The Government of Canada has taken a formal step in its national PFAS strategy, with a Canada Gazette notice reinforcing the federal risk classification and advancing risk management actions under the Canadian Environmental Protection Act (CEPA).
What Happened
The Canada Gazette notice published on May 16, 2026 confirms continued federal action on PFAS substances. It reinforces that PFAS are being treated as a priority chemical group under CEPA’s environmental and human health protection framework, moving from policy discussion into a formal regulatory risk classification pathway.
Key Regulatory Basis
This update is grounded in:
- CEPA Section 64 determination framework
- Federal classification of substances posing risk to human health and the environment
- Updated State of PFAS science assessment findings
- Federal acknowledgment of PFAS persistence and bioaccumulation concerns
Key Dates & Timeline
- Scientific assessment phase: Completed prior to 2026
- Canada Gazette notice: May 16, 2026
- Consultation / stakeholder engagement: Ongoing through 2026
- Risk management planning: 2026–2027
- Potential regulatory controls: Expected after final policy decision phase
Who Is Affected
- Chemical manufacturers
- Industrial product producers
- Textile and waterproofing industries
- Electronics and semiconductor supply chains
- Firefighting foam users and producers
- Water treatment operators
What Companies Should Do
- Identify PFAS usage across products and processes
- Prepare substitution and phase-out strategies
- Monitor Canada Gazette and CEPA updates
- Strengthen chemical inventory reporting systems
- Align compliance planning for 2026–2027
The Canada Gazette PFAS notice marks a shift toward formal CEPA-backed risk classification, signaling that PFAS regulation in Canada is moving from assessment into structured regulatory action planning.
Canada Gazette — May 16, 2026 PFAS Notice
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