Standards & FormatsIn use

chemSHERPA: Chemical Information Across the Supply Chain

A standardized scheme and data format, managed in Japan, for passing chemical-substance information in products through the supply chain. It succeeds the older JAMP AIS and MSDSplus and aligns with the IEC 62474 declarable substance list.

Updated
2026-06-12

Overview

chemSHERPA is a shared way to tell the next company in the chain which regulated chemicals a product contains. It defines both a scheme and a fixed data format, so a declaration created by one supplier can be read and reused by the customer above without rekeying.

Why it exists

Before chemSHERPA, the same chemical information was exchanged in several incompatible formats. It pulls that into one structure and ties the reported substances to the IEC 62474 declarable substance list, so the data lines up with an international reference instead of a private list.

Two formats

chemSHERPA splits into two formats depending on what is being declared.

chemSHERPA-AI

For articles, meaning finished or molded parts whose shape matters. It reports which declarable substances are present and where they sit in the part.

chemSHERPA-CI

For chemical products, meaning mixtures and substances such as paints, adhesives and solvents. It reports the composition of the chemical itself.

What it replaced

chemSHERPA is the successor to two earlier JAMP schemes. AIS (Article Information Sheet) covered articles and MSDSplus covered chemical products. Both are now consolidated under chemSHERPA, which keeps the same basic split but uses a single modern format and a maintained substance reference.

Earlier
JAMP AIS and MSDSplus
Two separate schemes for articles and for chemical products.
Now
chemSHERPA
One scheme with two formats, AI for articles and CI for chemical products, aligned with IEC 62474.

How it fits

chemSHERPA is one regional flavour of material declaration, widely used by suppliers into the Japanese and broader Asian electronics market. Because it follows the IEC 62474 declarable substance list, data produced for chemSHERPA generally maps to the substances other schemes expect, which makes it easier to satisfy several customers from one dataset.

Note: general educational information, not legal advice. Check the official source before relying on it.

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Related entries

material declarationsupply chainchemical informationJapanIEC 62474