SubstancesSCCP banned (POP), MCCP Candidate List

Chlorinated Paraffins (SCCP, MCCP)

Chlorinated paraffins used as flame retardants and plasticisers, where the short-chain type is banned as a persistent organic pollutant and the medium-chain type is on the REACH Candidate List.

Updated
2026-06-12

Overview

Chlorinated paraffins are chlorinated chains of carbon used as flame retardants and plasticisers. They turn up in metalworking fluids, sealants, paints and rubber. The regulatory picture splits by chain length. Short-chain types carry the strictest controls while medium-chain types are a step behind.

SCCP
C10 to C13, CAS 85535-84-8, banned as a POP
MCCP
C14 to C17, CAS 85535-85-9, on the Candidate List
Typical use
Metalworking fluids, plasticisers, flame retardants
Concern
Persistent and toxic to aquatic life

Short-chain versus medium-chain

SCCP (short-chain)

Carbon chains of C10 to C13, CAS 85535-84-8. These are persistent organic pollutants under the Stockholm Convention and the EU POP Regulation, and they are also a substance of very high concern.

MCCP (medium-chain)

Carbon chains of C14 to C17, CAS 85535-85-9. These sit on the REACH Candidate List, which brings declaration duties but not yet an outright ban.

Typical uses

The main jobs are flame retardancy and plasticising. Metalworking fluids use them as extreme-pressure additives, and they soften plastics, rubber and sealants. As the short-chain grade was restricted, much of the market shifted toward medium-chain and longer products.

Key point

Chain length decides the rule. A product specified as chlorinated paraffin should state whether it is short-chain or medium-chain, because the obligations differ sharply.

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

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POPREACHSVHCplasticiserflame retardant