EFSA toxicology reference values
Ethylene glycol
Ethylene glycol (CAS 107-21-1). Cannabis testing data across 0 states. Action levels when present, testing requirements, compliance status.
Ethylene glycol is a cannabis analyte contaminant represented in the cannabis public dataset.
Substance Identity
Analyte identity and classification used for this cannabis substance page.
Contaminant Class Badge
Color-coded cannabis class signal for scanning pesticide, metal, solvent, mycotoxin, and potency pages.
Dataset Snapshot
Compact public-data summary for page quality, state coverage, lab rows, and potency sample groups.
EFSA Substance Identity
EFSA substance identity rows matched by chemical name or CAS.
EFSA Reference Values
Reference values from efsa_reference_values_v2 for toxicology and food-safety context.
| Descriptor | Value | Population | Endpoint | Body |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| critical study not identified | - | consumers | - | - |
EFSA Study Results
Endpoint-level study rows from efsa_study_results matched to this substance.
| Endpoint | Species | Route | Effect | Assessment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Carcinogenicity_EU_PPP | - | - | - | The EFSA is required to carry out assessment on the risks originating from the migration into food of the substance 1,4:3,6-dianhydrosorbitol for use as a co-monomer in the production of polyesters along with ethylene glycol, 1,4-bis(hydroxymethyl)cyclohexane and terephthalic acid, at a maximum content of 40 diol mole% and to deliver a scientific opinion according to Regulation (EC) No 1935/2004 of the European Parliament and of the Council on materials and articles intended to come into contact with food. |
| Genetic Toxicity | - | - | - | The EFSA is required to carry out assessment on the risks originating from the migration into food of the substance 1,4:3,6-dianhydrosorbitol for use as a co-monomer in the production of polyesters along with ethylene glycol, 1,4-bis(hydroxymethyl)cyclohexane and terephthalic acid, at a maximum content of 40 diol mole% and to deliver a scientific opinion according to Regulation (EC) No 1935/2004 of the European Parliament and of the Council on materials and articles intended to come into contact with food. |
Cross-Reference to Chemicals / Cosmetics / Food
Internal cross-vertical links connecting cannabis rows to chemical, cosmetics, and EFSA food/toxicology context.
Frequently Asked Questions
FAQ answers are generated from the same fetched cannabis, EFSA, cosmetics, and chemical rows rendered above.
What is the regulatory limit for Ethylene glycol in cannabis?
Ethylene glycol does not have a numeric cannabis_contaminant_tests range in the fetched page data. The current page query does not expose a separate action-limit column.
Which states test for Ethylene glycol?
Ethylene glycol does not have state-level cannabis testing rows in the fetched page data.
What are the EFSA reference values for Ethylene glycol?
Ethylene glycol has 1 EFSA OpenFoodTox reference value row in the cannabis database, including critical study not identified.
Is Ethylene glycol also regulated in cosmetics or food?
Ethylene glycol has a cosmetics ingredient cross-reference with EU status permitted. EFSA food/toxicology context is available on this page.