Proposals for inclusion of a substance on the list of SVHCs can come either from the
European Commission or one of the Member States of the European Union. The proposals are made public by the
European Chemicals Agency (ECHA) and are open for public comment for 60–90 days. If the substance is deemed to meet one or more of the criteria, it is then listed as an SVHC. Once a substance has been listed as an SVHC, the Agency commissions a technical report from one or more national or private laboratories, which analyses the available information on manufacture, imports, uses and releases of the substance, as well as possible alternatives. On the basis of this technical report, the Agency decides whether to prioritise the substance, in effect, whether to make a recommendation to the European Commission to add the substance to Annex XIV of the REACH Regulation, making its use subject to authorisation. The draft recommendations must be made public and opened for comment for three months before the final recommendations are sent to the commission. The first draft recommendations were published on 14 January 2009, and new draft recommendations must be issued at least once every two years. ==Consequences of listing==