In an unexpected regulatory move, the government has withdrawn 21 Quality Control Orders (QCOs) within a span of just 17 days, creating widespread confusion among MSMEs, importers, and manufacturers across India’s petrochemical and chemical ecosystem. The withdrawals, effective immediately and implemented without any transition period, affect key industrial inputs such as polyethylene (PE), polypropylene (PP), PVC, paraxylene (PX), toluene, vinyl acetate monomer (VAM), ethylene dichloride (EDC), and vinyl chloride monomer (VCM).
The QCO rollbacks, issued between November 12 and November 28, 2025, have led to a race among businesses to determine their revised compliance requirements. Industry sources estimate that more than 3,000 MSMEs and import-dependent manufacturers are directly impacted, with many now facing uncertainty over shipments, BIS certification processes, and supplier documentation.
“Firms need immediate clarity on which QCOs still apply, how to handle certifications already in progress, and how to manage supplier documentation after deregulation,” said Rishikesh Mishra, CEO, JR Compliance. “Without transition periods, thousands of MSMEs face compliance risk and potential shipment delays, adding pressure on procurement and production schedules.”
Key Challenges Emerging:
Disruption of ongoing BIS certification processes due to abrupt withdrawals
Conflicting interpretations at ports and state enforcement authorities
Supplier documentation mismatches during the shift from regulated to deregulated materials
Unclear conformity obligations for shipments currently in transit
Downstream supply-chain volatility across textiles, polymers, and chemical manufacturing
Industry associations caution that the rapid sequence of regulatory changes may continue to affect production planning and procurement cycles for MSMEs, particularly those heavily dependent on imported intermediates and polymers. Many are urging the government to issue detailed guidelines or transition timelines to restore stability in the sector.
