The Canada toxic substances ban 2026 establishes a new regulatory framework which affects all global manufacturers because the updated CEPA regulations now ban Dechlorane Plus and Decabromodiphenyl Ethane. For CEOs, CFOs, and compliance leaders, this is not just a regulatory update—it is a material business risk which affects product design and supply chain continuity and market access in Canada. Organizations need to evaluate BOM-level exposure while validating supplier declarations and creating plans for phased exemptions which will last until 2056. The complex situation has become more complicated because both EU and international regulations have introduced similar restrictions which have created regulatory convergence. Organizations need to establish automated compliance systems because their current manual processes fail to track substances, prepare for audits, and meet new reporting standards. Forward-looking enterprises use AI-powered compliance systems to automate substance