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Top Global Regulatory Changes – October 2025

By: Cheryl Wong

Nimonik monitors regulations and standards across 75+ countries and 600+ jurisdictions. The list below highlights recent impactful changes. Descriptions with an asterisk (*) were generated with Nimonik’s artificial intelligence tools.

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Canada – Ontario

Amended Document – On-Site and Excess Soil Management
Amending Document – Amending O. Reg. 406/19 (On-Site and Excess Soil Management)

First Effective Date: 23 October 2025
Industry Sector: Construction

The changes enable greater reuse of excess soil, provide added flexibility in soil management options, and reduce costs for businesses. The changes notably—

  • “exempt aggregate reuse depots from a requirement for a waste environmental compliance approval (ECA)”;
  • include “enhanced reuse opportunities for recycled engineered aggregate and stormwater management pond sediment”;
  • allow “reuse between infrastructure project areas and reuse sites that are infrastructure undertakings”;
  • reduce “reuse planning requirements for excess soil moved between infrastructure projects”; and
  • allow “in-situ sampling for stormwater management pond sediment”.

More information about the update, including any additional effective dates, is available here.

Canada – Nova Scotia

New Principal Document – Electricity Act

First Effective Date: 3 October 2025
Industry Sector: General Industry, Office Spaces, Building Management and Maintenance

This document applies to electricity utilities, retail suppliers, customers, independent power producers, and hydrogen facility operators in Nova Scotia. It establishes comprehensive electricity market regulations including renewable energy standards, net-metering programs allowing customers to sell excess electricity back to utilities, community solar programs, retail electricity supplier licensing requirements, and various procurement processes for renewable energy projects. It requires utilities to develop open-access transmission tariffs and mandates data sharing through Green Button standards.*

It replaces the Electricity Act. The new document allows “power purchase agreements to keep all options open for using the […] resource of Nova Scotia’s offshore wind, including domestic use”. The new document further caps “energy from [clean energy] projects at their current volume of 1,140 megawatts so that no new project can be added unless another does not proceed”.

More information about the update, including any additional effective dates, is available here.

Amended Document – Apprenticeship and Trades Qualifications Act General Regulations
Amending Document – Apprenticeship and Trades Qualifications Act General Regulations–amendment

First Effective Date: 6 October 2025
Industry Sector: General Industry, Building Management and Maintenance

According to the Government, the change removes “the requirement to renew certificates of qualification and identity cards unless required by a trade regulation” and reduces “the fee for a trade qualification application”.

Canada – Yukon

New Principal Document – Contaminants Regulation

Publication Date: 25 September 2025
Industry Sector: General Industry, Office Spaces, Building Management and Maintenance

This document applies to persons, corporations, partnerships, trusts, property owners, permit applicants, and responsible parties involved in contaminated sites and contaminant releases. It establishes regulations for contaminated sites management, including release reporting thresholds, site investigation and assessment requirements, remediation standards, and various permit processes. Businesses must obtain permits for restricted activities, remediation work, and facility operations, conduct required environmental assessments, and comply with contamination cleanup standards based on land use types.*

It replaces the Contaminated Sites Regulation. According to the Government, the new document “establishes a modern framework that ensures cleanup efforts meet today’s highest environmental standards and supports safe, sustainable development across the territory”. Key improvements under the new Regulation include:

  • updated thresholds for contaminants and spills that align with the latest science and best practices, to improve cleanup and protect the Yukon’s land and water;
  • reduced red tape by simplifying approvals and eliminating duplicate authorizations so industry and communities can act faster to protect the environment;
  • increased development opportunities by enabling contaminated sites to be transferred to another party so they can be cleaned up and made ready for new development; and
  • clear certificates of compliance to confirm when cleanup has been completed, reducing liability and creating confidence in future development.

New Principal Document – Contaminants Regulation

Publication Date: 25 September 2025
Industry Sector: General Industry, Office Spaces, Building Management and Maintenance

This document applies to persons, corporations, partnerships, trusts, property owners, permit applicants, and responsible parties involved in contaminated sites and contaminant releases. It establishes regulations for contaminated sites management, including release reporting thresholds, site investigation and assessment requirements, remediation standards, and various permit processes. Businesses must obtain permits for restricted activities, remediation work, and facility operations, conduct required environmental assessments, and comply with contamination cleanup standards based on land use types.*

It replaces the Spills Regulations. According to the Government, the new document “establishes a modern framework that ensures cleanup efforts meet today’s highest environmental standards and supports safe, sustainable development across the territory”. Key improvements under the new Regulation include:

  • updated thresholds for contaminants and spills that align with the latest science and best practices, to improve cleanup and protect the Yukon’s land and water;
  • reduced red tape by simplifying approvals and eliminating duplicate authorizations so industry and communities can act faster to protect the environment;
  • increased development opportunities by enabling contaminated sites to be transferred to another party so they can be cleaned up and made ready for new development; and
  • clear certificates of compliance to confirm when cleanup has been completed, reducing liability and creating confidence in future development.

United States – Federal

New Principal Document – 47 CFR 1 Subpart FF Cable Landing Licenses

First Effective Date: 26 November 2025
Industry Sector: Utilities and Communications

This document applies to entities seeking cable landing licenses for submarine cable systems connecting the United States with foreign countries, Alaska, Hawaii, or U.S. territories. It establishes comprehensive requirements for cable landing license applications, including character qualifications, foreign adversary restrictions, cybersecurity plans, and operational conditions. Businesses must demonstrate public interest benefits, maintain U.S. control of cable systems, implement security risk management plans, file quarterly reports if affiliated with foreign carriers, and comply with restrictions on equipment from covered entities and foreign adversaries.*

United States – California

Amended Document – CIV Chapter 1-2.6-2 Disclosure of Medical Information by Providers
Amending Document – An act to amend Sections 56.05 and 56.10 of the Civil Code, and to add Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 24250) to Division 20 of the Health and Safety Code, relating to health and care facilities, and declaring the urgency thereof, to take effect immediately.

First Effective Date: 20 September 2025
Industry Sector: General Industry, Office Spaces, Building Management and Maintenance

Information about the update, including any additional effective dates, is available here.

Amended Document – CCR Chapter 11-6-1 California Consumer Privacy Act Regulations
Amending Document – CCPA Updates, Cyber, Risk, Automated Decisionmaking Technology.and Insurance Regulations

First Effective Date: 1 January 2026
Industry Sector: General Industry, Office Spaces, Building Management and Maintenance

According to the government, the effect of the change is to:

  • “update existing [California Consumer Protection Act (CCPA)] regulations”;
  • “specify requirements for businesses to conduct cybersecurity audits and risk assessments”;
  • “specify consumers’ rights to access and opt–out of businesses’ use of automated decision–making technology”; and
  • “specify when insurance companies must comply with the CCPA”.

Amended Document – GOV Chapter 2-1-7: California Emergency Services Act
Amending Document – An act to amend Section 8586.5 of the Government Code, relating to technology.

First Effective Date: 1 January 2026
Industry Sector: General Industry

Information about the update, including any additional effective dates, is available here.

Amended Document – PRC Part 34-8 Carbon Dioxide Capture, Removal, or Sequestration Projects
Amending Document – An act to amend Sections 51010, 51010.5, and 51018.6 of, and to add Sections 51011.5, 51011.6, 51015.06, and 51018.9 to, the Government Code, to amend Section 116375 of, and to add Section 39741.7 to, the Health and Safety Code, and to amend Section 71465 of, and to add Section 21087 to, the Public Resources Code, relating to public resources.

First Effective Date: 1 January 2026
Industry Sector: General Industry

According to the government, the change is part of a suite of amendments that notably:

  • “require the State Fire Marshal, by July 1, 2026, to adopt regulations governing the safe transportation of carbon dioxide in pipelines that, at a minimum, are as protective as certain draft regulations issued by the federal Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration on January 10, 2025”;
  • “limit the language [of certain provisions] restricting the transportation of carbon dioxide by pipeline to apply only to federally regulated interstate pipelines”; and
  • “require that intrastate pipelines be used to transport carbon dioxide to or from a carbon dioxide capture, removal, or sequestration project only after the State Fire Marshal adopts its regulations pursuant to the bill and only once the project operator demonstrates that the pipelines meet the standards in those regulations”.

Amended Document – BPC Chapter 7-3-1 Advertising
Amending Document – An act to amend Section 17539.1 of the Business and Professions Code, and to add Section 337o to the Penal Code, relating to gambling.

First Effective Date: 1 January 2026
Industry Sector: General Industry, Office Spaces, Building Management and Maintenance

Information about the update, including any additional effective dates, is available here.

Amended Document – WAT Chapter 7-7 Water Reclamation
Amending Document – An act to amend Sections 13529.2, 13551, 13552.4, 13553, and 13554 of the Water Code, relating to water quality.

First Effective Date: 1 January 2026
Industry Sector: General Industry, Building Management and Maintenance

According to the government, the changes notably:

  • redefine “recycled water” for the purposes of the Water Recycling Law;
  • “provide that water discharged from a decorative body of water during storm events is not to be considered an unauthorized discharge if recycled water was used to restore levels due to evaporation”;
  • “provide that incidental amounts of spray, mist, or runoff are to be permitted to enter outdoor eating areas of parks and open spaces when irrigated with disinfected tertiary treated recycled water that complies with a specified regulation regarding irrigation”;
  • “provide that outdoor landscape irrigation of common areas that does not enter the boundaries of a residence is not to be considered a part of the same premises as an individual residence and is not to be considered a dual-plumbed system”, and “require recycled water used for this purpose to comply with specified water quality and cost conditions”;
  • “include food handling and processing facilities as part of the definition of “structures”; and
  • “authorize the use of recycled water for toilet or urinal flushing or outdoor irrigation in and around food handling or processing facilities, commercial, institutional, and industrial buildings, and cafeterias, provided the recycled water does not enter the room where food handling or processing occurs, as specified”.

United States – New Jersey

Amended Document – NJAC Chapter 7-28 Radiation Protection Programs
Amending Document – NJAC Chapter 7-28 Radiation Protection Programs 2025-10-20 Amendments

First Effective Date: 20 October 2025
Industry Sector: General Industry, Office Spaces, Building Management and Maintenance

According to the government, the effect of the change is notably to “update the Radiation Protection Program rules for therapeutic installations, medical diagnostic X-ray installations, and dental radiographic installations to incorporate current technologies, allow flexibility to address emerging and future technologies, and incorporate the latest applicable Federal guidance to reflect national standards in radiation protection.” The change also updates the application and annual registration renewal fees for ionizing radiation-producing machines.

United States – New York

Amended Document – NYCRR Part 19-XXXIII-B-1240 State Energy Conservation Construction Code
Amending Document – State Energy Conservation Construction Code (Energy Code)

First Effective Date: 31 December 2025
Industry Sector: Construction, Building Management and Maintenance

According to the government, the update is to repeal the existing Energy Code and to adopt a new, updated Energy Code. The effect of the change is notably to:

  • “incorporate the [the 2025 Energy Conservation Construction Code of New York State] with a publication date of July 2025”;
  • “incorporate the NYSASHRAE90.1-2025 with a publication date of July 2025”;
  • “incorporate by reference the 2025 Residential Code of New York State, 2025 Building Code of New York State, 2025 Plumbing Code of New York, 2025 Mechanical Code of New York State, 2025 Fuel Gas Code of New York State, 2025 Fire Code of New York State, 2025 Existing Building Code of New York State, and 2025 Property Maintenance Code of New York State and specify the publication date of such publications as July 2025”;
  • “clarify the prohibition against installation of fossil-fuel equipment and building systems is applicable to “new” buildings and subject to the statutory exemptions”;
  • “clarify that provisions requiring electrification ready are only applicable to new and not existing buildings”;
  • “provide examples of demonstrating measurable emissions reductions or increased energy efficiency for clarity”; and
  • make various publication dates corrections.

Amended Document – NYCRR Part 6-V-E-601 Water Withdrawal Permiting, Reporting and Registration (Exclusive of Long Island Wells Regulated Under Part 602 of This Title)
Amending Document – Revisions to 6 NYCRR Parts 601 and 602 That Implement ECL Article 15, Title 15 (Water Supply)

First Effective Date: 14 November 2025
Industry Sector: General Industry, Building Management and Maintenance

According to the government, effect of the change is notably to:

  • “clarify that hydropower facilities operating under a Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) exemption are required to submit an annual water withdrawal report”;
  • “provide that direct withdrawals from the Atlantic Ocean, Long Island Sound, and saline surface waters classified in 6 NYCRR Chapter X, Subchapter B are exempt from annual water withdrawal reporting provided that a SPDES individual permit has been obtained if water is being withdrawn for cooling purposes, and provided that the withdrawal is not for public water supply or desalination purposes”;
  • “exempt mineral washing operations that recirculate at least 75% of the wash water from a constructed onsite pond system or quarry sump and do not utilize make-up water withdrawn from a well source or naturally occurring surface water from annual reporting”;
  • “clarify that a water withdrawal permit is required for the relocation of permanent surface water intake structures”;
  • “clarify the scope of water withdrawal permit exemptions for agricultural withdrawals, Federal Energy Regulatory Commission projects, withdrawals from saline waters (including withdrawals from saline surface waters classified in 6 NYCRR Chapter X, Subchapter B), reconstruction of facilities or works, and redundant wells”;
  • revise the “water withdrawal permit exemption relating to withdrawals by the Canal Corporation and withdrawals at remediation sites”;
  • add “new water withdrawal permit exemptions […] for certain mineral washing operations, certain recirculation pumps, fire suppression system maintenance, and increased drinking water tank or water tower storage capacity when the source water withdrawal is not increased”;
  • “clarify that a permit application is required for permit modifications and to require that engineering reports submitted with permit applications be signed and stamped, and that the engineer be licensed to practice engineering in New York State”;
  • “remove the requirement that privately owned public water supply systems form a water-works corporation pursuant to Article 4 of the Transportation Corporations Law, and now simply requires adequate proof of formation of a water-works corporation”;
  • “clarify that all water withdrawal permits are subject to the same general provisions”;
  • “provide that the application deadline for renewals of interbasin diversion registrations is within 180 days of transfer of ownership [… and] allow renewals of registrations to be made on forms made available by the Department”;
  • “allow alternative monitoring methods to estimate water withdrawal quantities if the alternative method is approved by the Department.

In addition, the proposed revisions clarify the Department’s existing authority to require meters to be installed for public water supply systems constructed or placed in operation after April 1, 2013. Furthermore, proposed revisions provide that if the Department determines that the installation of a water level measurement apparatus is impractical or unnecessary, the permittee may utilize alternative measurements methods or forgo water level measurement as approved by the Department, and “extend the period of recordkeeping from five (5) years to ten (10) years– the maximum duration of a water withdrawal permit”.

United States – North Carolina

Amended Document – NCAC Chapter 15A-18 Environmental Health
Amending Document – NCAC Chapter 15A-18 Environmental Health 2025-10-01 Amendments

First Effective Date: 1 September 2025
Industry Sector: General Industry

The effect of this change is notably to incorporate by reference the provisions of 40 CFR 141 Subpart Z Control of Per- and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances (PFAS), including any subsequent amendments and editions.

United States – Texas

Amended Document – TAC Chapter 30-114 Control of Air Pollution from Motor Vehicles
Amending Document – TAC Chapter 30-114 Control of Air Pollution from Motor Vehicles 2025-10-10 Amendments

First Effective Date: 16 October 2025
Industry Sector: General Industry

According to the government, the changes notably “revise the [inspection and maintenance (I/M)] program rules to provide for implementation of HB 3297 and SB 2102 and remove obsolete definitions. Adopted amendments also remove a state I/M requirement from the rule and state-adopted [State Implementation Plan (SIP)] to be consistent with the [U.S. Environmental Protection Agency]-approved federally enforceable Texas SIP”.

In addition to updating various definitions, notable changes include:

  • “[adding] an emissions inspection exception for rental vehicles, [combining] I/M program applicability subsections, [simplifying] language concerning test procedures, [removing] references to the extended DFW program area, [removing] obsolete references to safety inspections, [removing] references to the single sticker transition date, and [removing] a provision that is not part of the EPA-approved I/M SIP for Texas”;
  • “[adding] an exception for rental vehicles under emissions inspection applicability provisions that extends their initial inspection period to three years”;
  • “replacing a reference to safety inspection facilities with a reference to inspection facilities”;
  • “[removing] §114.50(b)(2) related to vehicles operated by any federal government agency employee under the jurisdiction of a federal government agency”; and
  • “[combining] I/M program fee requirements for several areas, [… removing] reference to the single sticker transition date, [removing] reference to the extended DFW program area, and [removing] language concerning fees associated with the outdated ASM-2 test”.

United States – Vermont

Amended Document – CVR Chapter 28-070-001 Vermont Fire and Building Safety Code
Amending Document – 2025 Vermont Fire & Building Safety Code.

First Effective Date: 4 November 2025
Industry Sector: General Industry, Office Spaces, Building Management and Maintenance

The change updates the Vermont Fire & Building Safety Code, replacing the 2015 edition with a 2025 edition. According to the government, “[t]he 2025 Vermont Fire & Building Safety Code establishes the process to obtain a construction or operating permit, lists the codes and standards that are adopted and describes the process used to evaluate and grant a variance or exemption from the Code.”

Amended Document – CVR Chapter 24-040-001 Vermont Electrical Safety Rules
Amending Document – 2025 Vermont Electrical Safety Rules.

First Effective Date: 5 November 2025
Industry Sector: General Industry, Office Spaces, Building Management and Maintenance

The change updates the Vermont Electrical Safety Rules, replacing the 2020 edition with a 2025 edition. According to the government, “[t]he purpose of these rules is to protect the people of the State of Vermont from the risk of fire or electrocution from unsafe electrical installation, by the adoption and enforcement of nationally recognized safety codes and by the licensure, education and training, of people doing electrical installation work.”

Denmark

New Principal Document – Executive Order on the Act on Working Environment

First Effective Date: 1 July 1977
Industry Sector: General Industry, Office Spaces, Building Management and Maintenance

This document applies to employers, employees, workplace safety representatives, work leaders, suppliers, contractors, builders, and young workers under 18 years in Denmark.

The document establishes comprehensive workplace safety and health requirements. Employers must ensure safe working conditions, conduct workplace assessments, provide safety training, and establish safety organizations. Employees must participate in safety cooperation and follow safety procedures. The document covers work execution standards, workplace design, technical equipment safety, hazardous substances handling, rest periods, and special protections for young workers. It establishes the Work Environment Authority for oversight and enforcement, with penalties for violations.*

It replaces the Promulgation of the Working Environment Act. The new document primarily covers the same scope as the replaced document concerning occupational health and safety, with amendments focused on:

  • expanding the situations that apply even when the work is not performed for an employer to cover the authorization for demolition of asbestos-containing material and the contractors’ duty to stop the work of contractors and subcontractors at construction sites;
  • excluding certain work related to the U.S. military presence and associated support services in Denmark from the regulated scope;
  • updating the requirements on employers to annually review training needs and expertise related to workplace health and safety within their organization’s working environment committee;
  • specifying that if the safety representative does not have full protection from dismissal, they are entitled to an extended notice period before termination;
  • clarifying the process of preparing workplace assessments to provide more detailed requirements on risk assessment and action plans;
  • mandating educational institutions to ensure that the working conditions during students’, apprentices’, and trainees’ practical exercises are fully safe with regard to occupational health and safety;
  • stating that the demolition or removal of asbestos-containing material may only be carried out by companies that are officially authorized, subject to certain exemptions; and
  • removing previous requirements with regard to the recognized occupational health and safety certificate.

Indonesia

New Principal Document – KEMENLHBPH No. 07 of 2025 concerning the Company Performance Rating Assessment Program in Environmental Management

First Effective Date: 28 August 2025
Industry Sector: General Industry

This document applies to business operators and activities that can impact the environment, particularly companies in manufacturing, mining, agriculture, and other industries that generate waste or emissions. It establishes a corporate environmental performance rating program (PROPER) that evaluates companies’ compliance with environmental regulations and their efforts beyond legal requirements. Companies must meet standards for water pollution control, air pollution control, hazardous and non-hazardous waste management, land damage control, and peat ecosystem protection. Businesses must have certified personnel for environmental management, conduct regular monitoring and reporting, and maintain proper documentation of their environmental activities.*

New Principal Document – BAPETEN No. 2 of 2025 Concerning Radiation Safety in the Use of Ionizing Radiation Sources for Gauging Equipment

First Effective Date: 10 October 2025
Industry Sector: General Industry

This document applies to license holders (businesses) and their radiation workers who use ionizing radiation sources for gauging equipment in industrial applications. It establishes radiation safety requirements including radiation protection principles, dose monitoring, workplace area controls, emergency preparedness, and safety management systems. Businesses must obtain licenses, implement safety programs, provide protective equipment, conduct regular monitoring, maintain qualified personnel including Radiation Protection Officers, and report incidents to authorities.*

Ireland

New Principal Document – National Minimum Wage Order 2025

First Effective Date: 1 January 2026
Industry Sector: General Industry, Office Spaces, Building Management and Maintenance

This document applies to all employers and employees in Ireland. It establishes the national minimum hourly wage rate at €14.15. Employers may include certain allowances in minimum wage calculations: €1.27 per hour for board provision, and €33.42 per week or €4.77 per day for lodging provision.*

Israel

Amended Document – Work Safety Regulations (Construction Work), 1988
Amending Document – Occupational Safety Regulations (Construction Works) (Amendment), 5770-2025

First Effective Date: 16 October 2026
Industry Sector: Construction, Building Management and Maintenance

The changes make a wide-ranging update on occupational safety regulations in the construction industry in Israel, with a focus on:

  • adding and updating various definitions, such as “construction site”, “professional builder for scaffolding”, “self-construction”, and “multi-unit construction”;
  • introducing detailed responsibilities for safety oversight with regard to the appointment and qualifications of safety supervisors, registered work managers, site managers, and professional constructors, as well as their duties;
  • mandating engineering management plans for various types of scaffolding, formwork and metal structure installations, including ensuring compliance with engineering plans for the use, installation, dismantling or modification of scaffolding;
  • establishing requirements for the construction supervisor to submit electronic notifications with regard to the start and completion of construction or engineering work, and changes in safety personnel, using designated forms; and
  • detailing safety inspection, supervision, reporting and documentation obligations.

More information about the update, including any additional effective dates, is available here.

Italy

Amended Document – Decree-Law 2 March 2024, n. 19 Further urgent provisions for the implementation of the National Recovery and Resilience Plan (PNRR)
Amending Document – Law 8 August 2025, n. 118 Conversion into law, with amendments, of Decree Law No. 95 of June 30, 2025, containing urgent provisions for the financing of economic activities and businesses, as well as interventions of a social nature and in the areas of infrastructure, transportation, and local authorities

First Effective Date: 10 August 2025
Industry Sector: General Industry

Information about the update, including any additional effective dates, is available here.

Philippines

New Principal Document – General Framework for Carbon Credits in the Energy Sector

First Effective Date: 24 October 2025
Industry Sector: Utilities and Communications

This document applies to energy sector stakeholders, project proponents of mitigation activities, and entities seeking to generate carbon credits from energy-related projects. It establishes guidelines for generating, managing, and monitoring carbon credits in the Philippines’ energy sector. Key requirements include:

  • ensuring carbon credits meet principles of being real, additional, measurable, and permanent;
  • registering eligible mitigation activities with the Department of Energy;
  • complying with recognized carbon crediting standards and methodologies; and
  • preventing double counting of environmental benefits from the same facility.*
Past months’ top changes are available here: September 2025, August 2025, July 2025, June 2025, May 2025, April 2025

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