I'll speak to that.
First of all, those phthalates were not banned in all toys. They were banned prior to the completion of risk assessments. The ban is in toys that can be placed in the mouth, and it's for a five-centimetre-square piece of article.
There's also another part of the European legislation called the CMR list—carcinogen, mutagen, or reproductive toxicant. It is based solely on hazard. So if you have an effect in any animal, and it's deemed to be a level-one or level-two CMR substance, it goes on a list. There are approximately 1,700 substances on that list currently. But if it's placed on that list, it can't be used in consumer products. Now, the irony of that is that dibutyl phthalate is certainly on the CMR list; however, the risk assessment also says there's no problem with its use in cosmetics by the general population.
For DEHP, it's the same thing; it is hazard-based.