The International Collaboration on Cosmetics Safety begins a new phase with the appointment of its 2026 Board officers, reinforcing its global commitment to advancing animal‑free approaches in cosmetics safety science as regulatory and scientific landscapes rapidly evolve.
The International Collaboration on Cosmetics Safety (ICCS) has announced its confirmed Board officers for 2026, following elections conducted during the organization’s December 2025 Board meeting, marking a notable achievement for the still young global initiative as it advances its role in promoting scientifically sound, human‑relevant alternatives to animal testing in cosmetics safety evaluation, with the newly appointed leadership illustrating both continuity and the increasing sophistication of ICCS as it builds on a year of meaningful advancements and prepares to broaden its influence across regulatory, scientific, and industry spheres worldwide.
ICCS operates at the intersection of science, policy, and collective engagement, bringing together a wide spectrum of stakeholders who pursue a common goal: promoting the global acceptance and implementation of animal-free safety science for cosmetics and their ingredients. The designation of the 2026 Board officers underscores the organization’s dedication to maintaining a strategic direction while adapting to an increasingly complex international landscape, where expectations related to ethical research, scientific rigor, and regulatory alignment continue to evolve.
Continued leadership stability and expansive global representation
The 2026 Board leadership unites senior leaders from the cosmetics, consumer goods, and regulatory advocacy fields, capturing the multi-stakeholder character that has shaped ICCS from the start. Stéphane Dhalluin, Ph.D., DABT, Global Head of Human & Environmental Safety Evaluation at L’Oréal, has been chosen again to serve as Chair of the Board of Directors. His renewed appointment reflects sustained trust in a leadership style grounded in scientific rigor, international collaboration, and productive dialogue with regulatory authorities.
Serving with him as Vice Chair is Darren Praznik, President and Chief Executive Officer of Cosmetics Alliance Canada, whose extensive record in industry advocacy and regulatory collaboration delivers a solid regional perspective shaped by policy expertise. The position of Secretary will be taken on by Heike Scheffler, Ph.D., Safety Advocacy and Regulatory Toxicology Director for Global Product Stewardship in Beauty and Oral Care at Procter & Gamble, contributing wide-ranging knowledge in regulatory toxicology and global product safety frameworks. Michael Southall, Ph.D., Senior Director and Head of Global Toxicology and Clinical Safety within Medical Clinical & Safety Sciences at Kenvue, has been named Treasurer, providing deep leadership experience in toxicology and organizational governance.
Acting collectively, the officers form a Board leadership team whose broad background spans multinational corporations, industry associations, and regulatory science, reinforcing ICCS’ position as a neutral platform for collaboration rather than a champion of any specific industry. This balance supports the organization’s credibility, particularly as it seeks to influence regulatory thinking and encourage convergence around animal-free safety methodologies.
Advancing animal-free science through collaboration
At the heart of ICCS’ mission is the belief that animal-free approaches to safety assessment are not only ethically preferable but scientifically superior when properly developed and validated. Since its formation in early 2023, ICCS has worked to demonstrate that non-animal methods can provide reliable, relevant information for protecting both human health and the environment. The confirmation of the 2026 Board officers comes at a moment when this message is gaining traction, supported by tangible outputs and growing engagement from regulators around the world.
During 2025, ICCS delivered a series of initiatives that strengthened its scientific foundation and expanded its influence. Among these was the release of a Best Practice Guidance document, designed to provide clarity and consistency in the application of animal-free safety assessment approaches. This guidance aimed to bridge gaps between scientific innovation and regulatory expectations, offering a practical framework that stakeholders could reference when developing or evaluating non-animal data.
In parallel, ICCS also played a key role in shaping innovative methodologies that align with next generation risk assessment (NGRA), an evolving framework that integrates advanced in vitro, in silico, and exposure-led approaches. These techniques are increasingly viewed as essential to modern toxicology, offering more human-relevant insights while reducing reliance on animal testing. ICCS’ efforts in this field highlight its commitment to ethical advancement and scientific excellence.
ICCS has also placed strong importance on open dialogue, and throughout 2025 the organization engaged widely with regulators, scientists, and policymakers in various regions, helping shape conversations about how animal-free data can be interpreted and integrated into current regulatory systems, a series of exchanges that has significantly advanced mutual understanding and confidence, especially in regions where the approval of non-animal approaches is still evolving.
A decisive turning point in cosmetics safety oversight
The installation of the 2026 Board officers takes place during a phase marked by notable transformations in global cosmetics regulations, as many markets reassess long‑standing testing standards in response to public expectations, scientific advancements, and new international policy trends, and within this shifting environment, organizations like ICCS remain vital in aligning innovation with regulatory requirements to ensure that progress continues to be both reliable and sustainable.
ICCS leadership has consistently emphasized that the transition to animal-free safety science cannot be achieved through isolated efforts. Instead, it requires coordinated action across industry, academia, regulators, and civil society. The composition of the Board reflects this philosophy, bringing together leaders who understand the technical, regulatory, and organizational dimensions of change.
Statements from ICCS leadership following the elections highlighted both confidence and realism. While there is recognition of the momentum generated in recent years, there is also acknowledgment that significant work remains. Achieving widespread regulatory acceptance of animal-free approaches will require continued investment in research, transparent data sharing, and ongoing engagement with authorities to address legitimate questions around reliability, applicability, and protection of public health.
The re-elected Chair emphasized the vital need to rely on ICCS’ global, multi-stakeholder framework to close the gap between innovation and regulation, ensuring that advances in animal-free science extend beyond the laboratory and evolve into dependable, consistently implemented tools that regulators can trust.
Strengthening foundations for long-term impact
As ICCS moves toward 2026 and the years that follow, the organization aims to reinforce its progress while broadening its influence, and the newly appointed Board leadership is anticipated to guide key priorities that balance scientific aspirations with practical execution, including pinpointing topics that require further direction or consensus, backing the validation and dissemination of emerging methodologies, and promoting global harmonization to minimize fragmentation among regulatory expectations.
Education remains a core element of ICCS’ strategy, as the organization works to provide accessible, science‑based resources and forums for discussion that illuminate the foundations of animal‑free safety science and enable well‑informed decision‑making. This mission becomes particularly crucial in a field where misconceptions or uneven expertise may slow progress, even when the underlying science is strong.
The organization’s structure, which unites top cosmetics and ingredient manufacturers with trade associations, research groups, and animal protection organizations, places it in a distinctive position to address these challenges. This diverse range of perspectives ensures discussions remain balanced, comprehensive, and focused on shared goals rather than narrow priorities.
Based in New York, ICCS remains active as a global initiative that underscores the inherently international landscape of cosmetics research and regulation. As products and ingredients frequently cross national borders, aligning standards and encouraging mutual acceptance of safety practices become ever more crucial. By working collaboratively, ICCS aims to support this alignment, minimize redundant efforts, and strengthen confidence in animal-free science around the world.
By confirming its 2026 Board officers, ICCS underscores stability while hinting at ongoing advancement, with its leadership team providing steady direction after a year marked by concrete achievements and the seasoned perspective needed to guide the next stage of transformation; as scientific innovation accelerates and regulatory expectations evolve, the organization’s role as a unifying hub and driving force for animal-free cosmetics safety science is set to become even more influential.
Ultimately, the importance of the 2026 Board elections rests not only on who is selected, but also on what their leadership conveys: a continued dedication to cooperation, scientific rigor, and the ethical progress of alternatives to animal testing. For ICCS and its stakeholders, the years ahead present a chance to turn ambition into enduring results, guiding the evolution of cosmetics safety in a manner that brings ethics, scientific excellence, and global public confidence into alignment.
