getdatmoney01
Member
- Joined
- Apr 13, 2015
- Messages
- 5
Such_Saturation said:Unless there is an explicit ban the worst could be ending up on some kind of watchlist, because I think they are pretty good at checking that you have all ingredients before singling you out. Now, "technical urea" could mean anything from agricultural grade to lab grade and they add "EU quality" which doesn't seem to mean anything so that is probably the best thing to start asking about. People usually get pretty uptight with details if they understand that you're meaning to eat the stuff.
Heh, yea. I messaged the guy, we'll see what we get. He listed it under "Sporting Goods", so surely he believes it's safe for ingestion.
I also contacted Australian customs and they just referred me to the Australian Office of Chemical Safety, who are closed right now, so I'll call them on Monday and see what i get. It's such a common compound in many goods so I don't see why there would be any problem.
I did find this but I can't find anything else.
http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/legis/cth/ ... /sch8.html
Goods the importation of which is prohibited if permission is not granted under regulation 5H
(2-Isopropyl-4-pentenoyl) urea and preparations containing (2-isopropyl-4-pentenoyl) urea.