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Toxic Substance Control Act

Toxic Substance Control Act. ENVIRONMENTAL RISK ASSESSMENT. Toxic Substances Control Act. History of the Act The primary purpose of TSCA is to regulate chemical substances and mixtures

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Toxic Substance Control Act

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  1. Toxic Substance Control Act ENVIRONMENTAL RISK ASSESSMENT

  2. Toxic Substances Control Act • History of the Act • The primary purpose of TSCA is to regulate chemical substances and mixtures • It does so by regulating both the distribution of existing chemicals and the manufacture of new chemicals based on their risks to health and the environment • The scope of the term “new chemical substances and mixtures” is defined in the statute and in EPA’s regulations • TSCA seeks to control hazardous inputs into commerce and industry rather than regulating by-products from manufacturing processes

  3. Toxic Substances Control Act • The TSCA Inventory • Under TSCA any person who manufactures, processes or imports a new chemical substance or mixture for commercial purposes must submit a “notice of intent” (known as a Premanufacture Notice or PMN) to the EPA at least 90 days before they begin manufacturing or processing • The person must submit test data for the substance • The EPA subsequently determines if the new chemical or mixture presents an unreasonable risk to health and environment or if testing on the new chemical must be performed • The EPA’s initial inventory was compiled from information submitted by chemical manufacturers

  4. Toxic Substances Control Act • The original inventory is periodically updated to add new chemicals for which PMNs are filed • There are currently over 75,000 chemicals on the database • Premanufacture Notices (PMNs) • If a company plans to import, manufacture or process a new chemical substance, it must give the EPA at least 90 days’ notice • Before a company can give notice, it must decide whether its proposed substance is in fact “new”

  5. Toxic Substances Control Act • The EPA takes action to control potential risks to health or the environment on approximately 10% of the PMNs submitted • Only 2-3% of these currently undergo a more stringent standard review • TSCA regulations exempt from PMN requirements “substances manufactured or imported only in small quantities solely for research and development” • The regulations also exempt substances manufactured or imported for test-marketing and for export • Also exempt are certain by-products, impurities formed ancillary to a chemical reaction or production process and certain polymers

  6. Toxic Substances Control Act • EPA Review of Premanufacture Notices • Once the EPA receives a PMN, the Agency publishes a notice in the Federal Register • When the PMN is complete the EPA has 90 days (in some circumstances, 180 days) to decide whether to prohibit or regulate manufacture of the new chemical • The EPA reviews PMNs in six stages. These stages include: • prenotice communication, process start-up, initial review, detailed review, regulatory response, and closeout.

  7. Toxic Substances Control Act • If the EPA takes no action on the notice within 90 days, the manufacturer may begin production -- the manufacturer must supply the EPA with further notice that manufacture will commence • At that point the EPA adds the chemical to the TSCA Inventory • TSCA Testing Provisions • The EPA can require a manufacturer to test its chemical if the substance may pose an unreasonable risk or if potential exposure to humans and the environment is substantial

  8. Toxic Substances Control Act • If the EPA requires testing, it must devise a test rule • Significant New Use Rules (SNURs) • Under TSCA EPA has authority to issue a Significant New Use Rule or SNUR if the EPA determines that a use of a chemical substance is a significant new use • Once a SNUR is issued, a PMN is required for the specified new uses of the existing chemical

  9. Toxic Substances Control Act • Regulation of Unreasonable Risk • If the EPA decides that a chemical presents an unreasonable risk, it can do a variety of things including: • Completely prohibit manufacture • Prohibit or limit certain use • Prescribe quantity and concentration limits in manufacture • Specify quality control measures that must be used by the manufacturer or processor • Require tests that are reasonable and necessary to assure compliance with regulations issued under § 6 • Establish recordkeeping requirements • Control disposal • Impose labeling and other public disclosure requirements

  10. What is environmental risk assessment (ERA)? • ERA is is comprised of: • human health risk assessment; • ecological risk assessment. • Qualitative and quantitative valuation of environmental status

  11. Purposes in performing ERA • to learn about the risks • to reduce the risk

  12. Risk comparison • Probability of frequency of events causing one or more immediate fatalities. • Chance of death for an individual within a specified population in each year. • Number of deaths from lifetime exposure. • Loss of life expectancy considers the age at which death occurs. • Deaths per tone of product, or per facility.

  13. Risk management: • Risk analysis and assessment: identification of hazards to people and the environment, the determination of the probability of occurrence of these hazards, and the magnitude of the events. • Risk limits - entails defining the acceptability of the risk, which can be classified as acceptable or in need of reduction. • Risk reduction: design and implementation of risk-reducing measures and controls.

  14. Human health risk assessment (HHRA) • hazard identification; • dose-response assessment; • exposure assessment; • risk characterization. Involves:

  15. Ecological risk assessment (ERA) • Determines the likelihood of the occurrence/non-occurrence of adverse ecological effects as a result of exposure to hazard

  16. Hazards • chemicals toxic to humans, animals, and plants; • materials that are highly flammable or explosive; • mechanical equipment, the failure of which would endanger persons and property; • structural failure (e.g., dam or containment vessel); • natural disasters that exacerbate technological hazards; • ecosystem damage (e.g., soil erosion).

  17. Toxic Substances Control Act • Regulation of PCBs under TSCA • Polychlorinated Biphenyls (PCBs) are a group of highly stable chemicals that achieved widespread industrial use by the time of TSCA’s enactment • PCBs are synthetic chemicals that fall within the group known as chlorinated hydrocarbons • PCBs were specifically included in the TSCA legislation due to growing concern about their environmental effects and due to evidence that PCBs are highly toxic in animals • Tests on laboratory animals showed that PCBs could cause cancers, tumors, birth defects and reproductive failures

  18. Toxic Substances Control Act • The EPA issued regulations on use and retirement of PCB-containing transformers in or near commercial buildings • The Agency also regulates the unintended by-product manufacture of PCBs • The PCB regulations also include certain recordkeeping requirements • Regulation of Asbestos under TSCA • In 1989 the EPA issued a final rule under TSCA to phase out the use of asbestos in commercial products

  19. Toxic Substances Control Act • The asbestos rule was designed to ban the use of asbestos in new products by 1997 • Section 8(e) requires manufacturers, importers, processors and distributors who obtain information “which reasonably supports the conclusion that [a] substance or mixture presents a substantial risk of injury to health or the environment” to inform the EPA immediately • Section 8(c) requires the manufacturer and processors of chemical substances to “maintain records of significant adverse reactions to health or the environment … alleged to have been caused by the substance or mixture”

  20. Toxic Substances Control Act • Enforcement and Penalties under TSCA • TSCA allows EPA to inspect any facility where chemical substances are manufactured, processed, or stored • TSCA allows the EPA to pursue civil penalties of up to $25,000 per day for each violation of the statute • The Agency can also seek criminal fines of up to $25,000 per day and imprisonment of up to one year

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