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US toxics overhaul

Most modern toxic substances control laws are based on the 1976 US Toxic Substances Control Act, 15 U.S.C. §2601 et seq. (TSCA).  It provides the US Environmental Protection Agency with authority to require reporting, record-keeping and testing requirements, and restrictions relating to certain kinds of chemical substances and/or mixtures,  such as polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), asbestos, radon and lead-based paint.  Substances  already regulated under other statutes, such as food,  pharmaceuticals, cosmetics, and pesticides, are excluded from TSCA.

34 years after its initial adoption, TSCA is badly in need of an overhaul. For the last year, US regulators, businesses, and others interested in toxic substances have been  developing and negotiating a new version of TSCA. Progress will likely be delayed by the new Republican Congress, but the November 2 elections will not make the issues go away. (Some of these issues are already better regulated in Canada, but in other respects we have even farther to go.)

In April 2010, the Chair of the US Senate Subcommittee on Superfund, Toxics and Environmental Health introduced the Safe Chemicals Act of 2010 (SCA) in the Senate, to overhaul TSCA.   Its purpose  is to ensure that risks from chemicals are adequately understood and managed, and to protect human health and the environment.  In July, a similar Bill, the Toxic Chemicals Safety Act of 2010 (TCSA), was introduced in the House of Representatives.

Both Bills reflect core principles to strengthen U.S. chemical management laws, released last September 29, 2009 by EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson. They are designed to provide better chemical control, because:

In September 2010, 51 organizations that manage a total of $35 billion in assets wrote to Congress

endorsing the proposed toxic substances reform, to alleviate the drag on the US economy caused by exposure to toxic chemicals, e.g., through costs of increased health problems.  The Investor Environmental Health Network and the American Sustainable Business Council reminded politicians that better  control of toxics should:

The investors also ask Congress to make toxics regulation easier for the regulated community- a message that Canadian regulators also need to hear:

On environmental justice, another area almost ignored in Canada, the investors ask regulators to:

The American Sustainable Business Council notes that the TSCA places significant burdens on users of products that contain toxic chemicals; in particular, the burden is on the users to research product ingredients and identify hazards to health and the environment; must continue using chemicals where no safer alternatives exist; select products without sufficient information concerning toxicity; respond to concerns from the public, which change frequently; possible liability from use of hazardous products; and understand a complex, changing regulatory environment.

A number of stakeholder meetings were held with the EPA and industry

Comparison of TSCA1976 and TCSA2010

http://www.saferchemicals.org/PDF/Denison_TSCA_vs_House_reform_legislation_summary31Aug10.pdf

In 2006, Canada launched the Chemicals Management Plan, a $300 million effort to better regulate chemicals and reduce use of those chemicals that harm human health and the environment.  The Plan includes a class assessment approach for approximately 350 aromatic substances that may degrade and be of concern to human health or the environment.  It established the Virtual Elimination List under the Canadian Environmental Protection Act, 1999 (CEPA).

http://www.chemicalsubstanceschimiques.gc.ca/plan/index-eng.php

http://www.willmsshier.com/newsletters.asp?id=36

It is also through regional collaboration

References

GAO. CHEMICAL REGULATION. Options for Enhancing the Effectiveness of the Toxic Substances Control Act: Statement of John Stephenson, Director

Natural Resources and the Environment. February 26 2009

http://www.gao.gov/new.items/d09428t.pdf

GAO. CHEMICAL REGULATION. Comparison of U.S. and Recently Enacted European Union Approaches to Protect against the Risks of Toxic Chemicals. August 2007

http://www.gao.gov/new.items/d07825.pdf

Safe Chemicals Act of 2010. (fulltext)

http://lautenberg.senate.gov/assets/SCA2010.pdf

originally published in Hazmat Magazine.

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