Chemistry & Life Sciences

TSCA Reform

Business Strategies in Times of Political Gridlock

06.03.2012 -

Change Is the Only Constant - Most would agree that legislative reform of the U.S. Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA) is long overdue. Few agree on what to change and how best to proceed.

If you throw in the 2012 presidential election, you have gridlock. Commerce marches on, however, and with the Environmental Protection Agency reinventing TSCA implementation in innovative and effective ways, Reach setting the new global tone, and California creating a new template for sustainable consumer products, TSCA reform is at risk of becoming a distracting afterthought.

Stakeholders must develop new strategies to survive and flourish in these fast-changing times.


Prospects For TSCA Legislation

The prospects for TSCA legislation this year are dim. Congress is especially polarized on chemical management issues, which to Republicans (and even some Democrats) is code for job- and innovation-killing legislation. The Safe Chemicals Act of 2011, the primary vehicle in the first session of the 112th Congress, was introduced on April 14 by Sen. Frank Lautenberg of New Jersey, chair of the Environment and Public Works Subcommittee on Superfund, Toxics and Environmental Health. The bill generally requires chemical companies to demonstrate the safety of industrial chemicals and EPA to evaluate safety based on the best available science.

In response to strong pushback from the chemical community, Lautenberg amended the bill to improve its chances of passage. Broad chemical testing requirements were scaled back and risk-based prioritization categories were identified to enable EPA to focus limited resources on the highest-risk chemicals.

House hearings took place throughout the year, along with some stakeholder discussions. Lautenberg's subcommittee had a hearing on the legislation Nov. 17. Some Democrats, especially Sen. Ben Cardin of Maryland, were critical of the American Chemistry Council (ACC) and the lack of a concrete alternative supported by the chemical industry. Lautenberg said he intended to bring his legislation up for a committee vote "in the near future." That was the last word in 2011. As of this writing, no hearings have been scheduled, and the buzz on TSCA reform is gone.

Enhanced Chemical Management: EPA Gets Tough

Perhaps sensing TSCA reform is not imminent, the Obama administration has moved aggressively to prove enhanced chemical management is an environmental priority. Early in her tenure, EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson rolled out innovative and aggressive Chemical Action Plans to address risks EPA believes are posed by high priority chemicals of concern. Other initiatives are noteworthy. For example:

  • EPA submitted several rulemakings to the Office of Management and Budget in 2011, including a proposed Significant New Use Rule (SNUR) that would add nine chemicals (dyes) to the benzidine-based chemical substances (dyes) SNUR at 40 C.F.R. Section 721.1660; create a SNUR for di-n-pentyl phthalate (DnPP); and create a SNUR for alkanes, C12-13, chloro. EPA also submitted a proposed SNUR concerning hexabromocyclododecane (HBCD) used in textiles.
  • In February, OMB completed its review of the proposed HBCD SNUR, as well as a combined TSCA Section 4 test rule and SNUR on certain polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDE) submitted to OMB on Dec. 17, 2010. The PBDEs action is particularly interesting in the way it will attempt to combine SNUR requirements with a test rule, thus forcing industry to choose to abide by the SNUR or confront potentially significant testing costs if a chemical such as decabrominated diphenyl ether (decaBDE) is to remain in the market. What emerges from EPA as a proposed rule remains to be seen.
  • EPA issued final revisions to its Inventory Update Reporting (IUR) Modifications Rule, now known as the Chemical Data Reporting (CDR) Rule, last year. The CDR Rule expands EPA's ability to collect and publish information on the manufacturing, processing, and use of commercial chemical substances and mixtures listed on the TSCA Chemical Substance Inventory. This includes current information on chemical substance production volumes, manufacturing sites and how the chemical substances are used.
  • EPA on Feb. 7 announced that Dover Chemical has agreed to pay a $1.4 million civil penalty for TSCA violations, settling alleged violations of TSCA premanufacture notice (PMN) obligations for the production of various short-chain chlorinated paraffins (SCCPs) (an action plan chemical).
  • The president's proposed fiscal year 2013 budget would increase funds available to EPA specifically to address chemical risks.

EPA has turned up the heat and is virtually reinventing TSCA in innovative and aggressive ways to achieve enhanced chemical management. These initiatives, which are by no means exhaustive, illustrate EPA's commitment to enhanced chemical management. The commitment is real, and industry is feeling the pressure.

Role of the States and Reach

Two other components of chemical management are critically important to add to the mix: State chemical activism and Reach. Increasingly frustrated with the slow pace of federal chemical reform, state legislatures are enacting chemical-specific or product-specific measures in record numbers. Over the last several years, a growing number of states have enacted chemical- or product-specific bans or limitations on chemicals in products. This trend is not abating. According to Safer States, a coalition of state-based organizations "championing solutions to protect public health," 28 states will consider toxic chemicals legislation in 2012.

Not surprisingly, California is leading the nation and is developing its own Green Chemistry Initiative (GCI). The state intends to roll out this year its implementation of the GCI through the Safer Consumer Products Regulations, requiring that "chemicals of concern" in "consumer products of concern" are identified, and alternatives to toxic chemicals in such products are found and used. This game-changing initiative is expected to have a profound effect on the manufacture and marketing of consumer products well beyond U.S. borders.

Finally, Reach is continuing to cause seismic shifts in chemical management policies and business practices globally. The Reach Authorization List under Annex XIV now boasts 14 chemicals and continues to expand. Listing under Annex XIV has global implications and none of them good for producers and users of listed chemicals. Reach-like measures continue to propagate around the globe with no signs of abating.

Business Strategies

Commercial stakeholders must effectively navigate these changes to regulatory paradigms to survive. At the least:
Know the chemicals your business is most reliant upon, and assess their regulatory vulnerability. If they are on or likely to be placed on the Authorization List, find alternatives now.
Proactively develop measures to limit exposure and make the case for key chemicals or products that pose risks but are not easily replaced.

Make the science case for chemicals that are critically important to your business if their risk profiles are not well developed or are data-poor.

Stay abreast of chemical regulatory developments in key jurisdictions, even if you have no commercial dealings outside the United States (if a U.S. entity), or in California (if a non-U.S. entity). Reach and GCI are game-changers, and both will set the tone globally.

Support TSCA reform to ensure consumer confidence in domestic chemical management is restored, and new chemical technologies that offer enhanced sustainability are rewarded and nurtured.

Engage with all stakeholders that will influence the outcome of the chemical management debate: nongovernmental organizations, state and federal agencies, unions, employees, customers, retailers and others. Diverse perspectives contribute to a rich discussion of the issues and may lead to better solutions.


Lynn L. Bergeson is Managing Principal of Bergeson & Campbell, P.C. (B&C), a Washington, D.C. law firm focusing on conventional, nanoscale, and biobased industrial, agricultural, and specialty chemical product regulation and approval matters, environmental health and safety law, chemical product litigation, and associated business counseling and litigation issues. She is president of The Acta Group, L.L.C. and Managing Director of The Acta Group EU, Ltd with offices in Washington, D.C. and Manchester, UK, and President of B&C Consortia Management, L.L.C. (BCCM) with offices in Washington, D.C.

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