Title: US Approach to Regulation: TSCA and Public Health
1US Approach to Regulation TSCA and Public Health
- Lynn R. Goldman, MD, MPH
- Professor, Environmental Health Sciences
- Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
- October 13, 2004
2Talk will cover
- Public health and environmental goals of TSCA
(Toxic Substances Control Act) - Major features of TSCA
- Principles for TSCA reform
3Chemicals management media specific versus
cradle to grave approaches
- Media specific approach
- Focus is on engineering approaches to decrease or
eliminate pollution/exposure from specific
substances in specific media. - Cradle to grave approach
- Focus is on pollution prevention via
consideration of the entire lifecycle of a
chemical or process including alternative
processes
4Media Specific Statutes
- Media specific approaches
- Environmental
- Clean Air Act, Clean Water Act, Safe Drinking
Water Act, Resources Conservation and Recovery
Act, etc. - Occupational
- Occupational Safety and Health Act, Mining Health
and Safety Act, etc. - Consumer
- Consumer Products Safety Act, Federal Food Drug
and Cosmetics Act, etc.
5Cradle to Grave Approach
- Chemicals are managed throughout their lifecycle
- Research and development
- Commercialization and scaling up production
- Production
- Processing, formulation
- Product manufacture
- Transport of materials and goods
- Worker exposures (in production, formulation, use
and disposal) - Consumer exposures (in product use)
- Waste (emissions, disposal, recycling, reuse)
- Statutes TSCA and Federal Insecticide,
Rodenticide and Fungicide Act
6Public health provisions in chemicals statutes
- Risk standard public health and environmental
goals - Protection of sensitive populations young,
diseased, etc. - Ability of other considerations (e.g., cost
benefit) to trump public health - New chemicals approvals
- Assessment of risks of existing chemicals
- Management of existing chemical hazards
- Chemical security
- Right to know access to information
- Pollution prevention
- Management of chemicals in trade
7Risk standard
- Food Quality Protection Act
- Food reasonable certainty of no harm
- FIFRA Avoid unreasonable risk to health or the
environment - TSCA
- Avoid unreasonable risk to health or the
environment - Conclusion
- Standard in TSCA is a least common denominator
8Protection of sensitive populations
- FQPA
- Specific provisions regarding examination of
toxicity and exposure to children - Assessment of aggregate risks from multiple
uses of a pesticide - Assessment of cumulative risks from multiple
pesticides with same mode of action - TSCA
- No such specific provisions but TSCA would not
preclude EPA from doing so - Conclusions
- TSCA does not give EPA clear direction for
protection of sensitive populations (like
children) - TSCA does not require EPA to address
environmental justice concerns (especially
cumulative and aggregate risks)
9Role of other considerations (e.g., cost benefit)
- FQPA
- Costs and benefits a consideration for nonfood
uses - Public health considerations only for food uses
- Burden is on manufacturer to prove safety before
a pesticide can be marketed or re-registered - TSCA
- Same standard (cost-benefit balancing) for all
circumstances - Overly elaborate procedures (in law and court
interpretation) - Burden is on EPA to prove cost-benefit standard
is met - Conclusions
- TSCA does not provide a public health based
standard for chemicals under any circumstance - TSCA will never be effective unless the burden
can be shfted onto industry to prove safety
10New chemicals approvals
- FIFRA
- Extensive database of testing required under
FIFRA Part 151 - Emergency exemptions allowed
- Exemptions (by rulemaking) allowed (e.g., garlic,
pheromones, genetic material) - TSCA
- Only chemical structure and physical
characteristics are supplied - Agency uses Structure Activity Relationships and
physicochemical properties for most decisions - Conclusions
- A more robust data set (e.g., the OECD Screening
Inventory DataSet) for initial determination
would provide EPA with more risk information - Rule making allowed to create exemptions
- Increased testing could be required for certain
uses (e.g., food uses, consumer products, heavy
worker exposures)
11Assessment of risks of existing chemicals
- FIFRA
- All pesticides on the market were approved at
some time and have registrations - 1988 law required reregistration, to update
testing - TSCA
- 70,000 existing chemicals grandfathered into use
and placed on the inventory - The inventory has numerous inaccuracies and is
only partially updated - To required testing EPA must write a test rule
that contains a finding of unreasonable risk
(can be based on exposure) EPA must meet a heavy
burden to justify testing - Voluntary high volume testing (but no clear
pathway to more complete testing) - Generation of data is not rewarded
- Conclusions
- TSCA does not give EPA clear expectation for
testing of risks of existing chemicals - TSCA does not provide for exposure monitoring
- Minus hazard and exposure data there is no
risk assessment
12Need for Explicit Priority Setting and Tiered
Assessments
- FQPA
- Hundreds of pesticides on the market formulated
into tens of thousands of commercial products - TSCA
- Tens of thousands of chemicals on the market
(15,000 at more than 10,000 lbs/year)
manufactured into millions of products - Conclusion
- EPA has not been given clear direction regarding
which chemicals/classes of chemicals should be
addressed first, (e.g., persistence
bioaccumulation endocrine activity
mutagenicity presence in home and school
environments, in food, in drinking water, or in
air or presence in humans, wildlife or the
environment). - Tiered assessment processes have not been
established (e.g. where do you go beyond
screening assessment?)
13Management of existing chemical hazards
- FQPA
- Occurs via pesticide reregistration processes
and hundreds of individual actions every year - TSCA
- TSCA Section 6 and has almost no regulatory
actions each year - 1992 Fifth Circuit Court decision on the 1989
asbestos ban and phase out (corrosion fittings)
set a precedent for a very high bar for EPA - Substantial substitution analyses, for which EPA
will never have adequate resources - A preference for end-of-pipe solutions to meet
the TSCA least burdensome language (rather than
solutions involving source reduction such as use
of safer substitutes) - In consequence almost all risk management under
TSCA is on a voluntary basis - Conclusions
- We have paralysis by analysis analytic
requirements are not within reason - We do not reward/encourage pollution prevention
approaches - We do not provide a set of clear expectations to
EPA about chemical management
14Managing risks to consumers, workers, and
communities
- FQPA
- Registration process considers all risk scenarios
- TSCA
- Fragmentation of responsibilities within EPA
(air, water, waste offices) and among agencies
(Occupational Safety and Health Administration,
Consumer Products Safety Commission) - TSCA referral process has been unproductive
- Conclusions
- A multimedia approach for chemicals management
requires more engagement and coordination across
all of EPA as well as OSHA, CPSC, the National
Toxicology Program (NTP), the CDC in areas such
as research, hazard assessment, exposure
assessment, risk communication and risk management
15Chemical Security
- Numerous exceedingly hazardous chemicals can be
purchased over the internet - Chemical facilities are not secure from terrorist
attacks (although some have taken action
voluntarily) - Chemical transport has not been secured .
- Policy Objective
- Chemicals management needs to recognize that we
are in a new environment with threats of
terrorist attacks
16Right to know access to information
- TSCA
- In 1998, more than 65 of the information
filings directed to the Agency through TSCA were
claimed as confidential. - Submissions under the former Inventory Update
Rule show that about 20 of facility identities
were claimed as confidential. - In 1998, 40 of Section 8(e) substantial risk
notices had chemical identity claimed as
confidential. - States cannot receive CBI filings under the
statute, yet many chemical risk management
decisions in this country are done at the state
and local level - Conclusions
- TSCA should protect legitimate business
interests, BUT - States, scientists and the general public need
more information (especially facility identities
and chemical identities for states and health and
environmental information for all parties!)
17Pollution prevention (P2)
- FQPA
- Incentives for safer pesticides
- TSCA
- No built-in incentives for greener chemistries
TSCA bias against the development of new, greener
processes - Most chemical regulation is done in other program
offices in a stovepipe fashion, decreasing
opportunities for P2 - Conclusions
- TSCA does not reward efforts to develop new safer
processes and for source reduction efforts - TSCA does not enable EPA to replace burdensome
media based regulations with more efficient and
protective multimedia approaches
18Management of chemicals in trade
- TSCA should
- Ratify Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic
Pollutants (POPs) - Ratify Rotterdam Convention on Prior Informed
Consent (PIC) - Put the US government in the center of
international efforts for sound management of
chemicals - Current efforts in the House of Representatives
to ratify the POPs and PIC convention would
instead make it more difficult for the US to be
full participants
19Conclusion
- To be successful, TSCA needs
- Clear expectations of EPA for action to protect
health and the environment (and deadlines) - Burden on industry to obtain approvals
- Participation by state (and sometimes local) govt
- Reward information
- Reward innovation
- Make information available to the public
- Involvement of other federal players
- Ratify chemicals conventions
20Role of Industry
- Move toward multimedia, pollution prevention
approaches - Participate in voluntary efforts, e.g., voluntary
chemical testing and green chemistry efforts as
well as full implementation of Responsible Care - Establish more progressive and consistent
approaches to public policy in this area - Examples EU REACH effort, chemical plant
security legislation, POPs ratification,
chemicals reform