Thursday, the OMB’s Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA0 announced that it had received a final rule from the EPA on “Trichloroethylene (TCE); Regulation Under the Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA)”. The notice of proposed rulemaking was published on October 31st, 2023.
According to the Spring 2024 Unified Agenda Entry for this rulemaking:
“On October 31,
2023, EPA issued a proposed rule to address the unreasonable risk of injury to
human health presented by trichloroethylene (TCE) under its conditions of use
as documented in EPA's November 2020 Risk Evaluation for TCE and January 2023
revised risk determination for TCE pursuant to the Toxic Substances Control Act
(TSCA). TCE is widely used as a solvent in a variety of industrial, commercial
and consumer applications including for hydrofluorocarbon (HFC) production,
vapor and aerosol degreasing, and in lubricants, greases, adhesives, and
sealants. TSCA requires that when EPA determines a chemical substance presents
unreasonable risk that EPA address by rule the unreasonable risk of injury to
health or the environment and apply requirements to the extent necessary so the
chemical no longer presents unreasonable risk. EPA determined that TCE presents
an unreasonable risk of injury to health due to the significant adverse health
effects associated with exposure to TCE, including non-cancer effects (liver
toxicity, kidney toxicity, neurotoxicity, immunotoxicity, reproductive
toxicity, and developmental toxicity) as well as cancer (liver, kidney, and
non-Hodgkin lymphoma) from chronic inhalation and dermal exposures to TCE. TCE
is a neurotoxicant and is carcinogenic to humans by all routes of exposure. The
most sensitive adverse effects of TCE exposure are non-cancer effects
(developmental toxicity and immunosuppression) for acute exposures and
developmental toxicity and autoimmunity for chronic exposures. To address the
identified unreasonable risk, EPA is proposing to: prohibit all manufacture
(including import), processing, and distribution in commerce of TCE and
industrial and commercial use of TCE for all uses, with longer compliance
timeframes and workplace controls for certain processing and industrial and
commercial uses (including proposed phaseouts and time-limited exemptions);
prohibit the disposal of TCE to industrial pre-treatment, industrial treatment,
or publicly owned treatment works, with a time-limited exemption for cleanup
projects; and establish recordkeeping and downstream notification requirements.”
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