EDF Health

Peer reviewers confirm EPA has failed to show Pigment Violet 29 doesn’t present unreasonable risk

Richard Denison, Ph.D., is a Lead Senior Scientist.

Late on Friday, EPA quietly posted the final peer review report of the Scientific Advisory Committee on Chemicals (SACC) for pigment violet 29, the first chemical for which EPA issued a draft risk evaluation under the Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA) as amended in 2016.

No wonder EPA posted it late Friday with no announcement.  The peer reviewers’ report confirms what EDF and others have been saying since release of the draft:  EPA has fallen far short of supporting its sweeping conclusion that the chemical does not present unreasonable risk, including to vulnerable subpopulations.  The report also faults EPA’s use of systematic review, and reiterates that EPA needs to submit its method to the National Academy of Sciences for review.  Read More »

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EPA needs to stop misleading the public and its peer reviewers about the data it has obtained from the European Chemicals Agency

Richard Denison, Ph.D., is a Lead Senior Scientist.

In numerous assessment documents issued by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) developed in its implementation of the Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA), EPA cites as a source the European Chemicals Agency (ECHA).  ECHA is the agency that administers the European Union’s (EU) REACH Regulation, which (unlike TSCA) requires the registration of chemicals in commerce by companies that wish to continue to produce and use the chemicals in the EU.

When companies register chemicals under REACH, they are required to develop and submit a “dossier” of certain information on production and use as well as on physical-chemical properties, fate, hazard, exposures and risks.  ECHA then makes information available on its website.

In its draft risk evaluations for the first 10 chemicals undergoing evaluations under TSCA, as well as in some of its support documents for high-priority substance designations under TSCA, EPA has heavily relied on these dossiers.  But in doing so, EPA has grossly mischaracterized the source and nature of the data it references as coming from ECHA.

EDF has been raising concerns about EPA’s mischaracterizations for some time now (see section 1.E of our comments on EPA’s draft risk evaluation for 1,4-dioxane), but they persist.  And as recently as yesterday, members of the peer review panel reviewing EPA’s draft documents have been led by EPA statements and citations to assume a degree of completeness and government review of these data that is simply false.

EPA needs to immediately cease and desist in its mischaracterizations.  Read More »

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Pruitt’s EPA plans to systematically deconstruct the expanded authority a bipartisan Congress gave it less than two years ago

Richard Denison, Ph.D., is a Lead Senior Scientist.

EDF has learned from sources across the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) that its political appointees are taking steps to systematically dismantle the agency’s ability to conduct broad risk reviews of chemicals and effectively address identified risks under the Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA).

The assault is taking the form of methodically excising from the scopes of the agency’s chemical reviews any uses of, or exposures to, chemicals that fall under TSCA’s jurisdiction, if those uses or exposures also touch on the jurisdiction of another office at EPA or another Federal agency.[pullquote]The Pruitt EPA’s attempt to atomize the evaluation of chemical risks has one purpose:  to make it far less likely that risks needing to be controlled will be identified.  If each activity that leads to a chemical exposure is looked at in isolation, it will be far more likely that such activity will be deemed safe.[/pullquote]

Under the Lautenberg Act’s 2016 amendments to TSCA, Congress directed EPA to identify the first 10 chemicals to undergo risk evaluations; EPA did so in December 2016.  After the transition to the new Administration, EPA scrambled to produce documents that set forth the “scopes” of those evaluations in order to meet the law’s deadline of June 2017; EPA acknowledged, however, that its scope documents were rushed and incomplete, and promised to update them in the form of so-called “problem formulations” that would be issued within six months.  Those documents are now months late.

We now are learning why:  Political appointees at EPA are engaged in an intra-agency process intended to dramatically narrow the scopes of those first 10 reviews.  They are seeking to shed from those reviews any use of or exposure to a chemical that touches on another office’s jurisdiction, apparently regardless of whether or what action has been or can or will be taken by that office to identify, assess or address the relevant potential risks of that chemical.  Reports indicate that leadership in some offices are welcoming this move, while others are resisting it.   Read More »

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Systematic slowdown: EPA indefinitely delays virtually all proposed actions to restrict chemicals under TSCA

Richard Denison, Ph.D., is a Lead Senior Scientist.  My colleague Ryan O’Connell assisted in the research described in this post.

By the time the long-awaited reforms of the Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA) passed in June of 2016, nearly all stakeholders had come to agree that we needed a stronger federal chemical safety system, one that gave EPA more authority and more resources to act.  Only through this could public confidence in the system begin to be restored – to the benefit of both business and public health.

That was then.  A scant 18 months later, the law is being implemented by an Administration hell-bent on rolling back existing or indefinitely delaying new health protections, even those called for by large bipartisan majorities in Congress.  And the chemical industry?  So much for the influence of its better angels who supported reform.  It’s now going for broke, grabbing what it can while it can.[pullquote]Virtually every proposed action that would impose restrictions or conditions on specific chemicals has been either moved to the “long-term action” attic or simply deleted altogether.[/pullquote]

Yesterday, the New York Times and The Intercept ran stories spotlighting EPA’s decision to back-burner proposed restrictions on high-risk uses of three highly toxic chemicals – trichloroethylene (TCE), methylene chloride (MC), and N-methylpyrrolidone (NMP) – relegating them to the bureaucratic dustbin of “long-term actions.”  Not coincidentally, the chemical industry has strongly opposed all of the proposed restrictions.

But those aren’t the only proposed actions on chemicals for which this EPA has applied the brakes.  An examination of EPA’s two most recent semi-annual “unified agendas” – that trumpeted by the President last week, and the preceding one issued this past April – reveals a much broader and more disturbing pattern:  Virtually every proposed action that would impose restrictions or conditions on specific chemicals has been either moved to the “long-term action” attic or simply deleted altogether.   Read More »

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Industry-requested risk evaluation for D4 under TSCA: EPA has improved its scoping approach, but must go further

Lauren Ellis, Research Analyst, Environmental Health

Earlier this week, EDF submitted comments to EPA on the agency’s draft scope for the manufacturer-requested risk evaluation of D4 under the Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA). This is EPA’s first draft scope under the Biden Administration – providing an opportunity to see where improvements have been made and where challenges still exist (see EDF’s and others’ comments on the last set of draft scopes under the Trump Administration).

In our comments, we applaud the agency for developing a more comprehensive chemical risk evaluation plan than EPA provided in past scopes. For instance, in its draft scope document, EPA indicated its intent to assess exposure occurring via environmental release to capture fenceline exposures – a necessary step toward addressing environmental justice considerations under TSCA. EPA also indicated it would not assume the use of personal protective equipment (PPE) when evaluating and making determinations on potential risks to workers – a highly problematic approach taken in the past. However, the draft D4 scope also revealed areas still needing further improvement, including greater detail on how the agency will approach differential risks across the population and address combined exposures from different sources.

Last year, the Silicones Environmental, Health and Safety Center (SEHSC), on behalf of Dow Silicones Corporation, Elkem Silicones USA Corporation, Evonik Corporation, Momentive Performance Materials, Shin-Etsu Silicones of America, Inc., and Wacker Chemical Corporation, asked EPA to evaluate D4, or octamethylcyclotetrasiloxane, under TSCA’s provisions governing manufacturer-requested risk evaluations. In October 2020, EPA granted that request. Critically, when conducting manufacturer-requested risk evaluations, EPA must adhere to the same requirements under TSCA as EPA-initiated risk evaluations, including consideration of all reasonably available information and use of the best available science.

D4 is a high production cyclic siloxane chemical, with an annual U.S. production volume of 750 million to 1 billion pounds. It has widespread industrial, commercial, and consumer uses, including as a reactant to make other silicone chemicals; in adhesives, paints, and plastic products; and in food packaging, personal care products (e.g., hair, skin, and nail products), over-the-counter medications (e.g., anti-gas drugs), and medical devices (e.g., breast implants).

D4 hazard, exposure, and risk has been considered by the Government of Canada and the European Chemicals Agency, among others. In 2009, a Health Canada screening assessment concluded that D4 is harmful to the environment and its biodiversity. In Europe, D4 is currently restricted in wash-off cosmetics (concentration limit of 0.1 % w/w); and recently, the European Chemicals Agency proposed further restrictions on D4 in other consumer and commercial uses due to potential risk. Notably, here in the U.S., EPA has received 39 separate “substantial risk reports” on D4 under TSCA Section 8(e), highlighting health concerns such as reproductive toxicity and immunotoxicity. Given the results of previous risk assessments on D4, and the significant number of risk reports provided to the agency, EPA must comprehensively assess the potential risk of D4 in all relevant uses to best protect public health.

Despite EPA’s movement toward a more comprehensive, public health protective approach to risk evaluation (see EDF’s Re-visioning TSCA after the Trump years blog series), the draft D4 scope highlights significant issues that remain, including:

  • Insufficient indication of specific “potentially exposed and susceptible subpopulations” that will be included in the risk evaluation;
  • Absence of a revised systematic review method and a specific systematic review protocol for D4;
  • Inadequate plan to use information authorities under TSCA to fill the extensive data gaps identified;
  • Failure to consider combined exposures to D4 in the workplace (e.g., when a worker is engaged in multiple activities involving potential exposure to D4);
  • Failure to consider combined exposures to individuals who fall into multiple receptor categories (e.g., individuals exposed to D4 in both the workplace and as resident of a fenceline community);
  • Insufficient commitment to consider relevant “background exposures” of D4 that may fall outside of TSCA’s direct regulatory authority but are relevant to evaluating risks from “TSCA uses” (e.g., exposures from food packaging, personal care products, and medical applications); and
  • Insufficient detail on how EPA plans to assess and incorporate uncertainty associated with the use of modeled or surrogate data when evaluating potential D4 risk.

EDF commends EPA for improvements made from previous scopes, and urges the agency to address the identified deficiencies in the final D4 scope.

See EDF’s comments for more detail.

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Getting chemical safety back on track 5 years after TSCA reform

Five years ago, President Obama signed into law the Lautenberg Chemical Safety for the 21st Century Act, which overhauled the country’s chemical safety law to better protect people from toxic chemicals.

In a welcome change to the dismal Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA) reform anniversaries during the Trump administration, this year we are able to highlight some signs of progress we have seen from the Biden EPA that are getting chemical safety back on track.

Though significant challenges remain and lots of work lies ahead to repair the damage done by the former administration and advance a broader vision of health protection for everyone, here are five ways the Biden administration has started to turn things around on chemical safety:

1. Naming leaders committed to scientific integrity and public health protection

With Michael Regan at the helm of EPA, the agency is already miles ahead of where it stood in the last administration. The critical position for overseeing TSCA implementation at EPA is the leader of the Office of Chemical Safety and Pollution Prevention. Fortunately, a chemist with deep experience on TSCA and other chemical issues from her time on Capitol Hill, Dr. Michal Freedhoff, has been confirmed for the role.

Both Regan and Freedhoff have made strong statements supporting a return to scientific integrity and transparency – which are critical needs to building back trust. Dr. Freedhoff specifically cited how the Trump White House forced EPA scientists to weaken their assessment of the dangerous chemical trichloroethylene, an egregious example of political interference in science-based decision-making.

Read More »

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