The cost of compliance with the Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA) will soon rise. On February 8, 2018, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) signed off on proposed TSCA user fees. As amended by the Frank Lautenberg Chemical Safety for the 21st Century Act, TSCA authorizes the EPA to levy fees on certain chemical manufacturers, including importers and processors, to “provide a sustainable source of funding to defray resources that are available for implementation of new responsibilities under the amended law.” This column summarizes the proposal and its significance.
Background
Under the TSCA, the EPA is authorized to request payment from manufacturers and processors who: are required to submit information by test rule, test order or enforceable consent agreement (ECA) (TSCA Section 4); submit notification of or information related to intent to manufacture a new chemical or significant new use of a chemical (TSCA Section 5); or manufacture or process a chemical substance that is subject to a risk evaluation, including one conducted at the request of a manufacturer (TSCA Section 6(b)).
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Beginning in fiscal year 2019 (October 1, 2018), the EPA is required to adjust fees every three years to reflect inflation and ensure that fees account for 25% of the EPA’s costs in administering TSCA Sections 4, 5, 6 and 14. The proposed rule reflects the EPA’s implementation of its statutory mandate.
In proposing new TSCA user fees, the EPA recommends amending long-standing user fee regulations governing the review of premanufacture notices (PMN), exemption applications and notices, and significant new use notices (SNUN). The EPA also would require payment for the following TSCA Section 5 notices and exemptions: microbial commercial activity notices (MCAN) and consolidated MCANs, test marketing exemptions (TME), low releases and low exposures (LoREX), low volume exemptions (LVE), Tier II, film article exemptions, and TSCA experimental release applications (TERA). After implementation of final TSCA user fees regulations, certain manufacturers and processors would pay a prescribed fee for each notice, exemption application, and data set submitted or chemical substance subject to a risk evaluation for the EPA to recover costs associated with carrying out such work. The EPA also is proposing and taking comments on standards for determining which persons qualify as small business concerns and thus are subject to lower fee payments.
Although the EPA has the authority to collect fees from both manufacturers and processors, the agency proposes focusing fee collection on chemical manufacturers and collecting fees from processors only when they submit a SNUN under Section 5 or when a Section 4 activity is tied to a SNUN submission by a processor. The EPA seeks public comment on this approach.
Table 1 summarizes the proposed fee amounts.