Request for Applications for Essential Use Exemptions to the Production and Import Phaseout of Ozone Depleting Substances Under the Montreal Protocol for the Years 2007 and 2008, 70071-70073 [05-22890]
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 223 / Monday, November 21, 2005 / Notices
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
90, Oak Ridge, TN 37831, or by calling
her at (865) 576–4025.
Environmental Management SiteSpecific Advisory Board, Oak Ridge
Reservation
Issued at Washington, DC, on November
15, 2005.
Carol Matthews,
Acting Advisory Committee Management
Officer.
[FR Doc. 05–23005 Filed 11–18–05; 8:45 am]
Department of Energy.
Notice of open meeting.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
SUMMARY: This notice announces a
meeting of the Environmental
Management Site-Specific Advisory
Board (EMSSAB), Oak Ridge
Reservation. The Federal Advisory
Committee Act (Pub. L. 92–463, 86 Stat.
770) requires that public notice of this
meeting be announced in the Federal
Register.
DATES:
Wednesday, December 14, 2005,
BILLING CODE 6450–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Office of Energy Efficiency and
Renewable Energy
Biomass Research and Development
Technical Advisory Committee
Department of Energy.
Notice of open meeting.
6 p.m.
AGENCY:
DOE Information Center,
475 Oak Ridge Turnpike, Oak Ridge,
Tennessee.
ACTION:
ADDRESSES:
Pat
Halsey, Federal Coordinator,
Department of Energy Oak Ridge
Operations Office, P.O. Box 2001, EM–
90, Oak Ridge, TN 37831. Phone (865)
576–4025; Fax (865) 576–5333 or e-mail:
halseypj@oro.doe.gov or check the Web
site at www.oakridge.doe.gov/em/ssab.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Purpose of
the Board: The purpose of the Board is
to make recommendations to DOE in the
areas of environmental restoration,
waste management, and related
activities.
Tentative Agenda: Oak Ridge
Reservation Planning—Integrating
Multiple Land Uses
Public Participation: The meeting is
open to the public. Written statements
may be filed with the Board either
before or after the meeting. Individuals
who wish to make oral statements
pertaining to the agenda item should
contact Pat Halsey at the address or
telephone number listed above.
Requests must be received five days
prior to the meeting and reasonable
provision will be made to include the
presentation in the agenda. The Deputy
Designated Federal Officer is
empowered to conduct the meeting in a
fashion that will facilitate the orderly
conduct of business. Individuals
wishing to make public comment will
be provided a maximum of five minutes
to present their comments.
Minutes: Minutes of this meeting will
be available for public review and
copying at the Department of Energy’s
Information Center at 475 Oak Ridge
Turnpike, Oak Ridge, TN between 8
a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday through
Friday, or by writing to Pat Halsey,
Department of Energy Oak Ridge
Operations Office, P.O. Box 2001, EM–
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
VerDate Aug<31>2005
15:51 Nov 18, 2005
Jkt 208001
SUMMARY: This notice announces an
open meeting of the Biomass Research
and Development Technical Advisory
Committee under the Biomass Research
and Development Act of 2000. The
Federal Advisory Committee Act (Pub.
L. 92–463, 86 Stat. 770) requires that
agencies publish these notices in the
Federal Register to allow for public
participation.
November 29th, 2005 at 8 a.m.,
November 30th, 2005 at 9:30 a.m.
ADDRESSES: Washington Marriott Hotel,
Ballrooms A&B, 1221 22nd Street, NW.,
Washington, DC 20037.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Neil
Rossmeissl, Designated Federal Officer
for the Committee, Office of Energy
Efficiency and Renewable Energy, U.S.
Department of Energy, 1000
Independence Avenue, SW.,
Washington, DC 20585; (202) 586–8668
or Harriet Foster at (202) 586–4541; Email: harriet.foster@ee.doe.gov
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Purpose of
Meeting: To provide advice and
guidance that promotes research and
development leading to promoting the
use of bio-based fuels and bio-based
products.
Tentative Agenda: Agenda will
include discussions on the following:
• Discussion of recommendations
towards updating the Biomass Vision
and Roadmap.
• Discussion of Annual
Recommendations to the Secretaries of
Agriculture and Energy.
• Joint meeting with Interagency
Biomass R&D Board.
• Discussion of 2005 and 2006
Committee Work Plans.
• Establishment of subcommittees.
Public Participation: In keeping with
procedures, members of the public are
welcome to observe the business of the
DATES:
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Fmt 4703
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70071
Biomass Research and Development
Technical Advisory Committee. To
attend the meeting and/or to make oral
statements regarding any of the items on
the agenda, you should contact Neil
Rossmeissl at 202–586–8668 or the
Biomass Initiative at 202–586–4541 or
harriet.foster@ee.doe.gov (e-mail). You
must make your request for an oral
statement at least 5 business days before
the meeting. Members of the public will
be heard in the order in which they sign
up at the beginning of the meeting.
Reasonable provision will be made to
include the scheduled oral statements
on the agenda. The Chair of the
Committee will make every effort to
hear the views of all interested parties.
If you would like to file a written
statement with the Committee, you may
do so either before or after the meeting.
The Chair will conduct the meeting to
facilitate the orderly conduct of
business.
Minutes: The minutes of the meeting
will be available for public review and
copying at the Freedom of Information
Public Reading Room; Room 1E–190;
Forrestal Building; 1000 Independence
Avenue, SW., Washington, DC, between
9 a.m. and 4 p.m., Monday through
Friday, except Federal holidays.
Issued at Washington, DC, on November
15, 2005.
Carol Matthews,
Acting Advisory Committee Management
Officer.
[FR Doc. 05–23004 Filed 11–18–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450–01–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
[FRL–7998–6]
Request for Applications for Essential
Use Exemptions to the Production and
Import Phaseout of Ozone Depleting
Substances Under the Montreal
Protocol for the Years 2007 and 2008
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: Through this action, the
Environmental Protection Agency is
requesting applications for essential use
allowances for calendar years 2007 and
2008. Essential use allowances provide
exemptions to the production and
import phaseout of ozone-depleting
substances and must be authorized by
the Parties to the Montreal Protocol on
Substances that Deplete the Ozone
Layer. The U.S. Government will use
the applications received in response to
this notice as the basis for its
E:\FR\FM\21NON1.SGM
21NON1
70072
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 223 / Monday, November 21, 2005 / Notices
nomination of essential use allowances
at the Eighteenth Meeting of the Parties
to the Montreal Protocol on substances
that Deplete the Ozone Layer (the
Protocol), to be held in 2006.
DATES: Applications for essential use
exemptions must be submitted to EPA
no later than December 21, 2005 in
order for the U.S. Government to
complete its review and to submit
nominations to the United Nations
Environment Programme and the
Protocol Parties in a timely manner.
ADDRESSES: Send two copies of
application materials to: Hodayah
Finman, Stratospheric Protection
Division (6205J), U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, 1200 Pennsylvania
Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 20460.
For applications sent via courier service,
use the following direct mailing
address: 1310 L Street, NW.,
Washington, DC 20005, room 827M.
Confidentiality: Application materials
that are confidential should be
submitted under separate cover and be
clearly identified as ‘‘trade secret,’’
‘‘proprietary,’’ or ‘‘company
confidential.’’ Information covered by a
claim of business confidentiality will be
treated in accordance with the
procedures for handling information
claimed as confidential under 40 CFR
part 2, subpart B, and will be disclosed
only to the extent, and by means of the
procedures, set forth in that subpart.
Please note that data will be presented
in aggregate form by the United States
as part of the nomination to the Parties.
If no claim of confidentiality
accompanies the information when it is
received by EPA, the information may
be made available to the public by EPA
without further notice to the company
(40 CFR 2.203).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Hodayah Finman at the above address,
or by telephone at (202) 343–9246, by
fax at (202) 343–2337, or by e-mail at
finman.hodayah@epa.gov. General
information may be obtained from
EPA’s stratospheric protection Web site
at https://www.epa.gov/ozone.
Table of Contents
I. Background on the Essential Use
Nomination Process
II. Information Required for Essential Use
Applications for Production or
Importation of Class I Substances in 2007
and 2008
I. Background—The Essential Use
Nomination Process
As described in previous Federal
Register (FR) documents,1 the Parties to
1 58 FR 29410, May 20, 1993; 59 FR 52544,
October 18, 1994; 60 FR 54349, October 23, 1995;
VerDate Aug<31>2005
15:51 Nov 18, 2005
Jkt 208001
the Protocol agreed during the Fourth
Meeting in Copenhagen on November
23–25, 1992, to accelerate the phaseout
schedules for Class I ozone-depleting
substances. Specifically, the Parties
agreed that non-Article 5 Parties (that is,
developed countries) would phase out
the production and consumption of
halons by January 1, 1994, and the
production and consumption of other
class I substances (under 40 CFR part
82, subpart A), except methyl bromide,
by January 1, 1996. The Parties also
reached decisions and adopted
resolutions on a variety of other matters,
including the criteria to be used for
allowing ‘‘essential use’’ exemptions
from the phaseout of production and
importation of controlled substances.
Decision IV/25 of the Fourth Meeting of
the Parties details the specific criteria
and review process for granting
essential use exemptions.
Decision IV/25 states that ‘‘* * * a
use of a controlled substance should
qualify as ‘essential’ only if: (i) It is
necessary for the health, safety or is
critical for the functioning of society
(encompassing cultural and intellectual
aspects); and (ii) there are no available
technically and economically feasible
alternatives or substitutes that are
acceptable from the standpoint of
environment and health.’’ In addition,
the Parties agreed ‘‘that production and
consumption, if any, of a controlled
substance, for essential uses should be
permitted only if: (i) All economically
feasible steps have been taken to
minimize the essential use and any
associated emission of the controlled
substance; and (ii) the controlled
substance is not available in sufficient
quantity and quality from the existing
stocks of banked or recycled controlled
substances * * * ’’ Decision XII/2 taken
at the twelfth meeting of the Parties
states that any CFC metered dose
inhaler (MDI) product approved after
December 31, 2000, is nonessential
unless the product meets the criteria in
Decision IV/25 paragraph 1(a).
The first step in obtaining essential
use allowances is for the user to
consider whether the use of the
controlled substance meets the criteria
of Decision IV/25. If the essential use
request is for an MDI product, the user
should also consider whether the
product meets the criteria of Decision
XII/2.
In addition, the user should consult a
recent final rule promulgated by the
Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
61 FR 51110, October 30, 1996, 62 FR 51655,
October 2, 1997; 63 FR 42629, August 10, 1998; 64
FR 50083, September 15, 1999; 65 FR 65377,
November 1, 2000; and 2001 66 FR 56102,
November 6, 2001.
PO 00000
Frm 00016
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
(70 FR 17168). That rule, published
April 4, 2005, finalized action by FDA
to remove the essential use designation
for albuterol metered-dose inhalers
(MDIs) effective December 31, 2008.
Albuterol MDIs containing ozone
depleting substances (ODS) may not be
marketed after that effective date. Users
may wish to consider the impact that
action has on their need for essential
use CFCs in 2007 and 2008.
Users should send a completed
application to EPA on the candidate use
and provide information for U.S.
government agencies and the Protocol
Parties to evaluate the candidate use
according to the criteria in the decisions
noted above.
Upon receipt of the essential use
exemption application, EPA reviews the
information provided and works with
other interested Federal agencies to
determine whether it meets the essential
use criteria and warrants being
nominated by the United States for an
exemption. In the case of multiple
exemption requests for a single use such
as for MDIs, EPA aggregates exemption
requests received from individual
entities into a single U.S. request. An
important part of the EPA review of
requests for CFCs for MDIs is to
determine that the aggregate request for
a particular future year adequately
reflects the total market need for CFC
MDIs and expected availability of CFC
substitutes by that point in time. If the
sum of individual requests does not
account for such factors, the U.S.
government may adjust the aggregate
request to better reflect true market
needs.
Nominations submitted by the United
States and other Parties are forwarded
from the United Nations Ozone
Secretariat to the Montreal Protocol’s
Technical and Economic Assessment
Panel (TEAP) and its Technical Options
Committees (TOCs), which review the
submissions and make
recommendations to the Protocol Parties
for essential use exemptions. Those
recommendations are then considered
by the Parties at their annual meeting
for final decision. If the Parties declare
a specified use of a controlled substance
as essential, and issue the necessary
exemption from the production and
consumption phaseout, EPA may
propose regulatory changes to reflect the
decisions by the Parties, but only to the
extent such action is consistent with the
Clean Air Act (CAA or Act). Applicants
should be aware that essential use
exemptions granted to the United States
under the Protocol in recent years have
been limited to chlorofluorocarbons
(CFCs) for metered dose inhalers (MDIs)
to treat asthma and chronic obstructive
E:\FR\FM\21NON1.SGM
21NON1
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 223 / Monday, November 21, 2005 / Notices
pulmonary disease, and methyl
chloroform for use in manufacturing
solid rocket motors.
The timing of this process is typically
such that in any given year the Parties
review nominations for essential use
exemptions from the production and
consumption phaseout intended for the
following year and subsequent years.
This means that, if nominated,
applications submitted in response to
today’s notice for an exemption in 2007
and 2008 may be considered by the
Parties in 2006 for final action. The
quantities of controlled ODSs that are
requested in response to this notice, if
approved by the Parties to the Montreal
Protocol, will then be allocated as
essential use allowances (EUAs) to the
specific U.S. companies through notice
and comment rulemaking, to the extent
that such allocations are consistent with
the CAA.
II. Information Required for Essential
Use Applications for Production or
Importation of Class I Substances in
2007 and 2008
Through this action, EPA requests
applications for essential use
exemptions for all class I substances,
except methyl bromide, for calendar
years 2007 and 2008. This notice is the
last opportunity to submit new or
revised applications for 2007. This
notice is also the first opportunity to
submit requests for 2008. Companies
will have an opportunity to submit new,
supplemental, or amended applications
for 2008 next year. All requests for
exemptions submitted to EPA must
present information as prescribed in the
current version of the TEAP ‘‘Handbook
on Essential Use Nominations’’ (or
‘‘handbook’’), which was published in
June 2001. The handbook is available
electronically on the Web at https://
www.teap.org or at https://www.epa.gov/
ozone.
In brief, the TEAP Handbook states
that applicants must present
information on:
• Role of use in society;
• Alternatives to use;
• Steps to minimize use;
• Steps to minimize emissions;
• Recycling and stockpiling;
• Quantity of controlled substances
requested; and
• Approval date and indications (for
MDIs).
First, in order to obtain complete
information from essential use
applicants for CFC MDIs, EPA requires
that entities (such as the International
Pharmaceutical Aerosol Consortium)
who request CFCs for multiple
pharmaceutical companies make clear
the amount of CFCs requested for each
VerDate Aug<31>2005
15:51 Nov 18, 2005
Jkt 208001
member company. Second, all essential
use applications for CFCs must provide
a breakdown of the quantity of CFCs
necessary for each MDI product to be
produced. This detailed breakdown of
EUAs will allow EPA and the Food and
Drug Administration to make informed
decisions on the amount of CFC to be
nominated by the U.S. Government for
the years 2007 and 2008. Third, all new
drug application (NDA) holders for CFC
MDI products produced in the United
States must submit a complete
application for essential use allowances
either on their own or in conjunction
with their contract filler. In the case
where a contract filler produces a
portion of an NDA holder’s CFC MDIs,
the contract filler and the NDA holder
must determine the total amount of
CFCs necessary to produce the NDA
holder’s entire product line of CFC
MDIs. The NDA holder must provide an
estimate of how the CFCs would be split
between the contract filler and the NDA
holder in the allocation year. This
estimate will be used only as a basis for
determining the nomination amount,
and may be adjusted prior to allocation
of EUAs. Since the U.S. Government
does not forward incomplete or
inadequate nominations to the Ozone
Secretariat, it is important for applicants
to provide all information requested in
the Handbook, including the
information specified in the
supplemental research and development
form (page 45).
The accounting framework matrix in
the handbook entitled ‘‘Table IV:
Reporting Accounting Framework for
Essential Uses Other Than Laboratory
and Analytical’’ requests data for the
year 2005 on the amount of ODS
exempted for an essential use, the
amount acquired by production, the
amount acquired by import, the amount
on hand at the start of the year, the
amount available for use in 2005, the
amount used for the essential use, the
quantity contained in exported
products, the amount destroyed, and the
amount on hand at the end of 2005.
Because all data necessary for
applicants to complete Table IV will not
be available until after January 1, 2006,
companies should not include this chart
with their EUA applications in response
to this action. Instead, companies
should provide the required data as
specified in 40 CFR 82.13(u)(2). EPA
will compile companies’ responses to
complete the U.S. CFC Accounting
Framework for submission to the Parties
to the Montreal Protocol by the end of
January.
EPA anticipates that the Parties’
review of MDI essential use requests
will focus extensively on the United
PO 00000
Frm 00017
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
70073
States’ progress in developing
alternatives to CFC MDIs, including
education programs to inform patients
and health care providers of the CFC
phaseout and the transition to
alternatives, particularly in the case of
albuterol MDIs where a phaseout date
has been set by the FDA. Accordingly,
applicants are strongly advised to
present detailed information on these
points, including the scope and cost of
such efforts and the medical and patient
organizations involved in the work.
Applicants should submit their
exemption requests to EPA as noted in
the ADDRESSES section at the beginning
of today’s document.
Dated: November 14, 2005.
Edward Callahan,
Acting Director, Office of Air and Radiation.
[FR Doc. 05–22890 Filed 11–18–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
[AMS–FRL–7998–9]
California State Motor Vehicle
Pollution Control Standards; Within
the Scope Requests; Opportunity for
Public Hearing and Comment
Environmental Protection
Agency, (EPA).
ACTION: Notice of opportunity for public
hearing and public comment.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The California Air Resources
Board (CARB) has notified EPA that it
has approved amendments to its onhighway motorcycle and motorcycle
engine for 2004 and subsequent model
years. CARB requests that EPA confirm
CARB’s findings that its amendments
are within-the-scope of previous
waivers issued by EPA under section
209(b) of the Clean Air Act (Act), 42
U.S.C. 7543(b).
DATES: EPA has tentatively scheduled a
public hearing for December 27, 2005,
2005 beginning at 10 a.m. EPA will hold
a hearing only if a party notifies EPA by
December 12, 2005, expressing its
interest in presenting oral testimony
regarding CARB’s requests or other
issues noted in this notice. By December
16, 2005, any person who plans to
attend the hearing should call David
Dickinson of EPA’s Compliance and
Innovative Strategies Division at (202)
343–9256 to learn if a hearing will be
held. Any party may submit written
comments by January 30, 2006.
ADDRESSES: EPA will make available for
public inspection at the Air and
Radiation Docket written comments
received from interested parties, in
E:\FR\FM\21NON1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 70, Number 223 (Monday, November 21, 2005)]
[Notices]
[Pages 70071-70073]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 05-22890]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
[FRL-7998-6]
Request for Applications for Essential Use Exemptions to the
Production and Import Phaseout of Ozone Depleting Substances Under the
Montreal Protocol for the Years 2007 and 2008
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: Through this action, the Environmental Protection Agency is
requesting applications for essential use allowances for calendar years
2007 and 2008. Essential use allowances provide exemptions to the
production and import phaseout of ozone-depleting substances and must
be authorized by the Parties to the Montreal Protocol on Substances
that Deplete the Ozone Layer. The U.S. Government will use the
applications received in response to this notice as the basis for its
[[Page 70072]]
nomination of essential use allowances at the Eighteenth Meeting of the
Parties to the Montreal Protocol on substances that Deplete the Ozone
Layer (the Protocol), to be held in 2006.
DATES: Applications for essential use exemptions must be submitted to
EPA no later than December 21, 2005 in order for the U.S. Government to
complete its review and to submit nominations to the United Nations
Environment Programme and the Protocol Parties in a timely manner.
ADDRESSES: Send two copies of application materials to: Hodayah Finman,
Stratospheric Protection Division (6205J), U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, 1200 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 20460.
For applications sent via courier service, use the following direct
mailing address: 1310 L Street, NW., Washington, DC 20005, room 827M.
Confidentiality: Application materials that are confidential should
be submitted under separate cover and be clearly identified as ``trade
secret,'' ``proprietary,'' or ``company confidential.'' Information
covered by a claim of business confidentiality will be treated in
accordance with the procedures for handling information claimed as
confidential under 40 CFR part 2, subpart B, and will be disclosed only
to the extent, and by means of the procedures, set forth in that
subpart. Please note that data will be presented in aggregate form by
the United States as part of the nomination to the Parties. If no claim
of confidentiality accompanies the information when it is received by
EPA, the information may be made available to the public by EPA without
further notice to the company (40 CFR 2.203).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Hodayah Finman at the above address,
or by telephone at (202) 343-9246, by fax at (202) 343-2337, or by e-
mail at finman.hodayah@epa.gov. General information may be obtained
from EPA's stratospheric protection Web site at https://www.epa.gov/
ozone.
Table of Contents
I. Background on the Essential Use Nomination Process
II. Information Required for Essential Use Applications for
Production or Importation of Class I Substances in 2007 and 2008
I. Background--The Essential Use Nomination Process
As described in previous Federal Register (FR) documents,\1\ the
Parties to the Protocol agreed during the Fourth Meeting in Copenhagen
on November 23-25, 1992, to accelerate the phaseout schedules for Class
I ozone-depleting substances. Specifically, the Parties agreed that
non-Article 5 Parties (that is, developed countries) would phase out
the production and consumption of halons by January 1, 1994, and the
production and consumption of other class I substances (under 40 CFR
part 82, subpart A), except methyl bromide, by January 1, 1996. The
Parties also reached decisions and adopted resolutions on a variety of
other matters, including the criteria to be used for allowing
``essential use'' exemptions from the phaseout of production and
importation of controlled substances. Decision IV/25 of the Fourth
Meeting of the Parties details the specific criteria and review process
for granting essential use exemptions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 58 FR 29410, May 20, 1993; 59 FR 52544, October 18, 1994; 60
FR 54349, October 23, 1995; 61 FR 51110, October 30, 1996, 62 FR
51655, October 2, 1997; 63 FR 42629, August 10, 1998; 64 FR 50083,
September 15, 1999; 65 FR 65377, November 1, 2000; and 2001 66 FR
56102, November 6, 2001.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Decision IV/25 states that ``* * * a use of a controlled substance
should qualify as `essential' only if: (i) It is necessary for the
health, safety or is critical for the functioning of society
(encompassing cultural and intellectual aspects); and (ii) there are no
available technically and economically feasible alternatives or
substitutes that are acceptable from the standpoint of environment and
health.'' In addition, the Parties agreed ``that production and
consumption, if any, of a controlled substance, for essential uses
should be permitted only if: (i) All economically feasible steps have
been taken to minimize the essential use and any associated emission of
the controlled substance; and (ii) the controlled substance is not
available in sufficient quantity and quality from the existing stocks
of banked or recycled controlled substances * * * '' Decision XII/2
taken at the twelfth meeting of the Parties states that any CFC metered
dose inhaler (MDI) product approved after December 31, 2000, is
nonessential unless the product meets the criteria in Decision IV/25
paragraph 1(a).
The first step in obtaining essential use allowances is for the
user to consider whether the use of the controlled substance meets the
criteria of Decision IV/25. If the essential use request is for an MDI
product, the user should also consider whether the product meets the
criteria of Decision XII/2.
In addition, the user should consult a recent final rule
promulgated by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) (70 FR 17168).
That rule, published April 4, 2005, finalized action by FDA to remove
the essential use designation for albuterol metered-dose inhalers
(MDIs) effective December 31, 2008. Albuterol MDIs containing ozone
depleting substances (ODS) may not be marketed after that effective
date. Users may wish to consider the impact that action has on their
need for essential use CFCs in 2007 and 2008.
Users should send a completed application to EPA on the candidate
use and provide information for U.S. government agencies and the
Protocol Parties to evaluate the candidate use according to the
criteria in the decisions noted above.
Upon receipt of the essential use exemption application, EPA
reviews the information provided and works with other interested
Federal agencies to determine whether it meets the essential use
criteria and warrants being nominated by the United States for an
exemption. In the case of multiple exemption requests for a single use
such as for MDIs, EPA aggregates exemption requests received from
individual entities into a single U.S. request. An important part of
the EPA review of requests for CFCs for MDIs is to determine that the
aggregate request for a particular future year adequately reflects the
total market need for CFC MDIs and expected availability of CFC
substitutes by that point in time. If the sum of individual requests
does not account for such factors, the U.S. government may adjust the
aggregate request to better reflect true market needs.
Nominations submitted by the United States and other Parties are
forwarded from the United Nations Ozone Secretariat to the Montreal
Protocol's Technical and Economic Assessment Panel (TEAP) and its
Technical Options Committees (TOCs), which review the submissions and
make recommendations to the Protocol Parties for essential use
exemptions. Those recommendations are then considered by the Parties at
their annual meeting for final decision. If the Parties declare a
specified use of a controlled substance as essential, and issue the
necessary exemption from the production and consumption phaseout, EPA
may propose regulatory changes to reflect the decisions by the Parties,
but only to the extent such action is consistent with the Clean Air Act
(CAA or Act). Applicants should be aware that essential use exemptions
granted to the United States under the Protocol in recent years have
been limited to chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) for metered dose inhalers
(MDIs) to treat asthma and chronic obstructive
[[Page 70073]]
pulmonary disease, and methyl chloroform for use in manufacturing solid
rocket motors.
The timing of this process is typically such that in any given year
the Parties review nominations for essential use exemptions from the
production and consumption phaseout intended for the following year and
subsequent years. This means that, if nominated, applications submitted
in response to today's notice for an exemption in 2007 and 2008 may be
considered by the Parties in 2006 for final action. The quantities of
controlled ODSs that are requested in response to this notice, if
approved by the Parties to the Montreal Protocol, will then be
allocated as essential use allowances (EUAs) to the specific U.S.
companies through notice and comment rulemaking, to the extent that
such allocations are consistent with the CAA.
II. Information Required for Essential Use Applications for Production
or Importation of Class I Substances in 2007 and 2008
Through this action, EPA requests applications for essential use
exemptions for all class I substances, except methyl bromide, for
calendar years 2007 and 2008. This notice is the last opportunity to
submit new or revised applications for 2007. This notice is also the
first opportunity to submit requests for 2008. Companies will have an
opportunity to submit new, supplemental, or amended applications for
2008 next year. All requests for exemptions submitted to EPA must
present information as prescribed in the current version of the TEAP
``Handbook on Essential Use Nominations'' (or ``handbook''), which was
published in June 2001. The handbook is available electronically on the
Web at https://www.teap.org or at https://www.epa.gov/ozone.
In brief, the TEAP Handbook states that applicants must present
information on:
Role of use in society;
Alternatives to use;
Steps to minimize use;
Steps to minimize emissions;
Recycling and stockpiling;
Quantity of controlled substances requested; and
Approval date and indications (for MDIs).
First, in order to obtain complete information from essential use
applicants for CFC MDIs, EPA requires that entities (such as the
International Pharmaceutical Aerosol Consortium) who request CFCs for
multiple pharmaceutical companies make clear the amount of CFCs
requested for each member company. Second, all essential use
applications for CFCs must provide a breakdown of the quantity of CFCs
necessary for each MDI product to be produced. This detailed breakdown
of EUAs will allow EPA and the Food and Drug Administration to make
informed decisions on the amount of CFC to be nominated by the U.S.
Government for the years 2007 and 2008. Third, all new drug application
(NDA) holders for CFC MDI products produced in the United States must
submit a complete application for essential use allowances either on
their own or in conjunction with their contract filler. In the case
where a contract filler produces a portion of an NDA holder's CFC MDIs,
the contract filler and the NDA holder must determine the total amount
of CFCs necessary to produce the NDA holder's entire product line of
CFC MDIs. The NDA holder must provide an estimate of how the CFCs would
be split between the contract filler and the NDA holder in the
allocation year. This estimate will be used only as a basis for
determining the nomination amount, and may be adjusted prior to
allocation of EUAs. Since the U.S. Government does not forward
incomplete or inadequate nominations to the Ozone Secretariat, it is
important for applicants to provide all information requested in the
Handbook, including the information specified in the supplemental
research and development form (page 45).
The accounting framework matrix in the handbook entitled ``Table
IV: Reporting Accounting Framework for Essential Uses Other Than
Laboratory and Analytical'' requests data for the year 2005 on the
amount of ODS exempted for an essential use, the amount acquired by
production, the amount acquired by import, the amount on hand at the
start of the year, the amount available for use in 2005, the amount
used for the essential use, the quantity contained in exported
products, the amount destroyed, and the amount on hand at the end of
2005. Because all data necessary for applicants to complete Table IV
will not be available until after January 1, 2006, companies should not
include this chart with their EUA applications in response to this
action. Instead, companies should provide the required data as
specified in 40 CFR 82.13(u)(2). EPA will compile companies' responses
to complete the U.S. CFC Accounting Framework for submission to the
Parties to the Montreal Protocol by the end of January.
EPA anticipates that the Parties' review of MDI essential use
requests will focus extensively on the United States' progress in
developing alternatives to CFC MDIs, including education programs to
inform patients and health care providers of the CFC phaseout and the
transition to alternatives, particularly in the case of albuterol MDIs
where a phaseout date has been set by the FDA. Accordingly, applicants
are strongly advised to present detailed information on these points,
including the scope and cost of such efforts and the medical and
patient organizations involved in the work. Applicants should submit
their exemption requests to EPA as noted in the Addresses section at
the beginning of today's document.
Dated: November 14, 2005.
Edward Callahan,
Acting Director, Office of Air and Radiation.
[FR Doc. 05-22890 Filed 11-18-05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560-50-P