Assignment and Application of the “Unique Identifier” Under TSCA Section 14; Notice of Additional Information and Opportunity To Comment, 5623-5625 [2018-02548]
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Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 27 / Thursday, February 8, 2018 / Notices
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The above-referenced meeting will be
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[FR Doc. 2018–02534 Filed 2–7–18; 8:45 am]
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ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
[EPA–HQ–OPPT–2017–0144; FRL–9972–94]
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Assignment and Application of the
‘‘Unique Identifier’’ Under TSCA
Section 14; Notice of Additional
Information and Opportunity To
Comment
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
Recent amendments to the
Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA)
require EPA to develop a system to
assign a ‘‘unique identifier’’ whenever it
SUMMARY:
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approves a Confidential Business
Information (CBI) claim for the specific
chemical identity of a chemical
substance, to apply this unique
identifier to other information
concerning the same substance, and to
ensure that any nonconfidential
information received by the Agency
identifies the chemical substance using
the unique identifier while the specific
chemical identity of the chemical
substance is protected from disclosure.
EPA previously requested comment on
approaches for assigning and applying
unique identifiers, and has developed
an additional approach on which it now
requests comment.
DATES: EPA will accept written
comments and materials submitted to
the docket on or before March 12, 2018.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments,
identified by docket identification (ID)
number EPA–HQ–OPPT–2017–0144, by
one of the following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the online
instructions for submitting comments.
Do not submit electronically any
information you consider to be
Confidential Business Information (CBI)
or other information whose disclosure is
restricted by statute.
• Mail: Document Control Office
(7407M), Office of Pollution Prevention
and Toxics (OPPT), Environmental
Protection Agency, 1200 Pennsylvania
Ave. NW, Washington, DC 20460–0001.
• Hand Delivery: To make special
arrangements for hand delivery or
delivery of boxed information, please
follow the instructions at https://
www.epa.gov/dockets/contacts.html.
Additional instructions on
commenting or visiting the docket,
along with more information about
dockets generally, is available at https://
www.epa.gov/dockets.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
technical information contact: Jessica
Barkas, Environmental Assistance
Division, Office of Pollution Prevention
and Toxics, Environmental Protection
Agency, 1200 Pennsylvania Ave. NW,
Washington, DC 20460–0001; telephone
number: (202) 250–8880; email address:
barkas.jessica@epa.gov.
For general information contact: The
TSCA-Hotline, ABVI-Goodwill, 422
South Clinton Ave., Rochester, NY
14620; telephone number: (202) 554–
1404; email address: TSCA-Hotline@
epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. General Information
A. Does this action apply to me?
You may be affected by this action if
you have submitted or expect to submit
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5623
information to EPA under TSCA.
Persons who would use unique
identifiers assigned by the Agency to
seek information may also be affected by
this action. The following list of North
American Industrial Classification
System (NAICS) codes is not intended
to be exhaustive, but rather provides a
guide to help readers determine whether
this document applies to them.
Potentially affected entities may
include:
• Manufacturers, importers, or
processors of chemical substances
(NAICS codes 325 and 324110), e.g.,
chemical manufacturing and petroleum
refineries.
B. What should I consider as I prepare
my comments for EPA?
1. Submitting CBI. Do not submit this
information to EPA through
regulations.gov or email. Clearly mark
the part or all of the information that
you claim to be CBI. For CBI
information in a disk or CD–ROM that
you mail to EPA, mark the outside of the
disk or CD–ROM as CBI and then
identify electronically within the disk or
CD–ROM the specific information that
is claimed as CBI. In addition to one
complete version of the comment that
includes information claimed as CBI, a
copy of the comment that does not
contain the information claimed as CBI
must be submitted for inclusion in the
public docket. Information so marked
will not be disclosed except in
accordance with procedures set forth in
40 CFR part 2.
2. Tips for preparing your comments.
When preparing and submitting your
comments, see the commenting tips at
https://www.epa.gov/dockets/
comments.html.
II. Background
A. TSCA Section 14 Requirement To
Assign a ‘‘Unique Identifier’’
The June 22, 2016, amendments to
TSCA by the Frank R. Lautenberg
Chemical Safety for the 21st Century
Act added a requirement in TSCA
section 14(g)(4) for EPA to, among other
things, ‘‘assign a unique identifier to
each specific chemical identity for
which the Administrator approves a
request for protection from disclosure.’’
EPA is required to use the ‘‘unique
identifier assigned under this paragraph
to protect the specific chemical identity
in information that the Administrator
has made public’’ and to ‘‘apply that
identifier consistently to all information
relevant to the applicable chemical
substance,’’ including ‘‘any
nonconfidential information received by
the Administrator with respect to a
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Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 27 / Thursday, February 8, 2018 / Notices
chemical substance . . . while the
specific chemical identity of the
chemical substance is protected from
disclosure.’’ 15 U.S.C. 2613(g)(4).
The requirements to assign a unique
identifier and the unreconciled
requirements concerning application of
the unique identifier and protection of
CBI are more fully discussed in the
Federal Register document published
previously. (See 82 FR 21386; May 8,
2017; hereafter ‘‘May 8 Federal Register
document’’.) EPA has noted drawbacks
to each of the two alternative
approaches discussed in the May 8
Federal Register document.
EPA has developed a third alternative
approach for reconciling the competing
requirements of TSCA section 14(g), and
now invites public comment on this
new alternative.
A brief explanation of CBI claims for
chemical identity provides context for
understanding the potential effects of
applying a unique identifier. TSCA
section 14 permits a person to assert a
CBI claim to seek to protect from public
disclosure certain information in a
submission, including a specific
chemical identity. A CBI claim for
specific chemical identity is intended to
protect from disclosure the existence of
the chemical substance and/or the fact
that the chemical substance is (or is
intended to be) manufactured by any
person for commercial purposes in the
United States (note that under TSCA,
the term ‘‘manufacture’’ includes
import).
When a chemical identity on the
TSCA Inventory (Inventory) is claimed
as CBI, then the chemical substance is
maintained on the confidential portion
of the Inventory. Conversely, a specific
chemical identity that appears on the
public portion of the Inventory, and is
therefore known to be (or to have been)
manufactured for commercial purposes
in the United States, is generally not
eligible for confidential protection (see,
e.g., Chemical Data Reporting
regulations at 40 CFR 711.30(b)). If
another company reveals that they
manufacture the substance for
commercial purposes, such as in a nonCBI submission filed under TSCA, the
chemical identity is no longer eligible
for confidential protection, and a CBI
claim for chemical identity would be
denied upon evaluation. Because the
meaning of a CBI claim for chemical
identity is limited, companies that wish
to protect other information in a
submission (such as company identity
or specific information regarding the
use, function, or application of that
chemical substance) should claim that
specific information as CBI rather than
(or in addition to) chemical identity.
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B. Third Alternative Approach
Under this approach, EPA would
assign one unique identifier (UID) per
chemical substance. In most cases EPA
would apply the UID to all nonconfidential information concerning the
same chemical substance, from any
company. However, in a small number
of cases, EPA would not apply the UID
to some non-confidential documents, in
order to preserve approved CBI claims
for specific chemical identity where the
non-confidential document itself does
not undermine the CBI claim, but EPA’s
application of the UID to that document
would result in a linkage that does
undermine the CBI claim. The basic
criterion for application of the UID to
submissions made by different
submitters is that the Agency’s act of
applying the UID must not disclose to
the public the confidential specific
chemical identity that the UID was
assigned to protect.
Specifically, prior to applying a UID
to public versions of documents
concerning the same substance, and
filed by different submitters, those
documents would be reviewed for
presence of the specific chemical
identity. If the specific chemical
identity (e.g., Chemical Abstracts
Service (CAS) name or CAS number)
appears in any of the documents, EPA
would revisit the CBI claim in the
remaining document(s) to assure that
the claim is unexpired and otherwise
still valid. If the CBI claim remains
valid, EPA would not apply the UID to
the document that reveals the specific
chemical identity, in order to preserve
the CBI claim in the other document(s)
(if the claim has expired, been
withdrawn, or appears no longer valid,
EPA would act in accordance with
section 14(f)(2)(B) and/or 14(g)(4)(D), as
appropriate). All of the documents
would be available to the public, and
the specific chemical identity would be
revealed in the document where it was
not claimed as CBI—the document
revealing the specific chemical identity
would simply not be connected by the
UID to the other document(s) where the
specific chemical identity is CBI.
For example, Company A files a
Premanufacture Notice (PMN) and later,
a Notice of Commencement (NOC),
claiming chemical identity as CBI to
protect from disclosure the fact that the
chemical is now being manufactured for
commercial purposes in the United
States and hence is being added to the
Inventory. EPA approves the CBI claim
and assigns a UID. Company A
subsequently files a section 8(e) notice
concerning the same substance,
claiming chemical identity as CBI again.
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The UID is applied to that submission
as well. Sometime later, Company B
files a section 8(e) notice on the same
substance, which it asserts it is using for
research and development (R&D)
purposes, but does not claim chemical
identity as CBI. EPA revisits Company
A’s original CBI claim and confirms that
it is not expired, has not been
withdrawn, and has not been denied.
Company B’s submission does not
reveal that the substance is on the
Inventory or that it is in commerce (as
other than an R&D substance). If EPA
applied the UID to Company B’s
submission, that act would link
Company B’s section 8(e) notice to
Company A’s NOC, revealing that the
specific chemical identity in Company
B’s section 8(e) notice is also the subject
of an NOC and has therefore been
manufactured for commercial purposes,
and is on the Inventory. Thus, EPA’s
linkage of the two documents through
the applied UID—as opposed to any
information contained in the nonconfidential document itself—would
undermine the previously approved CBI
claim for chemical identity. EPA would
not apply the UID to Company B’s
submission in this case, to preserve
Company A’s CBI claim.
By way of contrast, if Company B’s
non-confidential section 8(e) notice
itself revealed that the chemical
substance was manufactured for
commercial purposes in the United
States—for instance, if the filing were an
incident report relating to the
commercial manufacture or use of that
chemical substance, as opposed to an
R&D exploration as originally
described—then this would indicate
that Company A’s CBI claim may no
longer be valid, and EPA would
reevaluate the prior CBI claim in
accordance with TSCA section
14(f)(2)(B) and/or 14(g)(4)(D), as
appropriate.
EPA expects that exceptions to
application of the UID will be fairly
rare. For example, in reviewing all nonconfidential section 8(e) submissions
submitted over the past 5 years that
included a CAS number (such that
Inventory status can be readily
checked), EPA found that fewer than
4% of these submissions mentioned
substances that are currently on the
confidential portion of the TSCA
Inventory. Further, on preliminary
review (i.e., without completing a full
CBI review and determination), it
appeared that several of these
submissions were under circumstances
indicating that the original CBI claim
may have been withdrawn or otherwise
became invalid, suggesting that there
may be even fewer exceptional cases
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once EPA revisits the original CBI
claim(s).
EPA acknowledges that this approach
would occasionally create the
possibility that the application of the
UID to submissions from two or more
companies may alert each company to
the other’s manufacture of the same
chemical substance. However, such
disclosures frequently arise in the
normal course of business under TSCA,
independent of UID. One reason for this
is that a single accession number is
typically assigned to each Inventory
substance, and the accession number is
often used for subsequent reporting, e.g.,
under the Chemical Data Reporting
(CDR) rule. Accession numbers are also
included alongside other regulatory
information, such as relevant section 5
significant new use rule (SNUR)
citations, reported in public databases,
such as the Substance Registry Service
(SRS), and in the Inventory file that EPA
makes available to the public
(confidential inventory chemicals are
listed by PMN number, accession
number, and generic name). (See
https://www.epa.gov/tsca-inventory/
how-access-tsca-inventory.) Anyone that
has an accession number for a given
confidential inventory substance can
query the CDR database and learn
whether other companies have
manufactured the chemical in CDRreportable amounts, or query the public
Inventory to find out the PMN number
of the original submission.
While not every company reports
under the CDR for every chemical that
they manufacture (for example,
specialty chemical companies may be
making relatively small quantities of a
substance, for a specialized use, and
may not meet the reporting thresholds
for CDR), the fact that a chemical
substance is on the Inventory can be
revealed in other ways. For example, a
company that intends to manufacture a
chemical substance for commercial
purposes may file a bona fide
submission under 40 CFR 720.25 to
determine whether the chemical
substance is already on the Inventory.
The response to the bona fide inquiry,
where EPA tells the submitter whether
a chemical substance is on the
confidential portion of the Inventory,
would indicate whether another
company has manufactured the
chemical substance for commercial
purposes in the United States. Also,
submitters of section 5 notices that are
subsequently deemed to be invalid
because the substance is already on the
Inventory and thus not subject to
section 5 reporting requirements are
informed of the Inventory status and are
provided the accession number.
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This third alternative approach would
avoid several problems that EPA has
identified with assigning more than one
UID to a single substance (see ‘‘Second
Alternative Approach,’’ May 8 Federal
Register document (at 21389). One such
problem is that assigning more than one
UID per chemical substance would work
against one of the purposes of assigning
UIDs, to ‘‘provide a specific reference
identifier that protects the
confidentiality claim to the specific
chemical identity for the duration of the
claim, while providing a way for the
public to identify other filings
pertaining to that substance.’’ (See
discussion in EPA’s May 8 Federal
Register document (at 21388).) In
addition, it is unclear how multiple
UIDs per chemical can be reconciled
with the section 8(b)(7) requirement to
publish and keep current a list of each
confidential Inventory chemical, with
its UID, accession number, generic
name, and PMN number, where
applicable. Any list that includes all of
this information for each chemical
would automatically link submissions
from different companies by including
all of the UIDs and/or by using the same
accession number for multiple listings
on the same chemical. (i.e., if Chemical
X has three UIDs, assigned to three
different company claims, they would
all be linked on this list, because
Chemical X only has one accession
number, and the list is supposed to
include both accession number and
UID.) It is also unclear to EPA how
using one UID per chemical, per
company, would operate in the case that
a company or parts of a company
changes ownership; how such UIDs
would be applied to EPA-generated
documents that are relevant to more
than one submission; or how the
multiple UIDs would be handled in the
case that one company withdraws or
permits its CBI claim to expire while the
other does not. Using one UID per
chemical, and applying that same UID
to related documents in all but a very
few exceptional cases, would avoid
these issues.
C. Opportunity To Comment on
Approach to Applying the Unique
Identifier
EPA invites comment on the possible
approach outlined above.
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 2613.
Dated: January 26, 2018.
Charlotte Bertrand,
Acting Principal Deputy Assistant
Administrator, Office of Chemical Safety and
Pollution Prevention.
[FR Doc. 2018–02548 Filed 2–7–18; 8:45 am]
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ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
[EPA–HQ–OPP–2017–0687; FRL–9971–89]
Proposed Information Collection
Request (EPA ICR No. 1204.13);
Comment Request; Submission of
Unreasonable Adverse Effects
Information Under FIFRA Section
6(a)(2)
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
The Environmental Protection
Agency is planning to submit an
information collection request (ICR),
‘‘Submission of Unreasonable Adverse
Effects Information under FIFRA
Section 6(a)(2)’’ (EPA ICR No. 1204.13,
OMB Control No. 2070–0039), to the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) for review and approval in
accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act. Before doing so, EPA is
soliciting public comments on specific
aspects of the proposed information
collection as described below. This is a
proposed extension of the ICR, which is
currently approved through September
30, 2018. An Agency may not conduct
or sponsor and a person is not required
to respond to a collection of information
unless it displays a currently valid OMB
control number.
DATES: Comments must be submitted on
or before April 9, 2018.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments,
referencing Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–
OPP–2017–0687 online using
www.regulations.gov (our preferred
method), by email to OPP_Docket@
epa.gov, or by mail to: EPA Docket
Center, Environmental Protection
Agency, Mail Code 28221T, 1200
Pennsylvania Ave. NW, Washington, DC
20460.
EPA’s policy is that all comments
received will be included in the public
docket without change including any
personal information provided, unless
the comment includes profanity, threats,
information claimed to be Confidential
Business Information (CBI) or other
information whose disclosure is
restricted by statute.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Amaris Johnson, Field and External
Affairs Division, Office of Pesticide
Programs, (7506P), Environmental
Protection Agency, 1200 Pennsylvania
Ave. NW, Washington, DC 20460;
telephone number: (703) 305–9542;
email address: johnson.amaris@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Supporting documents which explain
in detail the information that the EPA
SUMMARY:
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 27 (Thursday, February 8, 2018)]
[Notices]
[Pages 5623-5625]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-02548]
=======================================================================
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ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
[EPA-HQ-OPPT-2017-0144; FRL-9972-94]
Assignment and Application of the ``Unique Identifier'' Under
TSCA Section 14; Notice of Additional Information and Opportunity To
Comment
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: Recent amendments to the Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA)
require EPA to develop a system to assign a ``unique identifier''
whenever it approves a Confidential Business Information (CBI) claim
for the specific chemical identity of a chemical substance, to apply
this unique identifier to other information concerning the same
substance, and to ensure that any nonconfidential information received
by the Agency identifies the chemical substance using the unique
identifier while the specific chemical identity of the chemical
substance is protected from disclosure. EPA previously requested
comment on approaches for assigning and applying unique identifiers,
and has developed an additional approach on which it now requests
comment.
DATES: EPA will accept written comments and materials submitted to the
docket on or before March 12, 2018.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments, identified by docket identification
(ID) number EPA-HQ-OPPT-2017-0144, by one of the following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the online instructions for submitting comments. Do not submit
electronically any information you consider to be Confidential Business
Information (CBI) or other information whose disclosure is restricted
by statute.
Mail: Document Control Office (7407M), Office of Pollution
Prevention and Toxics (OPPT), Environmental Protection Agency, 1200
Pennsylvania Ave. NW, Washington, DC 20460-0001.
Hand Delivery: To make special arrangements for hand
delivery or delivery of boxed information, please follow the
instructions at https://www.epa.gov/dockets/contacts.html.
Additional instructions on commenting or visiting the docket, along
with more information about dockets generally, is available at https://www.epa.gov/dockets.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For technical information contact:
Jessica Barkas, Environmental Assistance Division, Office of Pollution
Prevention and Toxics, Environmental Protection Agency, 1200
Pennsylvania Ave. NW, Washington, DC 20460-0001; telephone number:
(202) 250-8880; email address: [email protected].
For general information contact: The TSCA-Hotline, ABVI-Goodwill,
422 South Clinton Ave., Rochester, NY 14620; telephone number: (202)
554-1404; email address: [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. General Information
A. Does this action apply to me?
You may be affected by this action if you have submitted or expect
to submit information to EPA under TSCA. Persons who would use unique
identifiers assigned by the Agency to seek information may also be
affected by this action. The following list of North American
Industrial Classification System (NAICS) codes is not intended to be
exhaustive, but rather provides a guide to help readers determine
whether this document applies to them. Potentially affected entities
may include:
Manufacturers, importers, or processors of chemical
substances (NAICS codes 325 and 324110), e.g., chemical manufacturing
and petroleum refineries.
B. What should I consider as I prepare my comments for EPA?
1. Submitting CBI. Do not submit this information to EPA through
regulations.gov or email. Clearly mark the part or all of the
information that you claim to be CBI. For CBI information in a disk or
CD-ROM that you mail to EPA, mark the outside of the disk or CD-ROM as
CBI and then identify electronically within the disk or CD-ROM the
specific information that is claimed as CBI. In addition to one
complete version of the comment that includes information claimed as
CBI, a copy of the comment that does not contain the information
claimed as CBI must be submitted for inclusion in the public docket.
Information so marked will not be disclosed except in accordance with
procedures set forth in 40 CFR part 2.
2. Tips for preparing your comments. When preparing and submitting
your comments, see the commenting tips at https://www.epa.gov/dockets/comments.html.
II. Background
A. TSCA Section 14 Requirement To Assign a ``Unique Identifier''
The June 22, 2016, amendments to TSCA by the Frank R. Lautenberg
Chemical Safety for the 21st Century Act added a requirement in TSCA
section 14(g)(4) for EPA to, among other things, ``assign a unique
identifier to each specific chemical identity for which the
Administrator approves a request for protection from disclosure.'' EPA
is required to use the ``unique identifier assigned under this
paragraph to protect the specific chemical identity in information that
the Administrator has made public'' and to ``apply that identifier
consistently to all information relevant to the applicable chemical
substance,'' including ``any nonconfidential information received by
the Administrator with respect to a
[[Page 5624]]
chemical substance . . . while the specific chemical identity of the
chemical substance is protected from disclosure.'' 15 U.S.C.
2613(g)(4).
The requirements to assign a unique identifier and the unreconciled
requirements concerning application of the unique identifier and
protection of CBI are more fully discussed in the Federal Register
document published previously. (See 82 FR 21386; May 8, 2017; hereafter
``May 8 Federal Register document''.) EPA has noted drawbacks to each
of the two alternative approaches discussed in the May 8 Federal
Register document.
EPA has developed a third alternative approach for reconciling the
competing requirements of TSCA section 14(g), and now invites public
comment on this new alternative.
A brief explanation of CBI claims for chemical identity provides
context for understanding the potential effects of applying a unique
identifier. TSCA section 14 permits a person to assert a CBI claim to
seek to protect from public disclosure certain information in a
submission, including a specific chemical identity. A CBI claim for
specific chemical identity is intended to protect from disclosure the
existence of the chemical substance and/or the fact that the chemical
substance is (or is intended to be) manufactured by any person for
commercial purposes in the United States (note that under TSCA, the
term ``manufacture'' includes import).
When a chemical identity on the TSCA Inventory (Inventory) is
claimed as CBI, then the chemical substance is maintained on the
confidential portion of the Inventory. Conversely, a specific chemical
identity that appears on the public portion of the Inventory, and is
therefore known to be (or to have been) manufactured for commercial
purposes in the United States, is generally not eligible for
confidential protection (see, e.g., Chemical Data Reporting regulations
at 40 CFR 711.30(b)). If another company reveals that they manufacture
the substance for commercial purposes, such as in a non-CBI submission
filed under TSCA, the chemical identity is no longer eligible for
confidential protection, and a CBI claim for chemical identity would be
denied upon evaluation. Because the meaning of a CBI claim for chemical
identity is limited, companies that wish to protect other information
in a submission (such as company identity or specific information
regarding the use, function, or application of that chemical substance)
should claim that specific information as CBI rather than (or in
addition to) chemical identity.
B. Third Alternative Approach
Under this approach, EPA would assign one unique identifier (UID)
per chemical substance. In most cases EPA would apply the UID to all
non-confidential information concerning the same chemical substance,
from any company. However, in a small number of cases, EPA would not
apply the UID to some non-confidential documents, in order to preserve
approved CBI claims for specific chemical identity where the non-
confidential document itself does not undermine the CBI claim, but
EPA's application of the UID to that document would result in a linkage
that does undermine the CBI claim. The basic criterion for application
of the UID to submissions made by different submitters is that the
Agency's act of applying the UID must not disclose to the public the
confidential specific chemical identity that the UID was assigned to
protect.
Specifically, prior to applying a UID to public versions of
documents concerning the same substance, and filed by different
submitters, those documents would be reviewed for presence of the
specific chemical identity. If the specific chemical identity (e.g.,
Chemical Abstracts Service (CAS) name or CAS number) appears in any of
the documents, EPA would revisit the CBI claim in the remaining
document(s) to assure that the claim is unexpired and otherwise still
valid. If the CBI claim remains valid, EPA would not apply the UID to
the document that reveals the specific chemical identity, in order to
preserve the CBI claim in the other document(s) (if the claim has
expired, been withdrawn, or appears no longer valid, EPA would act in
accordance with section 14(f)(2)(B) and/or 14(g)(4)(D), as
appropriate). All of the documents would be available to the public,
and the specific chemical identity would be revealed in the document
where it was not claimed as CBI--the document revealing the specific
chemical identity would simply not be connected by the UID to the other
document(s) where the specific chemical identity is CBI.
For example, Company A files a Premanufacture Notice (PMN) and
later, a Notice of Commencement (NOC), claiming chemical identity as
CBI to protect from disclosure the fact that the chemical is now being
manufactured for commercial purposes in the United States and hence is
being added to the Inventory. EPA approves the CBI claim and assigns a
UID. Company A subsequently files a section 8(e) notice concerning the
same substance, claiming chemical identity as CBI again. The UID is
applied to that submission as well. Sometime later, Company B files a
section 8(e) notice on the same substance, which it asserts it is using
for research and development (R&D) purposes, but does not claim
chemical identity as CBI. EPA revisits Company A's original CBI claim
and confirms that it is not expired, has not been withdrawn, and has
not been denied. Company B's submission does not reveal that the
substance is on the Inventory or that it is in commerce (as other than
an R&D substance). If EPA applied the UID to Company B's submission,
that act would link Company B's section 8(e) notice to Company A's NOC,
revealing that the specific chemical identity in Company B's section
8(e) notice is also the subject of an NOC and has therefore been
manufactured for commercial purposes, and is on the Inventory. Thus,
EPA's linkage of the two documents through the applied UID--as opposed
to any information contained in the non-confidential document itself--
would undermine the previously approved CBI claim for chemical
identity. EPA would not apply the UID to Company B's submission in this
case, to preserve Company A's CBI claim.
By way of contrast, if Company B's non-confidential section 8(e)
notice itself revealed that the chemical substance was manufactured for
commercial purposes in the United States--for instance, if the filing
were an incident report relating to the commercial manufacture or use
of that chemical substance, as opposed to an R&D exploration as
originally described--then this would indicate that Company A's CBI
claim may no longer be valid, and EPA would reevaluate the prior CBI
claim in accordance with TSCA section 14(f)(2)(B) and/or 14(g)(4)(D),
as appropriate.
EPA expects that exceptions to application of the UID will be
fairly rare. For example, in reviewing all non-confidential section
8(e) submissions submitted over the past 5 years that included a CAS
number (such that Inventory status can be readily checked), EPA found
that fewer than 4% of these submissions mentioned substances that are
currently on the confidential portion of the TSCA Inventory. Further,
on preliminary review (i.e., without completing a full CBI review and
determination), it appeared that several of these submissions were
under circumstances indicating that the original CBI claim may have
been withdrawn or otherwise became invalid, suggesting that there may
be even fewer exceptional cases
[[Page 5625]]
once EPA revisits the original CBI claim(s).
EPA acknowledges that this approach would occasionally create the
possibility that the application of the UID to submissions from two or
more companies may alert each company to the other's manufacture of the
same chemical substance. However, such disclosures frequently arise in
the normal course of business under TSCA, independent of UID. One
reason for this is that a single accession number is typically assigned
to each Inventory substance, and the accession number is often used for
subsequent reporting, e.g., under the Chemical Data Reporting (CDR)
rule. Accession numbers are also included alongside other regulatory
information, such as relevant section 5 significant new use rule (SNUR)
citations, reported in public databases, such as the Substance Registry
Service (SRS), and in the Inventory file that EPA makes available to
the public (confidential inventory chemicals are listed by PMN number,
accession number, and generic name). (See https://www.epa.gov/tsca-inventory/how-access-tsca-inventory.) Anyone that has an accession
number for a given confidential inventory substance can query the CDR
database and learn whether other companies have manufactured the
chemical in CDR-reportable amounts, or query the public Inventory to
find out the PMN number of the original submission.
While not every company reports under the CDR for every chemical
that they manufacture (for example, specialty chemical companies may be
making relatively small quantities of a substance, for a specialized
use, and may not meet the reporting thresholds for CDR), the fact that
a chemical substance is on the Inventory can be revealed in other ways.
For example, a company that intends to manufacture a chemical substance
for commercial purposes may file a bona fide submission under 40 CFR
720.25 to determine whether the chemical substance is already on the
Inventory. The response to the bona fide inquiry, where EPA tells the
submitter whether a chemical substance is on the confidential portion
of the Inventory, would indicate whether another company has
manufactured the chemical substance for commercial purposes in the
United States. Also, submitters of section 5 notices that are
subsequently deemed to be invalid because the substance is already on
the Inventory and thus not subject to section 5 reporting requirements
are informed of the Inventory status and are provided the accession
number.
This third alternative approach would avoid several problems that
EPA has identified with assigning more than one UID to a single
substance (see ``Second Alternative Approach,'' May 8 Federal Register
document (at 21389). One such problem is that assigning more than one
UID per chemical substance would work against one of the purposes of
assigning UIDs, to ``provide a specific reference identifier that
protects the confidentiality claim to the specific chemical identity
for the duration of the claim, while providing a way for the public to
identify other filings pertaining to that substance.'' (See discussion
in EPA's May 8 Federal Register document (at 21388).) In addition, it
is unclear how multiple UIDs per chemical can be reconciled with the
section 8(b)(7) requirement to publish and keep current a list of each
confidential Inventory chemical, with its UID, accession number,
generic name, and PMN number, where applicable. Any list that includes
all of this information for each chemical would automatically link
submissions from different companies by including all of the UIDs and/
or by using the same accession number for multiple listings on the same
chemical. (i.e., if Chemical X has three UIDs, assigned to three
different company claims, they would all be linked on this list,
because Chemical X only has one accession number, and the list is
supposed to include both accession number and UID.) It is also unclear
to EPA how using one UID per chemical, per company, would operate in
the case that a company or parts of a company changes ownership; how
such UIDs would be applied to EPA-generated documents that are relevant
to more than one submission; or how the multiple UIDs would be handled
in the case that one company withdraws or permits its CBI claim to
expire while the other does not. Using one UID per chemical, and
applying that same UID to related documents in all but a very few
exceptional cases, would avoid these issues.
C. Opportunity To Comment on Approach to Applying the Unique Identifier
EPA invites comment on the possible approach outlined above.
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 2613.
Dated: January 26, 2018.
Charlotte Bertrand,
Acting Principal Deputy Assistant Administrator, Office of Chemical
Safety and Pollution Prevention.
[FR Doc. 2018-02548 Filed 2-7-18; 8:45 am]
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