TSCA Chemical Substances; Unique Identifier Assignment and Application Policy; Notice of Availability, 30168-30171 [2018-13829]
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30168
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 124 / Wednesday, June 27, 2018 / Notices
be received through May 11, 2018
(https://www.regulations.gov; docket ID
number HQ–OPPT–2017–0559).
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 2601 et seq.
Dated: June 21, 2018.
E. Scott Pruitt,
Administrator.
[FR Doc. 2018–13833 Filed 6–26–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
[EPA–HQ–OPPT–2017–0144; FRL–9979–59]
TSCA Chemical Substances; Unique
Identifier Assignment and Application
Policy; Notice of Availability
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
As amended in 2016, the
Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA)
requires EPA to develop a system to
assign a unique identifier (UID)
whenever it approves a confidential
business information (CBI) claim for the
specific chemical identity of a chemical
substance, to apply this UID to other
information concerning the same
chemical substance, and to ensure that
any non-confidential information
received by the Agency identifies the
chemical substance using the UID while
the specific chemical identity of the
chemical substance is protected from
disclosure. EPA previously requested
comment on several approaches for
assigning and applying UIDs. EPA has
determined that it will use a numerical
identifier that incorporates the year the
CBI claim was asserted, and will apply
this UID to non-confidential information
related to the chemical substance,
except where the Agency’s act of
applying the UID would itself disclose
to the public the confidential specific
chemical identity that the UID was
assigned to protect.
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.
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SUMMARY:
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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I. General Information
A. Does this action apply to me?
chemical substance is protected from
disclosure.’’ 15 U.S.C. 2613(g)(4).
You may be affected by this action if
you have submitted or expect to submit
information to EPA under TSCA.
Persons who would use UIDs 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. EPA Sought Public Comment
by docket identification (ID) number
EPA–HQ–OPPT–2017–0144, is available
at https://www.regulations.gov or at the
Office of Pollution Prevention and
Toxics Docket (OPPT Docket),
Environmental Protection Agency
Docket Center (EPA/DC), West William
Jefferson Clinton Bldg., Rm. 3334, 1301
Constitution Ave. NW, Washington, DC.
The Public Reading Room is open from
8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday through
Friday, excluding legal holidays. The
telephone number for the Public
Reading Room is (202) 566–1744, and
the telephone number for the OPPT
Docket is (202) 566–0280. Please review
the visitor instructions and additional
information about the docket available
at https://www.epa.gov/dockets.
A. UIDs Will Be a Numerical Identifier
The requirements to assign a UID and
the unreconciled requirements
concerning application of the UID and
protection of CBI are more fully
discussed in a document that published
in the Federal Register on May 8, 2017.
(See 82 FR 21386; May 8, 2017;
hereafter ‘‘May 2017 Federal Register
document’’.) EPA noted drawbacks to
each of the two alternative approaches
discussed in the May 2017 Federal
Register document, and subsequently
developed a third alternative approach
for reconciling the competing
requirements of TSCA section 14(g), on
which it requested comment in the
Federal Register on February 8, 2018.
(See 83 FR 5623; hereafter ‘‘February
B. How can I get copies of this document
2018 Federal Register document’’).
and other related information?
III. Policy
The docket for this action, identified
II. Background
A. What is the authority for this action?
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
chemical substance . . . while the
specific chemical identity of the
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The UID cannot be the specific
chemical identity, or a structurally
descriptive generic term. TSCA section
14(a)(4)(A)(i). Consequently, EPA has
developed a system to assign UIDs for
each substance for which it makes a
final determination approving a CBI
claim for specific chemical identity. The
UID is a number that incorporates the
year that the claim was asserted (e.g.,
the first approved claim asserted in
2019 would be UID–2019–00001).
Including this date will facilitate
tracking of the expiration of the CBI
claims for specific chemical identity
made in that document, pursuant to
TSCA section 14(e). The reasons for not
using a preexisting identifier, such as
the accession number, are further
explained in the May 2017 Federal
Register document. Note that in the May
2017 Federal Register document, it was
suggested that the UID year would be
based on year the claim was approved.
See 82 FR at 21387. However, because
the year of approval may be different
from the year the claim was asserted
(e.g., claims made in December may not
be approved until the following
February), and because the initial
expiration date of the claim runs from
the point that the claim was asserted,
EPA determined that the date would
better facilitate claim expiration
tracking if it were based on the year the
claim was asserted.
B. EPA Will Apply UIDs to Related
Documents, Except Where It Discloses
Confidential Chemical Identity
EPA is adopting the ‘‘third alternative
approach,’’ as described in the February
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2018 Federal Register document. Under
this approach, EPA will assign one UID
per chemical substance. In most cases,
EPA will apply the UID to all nonconfidential information relevant to the
applicable chemical substance, from any
company. However, in a small number
of cases, EPA will not apply the UID to
some non-confidential documents, in
order to preserve approved, still-valid
CBI claims for specific chemical
identity. These would be cases in which
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
would undermine the CBI claim and
reveal the CBI. The 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.
EPA believes that this is the best of
the approaches considered because it
most appropriately balances the two
purposes of the UID provisions: to
provide public linkages between related
non-confidential information
concerning a particular confidential
chemical substance (i.e., to promote
transparency), and to protect
information that EPA has determined to
be entitled to confidential treatment. It
does so by providing linkages to the
maximum extent possible while still
preserving valid claims of CBI for
chemical identity. The third alternative
approach also has the advantage of
being more straightforward to
administer than the other two
alternative approaches considered. Most
public commenters supported this
approach over the other alternatives for
similar reasons.
By contrast, the other two alternative
approaches (described more fully in the
May 2017 Federal Register document)
would not provide this balance, and
would have other significant
disadvantages. The ‘‘first alternative
approach’’ would have construed
section 14(g)(4)(C) as instructing EPA to
ensure that any non-confidential
information received by EPA concerning
a confidential chemical substance
should identify the substance using only
the UID, for so long as the confidential
identity remained protected from
disclosure. This approach would have
involved carefully searching for and
removing specific chemical identifying
information from all documents relating
to the applicable chemical, even where
that information was not claimed as
CBI, in order to replace that specific
information with the UID. This
approach would have provided a
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linkage between documents concerning
the same chemical, while at least
superficially maintaining the
confidentiality of the CBI claim for
chemical identity, but would require
withholding or withdrawing
information that would otherwise be (or
was previously) public. Moreover,
because many related documents may
already have long been made public,
removing chemical identities from these
documents would have been ineffectual
in some cases (such as when the older,
complete version of a document can be
compared with the newer version with
specific chemical identity redacted).
In the ‘‘second alternative approach,’’
whereby a UID would be assigned to
each chemical-company combination
(different companies submitting
information on the same substance
would be assigned different UIDs for
that substance), the CBI protection goal
would at least initially be met, but only
at considerable expense to the other goal
of the UID provisions—to provide the
public with links between related
documents. In addition, this approach
would have raised its own
administrative issues, such as what to
do with the UID 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 a substance that is
referenced in multiple submissions from
different companies; 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. Finally, this approach
seems unreconciled with the TSCA
section 8(b)(7) requirement to publish
UIDs alongside other identifiers for the
same chemical—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. (For example, 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.)
IV. Public Comments
A. Summary of Public Comments
In response to the two requests for
comment, in the May 2017 and February
2018 Federal Register documents, EPA
received a total of 20 comments from 14
identified commenters (some
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commenters responded to both
requests).
In response to the first request for
comment (May 2017 Federal Register
document), most commenters, including
seven of eight industry or trade group
commenters, and one non-governmental
organization (NGO) commenter,
preferred the one UID per companychemical combination approach
(‘‘second alternative approach’’). No
commenter supported the ‘‘first
alternative approach.’’ One NGO
commenter argued that assigning more
than one UID to any given chemical was
contrary to the purpose and
requirements of the UID provisions. One
trade association argued for an even
more complex system of UIDs (the
‘‘parent-daughter identifier approach’’),
whereby even submissions from the
same company may be assigned
different UIDs, and would involve
assigning additional UIDs for EPAgenerated documents and other thirdparty submissions—none of which
would be linkable by the public.
In response to the second request for
comment (February 2018 Federal
Register document), most commenters
expressed support for the ‘‘third
alternative approach’’—applying the
UID to all related information, but with
some exceptions to preserve approved
and still-valid CBI claims for chemical
identity, as explained above.
Commenters supporting the third
alternative approach included three
trade groups that had previously
supported the one UID per companychemical combination approach, and
two more trade groups that had not
previously commented. One NGO
commenter maintained the position that
they had taken in their earlier comment,
in response to the first request for
comment, that EPA should apply the
UID to all related documents, regardless
of the effect on approved CBI claims for
chemical identity. This same
commenter indicated, however, that the
third alternative approach was an
improvement over, and would be
preferred to, the other two alternatives.
One trade group maintained its
preference for a ‘‘parent-daughter
identifier’’ approach. Two commenters
did not express a preference or position
with respect to approach, but requested
clarification regarding EPA’s CBI review
procedures or commented in general
support of balancing public
transparency with CBI protections.
B. Response to Comments
EPA has prepared a separate response
to comments document, a copy of which
is available in the docket for this action
(Ref. 1), and is also including the
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following summary response to selected
comments.
1. ‘‘Parent-daughter identifier’’
approach. One commenter proposed
that EPA adopt a system of document
identifiers, such that documents
concerning the same substance would
use several different identifiers, the
relationship between which only EPA
would be aware. Documents concerning
the same substance, submitted by
different companies, and even
documents submitted by the same
company, would or could have different
identifiers. The public would be able to
link together only those documents that
are submitted by the same person, and
that have the same CBI status (CBI vs.
non-CBI). The commenter explained
that this system would provide more
protection to CBI information than
would be provided by using one
chemical identity per company, as in
the second alternative approach.
This approach would be largely
inconsistent with both the letter of
TSCA section 14(g)(4) and the intent of
setting up a UID system. EPA interprets
TSCA section 14(g)(4)(A)(i) (requiring
the Agency to ‘‘assign a unique
identifier to each specific chemical
identity’’ (emphasis added)), to indicate
that the UID was intended to be a single
identifier for each chemical. Moreover,
as noted in the February 2018 Federal
Register document, the reason for
assigning multiple UIDs per chemical
(CBI protection) is not possible to
reconcile with the TSCA section 8(b)(7)
requirement that for each confidential
chemical substance, EPA ‘‘shall make
available to the public . . . the unique
identifier assigned under [section 14],
accession number, generic name, and, if
applicable, premanufacture notice case
number.’’ The publication of the UIDs
alongside their corresponding accession
number (for which there is generally
only one per chemical) would cause all
of the UIDs for a given substance to be
linked together. The approach
advocated in this comment would also
largely defeat one of the two purposes
of the UID provision—to provide a
publicly-accessible link between
information concerning the same
substance.
2. ‘‘Straightforward’’ approach. One
commenter asserted that the text of
section 14(g)(4) is plain about EPA’s
obligations to apply the UID uniformly,
regardless of consequence for approved
CBI claims, and thus advocated for a
reading of the statute where one UID is
assigned to each chemical, and making
no exceptions in applying UIDs to
related information (i.e., the
‘‘straightforward’’ approach). EPA
disagrees that Congress plainly intended
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that approved, valid CBI claims should
be disregarded as UIDs are applied to
related documents. As is noted in the
May 2017 Federal Register document,
EPA understands the UID as having two
purposes: providing a public linkage
between information on the same
chemical substance, and protecting
approved CBI claims for specific
chemical identity. Under the
‘‘straightforward’’ approach, those two
purposes would conflict with each other
in certain circumstances, while the third
alternative approach selected by EPA
balances the two purposes without this
conflict.
The UID is specifically described in
the statute as an identifier assigned ‘‘to
protect the specific chemical identity’’
of the subject chemical. Section
14(g)(4)(D). It would plainly undermine
that Congressional purpose if
application of the UID itself were the
means by which an otherwise valid
chemical identity CBI claim was
disclosed. Congress’ intention that the
UID preserve valid CBI claims is further
evidenced by the requirement that the
UID ‘‘shall not be . . . the specific
chemical identity.’’ Section
14(g)(4)(A)(i). Similarly, section
14(g)(4)(B) requires EPA to publish an
annual list of confidential chemical
substances ‘‘referred to by their unique
identifiers . . . including the expiration
date for each such claim.’’ This further
reflects Congress’ understanding that
the duration of a valid CBI claim would
be determined by its expiration date and
that the UID would serve to link
documents pertaining to a confidential
chemical during that period, not to
terminate the period. Section 14(g)(4)(C)
in turn instructs EPA to ensure that any
non-confidential information received
by EPA regarding a chemical substance
‘‘on the list published under paragraph
(B)’’ while the specific identity is
protected from disclosure identifies the
chemical using the UID. It is apparent
that Congress intended the UID to serve
the function of enabling the public to
link such non-confidential information
to other documents pertaining to the
same confidential chemical during the
life of the valid CBI claim as reflected
on the list under paragraph (B), not to
terminate the period of protection.
Finally, section 14(g)(4)(D) requires EPA
to link the specific identity of a
chemical substance to the
corresponding UID in three
circumstances: where the claim has
been denied, has expired, or has been
withdrawn. If Congress had intended for
the application of the UID itself to
reveal the confidential chemical
identity, it presumably would have
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included this circumstance in the list in
section 14(g)(4)(D).
The approach suggested by the
commenter might also tend to increase
CBI claims for chemical identity. Many
TSCA section 8(e) filings, for example,
concern chemicals that are in the
research and development (R&D) stage.
At this early stage, not all companies
claim the chemical identity as CBI.
Under the ‘‘straightforward’’ approach,
any time a company chooses to not
claim an R&D chemical identity as CBI,
they would foreclose any chance (of
theirs, or of a competitor’s) to maintain
a successful CBI claim for the specific
identity of that substance in the future.
This is because even if such a claim
were made and approved in, for
example, a section 5 Notice of
Commencement, the confidential
chemical identity, and the fact the
substance is in commerce in the United
States, would be revealed as soon as
EPA applied the UID to the related R&D
8(e) submission and made the labeled
submission public. In order to avoid this
foreclosure of opportunity, TSCA
section 8(e) submitters may feel
compelled to claim more R&D chemical
identities as CBI.
EPA believes that section 14(g)(4) is
best read as instructing EPA to provide
a public linkage of non-confidential
information that concerns each
confidential chemical substance, while
simultaneously protecting approved and
valid CBI claims. It is both appropriate
and lawful for EPA to interpret
conflicting requirements of a provision
in a manner that minimizes those
conflicts, because provisions of a text
should be interpreted in a way that
renders them compatible and not
contradictory. Accordingly, EPA is
acting consistent with TSCA by
attempting to balance two requirements
that occasionally conflict with one
another.
3. UID application procedure. Several
commenters urged EPA to develop
procedures to assure that confidential
chemical identities are not
inappropriately disclosed as EPA
applies UIDs to related non-confidential
documents. Some commenters also
requested clarification on how
exceptions to UID application will
occur.
EPA has developed procedures for
applying UIDs to related documents,
prior to releasing those labeled
documents to the public. EPA will
search its records and screen incoming
submissions for non-confidential
information that relates to the
applicable confidential chemical
identity (using CASRN, accession
number, PMN number, specific name,
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and/or other identifiers). These
documents would be reviewed for
relevance (i.e., to ensure that they are
not mislabeled with the wrong CASRN
or PMN number), then searched for
mention of the confidential specific
chemical identity that is protected by
the UID (e.g., CASRN and/or specific
chemical name).
Any relevant documents that do not
reveal the confidential specific chemical
identity in the public version would be
labeled with the UID. Any relevant
documents that mention this
confidential specific chemical identity
in the public version would be set aside
for additional screening. EPA
anticipates that documents in the latter
category will be fairly rare. Documents
subject to additional screening would be
examined for information indicating
that the confidential TSCA Inventory
status may no longer be warranted (e.g.,
if the document reveals to the public
that the chemical substance is offered
for commercial distribution in the
United States for TSCA uses). If there is
no such public information
undermining the approved CBI claim,
then the UID would not be applied to
this document. The document would
continue to be available to the public,
and continue to include reference to the
confidential chemical identity, but it
would not be labeled with the UID.
If the result of the additional
screening is that the chemical identity
CBI claim appears no longer valid (i.e.,
EPA develops a reasonable basis to
believe that the information no longer
qualifies for protection from disclosure)
or appears to have been withdrawn (for
example, where a subsequent
submission by the original claimant
does not claim the specific chemical
identity as CBI), EPA will proceed in
accordance with section 14(f)(2)(B) and/
or 14(e)(1)(B)(ii), as appropriate.
Consistent with section 14(g)(4)(D),
whenever a claim for protection of a
specific chemical identity for which a
UID has been assigned is subsequently
denied by EPA, is withdrawn by the
claimant, or expires, EPA will, to the
extent practicable, clearly link the
specific chemical identity to the UID in
information that EPA has made public.
V. Annual UID List
Under TSCA section 14(g)(4)(B), EPA
is required to ‘‘annually publish and
update a list of chemical substances,
referred to by their unique identifiers,
for which claims to protect the specific
chemical identity from disclosure have
been approved, including the expiration
date for each such claim.’’ EPA will be
using the approach announced in this
document and anticipates publishing
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the first annual list on EPA’s internet
site in November of 2018.
VI. References
The following is a listing of the
documents that are specifically
referenced in this document. The docket
includes these documents and other
information considered by EPA,
including documents that are referenced
within the documents that are included
in the docket, even if the referenced
document is not physically located in
the docket. For assistance in locating
these other documents, please consult
the person listed under FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT.
1. EPA. 2018. Response to Comment
Document for Unique Identifier
Assignment and Application Policy.
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 2613.
Dated: June 21, 2018.
E. Scott Pruitt,
Administrator, Environmental Protection
Agency.
[FR Doc. 2018–13829 Filed 6–26–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
[EPA–HQ–OPPT–2017–0652; FRL–9979–75]
Guidance on Expanded Access to
TSCA Confidential Business
Information; Notice of Availability
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
The amendments to the Toxic
Substances Control Act in June 2016
expanded the categories of people to
whom EPA may disclose TSCA
confidential business information (CBI)
by specifically authorizing EPA to
disclose TSCA CBI to state, tribal, and
local governments; environmental,
health, and medical professionals; and
emergency responders, under certain
conditions, including consistency with
guidance that EPA is required to
develop. This document announces the
availability of three guidance
documents that address this
requirement.
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
SUMMARY:
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30171
South Clinton Ave., Rochester, NY
14620; telephone number: (202) 554–
1404; email address: TSCA-Hotline@
epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Executive Summary
A. What action is EPA taking?
As directed by TSCA, EPA has
developed guidance for each of three
new expanded TSCA CBI access
provisions. The guidance documents
cover the content and form of the
agreements and statements of need
required under each provision, and
include some basic logistical
information on where and how to
submit requests to EPA.
EPA maintains a list of Significant
Guidance Documents at https://
www.epa.gov/regulations/guidance/ as
called for by the Office of Management
and Budget’s (OMB) Final Bulletin for
Agency Good Guidance Practices
(https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR2007-01-25/pdf/E7-1066.pdf). Please be
aware that the EPA list of Significant
Guidance Documents does not include
every guidance document issued by
EPA and only encompasses those
documents that are ‘‘significant’’ as
defined by OMB’s Bulletin.
These final documents have been
determined to be EPA Significant
Guidance Documents per the OMB
Bulletin definition and are included on
the EPA list of significant guidance
documents. OMB’s Bulletin directs
agencies to allow for the public to
submit comments on any Significant
Guidance Document that appears on the
Agency’s list of significant guidance
documents. EPA allows for public
comments to be submitted through the
Agency’s electronic docket and
commenting system at https://
www.regulations.gov. Please note that
although you may receive an
acknowledgement that EPA has received
your comment, you may not receive a
detailed response to your comment.
Your feedback is nevertheless important
to EPA and will be forwarded to the
appropriate program for consideration.
B. What is the Agency’s authority for
taking this action?
TSCA section 14(c)(4)(B) requires that
EPA develop guidance concerning the
‘‘content and form of the statements of
need and agreements required’’ under
TSCA section 14(d)(4), (5), and (6). 15
U.S.C. 2613.
C. Does this action apply to me?
You may be potentially affected by
this action if you are a state, tribal, or
local government, or are employed by a
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 124 (Wednesday, June 27, 2018)]
[Notices]
[Pages 30168-30171]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-13829]
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ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
[EPA-HQ-OPPT-2017-0144; FRL-9979-59]
TSCA Chemical Substances; Unique Identifier Assignment and
Application Policy; Notice of Availability
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Notice.
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SUMMARY: As amended in 2016, the Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA)
requires EPA to develop a system to assign a unique identifier (UID)
whenever it approves a confidential business information (CBI) claim
for the specific chemical identity of a chemical substance, to apply
this UID to other information concerning the same chemical substance,
and to ensure that any non-confidential information received by the
Agency identifies the chemical substance using the UID while the
specific chemical identity of the chemical substance is protected from
disclosure. EPA previously requested comment on several approaches for
assigning and applying UIDs. EPA has determined that it will use a
numerical identifier that incorporates the year the CBI claim was
asserted, and will apply this UID to non-confidential information
related to the chemical substance, except where the Agency's act of
applying the UID would itself disclose to the public the confidential
specific chemical identity that the UID was assigned to protect.
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 UIDs
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. How can I get copies of this document and other related information?
The docket for this action, identified by docket identification
(ID) number EPA-HQ-OPPT-2017-0144, is available at https://www.regulations.gov or at the Office of Pollution Prevention and Toxics
Docket (OPPT Docket), Environmental Protection Agency Docket Center
(EPA/DC), West William Jefferson Clinton Bldg., Rm. 3334, 1301
Constitution Ave. NW, Washington, DC. The Public Reading Room is open
from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday, excluding legal
holidays. The telephone number for the Public Reading Room is (202)
566-1744, and the telephone number for the OPPT Docket is (202) 566-
0280. Please review the visitor instructions and additional information
about the docket available at https://www.epa.gov/dockets.
II. Background
A. What is the authority for this action?
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 non-confidential information received by
the Administrator with respect to a chemical substance . . . while the
specific chemical identity of the chemical substance is protected from
disclosure.'' 15 U.S.C. 2613(g)(4).
B. EPA Sought Public Comment
The requirements to assign a UID and the unreconciled requirements
concerning application of the UID and protection of CBI are more fully
discussed in a document that published in the Federal Register on May
8, 2017. (See 82 FR 21386; May 8, 2017; hereafter ``May 2017 Federal
Register document''.) EPA noted drawbacks to each of the two
alternative approaches discussed in the May 2017 Federal Register
document, and subsequently developed a third alternative approach for
reconciling the competing requirements of TSCA section 14(g), on which
it requested comment in the Federal Register on February 8, 2018. (See
83 FR 5623; hereafter ``February 2018 Federal Register document'').
III. Policy
A. UIDs Will Be a Numerical Identifier
The UID cannot be the specific chemical identity, or a structurally
descriptive generic term. TSCA section 14(a)(4)(A)(i). Consequently,
EPA has developed a system to assign UIDs for each substance for which
it makes a final determination approving a CBI claim for specific
chemical identity. The UID is a number that incorporates the year that
the claim was asserted (e.g., the first approved claim asserted in 2019
would be UID-2019-00001). Including this date will facilitate tracking
of the expiration of the CBI claims for specific chemical identity made
in that document, pursuant to TSCA section 14(e). The reasons for not
using a preexisting identifier, such as the accession number, are
further explained in the May 2017 Federal Register document. Note that
in the May 2017 Federal Register document, it was suggested that the
UID year would be based on year the claim was approved. See 82 FR at
21387. However, because the year of approval may be different from the
year the claim was asserted (e.g., claims made in December may not be
approved until the following February), and because the initial
expiration date of the claim runs from the point that the claim was
asserted, EPA determined that the date would better facilitate claim
expiration tracking if it were based on the year the claim was
asserted.
B. EPA Will Apply UIDs to Related Documents, Except Where It Discloses
Confidential Chemical Identity
EPA is adopting the ``third alternative approach,'' as described in
the February
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2018 Federal Register document. Under this approach, EPA will assign
one UID per chemical substance. In most cases, EPA will apply the UID
to all non-confidential information relevant to the applicable chemical
substance, from any company. However, in a small number of cases, EPA
will not apply the UID to some non-confidential documents, in order to
preserve approved, still-valid CBI claims for specific chemical
identity. These would be cases in which 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 would undermine the
CBI claim and reveal the CBI. The 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.
EPA believes that this is the best of the approaches considered
because it most appropriately balances the two purposes of the UID
provisions: to provide public linkages between related non-confidential
information concerning a particular confidential chemical substance
(i.e., to promote transparency), and to protect information that EPA
has determined to be entitled to confidential treatment. It does so by
providing linkages to the maximum extent possible while still
preserving valid claims of CBI for chemical identity. The third
alternative approach also has the advantage of being more
straightforward to administer than the other two alternative approaches
considered. Most public commenters supported this approach over the
other alternatives for similar reasons.
By contrast, the other two alternative approaches (described more
fully in the May 2017 Federal Register document) would not provide this
balance, and would have other significant disadvantages. The ``first
alternative approach'' would have construed section 14(g)(4)(C) as
instructing EPA to ensure that any non-confidential information
received by EPA concerning a confidential chemical substance should
identify the substance using only the UID, for so long as the
confidential identity remained protected from disclosure. This approach
would have involved carefully searching for and removing specific
chemical identifying information from all documents relating to the
applicable chemical, even where that information was not claimed as
CBI, in order to replace that specific information with the UID. This
approach would have provided a linkage between documents concerning the
same chemical, while at least superficially maintaining the
confidentiality of the CBI claim for chemical identity, but would
require withholding or withdrawing information that would otherwise be
(or was previously) public. Moreover, because many related documents
may already have long been made public, removing chemical identities
from these documents would have been ineffectual in some cases (such as
when the older, complete version of a document can be compared with the
newer version with specific chemical identity redacted).
In the ``second alternative approach,'' whereby a UID would be
assigned to each chemical-company combination (different companies
submitting information on the same substance would be assigned
different UIDs for that substance), the CBI protection goal would at
least initially be met, but only at considerable expense to the other
goal of the UID provisions--to provide the public with links between
related documents. In addition, this approach would have raised its own
administrative issues, such as what to do with the UID 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 a substance
that is referenced in multiple submissions from different companies; 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.
Finally, this approach seems unreconciled with the TSCA section 8(b)(7)
requirement to publish UIDs alongside other identifiers for the same
chemical--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. (For example, 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.)
IV. Public Comments
A. Summary of Public Comments
In response to the two requests for comment, in the May 2017 and
February 2018 Federal Register documents, EPA received a total of 20
comments from 14 identified commenters (some commenters responded to
both requests).
In response to the first request for comment (May 2017 Federal
Register document), most commenters, including seven of eight industry
or trade group commenters, and one non-governmental organization (NGO)
commenter, preferred the one UID per company-chemical combination
approach (``second alternative approach''). No commenter supported the
``first alternative approach.'' One NGO commenter argued that assigning
more than one UID to any given chemical was contrary to the purpose and
requirements of the UID provisions. One trade association argued for an
even more complex system of UIDs (the ``parent-daughter identifier
approach''), whereby even submissions from the same company may be
assigned different UIDs, and would involve assigning additional UIDs
for EPA-generated documents and other third-party submissions--none of
which would be linkable by the public.
In response to the second request for comment (February 2018
Federal Register document), most commenters expressed support for the
``third alternative approach''--applying the UID to all related
information, but with some exceptions to preserve approved and still-
valid CBI claims for chemical identity, as explained above. Commenters
supporting the third alternative approach included three trade groups
that had previously supported the one UID per company-chemical
combination approach, and two more trade groups that had not previously
commented. One NGO commenter maintained the position that they had
taken in their earlier comment, in response to the first request for
comment, that EPA should apply the UID to all related documents,
regardless of the effect on approved CBI claims for chemical identity.
This same commenter indicated, however, that the third alternative
approach was an improvement over, and would be preferred to, the other
two alternatives. One trade group maintained its preference for a
``parent-daughter identifier'' approach. Two commenters did not express
a preference or position with respect to approach, but requested
clarification regarding EPA's CBI review procedures or commented in
general support of balancing public transparency with CBI protections.
B. Response to Comments
EPA has prepared a separate response to comments document, a copy
of which is available in the docket for this action (Ref. 1), and is
also including the
[[Page 30170]]
following summary response to selected comments.
1. ``Parent-daughter identifier'' approach. One commenter proposed
that EPA adopt a system of document identifiers, such that documents
concerning the same substance would use several different identifiers,
the relationship between which only EPA would be aware. Documents
concerning the same substance, submitted by different companies, and
even documents submitted by the same company, would or could have
different identifiers. The public would be able to link together only
those documents that are submitted by the same person, and that have
the same CBI status (CBI vs. non-CBI). The commenter explained that
this system would provide more protection to CBI information than would
be provided by using one chemical identity per company, as in the
second alternative approach.
This approach would be largely inconsistent with both the letter of
TSCA section 14(g)(4) and the intent of setting up a UID system. EPA
interprets TSCA section 14(g)(4)(A)(i) (requiring the Agency to
``assign a unique identifier to each specific chemical identity''
(emphasis added)), to indicate that the UID was intended to be a single
identifier for each chemical. Moreover, as noted in the February 2018
Federal Register document, the reason for assigning multiple UIDs per
chemical (CBI protection) is not possible to reconcile with the TSCA
section 8(b)(7) requirement that for each confidential chemical
substance, EPA ``shall make available to the public . . . the unique
identifier assigned under [section 14], accession number, generic name,
and, if applicable, premanufacture notice case number.'' The
publication of the UIDs alongside their corresponding accession number
(for which there is generally only one per chemical) would cause all of
the UIDs for a given substance to be linked together. The approach
advocated in this comment would also largely defeat one of the two
purposes of the UID provision--to provide a publicly-accessible link
between information concerning the same substance.
2. ``Straightforward'' approach. One commenter asserted that the
text of section 14(g)(4) is plain about EPA's obligations to apply the
UID uniformly, regardless of consequence for approved CBI claims, and
thus advocated for a reading of the statute where one UID is assigned
to each chemical, and making no exceptions in applying UIDs to related
information (i.e., the ``straightforward'' approach). EPA disagrees
that Congress plainly intended that approved, valid CBI claims should
be disregarded as UIDs are applied to related documents. As is noted in
the May 2017 Federal Register document, EPA understands the UID as
having two purposes: providing a public linkage between information on
the same chemical substance, and protecting approved CBI claims for
specific chemical identity. Under the ``straightforward'' approach,
those two purposes would conflict with each other in certain
circumstances, while the third alternative approach selected by EPA
balances the two purposes without this conflict.
The UID is specifically described in the statute as an identifier
assigned ``to protect the specific chemical identity'' of the subject
chemical. Section 14(g)(4)(D). It would plainly undermine that
Congressional purpose if application of the UID itself were the means
by which an otherwise valid chemical identity CBI claim was disclosed.
Congress' intention that the UID preserve valid CBI claims is further
evidenced by the requirement that the UID ``shall not be . . . the
specific chemical identity.'' Section 14(g)(4)(A)(i). Similarly,
section 14(g)(4)(B) requires EPA to publish an annual list of
confidential chemical substances ``referred to by their unique
identifiers . . . including the expiration date for each such claim.''
This further reflects Congress' understanding that the duration of a
valid CBI claim would be determined by its expiration date and that the
UID would serve to link documents pertaining to a confidential chemical
during that period, not to terminate the period. Section 14(g)(4)(C) in
turn instructs EPA to ensure that any non-confidential information
received by EPA regarding a chemical substance ``on the list published
under paragraph (B)'' while the specific identity is protected from
disclosure identifies the chemical using the UID. It is apparent that
Congress intended the UID to serve the function of enabling the public
to link such non-confidential information to other documents pertaining
to the same confidential chemical during the life of the valid CBI
claim as reflected on the list under paragraph (B), not to terminate
the period of protection. Finally, section 14(g)(4)(D) requires EPA to
link the specific identity of a chemical substance to the corresponding
UID in three circumstances: where the claim has been denied, has
expired, or has been withdrawn. If Congress had intended for the
application of the UID itself to reveal the confidential chemical
identity, it presumably would have included this circumstance in the
list in section 14(g)(4)(D).
The approach suggested by the commenter might also tend to increase
CBI claims for chemical identity. Many TSCA section 8(e) filings, for
example, concern chemicals that are in the research and development
(R&D) stage. At this early stage, not all companies claim the chemical
identity as CBI. Under the ``straightforward'' approach, any time a
company chooses to not claim an R&D chemical identity as CBI, they
would foreclose any chance (of theirs, or of a competitor's) to
maintain a successful CBI claim for the specific identity of that
substance in the future. This is because even if such a claim were made
and approved in, for example, a section 5 Notice of Commencement, the
confidential chemical identity, and the fact the substance is in
commerce in the United States, would be revealed as soon as EPA applied
the UID to the related R&D 8(e) submission and made the labeled
submission public. In order to avoid this foreclosure of opportunity,
TSCA section 8(e) submitters may feel compelled to claim more R&D
chemical identities as CBI.
EPA believes that section 14(g)(4) is best read as instructing EPA
to provide a public linkage of non-confidential information that
concerns each confidential chemical substance, while simultaneously
protecting approved and valid CBI claims. It is both appropriate and
lawful for EPA to interpret conflicting requirements of a provision in
a manner that minimizes those conflicts, because provisions of a text
should be interpreted in a way that renders them compatible and not
contradictory. Accordingly, EPA is acting consistent with TSCA by
attempting to balance two requirements that occasionally conflict with
one another.
3. UID application procedure. Several commenters urged EPA to
develop procedures to assure that confidential chemical identities are
not inappropriately disclosed as EPA applies UIDs to related non-
confidential documents. Some commenters also requested clarification on
how exceptions to UID application will occur.
EPA has developed procedures for applying UIDs to related
documents, prior to releasing those labeled documents to the public.
EPA will search its records and screen incoming submissions for non-
confidential information that relates to the applicable confidential
chemical identity (using CASRN, accession number, PMN number, specific
name,
[[Page 30171]]
and/or other identifiers). These documents would be reviewed for
relevance (i.e., to ensure that they are not mislabeled with the wrong
CASRN or PMN number), then searched for mention of the confidential
specific chemical identity that is protected by the UID (e.g., CASRN
and/or specific chemical name).
Any relevant documents that do not reveal the confidential specific
chemical identity in the public version would be labeled with the UID.
Any relevant documents that mention this confidential specific chemical
identity in the public version would be set aside for additional
screening. EPA anticipates that documents in the latter category will
be fairly rare. Documents subject to additional screening would be
examined for information indicating that the confidential TSCA
Inventory status may no longer be warranted (e.g., if the document
reveals to the public that the chemical substance is offered for
commercial distribution in the United States for TSCA uses). If there
is no such public information undermining the approved CBI claim, then
the UID would not be applied to this document. The document would
continue to be available to the public, and continue to include
reference to the confidential chemical identity, but it would not be
labeled with the UID.
If the result of the additional screening is that the chemical
identity CBI claim appears no longer valid (i.e., EPA develops a
reasonable basis to believe that the information no longer qualifies
for protection from disclosure) or appears to have been withdrawn (for
example, where a subsequent submission by the original claimant does
not claim the specific chemical identity as CBI), EPA will proceed in
accordance with section 14(f)(2)(B) and/or 14(e)(1)(B)(ii), as
appropriate. Consistent with section 14(g)(4)(D), whenever a claim for
protection of a specific chemical identity for which a UID has been
assigned is subsequently denied by EPA, is withdrawn by the claimant,
or expires, EPA will, to the extent practicable, clearly link the
specific chemical identity to the UID in information that EPA has made
public.
V. Annual UID List
Under TSCA section 14(g)(4)(B), EPA is required to ``annually
publish and update a list of chemical substances, referred to by their
unique identifiers, for which claims to protect the specific chemical
identity from disclosure have been approved, including the expiration
date for each such claim.'' EPA will be using the approach announced in
this document and anticipates publishing the first annual list on EPA's
internet site in November of 2018.
VI. References
The following is a listing of the documents that are specifically
referenced in this document. The docket includes these documents and
other information considered by EPA, including documents that are
referenced within the documents that are included in the docket, even
if the referenced document is not physically located in the docket. For
assistance in locating these other documents, please consult the person
listed under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT.
1. EPA. 2018. Response to Comment Document for Unique Identifier
Assignment and Application Policy.
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 2613.
Dated: June 21, 2018.
E. Scott Pruitt,
Administrator, Environmental Protection Agency.
[FR Doc. 2018-13829 Filed 6-26-18; 8:45 am]
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