Regulation of Persistent, Bioaccumulative, and Toxic Chemicals Under TSCA Section 6(h); Phenol, Isopropylated Phosphate (3:1); Further Compliance Date Extension, 12875-12887 [2022-04945]
Download as PDF
12875
Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 45 / Tuesday, March 8, 2022 / Rules and Regulations
this action alter the relationships or
distribution of power and
responsibilities established by Congress
in the preemption provisions of FFDCA
section 408(n)(4). As such, the Agency
has determined that this action will not
have a substantial direct effect on States
or Tribal Governments, on the
relationship between the National
Government and the States or Tribal
Governments, or on the distribution of
power and responsibilities among the
various levels of government or between
the Federal Government and Indian
Tribes. Thus, the Agency has
determined that Executive Order 13132,
entitled ‘‘Federalism’’ (64 FR 43255,
August 10, 1999) and Executive Order
13175, entitled ‘‘Consultation and
Coordination with Indian Tribal
Governments’’ (65 FR 67249, November
9, 2000) do not apply to this action. In
addition, this action does not impose
any enforceable duty or contain any
unfunded mandate as described under
Title II of the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act (UMRA) (2 U.S.C. 1501 et
seq.).
This action does not involve any
technical standards that would require
Agency consideration of voluntary
consensus standards pursuant to section
12(d) of the National Technology
Transfer and Advancement Act
(NTTAA) (15 U.S.C. 272 note).
VIII. Congressional Review Act
Pursuant to the Congressional Review
Act (5 U.S.C. 801 et seq.), EPA will
submit a report containing this rule and
other required information to the U.S.
Senate, the U.S. House of
Representatives, and the Comptroller
General of the United States prior to
publication of the rule in the Federal
Register. This action is not a ‘‘major
rule’’ as defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 180
Environmental protection,
Administrative practice and procedure,
Agricultural commodities, Pesticides
and pests, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
Dated: February 17, 2022.
Marietta Echeverria,
Acting Director, Registration Division, Office
of Pesticide Programs.
Therefore, for the reasons stated in the
preamble, EPA is amending 40 CFR
chapter I as follows:
PART 180—TOLERANCES AND
EXEMPTIONS FOR PESTICIDE
CHEMICAL RESIDUES IN FOOD
1. The authority citation for part 180
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 21 U.S.C. 321(q), 346a and 371.
2. In § 180.940, amend Table 1 to
paragraph (a) by adding in alphabetical
order an entry for ‘‘Phosphoric Acid’’ to
read as follows:
■
§ 180.940 Tolerance exemptions for active
and inert ingredients for use in
antimicrobial formulations (Food-contact
surface sanitizing solutions)
*
*
*
(a) * * *
*
*
TABLE 1 TO PARAGRAPH (a)
Inert ingredients
*
*
*
*
*
Phosphoric Acid .......................................................................................................................................................
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
[FR Doc. 2022–04852 Filed 3–7–22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 751
[EPA–HQ–OPPT–2021–0598; FRL–6015.6–
02–OCSPP]
RIN 2070–AK95
Regulation of Persistent,
Bioaccumulative, and Toxic Chemicals
Under TSCA Section 6(h); Phenol,
Isopropylated Phosphate (3:1); Further
Compliance Date Extension
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule.
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with RULES1
AGENCY:
The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) is amending the
regulations applicable to phenol,
isopropylated phosphate (3:1) (PIP (3:1))
promulgated under the Toxic
Substances Control Act (TSCA).
Specifically, EPA is extending the
SUMMARY:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:22 Mar 07, 2022
Jkt 256001
*
*
compliance date applicable to the
prohibition on processing and
distribution in commerce of certain PIP
(3:1)-containing articles, and the PIP
(3:1) used to make those articles, until
October 31, 2024, along with the
compliance date for the associated
recordkeeping requirements for
manufacturers, processors, and
distributors of PIP (3:1)-containing
articles. This final rule follows issuance
of a proposed rule for public comment
on October 28, 2021; comments on the
proposed rule are responded to in this
action.
DATES: This final rule is effective on
March 8, 2022. For purposes of judicial
review and 40 CFR 23.5, this rule shall
be promulgated at 1 p.m. eastern
standard time on March 22, 2022.
ADDRESSES: The docket for this action,
identified by docket identification (ID)
number EPA–HQ–OPPT–2021–0598, is
available at https://
www.regulations.gov. Due to the public
health concerns related to COVID–19,
the EPA Docket Center (EPA/DC) and
Reading Room are opened to visitors by
appointment only. For the latest status
PO 00000
Frm 00023
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
CAS Reg. No.
Limits
*
*
7664–38–2
*
*
information on EPA/DC services and
docket access, visit https://
www.epa.gov/dockets.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
technical information contact: Cindy
Wheeler, Existing Chemicals Risk
Management Division, Office of
Pollution Prevention and Toxics,
Environmental Protection Agency, 1200
Pennsylvania Ave. NW, Washington, DC
20460–0001; telephone number: (202)
566–0484; email address: TSCA-PBTrules@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. Executive Summary
A. Does this action apply to me?
You may be potentially affected by
this action if you manufacture
(including import), process, distribute
in commerce, or use phenol,
isopropylated phosphate (3:1) (PIP
(3:1)), or PIP (3:1)-containing articles,
E:\FR\FM\08MRR1.SGM
08MRR1
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with RULES1
12876
Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 45 / Tuesday, March 8, 2022 / Rules and Regulations
especially plastic articles that are
components of electronics or electrical
articles. 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 action applies to them. Potentially
affected entities may include:
• Petroleum Refineries (NAICS Code
324110);
• All Other Basic Organic Chemical
Manufacturing (NAICS Code 325199);
• Plastics Material and Resin
Manufacturing (NAICS Code 325211);
• All Other Miscellaneous Chemical
Product and Preparation Manufacturing
(NAICS Code 325998);
• Machinery Manufacturing (NAICS
Code 333);
• Air-Conditioning and Warm Air
Heating Equipment and Commercial
and Industrial Refrigeration Equipment
Manufacturing (NAICS Code 333415);
• Other Communications Equipment
Manufacturing (NAICS Code 334290);
• Computer and Electronic Product
Manufacturing (NAICS Code 334);
• Small Electrical Appliance
Manufacturing (NAICS Code 335210);
• Major Household Appliance
Manufacturing (NAICS Code 335220);
• Motor and Generator Manufacturing
(NAICS Code 335312);
• Switchgear and Switchboard
Apparatus Manufacturing (NAICS Code
335313);
• Relay and Industrial Control
Manufacturing (NAICS Code 335314);
• Other Communication and Energy
Wire Manufacturing (NAICS Code
335929);
• Current-carrying Wiring Device
Manufacturing (NAICS Code 335931);
• Transportation Equipment
Manufacturing (NAICS Code 336);
• Musical Instrument Manufacturing
(NAICS Code 339992);
• All Other Miscellaneous
Manufacturing (NAICS Code 339999);
• Other Chemical and Allied
Products Merchant Wholesalers (NAICS
Code 424690);
• Motor Vehicle and Parts Dealers
(NAICS Code 441);
• All Other Home Furnishings Stores
(NAICS Code 442299);
• Electronics and Appliance Stores
(NAICS Code 443);
• Building Material and Garden
Equipment and Supplies Dealers
(NAICS Code 444);
• Research and Development in the
Physical, Engineering, and Life Sciences
(NAICS Code 541710).
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:22 Mar 07, 2022
Jkt 256001
B. What is the Agency’s authority for
taking this action?
1. Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA)
TSCA section 6(h), 15 U.S.C. 2605(h),
directs EPA to take expedited action on
certain persistent, bioaccumulative, and
toxic (PBT) chemical substances. For
chemical substances that meet the
statutory criteria, EPA is directed to
issue final rules that address the risks of
injury to health or the environment that
the Administrator determines are
presented and that reduce exposure to
the substance(s) to the extent
practicable. In response to this directive,
EPA identified PIP (3:1) as meeting the
TSCA section 6(h) criteria and issued a
final rule for PIP (3:1) on January 6,
2021 (Ref. 1).
With the obligation to promulgate
these rules, the Agency also has the
authority to amend them if
circumstances change, including in
relation to the receipt of new
information. It is well settled that EPA
has inherent authority to reconsider,
revise, or repeal past decisions to the
extent permitted by law so long as the
Agency provides a reasoned
explanation. See F.C.C. v. Fox
Television Stations, Inc., 556 U.S. 502,
515 (2009). Here, as explained further in
Unit I.D. and Unit IV.A, based on
information submitted by regulated
entities, the Agency has determined that
revised compliance dates are necessary
to address detailed information
submitted in comments demonstrating
that the original compliance dates were
not practicable and did not provide
adequate transition time consistent with
TSCA section 6(d)(1) because
compliance with the original
compliance date and initially extended
compliance date would have caused
extensive harm to the economy and
public due to unavailability of critical
goods and equipment.
2. Administrative Procedure Act (APA).
APA section 553(d), 5 U.S.C. 553(d),
provides that the publication of a
substantive rule must occur no later
than 30 days before its effective date,
with certain exceptions. The purpose of
this provision is to ‘‘give affected parties
a reasonable time to adjust their
behavior before the final rule takes
effect.’’ See Omnipoint Corp. v. F.C.C.,
78 F.3d 620, 630 (D.C. Cir. 1996); see
also United States v. Gavrilovic, 551
F.2d 1099, 1104 (8th Cir. 1977) (quoting
legislative history). Of relevance here,
APA section 553(d)(1), 5 U.S.C.
553(d)(1), provides that final rules shall
not become effective until 30 days after
publication in the Federal Register
‘‘except . . . a substantive rule which
PO 00000
Frm 00024
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
grants or recognizes an exemption or
relieves a restriction.’’ When the agency
grants or recognizes an exemption or
relieves a restriction, affected parties do
not need a reasonable time to adjust
because the effect is not adverse. See
Indep. U.S. Tanker Owners Comm. v.
Skinner, 884 F.2d 587 (D.C. Cir. 1989)
(upholding immediate effective date for
a final rule intended to avoid disruption
in domestic trade by lifting a ban on
vessels participating in domestic
shipping), mandate modified on other
grounds, 901 F.2d 1116 (D.C. Cir. 1990).
EPA has determined that this rule
relieves a restriction by providing
additional time for regulated entities to
comply with the applicable
requirements. Accordingly, EPA is
making this rule effective immediately
upon publication.
C. What action is the Agency taking?
The January 2021 final rule for PIP
(3:1) prohibits the processing and
distribution in commerce of PIP (3:1),
PIP (3:1)-containing products, and PIP
(3:1)-containing articles, with specified
exclusions; prohibits or restricts the
release of PIP (3:1) to water during
manufacturing, processing, distribution
in commerce, and commercial use; and
requires persons manufacturing,
processing, and distributing in
commerce PIP (3:1) and products
containing PIP (3:1) to notify their
customers of these prohibitions and
restrictions and to keep records. Several
different compliance dates were
established, the first of which was 60
days after publication, or March 8, 2021,
after which processing and distribution
in commerce of PIP (3:1), PIP (3:1)containing products, and PIP (3:1)containing articles were prohibited
unless an alternative compliance date or
exclusion was otherwise provided. A
final rule issued in September 2021
extended the compliance date
applicable to the prohibition on
processing and distribution in
commerce of certain PIP (3:1)containing articles, and the PIP (3:1)
used to make those articles, from March
8, 2021, to March 8, 2022, along with
the compliance date for the associated
recordkeeping requirements for PIP
(3:1)-containing articles (Ref. 2).
This final rule amends the regulations
at 40 CFR 751.407(a)(2)(iii) and (d)(4) to
further extend the phased-in
prohibition, established in the
September 2021 final rule, for the
processing and distribution in
commerce of PIP (3:1) for use in certain
articles, and for the processing and
distribution in commerce of certain PIP
(3:1)-containing articles, from March 8,
2022, to October 31, 2024. The
E:\FR\FM\08MRR1.SGM
08MRR1
Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 45 / Tuesday, March 8, 2022 / Rules and Regulations
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with RULES1
compliance date for the recordkeeping
requirements for manufacturers,
processors, and distributors of PIP (3:1)containing articles is also extended from
March 8, 2022, to October 31, 2024.
Articles covered by the phased-in
prohibition include any article not
otherwise covered by an alternative
compliance deadline or exclusion
described in 40 CFR 751.407(a)(2)(ii) or
(b).
D. Why is the Agency taking this action?
EPA is further extending the
compliance dates applicable to the
prohibition on processing and
distribution in commerce of PIP (3:1) for
use in certain articles, and the
processing and distribution in
commerce of certain PIP (3:1)containing articles, to further address
the hardships inadvertently created by
the January 2021 final rule on PIP (3:1)
(Ref. 1) due to impacted uses and
supply chain challenges that were not
communicated to EPA until after the
rule was published. Shortly after the
final rule was published in January
2021, many stakeholders, including, for
example, the electronics and electrical
manufacturing sector and their
customers, raised significant concerns
about their ability to meet the March 8,
2021, compliance date for PIP (3:1)containing articles (Ref. 3). In the
Federal Register of March 16, 2021 (Ref.
4), EPA requested additional comment
on this specific issue, as well as on
other aspects of all the TSCA section
6(h) final rules (Refs. 1, 5, 6, 7, and 8).
According to the comments received in
response to the March 2021 notification
and request for comments, a wide range
of key consumer and commercial goods
were affected by the prohibitions in the
PIP (3:1) final rule such as cellular
telephones, laptop computers, and other
electronic devices and industrial and
commercial equipment used in various
sectors including transportation, life
sciences, and semiconductor production
(Ref. 9). In September 2021, EPA issued
a final rule that extended the
compliance date applicable to the
prohibition on processing and
distribution in commerce of certain PIP
(3:1)-containing articles, and the PIP
(3:1) used to make those articles, until
March 8, 2022, along with the
compliance date for the associated
recordkeeping requirements for
manufacturers, processors, and
distributors of PIP (3:1)-containing
articles (Ref. 2). The September 2021
final rule provided a necessary shortterm extension to avoid immediate and
significant disruption in the supply
chains for certain articles, to provide the
public with regulatory certainty in the
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:22 Mar 07, 2022
Jkt 256001
near term, and to allow EPA additional
time to further evaluate the need to
again extend the compliance deadlines
for PIP (3:1). Shortly thereafter, EPA
issued a proposal to further extend the
compliance dates to October 31, 2024
(Ref. 10). This final rule extending the
compliance dates from March 8, 2022,
until October 31, 2024, is based on the
detailed information provided by
several industry commenters in
response to the proposal.
E. What are the incremental economic
impacts?
Pursuant to TSCA section 6(c)(2), EPA
evaluated the potential incremental
economic impacts of further extending
the compliance deadline and
determined that the changes being
finalized in this action would reduce
the existing burden of the March 8,
2022, compliance date. The quantified
effect of this compliance date extension
(from March 8, 2022, to October 31,
2024) reflects the difference between the
incremental cost and benefits of the
January 2021 final rule as it was
originally promulgated and the
incremental cost and benefits of this
final rule with the new compliance date
in place. This was estimated as the
difference between the cost and benefits
of the final rule after the compliance
extension to March 8, 2022, and the cost
and benefits of this final rule with an
October 31, 2024, compliance date.
Quantified costs for substitution and
recordkeeping were estimated to be
incurred later than they would have
been under the January 2021 rule,
assuming they will be incurred when
the compliance date extension expires.
In summary, extending the compliance
date from March 8, 2022, to October 31,
2024, for PIP (3:1)-containing articles
results in an estimated annualized cost
savings of $1.8 million (from $24.1 to
$22.3 million) at a 3 percent discount
rate or $2.4 million (from $23.4 to $21.0
million) at a 7 percent discount rate
over a 25-year time horizon. While the
Agency has no data to quantify this,
qualitative costs savings may include
savings stemming from the additional
time for manufacturers and retailers to
sell articles prior to the prohibition
deadline rather than being forced to
dispose of them, thereby avoiding loss
of revenue from those products. In
addition to these cost savings,
reformulation (which can include
research and development, laboratory
testing, and re-labeling) will be
facilitated once an acceptable substitute
is identified given that companies will
have more time to gather information
regarding the steps involved in the
reformulation process. Cost reductions
PO 00000
Frm 00025
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
12877
for reformulation are not certain,
however, since the time required for the
regulated community to identify viable
substitutes can be complex and
unpredictable. The level of these cost
savings is dependent on complexity of
achieving needed efficacy, length of
time needed for testing and quality
control, and the current status of
development of alternatives, which may
vary greatly by sector and end use
product.
Lastly, the compliance date extension
may provide additional time for
information gathering about supply
chain impacts that could alleviate the
necessity for chemical testing of certain
articles to identify whether and where
PIP (3:1) might be present in their
supply chains.
With respect to benefits, pursuant to
TSCA section 6(h)(2), for chemical
substances that meet the criteria of
TSCA section 6(h)(1), a risk evaluation
is not required to be conducted for EPA
to meet its obligations under TSCA
section 6(h). As discussed in the January
2021 final rule, while EPA reviewed
hazard and exposure information for the
PBT chemicals, this information did not
provide a basis for EPA to develop
scientifically robust and representative
risk estimates to evaluate whether or not
any of the chemicals present a risk of
injury to health or the environment.
Benefits were not quantified due to the
lack of risk estimates. Although the
benefits of the January 2021 and
September 2021 final rules were not
quantified, the extension would also
postpone decreases in potential releases
and exposures to PIP (3:1). Due to
discounting, in a manner similar to
costs, this postponement would lead to
lower potential benefits due to
continued exposures. On balance, this
further extension of the compliance
dates is appropriate to prevent the
disruptive consequences of
implementing the March 8, 2022,
compliance date without a further
compliance extension. The economic
consequences (such as loss of supply)
could be severe, given the apparent
extent of the chemical in commerce.
Thus, EPA has determined that the cost
savings and avoidance of disruption to
industry outweigh the delayed
realization of benefits that may accrue
from reduced exposure.
II. Background
A. The January 2021 Final Rule
A final rule for PIP (3:1) was
published in the Federal Register on
January 6, 2021 (Ref. 1). EPA
determined in the final rule that PIP
(3:1) met the TSCA section 6(h)(1)(A)
E:\FR\FM\08MRR1.SGM
08MRR1
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with RULES1
12878
Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 45 / Tuesday, March 8, 2022 / Rules and Regulations
criteria for expedited action. In
addition, EPA determined, in
accordance with TSCA section
6(h)(1)(B), that exposure to PIP (3:1) was
likely under the conditions of use to the
general population, to a potentially
exposed or susceptible subpopulation,
or the environment. The PIP (3:1) final
rule prohibited processing and
distribution in commerce of PIP (3:1),
and products or articles containing the
chemical substance, for all uses after
March 8, 2021, except for the following
different compliance dates or
exclusions:
• Use in photographic printing
articles after January 1, 2022;
• Use in aviation hydraulic fluid in
hydraulic systems and use in specialty
hydraulic fluids for military
applications;
• Use in lubricants and greases;
• Use in new and replacement parts
for the aerospace and automotive
industries;
• Use as an intermediate in the
manufacture of cyanoacrylate glue;
• Use in specialized engine air filters
for locomotive and marine applications;
• Use in sealants and adhesives after
January 6, 2025; and
• Recycling of plastic that contained
PIP (3:1) before the plastic was recycled,
and the articles and products made from
such recycled plastic, provided no new
PIP (3:1) is added during the recycling
or production process.
In addition, the final rule required
manufacturers, processors, and
distributors of PIP (3:1) and products
containing PIP (3:1) to notify their
customers of these restrictions. Finally,
the rule prohibited releases to water
from the remaining manufacturing,
processing, and distribution in
commerce activities, and required
commercial users of PIP (3:1) and PIP
(3:1)-containing products to follow
existing regulations and best
management practices to prevent
releases to water during use.
Also defined at 40 CFR 751.403 for
the purposes of 40 CFR part 751,
subpart E, which includes the PIP (3:1)
final rule, are the terms ‘‘article’’ and
‘‘product’’ (Ref. 5). ‘‘Article’’ is defined
as a manufactured item: (1) Which is
formed to a specific shape or design
during manufacture, (2) Which has end
use function(s) dependent in whole or
in part upon its shape or design during
end use, and (3) Which has either no
change of chemical composition during
its end use or only those changes of
composition which have no commercial
purpose separate from that of the article,
and that result from a chemical reaction
that occurs upon end use of other
chemical substances, mixtures, or
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:22 Mar 07, 2022
Jkt 256001
articles; except that fluids and particles
are not considered articles regardless of
shape or design. For example, laptop
computers are articles, as are the
internal components such as chips,
wiring, and cooling fans. ‘‘Product’’ is
defined as the chemical substance, a
mixture containing the chemical
substance, or any object that contains
the chemical substance or mixture
containing the chemical substance that
is not an article. For example, hydraulic
fluids and motor oils are products.
B. The March 2021 Notification and
Request for Comments and the No
Action Assurance
Shortly after the publication of the
January 2021 final rule, a wide variety
of stakeholders from various sectors
started raising concerns about the March
8, 2021, compliance date for the
prohibition on the processing and
distributing in commerce of PIP (3:1) for
use in articles and PIP (3:1)-containing
articles (Ref. 3). These stakeholders
contended that they needed
significantly more time to identify
whether and where PIP (3:1) might be
present in articles in their supply
chains, find and certify alternative
chemicals, and produce or import new
articles that do not contain PIP (3:1).
Despite EPA’s extensive outreach (Refs.
1, 2, 4 and 10), most stakeholders
contacting EPA after the rule was
finalized did not comment on the
proposal or otherwise engage with the
agency on the PIP (3:1) rulemaking, and
do not appear to have previously
surveyed their supply chains to
determine if PIP (3:1) was being used.
Based on the concerns raised by
stakeholders shortly after publication of
the final rule, EPA issued a No Action
Assurance (NAA) on March 8, 2021, in
an effort to ensure that the supply
chains of these important articles were
not interrupted while the agency
collected the information needed to best
inform subsequent regulatory efforts
(Ref. 11). The NAA was written to
expire on September 4, 2021, or ‘‘the
effective date of a final action
addressing the compliance date for the
prohibition on processing and
distributing in commerce of PIP (3:1),
including in PIP (3:1)-containing
articles, whichever occurs earlier.’’ In
addition, shortly after the NAA was
issued, EPA published in the ‘‘Proposed
Rules’’ part of the Federal Register a
notification and request for comments
on the five final PBT rules in general
and, more specifically, on the
compliance date issues with respect to
PIP (3:1)-containing articles that had
been raised by stakeholders (Ref. 4). The
March 2021 Federal Register
PO 00000
Frm 00026
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
notification and request for comments is
described in detail in EPA’s October
2021 proposal (Ref. 10). EPA received a
total of 122 comments in response to the
March 2021 notification and request for
comments (Ref. 9), nearly all of which
addressed PIP (3:1) issues. Based on the
comments received in response to the
March 2021 notification and request for
comments, EPA issued a final rule in
September 2021, extending the
compliance dates applicable to the
processing and distribution in
commerce of certain PIP (3:1)containing articles, and the PIP (3:1)
used to make those articles, until March
8, 2022, along with the associated
recordkeeping requirements for
manufacturers, processors, and
distributors of PIP (3:1)-containing
articles (Ref. 2). While most commenters
on the March 2021 notification and
request for comments requested a longer
compliance date extension (Ref. 9), EPA
determined that a short-term extension
was necessary to ensure that the supply
chains for these important articles
continue uninterrupted in the near term
while allowing EPA to conduct notice
and comment rulemaking on a longerterm compliance date extension
generally.
C. The October 2021 Proposal
Accordingly, in October 2021, EPA
proposed to further extend until October
31, 2024, the compliance dates for the
prohibition on the distribution in
commerce of certain PIP (3:1)containing articles, and the PIP (3:1)
used to make those articles, along with
the compliance date for the associated
recordkeeping requirements for
manufacturers, processors, and
distributors of PIP (3:1)-containing
articles (Ref. 10). EPA based the October
2021 proposal on the comments
received on the March 2021 notification
and request for comments, as well as
information EPA received from
stakeholders after the January 2021 final
rule was published but prior to the
issuance of the March 2021 notification
and request for comments.
Industry stakeholders commenting on
the March 2021 notification and request
for comments contended that they
needed more time in order to identify
where PIP (3:1) might be present in their
supply chains, find and certify
alternatives, and produce or import new
articles that do not contain PIP (3:1). As
described in the October 2021 proposed
rule, industry commenters identified a
wide range of articles that may contain
PIP (3:1), which generally is used as a
flame retardant and plasticizer in plastic
articles (Refs. 9 and 10). Commenters on
the March 2021 notification and request
E:\FR\FM\08MRR1.SGM
08MRR1
Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 45 / Tuesday, March 8, 2022 / Rules and Regulations
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with RULES1
for comments also described the
challenges associated with determining
whether a particular article contains PIP
(3:1), especially for complex goods that
contain thousands of individual parts.
Some commenters stated that article
manufacturers may be unable to identify
or confirm the PIP (3:1) content of
articles, such as supplied parts and
components, without laboratory testing,
which can be expensive and timeconsuming. As a result, companies must
rely on material declarations by
suppliers as a more practicable and
reliable approach to determine the usage
of PIP (3:1) within an article. However,
the ability to obtain material
composition data from across the supply
chain may be limited (Ref. 12).
As described in the October 2021
proposal, nearly all of the industry
commenters responding to EPA’s March
2021 notification and request for
comments stated that they needed
several years to phase PIP (3:1) out of
their articles (Refs. 9 and10). Estimated
timelines provided by commenters in
response to the March 2021 notification
and request for comments ranged from
2.25 years to 15 years or more (Ref. 9).
Given the varying estimates, and the
lack of detail accompanying some of
those estimates, EPA proposed to
further extend the compliance dates
until October 31, 2024, which was
consistent with the lower end of the
time estimates provided by commenters.
EPA reasoned that this would avoid
significant disruption in the supply
chains for certain articles and would
provide the public with regulatory
certainty while EPA determines whether
any further compliance date extensions
are necessary for certain industry
sectors, based on information submitted
in the context of revisions to the PBT
rules more generally. As announced in
March 2021 and in the October 2021
proposal, EPA intends to consider any
additional information of this kind in
the context of revisions to the final PBT
rules to further reduce exposures,
promote environmental justice, and
better protect human health and the
environment. More information on the
March 2021 notification and request for
comments, and a summary of the
comments received in response to the
notification, are in the October 2021
proposal (Ref. 10).
III. Comments on the October 2021
Proposal
EPA received a total of 40 public
comments on the October 2021
proposal: 38 from industry stakeholders,
one from environmental, public health,
children’s health organizations, and one
from a tribal partnership group (Ref. 13).
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:22 Mar 07, 2022
Jkt 256001
Many of the industry commenters on
this proposal also commented on the
March 2021 notification and request for
comments, some providing additional
details about their efforts to identify PIP
(3:1) in their supply chains since the
earlier public comment period.
A. Comments Supporting the Proposed
Compliance Dates or Further Extensions
Approximately one-third of the
industry commenters on the October
2021 proposal expressed qualified
support for the proposed compliance
date of October 31, 2024, for the
prohibition on the processing and
distribution in commerce of certain PIP
(3:1)-containing articles and the PIP
(3:1) used to make those articles.
1. Summary of Public Comments
Supporting Extension of Compliance
Dates
A commenter from the heating,
ventilation, air-conditioning, and
refrigeration (HVACR) industry noted
that their comments on the March 2021
notification and request for comments
provided two scenarios for the length of
time needed to eliminate PIP (3:1) in
their supply chains (Ref. 14). While the
first scenario resulted in an estimate of
three years to complete the phase-out of
PIP (3:1), the commenter noted that this
was a best-case scenario, assuming that
a number of potential difficulties with
identifying PIP (3:1) in the supply chain
and scheduling scarce laboratory time
for recertifications would be eliminated.
The more realistic scenario, according to
this commenter, was the scenario that
estimated that a period of five years
would be needed to eliminate PIP (3:1)
in their supply chain. This commenter
reiterated concerns with the process for
eliminating PIP (3:1), noting that it
remains difficult to obtain information
from suppliers, testing is an expensive
and time-consuming alternative, and
that it will be challenging to find and
test substitute chemicals with the fireretardant characteristics of PIP (3:1) for
every application. The commenter
further explained that the industry is
dealing with a shortage of acrylonitrile
butadiene styrene plastic due to the
ongoing COVID–19 pandemic as well as
a mandatory refrigerant transition.
Finally, this commenter contended that
the compliance date should be a
‘‘manufactured-by’’ date, rather than a
processing and distribution in
commerce prohibition, and expressed
concern over the need for replacement
parts for equipment that is produced
before the ‘‘manufactured-by’’ date.
Commenters from the consumer
technology sector noted that they had
originally estimated in their comments
PO 00000
Frm 00027
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
12879
on the March 2021 notification and
request for comments that they would
need four years to phase PIP (3:1) out of
their articles, but now believe that they
can achieve this by October 31, 2024
(Ref 15). They conditioned their support
for the 2024 date on the date being a
‘‘manufactured-by’’ date, rather than a
prohibition on processing and
distribution in commerce, and also
raised the issue of replacement parts for
consumer articles produced before the
‘‘manufactured-by’’ date.
The home appliance industry also
supported the October 2024 date, noting
that their comments on the March 2021
notification and request for comments
recommended a three-year extension of
the compliance date. They also
requested that the compliance date be
applied as a ‘‘manufactured-by’’ date,
and that there be an exclusion for spare
or replacement parts (Ref. 16).
Other commenters maintained that
they would need more time to complete
a phase-out of PIP (3:1) from their
supply chains. A commenter from the
electrical manufacturing industry stated
that they would need at least five years
to eliminate PIP (3:1) in their articles,
and eight years would be preferred (Ref.
17). The commenter described the
complexity of the sector’s supply
chains, estimating that six to twelve
months would be needed to identify PIP
(3:1) in articles and two to three years
would be needed to identify an
alternative, after which it would be
necessary to test and certify components
made with the alternative. This
commenter also noted that it would be
very expensive to replace PIP (3:1)
throughout the electrical manufacturing
industry. Finally, this commenter stated
that an additional three years would be
needed for ‘‘sell-through,’’ i.e., allowing
articles made with PIP (3:1) to clear the
supply chain.
Several commenters from the
semiconductor manufacturing industry
indicated that they would need a phaseout timeline of at least fifteen years
(Refs. 12, 18, and 19). One commenter
noted that the same considerations that
led EPA to exclude new and
replacement parts for the aerospace and
automotive industry from the January
2021 final rule could be applied to the
semiconductor manufacturing industry
and, therefore, that industry should also
be excluded (Ref. 12). This commenter
suggested a fifteen-year delay in the
compliance date for the semiconductor
manufacturing industry, which was
consistent with the comments this
commenter provided in May 2021. The
commenter provided a chart showing
the typical cycle for one part going
through an engineering change under
E:\FR\FM\08MRR1.SGM
08MRR1
12880
Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 45 / Tuesday, March 8, 2022 / Rules and Regulations
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with RULES1
normal conditions. While the chart
showed that the process could be
completed in ten years, and that process
steps could overlap, the commenter
noted that a PIP (3:1) phase-out would
involve the entire industry going
through these processes for many parts
at once, leading to numerous logjams.
The commenter estimated that 30
months would be needed to identify PIP
(3:1)-containing components in the
supply chain, 20 months would be
needed to identify and test alternatives,
6 to 48 months would be needed to
requalify suppliers to the
manufacturer’s requirements, 18 months
would be needed to laboratory testing
and recertification, and 36 months
would be needed for customer
qualification (Ref. 12).
In addition to comments regarding the
extension of compliance dates for
prohibitions, one commenter further
requested that EPA make the
compliance date for recordkeeping for
excluded articles, such as new and
replacement automotive parts,
consistent with the recordkeeping
compliance date for articles that are the
subject of this rulemaking (Ref. 20).
2. EPA Response
EPA notes that one-third of the
commenters overall estimated that
impacted industries would be able to
comply with the October 2024
compliance date, albeit with some
reservations related to replacement
parts, the ability to sell articles
produced before the compliance date,
and pandemic impacts on global supply
chains. EPA appreciates the efforts that
many of the commenters made to
provide the details requested by EPA in
the October 2021 proposal as to:
• The specific uses of PIP (3:1) in
articles throughout their supply chains;
• Concrete steps taken to identify,
test, and qualify substitutes for those
uses, including details on the
substitutes tested and the specific
certifications that would require
updating;
• Estimates of the time required to
identify, test, and qualify substitutes
with supporting documentation; and
• Documentation of the specific need
for replacement parts, which may
include the documented service life of
the equipment and specific
identification of any applicable
regulatory requirements for the
assurance of replacement parts.
EPA also appreciates the comments
that provide updated estimates of
needed time to comply and which
provide more detailed information than
was provided in response to the March
2021 notification and request for
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:22 Mar 07, 2022
Jkt 256001
comments. Overall, EPA finds the
description of concrete steps taken in
some industries to identify alternatives
or continue engaging in phase-outs to
provide a compelling rationale for the
need for an extension of the compliance
date to October 31, 2024, with an
expectation that in several industries
this extension would be sufficient.
While EPA appreciates the information
submitted by some commenters to
support a further compliance date
extension beyond October 31, 2024,
EPA also recognizes that, for many
industries, the collection of this
information is still ongoing. EPA does
not find that the Agency has sufficient
information at this time to identify an
appropriate compliance date beyond
October 31, 2024, or to justify extending
the compliance date beyond October 31,
2024. As commenters stated, obtaining
information from suppliers continues to
present challenges, and EPA anticipates
that additional time to investigate
supply chains as well as substitute
chemicals will result in more robust
information regarding the need for
compliance date extensions beyond
October 31, 2024, including the number
of years that will be needed to qualify
the substitutes and distribute them
throughout the supply chain. As
discussed in the October 2021 proposal
and in more detail in Unit IV.B., EPA
will consider any additional
information on this issue in the context
of the broader rulemaking EPA plans to
undertake for PIP (3:1) and other PBTs.
As part of that broader rulemaking, EPA
will also review the justifications
underlying the exclusions in the January
2021 PIP (3:1) final rule to consider
whether to adopt new restrictions for
activities currently excluded, such as
new and replacement automotive and
aerospace vehicle parts, consistent with
the statutory directive to reduce
exposure to the extent practicable.
Regarding commenters’ statements
that compliance date extensions should
be combined with a further regulatory
change allowing for a ‘‘manufacturedby’’ date, rather than a processing and
distribution in commerce prohibition,
EPA’s response is provided in Unit
III.D.2.
Regarding compliance dates for
recordkeeping, based on the comments
received from the non-road mobile
machinery and other similar industries
(described in more details in comments
requesting exclusions from the
prohibitions), EPA understands that the
scope of the exclusion for new and
replacement motor vehicle parts is
broader than what would strictly be
considered the automotive industry, and
not all suppliers eligible for the motor
PO 00000
Frm 00028
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
vehicle parts exclusion participate in
the automotive industry’s recordkeeping
system. EPA recognizes the benefits in
extending the recordkeeping
compliance date in the way described
by the commenter; details of the
recordkeeping compliance date
extension are described in Unit IV.B.
B. Comments Supporting Exclusions
A number of commenters from the
construction, agriculture, mining,
forestry and utility industries, which
EPA is referring to as the non-road
mobile machinery industry, argued that
they should be afforded the same
exclusion that was provided in the
January 2021 final rule for new and
replacement parts for the aerospace and
automotive industries.
1. Summary of Public Comments
Supporting Exclusions
One commenter from the non-road
mobile machinery industry stated that
this industry faces the same types of
safety, design, manufacturing and
purchasing issues experienced by the
aerospace and automotive sectors (Ref.
22). According to the commenter, this
leads to overlapping supply chains with
the much-larger aerospace and
automotive industries. As a result of
these overlapping supply chains, the
exclusions granted to the aerospace and
automotive industries, without a similar
exclusion for the non-road mobile
machinery industry, greatly complicate
efforts to comply with the provisions of
the January 2021 final rule in that the
non-road mobile machinery industry
may be forced to find new suppliers to
provide replacements for PIP (3:1)containing components at a higher cost.
As an alternative to an exclusion, this
commenter stated that they would need
seven years to eliminate PIP (3:1)containing components from their
supply chain. The commenter provided
a detailed timeline in support of this
assertion, as well as an estimate of the
costs that would be incurred in
eliminating PIP (3:1). Other commenters
supported a seven-year delayed
compliance date as an alternative to
their preferred approach of excluding
the heavy machinery industry (Refs. 22
and 23).
Relatedly, commenters representing
the automotive and similar industries,
such as the non-road mobile machinery
industry, requested that EPA clarify
several provisions. Several commenters
noted that EPA had provided its
understanding of the meaning of the
term ‘‘motor vehicle,’’ as that term is
used in the January 2021 final rule, to
stakeholders upon request (Ref. 20, 22,
and 24). These commenters asked that
E:\FR\FM\08MRR1.SGM
08MRR1
Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 45 / Tuesday, March 8, 2022 / Rules and Regulations
EPA provide its understanding of the
term ‘‘motor vehicle’’ in the regulatory
text itself, or in a companion guidance
document.
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with RULES1
2. EPA Response
EPA appreciates the detailed
estimates that several commenters
provided describing the time that would
be needed to identify PIP (3:1) in their
supply chain, find and test alternatives,
recertify and requalify parts and
finished goods, and distribute them
through the supply chain (Ref. 21). EPA
notes that some of the articles produced
by these commenters would be
considered motor vehicles. As EPA has
stated in response to stakeholder
inquiries (Refs. 20, 22, and 24), EPA
generally interprets the term ‘‘motor
vehicle’’ to mean a transport vehicle
that is propelled or drawn by
mechanical power, such as cars, trucks,
motorcycles, boats, and construction,
agricultural, and industrial machinery.
To the extent that the commenters
produce motor vehicles, they are
currently covered under the exclusion
provided in the January 2021 final rule
for new and replacement motor vehicle
parts. However, as EPA announced in
the March 2021 notification and request
for comments and further described in
the October 2021 proposal, EPA, as part
of its planned future rulemaking on all
five of the PBTs, will review the
justifications underlying the exclusions
in the January 2021 PIP (3:1) final rule
to consider whether to adopt new
restrictions for activities currently
excluded, consistent with the statutory
directive to reduce exposure to the
extent practicable (Refs. 4 and 10). As
noted previously, in the future
rulemaking, EPA will also consider
comments addressing any need for a
further extension to compliance dates
that have already been extended. For
example, in the upcoming rulemaking,
EPA intends to evaluate whether a
compliance date can be established for
new automotive parts that contain PIP
(3:1). As part of that evaluation, EPA
will consider a similar compliance date
for adjacent industries, such as non-road
mobile machinery, given that they share
supply chains. Similarly, EPA
appreciates the suggestion from the
commenters regarding a definition of
‘‘motor vehicle’’ in the regulatory text
and will consider proposing such a
definition in relevant regulatory text as
part of the upcoming broader
rulemaking on PIP (3:1) and other PBT
chemicals.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:22 Mar 07, 2022
Jkt 256001
C. Comments Opposed to Further
Compliance Date Extensions
In contrast to industry commenters,
commenters from environmental, public
health, children’s health organizations,
or tribal partnership groups contended
that no additional compliance date
delay was warranted.
1. Summary of Public Comments
Opposed to Further Compliance Date
Extensions
Two commenters expressed concern
over the additional exposures that could
result from further extensions to the
compliance date, including to children,
persons who are exposed to PIP (3:1)
through multiple pathways, subsistence
fishers and others who are likely to have
higher dietary exposures than those of
the general population, and persons
exposed through the disposal of PIP
(3:1)-containing materials at certain
landfills and through open burning
(Refs. 25 and 26).
One comment from several
environmental, public health, and
children’s health organizations stated
that an extension of the compliance date
would perpetuate exposure to a toxic
chemical contrary to the statutory
requirement to take expedited action to
reduce exposure to the extent
practicable for the PBT chemicals (Ref.
25). The comment emphasized that a
further extension of the compliance
deadline would reward industry’s lack
of participation in the regulatory
process that preceded the January 2021
final rules, and stated their position that
EPA failed to justify the proposed
compliance extension by dismissing its
impact on exposure risks, instead
focusing only on industry hardship, and
that this approach contravenes
Congress’ intent in TSCA. The
commenter cited EPA’s proposed rule to
note that PIP (3:1) is among the highest
scoring PBT chemicals based on its
scores for hazard, exposure, and
persistence and bioaccumulation. The
commenter also stated that, because the
general prohibition against PIP (3:1)
took effect within sixty days, the
commenter believed that EPA had not
considered whether there were steps
that could be taken during a multi-year
phase-in period to reduce exposure to
PIP (3:1), such as public notifications
and labeling of products containing PIP
(3:1) or additional safeguards for the
workers who manufacture, recycle, or
dispose of those products (Ref. 25).
Additionally, the comment cited studies
in stating that the proposed extension
will be especially harmful to
communities where PIP (3:1) is
manufactured, imported, released, and
PO 00000
Frm 00029
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
12881
disposed of, and that multiple
exposures to PIP (3:1) would have a
disproportionate impact on those
communities that raise environmental
justice concerns. The commenter added
that the proposed extension will be
especially harmful to children,
providing citations of industry reports
of the presence of PIP (3:1) in children’s
products. Finally, the commenter
requested that EPA initiate information
gathering rulemakings under TSCA
section 8(a) to prevent any future
attempts by industry to evade regulatory
control on the basis of ignorance of
chemicals present in products and
supply chains.
The National Tribal Toxics Council
(NTTC), an EPA Tribal Partnership
group, stated that, prior to the original
compliance date, EPA had provided
more than adequate advance notice as
well as ample opportunities for
stakeholder engagement, and thus
further extensions are not warranted.
The commenter emphasized that any
regulatory action that pertains to PBTs
has significant tribal implications, and
expressed concern that the rule would
result in 31 additional months of PIP
(3:1) products being disposed in or near
tribal lands without monitoring for
environmental releases (Ref. 26).
2. EPA Response
EPA appreciates the commenters’
descriptions of their concerns, their
input during the current and previous
rulemakings, and their support of EPA’s
stakeholder engagement process. EPA
agrees that earlier industry stakeholder
engagement during the multiple years
the original PIP (3:1) regulation was
under development would have been of
great help to EPA in crafting practicable
compliance dates for various industry
sectors as is required by TSCA section
6(d)(1). EPA also acknowledges that PIP
(3:1) scores high for hazard, exposure,
and persistence and bioaccumulation.
However, EPA finds the information
industry stakeholders have provided in
response to the March 2021 and October
2021 notices to be compelling
justification for the necessity of
extension of the relevant compliance
dates to October 2024 because of the
potential for significant disruption to
the supply chains for important articles
such as HVACR equipment and
personal electronics.
EPA appreciates the
recommendations for steps that could be
taken to phase out PIP (3:1) or further
reduce exposure, such as the public
notifications or worker protections the
commenter described. EPA will
consider these recommendations as part
of EPA’s planned future rulemaking on
E:\FR\FM\08MRR1.SGM
08MRR1
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with RULES1
12882
Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 45 / Tuesday, March 8, 2022 / Rules and Regulations
PIP (3:1) and other PBTs, as described
in the October 2021 proposal, and EPA
will be seeking more detailed comments
and information on issues of this kind
to determine whether additional
measures as proposed would be
practicable. Similarly, as part of that
future rulemaking, EPA will assess how
environmental justice could be
promoted through further exposure
reduction. While EPA has taken note of
the information provided by the
commenters on the reports of PIP (3:1)
in products used by children, as well as
the potential impacts on communities
near importers of PIP (3:1), EPA
emphasizes that the agency has not
determined at what level exposure to
PIP (3:1) represents a risk to human
health or the environment. In the future
rulemaking on PIP (3:1) and other PBTs,
EPA intends to identify whether
exposure to PIP (3:1) could be further
practicably reduced, including by
reducing or removing current exclusions
from prohibitions or by modifying
compliance timeframes. EPA
emphasizes that, as part of the future
rulemaking, information such as that
provided in the comment will be
considered.
Regarding the concerns raised in both
comments regarding tribes and
environmental justice communities,
EPA recognizes that while the
compliance date extension may result in
the potential for exposures that might
otherwise have been precluded, EPA
does not have information to suggest
that such potential exposures are likely
to be substantial or direct. For example,
according to another commenter, the
risk of exposure to PIP (3:1) to workers,
consumers, and end-users is low
because the PIP (3:1) is generally
incorporated into the composition
(polymer matrix) of the components that
are internal to equipment accessible
only by trained technicians (Ref. 14). In
contrast, EPA does know that the use of
PIP (3:1) for these articles in the near
term is necessary to avoid significant
disruption to the supply chains for
certain important articles such as
HVACR systems and personal electronic
devices such as cellular telephones.
Thus, an earlier compliance date would
not be practicable or provide a
reasonable transition period as is
required by TSCA section 6(d)(1). More
information on TSCA section 6(d) is
provided in Unit IV.A. As EPA works to
develop planned future rulemakings on
PIP (3:1) and other PBTs, described in
the October 2021 proposal, EPA will
consider to what extent impacts to tribes
and environmental justice communities
could be reduced further and welcomes
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:22 Mar 07, 2022
Jkt 256001
NTTC’s interest in tribal consultation
and developing a more effective process
for determining whether an action is of
tribal significance.
EPA agrees with commenters’ concern
regarding several industries’ lack of
information on the presence of
chemicals in their supply chains,
particularly in imported articles. EPA
notes that the commenters’
recommendation for promulgation of a
rule under TSCA section 8 is outside the
scope of this compliance date extension.
D. Comments on Other Topics
Commenters also provided
information on other topics, including
their interest in a ‘‘manufactured-by’’
date for articles, applicability of the rule
to replacement parts, and establishment
of a de minimus threshold.
Additionally, a commenter requested
clarification of downstream notification
requirements.
1. Summary of Comments on Other
Topics
Many of the industry commenters
stated that the compliance date
referenced in the proposal should be a
‘‘manufactured-by’’ date, rather than a
compliance date for a prohibition on
processing and distribution in
commerce. By this, the commenters
generally meant that any article
manufactured before the
‘‘manufactured-by’’ date could be
processed and distributed in commerce
at any time in the future without
restriction. One commenter noted that
the only date that the industry has
control over is the date by which an
article is manufactured (Ref. 15). The
commenter asserted that manufacturers
of consumer goods and EPA could more
readily determine compliance using this
approach because a ‘‘manufactured-by’’
date can be confirmed based on unique
product identifiers, such as lot or serial
numbers, that are often marked on the
article. According to the commenter,
retailers do not have control over how
quickly goods are sold and do not
necessarily operate under a first-in, firstout system, which adds to the challenge
of inventory management. The
commenter further stated that in the
absence of a ‘‘manufactured-by’’
compliance date, retailers would be
unable to determine whether a good was
compliant, i.e., does not contain PIP
(3:1). This commenter stated that an
‘‘imported-by’’ date would present
challenges for the industry, primarily
due to the potential for import delays
associated with the process itself as well
as with shipping, which have been
exacerbated by the COVID–19
pandemic. However, the commenter
PO 00000
Frm 00030
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
stated that an ‘‘imported-by’’ date would
be more manageable for the industry
than a compliance date associated with
distribution in commerce.
Another commenter stated that the
date of compliance should be a
‘‘manufactured-by’’ date for
domestically produced articles, and an
‘‘imported-by’’ date for those articles
produced abroad (Ref. 27). This
commenter noted that distributors do
not necessarily ship finished goods
based on when they receive them, and
it may be difficult for manufacturers,
importers, distributors, and retailers to
differentiate with certainty between
goods that appear the same but may
have different chemical compositions.
This commenter further noted that a
distribution in commerce prohibition is
also unworkable because distribution in
commerce has been very broadly
interpreted by EPA to include, in some
cases, any movement of a regulated
product, even among facilities within
the same business enterprise and its
affiliates and subsidiaries.
While some commenters (Refs. 15 and
27) stated that the only compliance date
should be a ‘‘manufactured-by’’ date, or
‘‘imported-by’’ date, other commenters
indicated that a restriction on
distribution in commerce might be
workable as long as sufficient time was
provided for articles manufactured
before the ‘‘manufactured-by’’ date to
move through the channels of trade to
the end user. These commenters often
used the phrase ‘‘sell-through’’ to
describe the date by which sales of
articles manufactured before the
‘‘manufactured-by’’ date must cease.
Two commenters stated that a three-year
‘‘sell-through’’ date would be adequate
(Refs. 17 and 28). One commenter
representing the retail industry
indicated that the minimum time
needed would be 18 months, based on
more-detailed information provided by
a retailer of electronic products (Ref.
29). This commenter noted that more
time would be needed for products that
tend to sell more slowly, such as
furniture.
Many of the industry commenters also
expressed concern over the applicability
of the January 2021 final rule’s
provisions only to some types of
replacement parts. One commenter
noted that HVACR and water-heating
equipment can safely remain in
operation for as long as fifty years or
more and, in many cases, buildings are
designed and built around such
equipment, making it difficult to replace
(Ref. 28). This commenter contended
that to ensure that this critical HVACR
and water heating equipment can still
function in the future, the components
E:\FR\FM\08MRR1.SGM
08MRR1
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with RULES1
Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 45 / Tuesday, March 8, 2022 / Rules and Regulations
and parts used in servicing the
equipment must be able to be used
without restriction. Another commenter
stated that components or parts of
articles typically are held by the
manufacturer until needed for repair or
replacement (Ref. 15). The commenter
noted that electronic finished goods
may have warranties upwards of fifteen
years, meaning that components or parts
of articles for repair or replacement can
be kept in a manufacturer’s warehouse
for well over a decade. This commenter
further explained that, when
transitioning from one generation of an
electronic finished good to the next,
spare parts for the first generation are
bought under a ‘‘last time buy’’ from the
supplier to create the inventory of spare
parts needed to support warranty
claims. After this ‘‘last time buy’’, the
tooling needed to manufacture those
parts is decommissioned. The
commenter further noted that spare and
replacement parts or articles that
contain PIP (3:1) would be expected to
be in inventory well past the proposed
October 2024 compliance date, but the
‘‘manufactured-by’’ date approach
would solve this problem.
A number of commenters
recommended that EPA establish a de
minimis threshold for PIP (3:1)
regulation, particularly in articles.
Commenters gave a variety of reasons
for why EPA should establish a
threshold level. One commenter stated
that the difficulty in determining
whether PIP (3:1) is present in a
component article was at least partly
due to potential discomfort with
claiming absolute ‘‘zero’’ PIP (3:1) when
there is ambiguity about how that will
be determined or whether it is feasible
to determine due to the potential for
miniscule contamination (Ref. 30). This
commenter contended that ambiguity in
the material declaration process makes
that process extremely time consuming
and adds months to the process for each
supplier. Other commenters also
expressed concern for the potential for
trace contamination and the feasibility
of controlling such contamination (Refs.
15 and 31). Another commenter noted
the high expense that is entailed by
having to test down to the detection
limit in the absence of a de minimis
threshold (Ref. 21). Yet another
commenter noted that other chemical
regulatory programs such as REACH
incorporate a de minimis threshold (Ref.
16).
One commenter requested that EPA
clarify the downstream notification
requirements for manufacturers,
processors, and distributors of PIP (3:1)
for use in certain articles, and whether
those requirements would be extended
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:22 Mar 07, 2022
Jkt 256001
along with the compliance dates for the
prohibition on processing and
distribution of certain PIP (3:1)
containing articles (Ref. 27).
2. EPA Response
EPA generally recognizes the
challenges described by these
commenters in determining whether
and where PIP (3:1) is present in articles
in their supply chains, how long it may
take to clear those PIP (3:1)-containing
articles through the channels of trade,
and the steps needed to phase PIP (3:1)
out of articles in the supply chain. EPA
will consider these comments in the
context of the broader rulemaking EPA
plans to undertake for PIP (3:1) and
other PBT chemicals (Ref. 10). In that
rulemaking, EPA plans to request public
comment on the utility as well as the
drawbacks of a ‘‘manufactured-by’’ date
and the amount of time needed for
articles to clear the channels of trade,
the applicability of the rule to
replacement parts, and a de minimis
threshold in the context of reducing
exposure to PIP (3:1) to the extent
practicable. Regarding the request for
clarification regarding downstream
notification requirements, EPA is not
extending the compliance date for
downstream notification requirements
to align with the extended compliance
dates for PIP (3:1)-containing articles in
this final rule. The downstream
notification requirements apply only to
the chemical PIP (3:1) and mixtures
(products) that contain the chemical PIP
(3:1); they are not applicable to PIP (3:1)
containing articles. However, EPA is
conforming the required downstream
notification language with the
compliance date extensions. Details of
these amendments are in Unit IV.C.
IV. Provisions of this Final Rule
A. Establishing a Revised Compliance
Date
TSCA section 6(d) includes a number
of provisions relating to establishment
of effective or compliance dates in rules
promulgated under TSCA section 6.
Specifically, TSCA section 6(d)(1)(A)
directs EPA to specify a date on which
the TSCA section 6(a) rule is to take
effect that is ‘‘as soon as practicable.’’
TSCA section 6(d)(1)(B) requires EPA to
specify mandatory compliance dates for
each requirement of a rule promulgated
under TSCA section 6(a), which must be
as soon as practicable but no later than
five years after promulgation except as
provided in subsections (C) and (D) or
in the case of a use exempted under
TSCA section 6(g). TSCA section
6(d)(1)(C) states that EPA must specify
mandatory compliance dates for the
PO 00000
Frm 00031
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
12883
start of ban or phase-out requirements
under a TSCA section 6(a) rule, which
must be as soon as practicable but no
later than five years after promulgation,
except in the case of a use exempted
under TSCA section 6(g); and TSCA
section 6(d)(1)(D) requires EPA to
specify mandatory compliance dates for
full implementation of ban or phase-out
requirements under a TSCA section 6(a)
rule, which must be as soon as
practicable. Additionally, TSCA section
6(d)(1)(E) directs EPA to provide for a
reasonable transition period.
As noted in the preamble to the
January 2021 final rule, the term
‘‘practicable’’ as used in the phrase ‘‘to
the extent practicable’’ in TSCA section
6(h) is undefined, the phrases ‘‘as soon
as practicable’’ and ‘‘reasonable
transition period’’ as used in TSCA
section 6(d)(1) are also undefined, and
the legislative history on each provision
is limited. Given the ambiguity in the
statute, for purposes of the January 2021
final rule under TSCA section 6(h), EPA
presumed a 60-day compliance date was
‘‘as soon as practicable’’ where EPA
determined a prohibition or restriction
was practicable, unless there was
support for a lengthier period of time on
the basis of reasonably available
information, such as information
submitted in comments on the Exposure
and Use Assessment or on the proposed
rule, or in stakeholder dialogues. At the
time, EPA believed that such a
presumption would ensure that the
compliance schedule is ‘‘as soon as
practicable,’’ particularly in the context
of the TSCA section 6(h) rules for
chemicals identified as persistent,
bioaccumulative and toxic, and given
that the expedited timeframe for issuing
a TSCA section 6(h) proposed rule did
not allow time for collection and
assessment of new information separate
from the comment opportunities during
the development of and in response to
the proposed rule. EPA noted that this
approach also allowed for submission of
information from the sources most
likely to have the information that
would impact an EPA determination on
whether or how best to adjust the
compliance deadline to ensure that the
final compliance deadline chosen was
both ‘‘as soon as practicable’’ and
provides a ‘‘reasonable transition
period.’’
As noted in the September 2021 final
rule and the October 2021 proposal,
despite significant outreach efforts, EPA
did not receive timely or specific input
from certain stakeholders during any
public comment periods prior to
issuance of the January 2021 final rule
regarding the presence of PIP (3:1) in
myriad articles (Refs. 2 and 10). Absent
E:\FR\FM\08MRR1.SGM
08MRR1
12884
Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 45 / Tuesday, March 8, 2022 / Rules and Regulations
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with RULES1
this input, in the January 2021 final
rule, EPA determined that PIP (3:1) was
not widely present in articles outside
the aerospace and automotive sectors
and that the presumption that a 60-day
compliance date was practicable was
appropriate. The comments received in
response to EPA’s March 2021
notification and request for comments,
and the communications received before
that document published in in the
Federal Register, presented new
information demonstrating that a 60-day
compliance date was not practicable
and did not provide a reasonable
transition period for the full
implementation of a ban or phase-out
for many industries.
B. Compliance Dates in this Final Rule
Based upon EPA’s analysis of the
comments received on the October 2021
proposal, along with the information
provided in comments received on the
March 2021 notification and request for
comments, EPA is extending until
October 31, 2024, the compliance date
for the prohibition on processing and
distribution in commerce of PIP (3:1)containing articles, and the PIP (3:1)
used to make those articles. As
discussed in the October 2021 proposal,
and in the response to comments earlier,
the October 2024 compliance date is
consistent with the lower end of the
time estimates provided by commenters
on the March 2021 notification and
request for comments. As described in
Unit III.A., approximately one-third of
the commenters on the October 2021
proposal estimated that they would be
able to comply with the October 2024
compliance date, albeit with some
reservations related to replacement
parts, the ability to sell articles
produced before the compliance date,
and COVID–19 pandemic impacts on
global supply chains. EPA has
determined that this further extension of
the March 8, 2022 compliance date to
October 31, 2024, for the prohibition on
processing and distribution in
commerce is necessary to avoid
significant disruption in the supply
chains for certain articles, such as
HVACR equipment and consumer
electronics, and will provide a measure
of regulatory certainty while industry
collects and submits additional
information to inform whether a further
compliance date extension may be
necessary for certain industry sectors,
such as the semiconductor
manufacturing industry. While EPA
expects that that in several industries
this extension would be sufficient, EPA
also recognizes the challenges described
by commenters with complex supply
chains and the potential need for a
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:22 Mar 07, 2022
Jkt 256001
longer compliance date extension in
certain industries. The compliance date
extension to October 31, 2024, will
allow EPA additional time to further
evaluate the need to again extend the
compliance deadlines for PIP (3:1) for
certain industries such as the
semiconductor manufacturing industry.
As discussed in the October 2021
proposal and in more detail in Unit
II.C., EPA plans to consider this
information in the context of revisions
to PIP (3:1) and other PBT rules more
generally.
EPA is also extending the
recordkeeping compliance date in 40
CFR 751.407(d) for PIP (3:1)-containing
articles until October 31, 2024. Because
industry is still in the process of
identifying whether and where PIP (3:1)
is present in many of the articles in their
supply chains, it would be difficult, if
not impossible, for them to supply the
required information. Additionally, as
described earlier, a public comment
requested that EPA make the
compliance date for recordkeeping for
excluded articles, such as new and
replacement automotive parts,
consistent with the recordkeeping
compliance date for articles that are the
subject of this rulemaking (Ref. 20).
Based on the comments received from
the non-road mobile machinery and
other similar industries, EPA
understands that not all suppliers
eligible for the motor vehicle parts
exclusion participate in the automotive
industry’s recordkeeping system.
Therefore, EPA is extending the
recordkeeping compliance dates
specified in paragraphs 40 CFR 751.407
(a)(2)(iii) and (d)(4) from March 8, 2022,
to October 31, 2024. However, the
compliance dates specified in 40 CFR
751.407(a)(2)(ii) remain in effect.
EPA also recognizes that, for many
industries, the collection of information
on the presence of PIP (3:1) in their
supply chains is still ongoing. As
discussed in the October 2021 proposal,
EPA will consider any additional
information of this kind in the context
of the broader rulemaking EPA plans to
undertake for PIP (3:1) and other PBT
chemicals (Ref. 10). In that future
rulemaking, EPA also plans to consider
the comments, discussed in Unit III.D.,
regarding a ‘‘manufactured-by’’ date,
replacement parts, and a de minimis
threshold.
C. Conforming Amendments to the
Downstream Notification Requirements
In reviewing the comments received
on the October 2021 proposal (e.g., Ref.
27), EPA realized that the downstream
notification requirements in the January
2021 final rule could be misleading,
PO 00000
Frm 00032
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
resulting in potential confusion for the
regulated community. 40 CFR
751.407(e) requires manufacturers,
processors, and distributors in
commerce of PIP (3:1) and PIP (3:1)containing products to provide
notification of the restrictions on the
chemical substance to their customers,
either through specific mandatory
language on a Safety Data Sheet (SDS)
or a label. EPA notes that the
notification requirements only apply to
the chemical PIP (3:1) or to products
containing the chemical PIP (3:1). As
discussed in Unit II.A., the term
‘‘product’’ excludes articles. Therefore,
the downstream notification
requirements on 40 CFR 751.407(e) do
not apply to PIP (3:1)-containing
articles.
However, the mandatory language in
40 CFR 751.407(e)(3)(i) through (iii)
does not reflect the fact that EPA is
extending the compliance date for the
prohibition on processing and
distribution in commerce of certain PIP
(3:1)-containing articles. Thus,
purchasers of PIP (3:1) and PIP (3:1)containing products who intend to use
them in articles may be confused by the
mandatory language on an SDS or a
label that says that they may not use the
PIP (3:1) or PIP (3:1)-containing product
in this manner. Therefore, EPA is
amending the mandatory language at 40
CFR 751.407(e)(3)(i) through (iii) to
conform to the compliance date
extension for the prohibition on
processing and distribution in
commerce of certain PIP (3:1)containing articles.
V. 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 technical person listed under FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT.
1. EPA. Phenol, Isopropylated Phosphate
(3:1) (PIP (3:1)); Regulation of Persistent,
Bioaccumulative, and Toxic Chemicals
Under TSCA Section 6(h); Final Rule.
Federal Register (86 FR 894, January 6,
2021) (FRL–10018–88).
2. EPA. Regulation of Persistent,
Bioaccumulative, and Toxic Chemicals
Under TSCA Section 6(h); Phenol,
Isopropylated Phosphate (3:1);
Compliance Date Extension. Federal
Register (86 FR 51823, September 17,
2021) (FRL–6015.5–03–OCSPP).
E:\FR\FM\08MRR1.SGM
08MRR1
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with RULES1
Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 45 / Tuesday, March 8, 2022 / Rules and Regulations
3. Letter from the Consumer Technology
Association (CTA) and the Information
Technology Industry Council (ITI) to
EPA on March 15, 2021. EPA–HQ–
OPPT–2021–0202–0015.
4. EPA. Regulation of Persistent,
Bioaccumulative, and Toxic Chemicals
Under TSCA Section 6(h); Phenol,
Isopropylated Phosphate (3:1); Request
for Comments. Federal Register (86 FR
14398, March 16, 2021) (FRL–10021–08).
5. 2,4,6-Tris(tert-butyl)phenol (2,4,6–TTBP);
Regulation of Persistent,
Bioaccumulative, and Toxic Chemicals
Under TSCA Section 6(h); Final Rule.
Federal Register (86 FR 866, January 6,
2021) (FRL–10018–90).
6. EPA. Decabromodiphenyl Ether
(DecaBDE); Regulation of Persistent,
Bioaccumulative, and Toxic Chemicals
Under TSCA Section 6(h); Final Rule.
Federal Register (86 FR 880, January 6,
2021) (FRL–10018–87).
7. EPA. Pentachlorothiophenol (PCTP);
Regulation of Persistent,
Bioaccumulative, and Toxic Chemicals
Under TSCA Section 6(h); Final Rule.
Federal Register (86 FR 911, January 6,
2021) (FRL–10018–89).
8. EPA. Hexachlorobutadiene (HCBD);
Regulation of Persistent,
Bioaccumulative, and Toxic Chemicals
Under TSCA Section 6(h); Final Rule.
Federal Register (86 FR 922, January 6,
2021) (FRL–10018–91).
9. Comments submitted to EPA. Regulation of
Persistent, Bioaccumulative, and Toxic
Chemicals Under TSCA Section 6(h).
EPA–HQ–OPPT–2021–0202–0001.
10. EPA. Regulation of Persistent,
Bioaccumulative, and Toxic Chemicals
Under TSCA Section 6(h); Phenol,
Isopropylated Phosphate (3:1); Further
Compliance Date Extension. Federal
Register (86 FR 59684, October 28, 2021)
(FRL–6015.6–01–OCSPP).
11. EPA. No Action Assurance Regarding
Prohibition of Processing and
Distribution of Phenol Isopropylated
Phosphate (3:1), PIP (3:1) for Use in
Articles, and PIP (3:1)-containing
Articles under 40 CFR 751.407(a)(1).
March 8, 2021. https://www.epa.gov/
assessing-and-managing-chemicalsunder-tsca/public-comment-period-pbtrules-and-no-action-assurance.
12. Comment submitted by SEMI to EPA on
December 22, 2021. EPA–HQ–OPPT–
2021–0598–0038.
13. Comments submitted to EPA. Regulation
of Persistent, Bioaccumulative, and
Toxic Chemicals Under TSCA Section
6(h); Phenol, Isopropylated Phosphate
(3:1); Further Compliance Date
Extension. EPA–HQ–OPPT–2021–0598–
0001.
14. Comment submitted by Air Conditioning,
Refrigeration, and Heating Institute
(AHRI) to EPA on December 21, 2021.
EPA–HQ–OPPT–2021–0598–0027.
15. Comment submitted by Consumer
Technology Association (CTA), IPC and
Information Technology Industry
Council (ITI) to EPA on December 21,
2021. EPA–HQ–OPPT–2021–0598–0030.
16. Comment submitted by the Alliance of
Home Appliance Manufacturers (AHAM)
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:22 Mar 07, 2022
Jkt 256001
to EPA on December 23, 2021. EPA–HQ–
OPPT–2021–0598–0033.
17. Comment submitted by the National
Electrical Manufacturers Association
(NEMA) to EPA on December 22, 2021.
EPA–HQ–OPPT–2021–0598–0031.
18. Comment submitted by the
Semiconductor Industry Association
(SIA) to EPA on December 21, 2021.
EPA–HQ–OPPT–2021–0598–0025.
19. Comment submitted by Hitachi HighTech America, Inc. (HTA) to EPA on
December 22, 2021. EPA–HQ–OPPT–
2021–0598–0041.
20. Comment submitted by Alliance for
Automotive Innovation and Motor &
Equipment Manufacturers Association
(MEMA) to EPA on December 23, 2021.
EPA–HQ–OPPT–2021–0598–0046.
21. Comment submitted by the Association of
Equipment Manufacturers (AEM) to EPA
on December 23, 2021. EPA–HQ–OPPT–
2021–0598–0047.
22. Comment submitted by Truck and Engine
Manufacturers Association (EMA) to
EPA on December 23, 2021. EPA–HQ–
OPPT–2021–0598–0044.
23. Comment submitted by Kubota North
America Corporation (KNA) to EPA on
December 21, 2021. EPA–HQ–OPPT–
2021–0598–0028.
24. Comment submitted by the Outdoor
Power Equipment Institute (OPEI) to
EPA on December 22, 2021. EPA–HQ–
OPPT–2021–0598–0032.
25. Comment submitted by Alaska
Community Action on Toxics et al. to
EPA on December 23, 2021. EPA–HQ–
OPPT–2021–0598–0043.
26. Comment submitted by National Tribal
Toxics Council (NTTC) To EPA on
December 27, 2021. EPA–HQ–OPPT–
2021–0598–0057.
27. Comment submitted by Chemical Users
Coalition (CUC) to EPA on December 22,
2021. EPA–HQ–OPPT–2021–0598–0036.
28. Comment submitted by Air Conditioning,
Heating, and Refrigeration Institute
(AHRI) to EPA on December 21, 2022.
EPA–HQ–OPPT–2021–0598–0027.
29. Comment submitted by the Retail
Industry Leaders Association (RILA) to
EPA on December 27, 2021. EPA–HQ–
OPPT–2021–0598–0055.
30. Comment submitted by Advanced
Medical Technology Association
(AdvaMed) to EPA on December 17,
2021. EPA–HQ–OPPT–2021–0598–0022.
31. Comment submitted by Thermo Fisher
Scientific to EPA on December 24, 2021.
EPA–HQ–OPPT–2021–0598–0049.
VI. Statutory and Executive Order
Reviews
Additional information about these
statutes and Executive Orders can be
found at https://www2.epa.gov/
lawsregulations/laws-and-executiveorders.
PO 00000
Frm 00033
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
12885
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory
Planning and Review and Executive
Order 13563: Improving Regulation and
Regulatory Review
This action is a significant regulatory
action under Executive Order 12866 (58
FR 51735, October 4, 1993) and was
submitted to the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) for review under
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563 (76
FR 3821, January 21, 2011). Any
changes made in response to OMB
review have been reflected in the docket
for this action.
B. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
This action does not impose any new
information collection activities or
burden subject to OMB review and
approval under the PRA, 44 U.S.C. 3501
et seq. Burden is defined in 5 CFR
1320.3(b). OMB has previously
approved the information collection
activities contained in the existing
regulations and associated burden under
OMB Control No. 2070–0213 (EPA ICR
No. 2599.02). An agency may not
conduct or sponsor, and a person is not
required to respond to a collection of
information that requires OMB approval
under PRA, unless it has been approved
by OMB and displays a currently valid
OMB control number. The OMB control
numbers for EPA’s regulations in title 40
of the CFR, after appearing in the
Federal Register, are listed in 40 CFR
part 9, and included on the related
collection instrument or form, if
applicable.
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
I certify that this action will not have
a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities
under the RFA, 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq. In
making this determination, EPA
concludes that the impact of concern for
this rule is any significant adverse
economic impact on small entities, and
the Agency is certifying that this rule
will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities because the rule relieves
regulatory burden. This action would
extend the compliance date for a
prohibition on the processing and
distributing in commerce of PIP (3:1) for
use in certain articles and the
processing and distributing in
commerce of certain PIP (3:1)containing articles, along with the
associated recordkeeping requirements,
from March 8, 2022, to October 31,
2024. EPA has therefore concluded that
this action would relieve regulatory
burden for all directly regulated small
entities.
E:\FR\FM\08MRR1.SGM
08MRR1
12886
Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 45 / Tuesday, March 8, 2022 / Rules and Regulations
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
(UMRA)
This action does not contain any
unfunded mandate as described in
UMRA, 2 U.S.C. 1531–1538, and does
not significantly or uniquely affect small
governments. The action imposes no
enforceable duty on any state, local or
tribal governments or the private sector.
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
This action does not have federalism
implications as specified in Executive
Order 13132 (64 FR 43255, August 10,
1999). It will not have substantial direct
effects on the states, on the relationship
between the national government and
the states, or on the distribution of
power and responsibilities among the
various levels of government.
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation
and Coordination With Indian Tribal
Governments
This action does not have tribal
implications as specified in Executive
Order 13175 (65 FR 67249, November 9,
2000) because it does not have
substantial direct effects on one or more
Indian tribes, on the relationship
between the Federal Government and
Indian tribes, or on the distribution of
power and responsibilities between the
Federal Government and Indian tribes.
Thus, Executive Order 13175 does not
apply to this action.
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of
Children From Environmental Health
Risks and Safety Risks
This action is not a ‘‘covered
regulatory action’’ under Executive
Order 13045 (62 FR 19885, April 23,
1997) because it is not an economically
significant regulatory action as defined
by Executive Order 12866.
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with RULES1
I. National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act (NTTAA)
This action does not involve technical
standards. As such, NTTAA section
12(d), 15 U.S.C. 272 note, does not
apply to this action.
Jkt 256001
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 751
Environmental protection, Chemicals,
Export notification, Hazardous
substances, Import certification,
Reporting and recordkeeping.
Michael S. Regan,
Administrator.
Therefore, for the reasons stated in the
preamble, 40 CFR part 751 is amended
as follows:
PART 751—REGULATION OF CERTAIN
CHEMICAL SUBSTANCES AND
MIXTURES UNDER SECTION 6 OF THE
TOXIC SUBSTANCES CONTROL ACT
1. The authority citation for part 751
continues to read as follows:
■
2. Amend § 751.407:
a. In paragraphs (a)(2)(iii) and (d)(4)
by removing ‘‘March 8, 2022’’ and
adding ‘‘October 31, 2024’’ in its place;
and
■ b. By revising paragraphs (e)(3)(i)
through (iii).
The revisions read as follows:
■
■
This is not a ‘‘significant energy
action’’ as defined in Executive Order
13211 (66 FR 28355, May 22, 2001),
because it is not likely to have a
significant adverse effect on the supply,
distribution or use of energy and has not
otherwise been designated by the
Administrator of the Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs as a
significant energy action.
16:22 Mar 07, 2022
K. Congressional Review Act (CRA)
This action is subject to the CRA, 5
U.S.C. 801 et seq., and EPA will submit
a report containing this rule and other
required information to each House of
the Congress and to the Comptroller
General of the United States. This action
is not a ‘‘major rule’’ as defined by 5
U.S.C. 804(2).
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 2605, 15 U.S.C.
2625(l)(4).
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions
Concerning Regulations That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use
VerDate Sep<11>2014
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal
Actions To Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and
Low-Income Populations
EPA believes that this action does not
have disproportionately high and
adverse human health or environmental
effects on minority populations, lowincome populations and/or indigenous
peoples, as specified in Executive Order
12898 (59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994).
As discussed in Unit II., this action is
necessary to avoid widespread
disruptions in the supply chains for a
wide variety of essential goods and
would not otherwise materially alter the
final rule as published.
§ 751.407
PIP (3:1).
*
*
*
*
*
(e) * * *
(3) * * *
(i) SDS Section 1(c). ‘‘The
Environmental Protection Agency
prohibits processing and distribution of
this chemical/product for any use other
than: (1) In hydraulic fluids either for
the aviation industry or to meet military
specifications for safety and
PO 00000
Frm 00034
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
performance where no alternative
chemical is available that meets U.S.
Department of Defense specification
requirements, (2) lubricants and greases,
(3) New or replacement parts for motor
and aerospace vehicles, (4) as an
intermediate in the manufacture of
cyanoacrylate glue, (5) In specialized
engine air filters for locomotive and
marine applications, (6) In adhesives
and sealants before January 6, 2025,
after which use in adhesives and
sealants is prohibited, and (7) in other
articles before October 31, 2024, after
which use in articles other than new or
replacement parts for motor and
aerospace vehicles or specialized engine
air filters for locomotive and marine
applications is prohibited. In addition,
all persons are prohibited from releasing
PIP (3:1) to water during manufacturing,
processing, and distribution in
commerce, and must follow all existing
regulations and best practices to prevent
the release of PIP (3:1) to water during
the commercial use of PIP (3:1).’’; and
(ii) SDS Section 15. ‘‘The
Environmental Protection Agency
prohibits processing and distribution of
this chemical/product for any use other
than: (1) In hydraulic fluids either for
the aviation industry or to meet military
specifications for safety and
performance where no alternative
chemical is available that meets U.S.
Department of Defense specification
requirements, (2) lubricants and greases,
(3) new or replacement parts for motor
and aerospace vehicles, (4) as an
intermediate in the manufacture of
cyanoacrylate glue, (5) In specialized
engine air filters for locomotive and
marine applications, (6) in adhesives
and sealants before January 6, 2025,
after which use in adhesives and
sealants is prohibited, and (7) in other
articles before October 31, 2024, after
which use in articles other than new or
replacement parts for motor and
aerospace vehicles or specialized engine
air filters for locomotive and marine
applications is prohibited. In addition,
all persons are prohibited from releasing
PIP (3:1) to water during manufacturing,
processing, and distribution in
commerce, and must follow all existing
regulations and best practices to prevent
the release of PIP (3:1) to water during
the commercial use of PIP (3:1).’’; or
(iii) Labeling. ‘‘The Environmental
Protection Agency prohibits processing
and distribution of this chemical/
product for any use other than: (1) In
hydraulic fluids either for the aviation
industry or to meet military
specifications for safety and
performance where no alternative
chemical is available that meets U.S.
Department of Defense specification
E:\FR\FM\08MRR1.SGM
08MRR1
Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 45 / Tuesday, March 8, 2022 / Rules and Regulations
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with RULES1
requirements, (2) lubricants and greases,
(3) new or replacement parts for motor
and aerospace vehicles, (4) as an
intermediate in the manufacture of
cyanoacrylate glue, (5) In specialized
engine air filters for locomotive and
marine applications, (6) In adhesives
and sealants before January 6, 2025,
after which use in adhesives and
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:22 Mar 07, 2022
Jkt 256001
sealants is prohibited, and (7) in other
articles before October 31, 2024, after
which use in articles other than new or
replacement parts for motor and
aerospace vehicles or specialized engine
air filters for locomotive and marine
applications is prohibited. In addition,
all persons are prohibited from releasing
PIP (3:1) to water during manufacturing,
PO 00000
Frm 00035
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 9990
12887
processing, and distribution in
commerce, and must follow all existing
regulations and best practices to prevent
the release of PIP (3:1) to water during
the commercial use of PIP (3:1).’’
*
*
*
*
*
[FR Doc. 2022–04945 Filed 3–7–22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
E:\FR\FM\08MRR1.SGM
08MRR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 87, Number 45 (Tuesday, March 8, 2022)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 12875-12887]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2022-04945]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Part 751
[EPA-HQ-OPPT-2021-0598; FRL-6015.6-02-OCSPP]
RIN 2070-AK95
Regulation of Persistent, Bioaccumulative, and Toxic Chemicals
Under TSCA Section 6(h); Phenol, Isopropylated Phosphate (3:1); Further
Compliance Date Extension
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is amending the
regulations applicable to phenol, isopropylated phosphate (3:1) (PIP
(3:1)) promulgated under the Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA).
Specifically, EPA is extending the compliance date applicable to the
prohibition on processing and distribution in commerce of certain PIP
(3:1)-containing articles, and the PIP (3:1) used to make those
articles, until October 31, 2024, along with the compliance date for
the associated recordkeeping requirements for manufacturers,
processors, and distributors of PIP (3:1)-containing articles. This
final rule follows issuance of a proposed rule for public comment on
October 28, 2021; comments on the proposed rule are responded to in
this action.
DATES: This final rule is effective on March 8, 2022. For purposes of
judicial review and 40 CFR 23.5, this rule shall be promulgated at 1
p.m. eastern standard time on March 22, 2022.
ADDRESSES: The docket for this action, identified by docket
identification (ID) number EPA-HQ-OPPT-2021-0598, is available at
https://www.regulations.gov. Due to the public health concerns related
to COVID-19, the EPA Docket Center (EPA/DC) and Reading Room are opened
to visitors by appointment only. For the latest status information on
EPA/DC services and docket access, visit https://www.epa.gov/dockets.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For technical information contact:
Cindy Wheeler, Existing Chemicals Risk Management Division, Office of
Pollution Prevention and Toxics, Environmental Protection Agency, 1200
Pennsylvania Ave. NW, Washington, DC 20460-0001; telephone number:
(202) 566-0484; 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. Executive Summary
A. Does this action apply to me?
You may be potentially affected by this action if you manufacture
(including import), process, distribute in commerce, or use phenol,
isopropylated phosphate (3:1) (PIP (3:1)), or PIP (3:1)-containing
articles,
[[Page 12876]]
especially plastic articles that are components of electronics or
electrical articles. 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
action applies to them. Potentially affected entities may include:
Petroleum Refineries (NAICS Code 324110);
All Other Basic Organic Chemical Manufacturing (NAICS Code
325199);
Plastics Material and Resin Manufacturing (NAICS Code
325211);
All Other Miscellaneous Chemical Product and Preparation
Manufacturing (NAICS Code 325998);
Machinery Manufacturing (NAICS Code 333);
Air-Conditioning and Warm Air Heating Equipment and
Commercial and Industrial Refrigeration Equipment Manufacturing (NAICS
Code 333415);
Other Communications Equipment Manufacturing (NAICS Code
334290);
Computer and Electronic Product Manufacturing (NAICS Code
334);
Small Electrical Appliance Manufacturing (NAICS Code
335210);
Major Household Appliance Manufacturing (NAICS Code
335220);
Motor and Generator Manufacturing (NAICS Code 335312);
Switchgear and Switchboard Apparatus Manufacturing (NAICS
Code 335313);
Relay and Industrial Control Manufacturing (NAICS Code
335314);
Other Communication and Energy Wire Manufacturing (NAICS
Code 335929);
Current-carrying Wiring Device Manufacturing (NAICS Code
335931);
Transportation Equipment Manufacturing (NAICS Code 336);
Musical Instrument Manufacturing (NAICS Code 339992);
All Other Miscellaneous Manufacturing (NAICS Code 339999);
Other Chemical and Allied Products Merchant Wholesalers
(NAICS Code 424690);
Motor Vehicle and Parts Dealers (NAICS Code 441);
All Other Home Furnishings Stores (NAICS Code 442299);
Electronics and Appliance Stores (NAICS Code 443);
Building Material and Garden Equipment and Supplies
Dealers (NAICS Code 444);
Research and Development in the Physical, Engineering, and
Life Sciences (NAICS Code 541710).
B. What is the Agency's authority for taking this action?
1. Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA)
TSCA section 6(h), 15 U.S.C. 2605(h), directs EPA to take expedited
action on certain persistent, bioaccumulative, and toxic (PBT) chemical
substances. For chemical substances that meet the statutory criteria,
EPA is directed to issue final rules that address the risks of injury
to health or the environment that the Administrator determines are
presented and that reduce exposure to the substance(s) to the extent
practicable. In response to this directive, EPA identified PIP (3:1) as
meeting the TSCA section 6(h) criteria and issued a final rule for PIP
(3:1) on January 6, 2021 (Ref. 1).
With the obligation to promulgate these rules, the Agency also has
the authority to amend them if circumstances change, including in
relation to the receipt of new information. It is well settled that EPA
has inherent authority to reconsider, revise, or repeal past decisions
to the extent permitted by law so long as the Agency provides a
reasoned explanation. See F.C.C. v. Fox Television Stations, Inc., 556
U.S. 502, 515 (2009). Here, as explained further in Unit I.D. and Unit
IV.A, based on information submitted by regulated entities, the Agency
has determined that revised compliance dates are necessary to address
detailed information submitted in comments demonstrating that the
original compliance dates were not practicable and did not provide
adequate transition time consistent with TSCA section 6(d)(1) because
compliance with the original compliance date and initially extended
compliance date would have caused extensive harm to the economy and
public due to unavailability of critical goods and equipment.
2. Administrative Procedure Act (APA).
APA section 553(d), 5 U.S.C. 553(d), provides that the publication
of a substantive rule must occur no later than 30 days before its
effective date, with certain exceptions. The purpose of this provision
is to ``give affected parties a reasonable time to adjust their
behavior before the final rule takes effect.'' See Omnipoint Corp. v.
F.C.C., 78 F.3d 620, 630 (D.C. Cir. 1996); see also United States v.
Gavrilovic, 551 F.2d 1099, 1104 (8th Cir. 1977) (quoting legislative
history). Of relevance here, APA section 553(d)(1), 5 U.S.C. 553(d)(1),
provides that final rules shall not become effective until 30 days
after publication in the Federal Register ``except . . . a substantive
rule which grants or recognizes an exemption or relieves a
restriction.'' When the agency grants or recognizes an exemption or
relieves a restriction, affected parties do not need a reasonable time
to adjust because the effect is not adverse. See Indep. U.S. Tanker
Owners Comm. v. Skinner, 884 F.2d 587 (D.C. Cir. 1989) (upholding
immediate effective date for a final rule intended to avoid disruption
in domestic trade by lifting a ban on vessels participating in domestic
shipping), mandate modified on other grounds, 901 F.2d 1116 (D.C. Cir.
1990). EPA has determined that this rule relieves a restriction by
providing additional time for regulated entities to comply with the
applicable requirements. Accordingly, EPA is making this rule effective
immediately upon publication.
C. What action is the Agency taking?
The January 2021 final rule for PIP (3:1) prohibits the processing
and distribution in commerce of PIP (3:1), PIP (3:1)-containing
products, and PIP (3:1)-containing articles, with specified exclusions;
prohibits or restricts the release of PIP (3:1) to water during
manufacturing, processing, distribution in commerce, and commercial
use; and requires persons manufacturing, processing, and distributing
in commerce PIP (3:1) and products containing PIP (3:1) to notify their
customers of these prohibitions and restrictions and to keep records.
Several different compliance dates were established, the first of which
was 60 days after publication, or March 8, 2021, after which processing
and distribution in commerce of PIP (3:1), PIP (3:1)-containing
products, and PIP (3:1)-containing articles were prohibited unless an
alternative compliance date or exclusion was otherwise provided. A
final rule issued in September 2021 extended the compliance date
applicable to the prohibition on processing and distribution in
commerce of certain PIP (3:1)-containing articles, and the PIP (3:1)
used to make those articles, from March 8, 2021, to March 8, 2022,
along with the compliance date for the associated recordkeeping
requirements for PIP (3:1)-containing articles (Ref. 2).
This final rule amends the regulations at 40 CFR 751.407(a)(2)(iii)
and (d)(4) to further extend the phased-in prohibition, established in
the September 2021 final rule, for the processing and distribution in
commerce of PIP (3:1) for use in certain articles, and for the
processing and distribution in commerce of certain PIP (3:1)-containing
articles, from March 8, 2022, to October 31, 2024. The
[[Page 12877]]
compliance date for the recordkeeping requirements for manufacturers,
processors, and distributors of PIP (3:1)-containing articles is also
extended from March 8, 2022, to October 31, 2024. Articles covered by
the phased-in prohibition include any article not otherwise covered by
an alternative compliance deadline or exclusion described in 40 CFR
751.407(a)(2)(ii) or (b).
D. Why is the Agency taking this action?
EPA is further extending the compliance dates applicable to the
prohibition on processing and distribution in commerce of PIP (3:1) for
use in certain articles, and the processing and distribution in
commerce of certain PIP (3:1)-containing articles, to further address
the hardships inadvertently created by the January 2021 final rule on
PIP (3:1) (Ref. 1) due to impacted uses and supply chain challenges
that were not communicated to EPA until after the rule was published.
Shortly after the final rule was published in January 2021, many
stakeholders, including, for example, the electronics and electrical
manufacturing sector and their customers, raised significant concerns
about their ability to meet the March 8, 2021, compliance date for PIP
(3:1)-containing articles (Ref. 3). In the Federal Register of March
16, 2021 (Ref. 4), EPA requested additional comment on this specific
issue, as well as on other aspects of all the TSCA section 6(h) final
rules (Refs. 1, 5, 6, 7, and 8). According to the comments received in
response to the March 2021 notification and request for comments, a
wide range of key consumer and commercial goods were affected by the
prohibitions in the PIP (3:1) final rule such as cellular telephones,
laptop computers, and other electronic devices and industrial and
commercial equipment used in various sectors including transportation,
life sciences, and semiconductor production (Ref. 9). In September
2021, EPA issued a final rule that extended the compliance date
applicable to the prohibition on processing and distribution in
commerce of certain PIP (3:1)-containing articles, and the PIP (3:1)
used to make those articles, until March 8, 2022, along with the
compliance date for the associated recordkeeping requirements for
manufacturers, processors, and distributors of PIP (3:1)-containing
articles (Ref. 2). The September 2021 final rule provided a necessary
short-term extension to avoid immediate and significant disruption in
the supply chains for certain articles, to provide the public with
regulatory certainty in the near term, and to allow EPA additional time
to further evaluate the need to again extend the compliance deadlines
for PIP (3:1). Shortly thereafter, EPA issued a proposal to further
extend the compliance dates to October 31, 2024 (Ref. 10). This final
rule extending the compliance dates from March 8, 2022, until October
31, 2024, is based on the detailed information provided by several
industry commenters in response to the proposal.
E. What are the incremental economic impacts?
Pursuant to TSCA section 6(c)(2), EPA evaluated the potential
incremental economic impacts of further extending the compliance
deadline and determined that the changes being finalized in this action
would reduce the existing burden of the March 8, 2022, compliance date.
The quantified effect of this compliance date extension (from March 8,
2022, to October 31, 2024) reflects the difference between the
incremental cost and benefits of the January 2021 final rule as it was
originally promulgated and the incremental cost and benefits of this
final rule with the new compliance date in place. This was estimated as
the difference between the cost and benefits of the final rule after
the compliance extension to March 8, 2022, and the cost and benefits of
this final rule with an October 31, 2024, compliance date. Quantified
costs for substitution and recordkeeping were estimated to be incurred
later than they would have been under the January 2021 rule, assuming
they will be incurred when the compliance date extension expires. In
summary, extending the compliance date from March 8, 2022, to October
31, 2024, for PIP (3:1)-containing articles results in an estimated
annualized cost savings of $1.8 million (from $24.1 to $22.3 million)
at a 3 percent discount rate or $2.4 million (from $23.4 to $21.0
million) at a 7 percent discount rate over a 25-year time horizon.
While the Agency has no data to quantify this, qualitative costs
savings may include savings stemming from the additional time for
manufacturers and retailers to sell articles prior to the prohibition
deadline rather than being forced to dispose of them, thereby avoiding
loss of revenue from those products. In addition to these cost savings,
reformulation (which can include research and development, laboratory
testing, and re-labeling) will be facilitated once an acceptable
substitute is identified given that companies will have more time to
gather information regarding the steps involved in the reformulation
process. Cost reductions for reformulation are not certain, however,
since the time required for the regulated community to identify viable
substitutes can be complex and unpredictable. The level of these cost
savings is dependent on complexity of achieving needed efficacy, length
of time needed for testing and quality control, and the current status
of development of alternatives, which may vary greatly by sector and
end use product.
Lastly, the compliance date extension may provide additional time
for information gathering about supply chain impacts that could
alleviate the necessity for chemical testing of certain articles to
identify whether and where PIP (3:1) might be present in their supply
chains.
With respect to benefits, pursuant to TSCA section 6(h)(2), for
chemical substances that meet the criteria of TSCA section 6(h)(1), a
risk evaluation is not required to be conducted for EPA to meet its
obligations under TSCA section 6(h). As discussed in the January 2021
final rule, while EPA reviewed hazard and exposure information for the
PBT chemicals, this information did not provide a basis for EPA to
develop scientifically robust and representative risk estimates to
evaluate whether or not any of the chemicals present a risk of injury
to health or the environment. Benefits were not quantified due to the
lack of risk estimates. Although the benefits of the January 2021 and
September 2021 final rules were not quantified, the extension would
also postpone decreases in potential releases and exposures to PIP
(3:1). Due to discounting, in a manner similar to costs, this
postponement would lead to lower potential benefits due to continued
exposures. On balance, this further extension of the compliance dates
is appropriate to prevent the disruptive consequences of implementing
the March 8, 2022, compliance date without a further compliance
extension. The economic consequences (such as loss of supply) could be
severe, given the apparent extent of the chemical in commerce. Thus,
EPA has determined that the cost savings and avoidance of disruption to
industry outweigh the delayed realization of benefits that may accrue
from reduced exposure.
II. Background
A. The January 2021 Final Rule
A final rule for PIP (3:1) was published in the Federal Register on
January 6, 2021 (Ref. 1). EPA determined in the final rule that PIP
(3:1) met the TSCA section 6(h)(1)(A)
[[Page 12878]]
criteria for expedited action. In addition, EPA determined, in
accordance with TSCA section 6(h)(1)(B), that exposure to PIP (3:1) was
likely under the conditions of use to the general population, to a
potentially exposed or susceptible subpopulation, or the environment.
The PIP (3:1) final rule prohibited processing and distribution in
commerce of PIP (3:1), and products or articles containing the chemical
substance, for all uses after March 8, 2021, except for the following
different compliance dates or exclusions:
Use in photographic printing articles after January 1,
2022;
Use in aviation hydraulic fluid in hydraulic systems and
use in specialty hydraulic fluids for military applications;
Use in lubricants and greases;
Use in new and replacement parts for the aerospace and
automotive industries;
Use as an intermediate in the manufacture of cyanoacrylate
glue;
Use in specialized engine air filters for locomotive and
marine applications;
Use in sealants and adhesives after January 6, 2025; and
Recycling of plastic that contained PIP (3:1) before the
plastic was recycled, and the articles and products made from such
recycled plastic, provided no new PIP (3:1) is added during the
recycling or production process.
In addition, the final rule required manufacturers, processors, and
distributors of PIP (3:1) and products containing PIP (3:1) to notify
their customers of these restrictions. Finally, the rule prohibited
releases to water from the remaining manufacturing, processing, and
distribution in commerce activities, and required commercial users of
PIP (3:1) and PIP (3:1)-containing products to follow existing
regulations and best management practices to prevent releases to water
during use.
Also defined at 40 CFR 751.403 for the purposes of 40 CFR part 751,
subpart E, which includes the PIP (3:1) final rule, are the terms
``article'' and ``product'' (Ref. 5). ``Article'' is defined as a
manufactured item: (1) Which is formed to a specific shape or design
during manufacture, (2) Which has end use function(s) dependent in
whole or in part upon its shape or design during end use, and (3) Which
has either no change of chemical composition during its end use or only
those changes of composition which have no commercial purpose separate
from that of the article, and that result from a chemical reaction that
occurs upon end use of other chemical substances, mixtures, or
articles; except that fluids and particles are not considered articles
regardless of shape or design. For example, laptop computers are
articles, as are the internal components such as chips, wiring, and
cooling fans. ``Product'' is defined as the chemical substance, a
mixture containing the chemical substance, or any object that contains
the chemical substance or mixture containing the chemical substance
that is not an article. For example, hydraulic fluids and motor oils
are products.
B. The March 2021 Notification and Request for Comments and the No
Action Assurance
Shortly after the publication of the January 2021 final rule, a
wide variety of stakeholders from various sectors started raising
concerns about the March 8, 2021, compliance date for the prohibition
on the processing and distributing in commerce of PIP (3:1) for use in
articles and PIP (3:1)-containing articles (Ref. 3). These stakeholders
contended that they needed significantly more time to identify whether
and where PIP (3:1) might be present in articles in their supply
chains, find and certify alternative chemicals, and produce or import
new articles that do not contain PIP (3:1). Despite EPA's extensive
outreach (Refs. 1, 2, 4 and 10), most stakeholders contacting EPA after
the rule was finalized did not comment on the proposal or otherwise
engage with the agency on the PIP (3:1) rulemaking, and do not appear
to have previously surveyed their supply chains to determine if PIP
(3:1) was being used.
Based on the concerns raised by stakeholders shortly after
publication of the final rule, EPA issued a No Action Assurance (NAA)
on March 8, 2021, in an effort to ensure that the supply chains of
these important articles were not interrupted while the agency
collected the information needed to best inform subsequent regulatory
efforts (Ref. 11). The NAA was written to expire on September 4, 2021,
or ``the effective date of a final action addressing the compliance
date for the prohibition on processing and distributing in commerce of
PIP (3:1), including in PIP (3:1)-containing articles, whichever occurs
earlier.'' In addition, shortly after the NAA was issued, EPA published
in the ``Proposed Rules'' part of the Federal Register a notification
and request for comments on the five final PBT rules in general and,
more specifically, on the compliance date issues with respect to PIP
(3:1)-containing articles that had been raised by stakeholders (Ref.
4). The March 2021 Federal Register notification and request for
comments is described in detail in EPA's October 2021 proposal (Ref.
10). EPA received a total of 122 comments in response to the March 2021
notification and request for comments (Ref. 9), nearly all of which
addressed PIP (3:1) issues. Based on the comments received in response
to the March 2021 notification and request for comments, EPA issued a
final rule in September 2021, extending the compliance dates applicable
to the processing and distribution in commerce of certain PIP (3:1)-
containing articles, and the PIP (3:1) used to make those articles,
until March 8, 2022, along with the associated recordkeeping
requirements for manufacturers, processors, and distributors of PIP
(3:1)-containing articles (Ref. 2). While most commenters on the March
2021 notification and request for comments requested a longer
compliance date extension (Ref. 9), EPA determined that a short-term
extension was necessary to ensure that the supply chains for these
important articles continue uninterrupted in the near term while
allowing EPA to conduct notice and comment rulemaking on a longer-term
compliance date extension generally.
C. The October 2021 Proposal
Accordingly, in October 2021, EPA proposed to further extend until
October 31, 2024, the compliance dates for the prohibition on the
distribution in commerce of certain PIP (3:1)-containing articles, and
the PIP (3:1) used to make those articles, along with the compliance
date for the associated recordkeeping requirements for manufacturers,
processors, and distributors of PIP (3:1)-containing articles (Ref.
10). EPA based the October 2021 proposal on the comments received on
the March 2021 notification and request for comments, as well as
information EPA received from stakeholders after the January 2021 final
rule was published but prior to the issuance of the March 2021
notification and request for comments.
Industry stakeholders commenting on the March 2021 notification and
request for comments contended that they needed more time in order to
identify where PIP (3:1) might be present in their supply chains, find
and certify alternatives, and produce or import new articles that do
not contain PIP (3:1). As described in the October 2021 proposed rule,
industry commenters identified a wide range of articles that may
contain PIP (3:1), which generally is used as a flame retardant and
plasticizer in plastic articles (Refs. 9 and 10). Commenters on the
March 2021 notification and request
[[Page 12879]]
for comments also described the challenges associated with determining
whether a particular article contains PIP (3:1), especially for complex
goods that contain thousands of individual parts. Some commenters
stated that article manufacturers may be unable to identify or confirm
the PIP (3:1) content of articles, such as supplied parts and
components, without laboratory testing, which can be expensive and
time-consuming. As a result, companies must rely on material
declarations by suppliers as a more practicable and reliable approach
to determine the usage of PIP (3:1) within an article. However, the
ability to obtain material composition data from across the supply
chain may be limited (Ref. 12).
As described in the October 2021 proposal, nearly all of the
industry commenters responding to EPA's March 2021 notification and
request for comments stated that they needed several years to phase PIP
(3:1) out of their articles (Refs. 9 and10). Estimated timelines
provided by commenters in response to the March 2021 notification and
request for comments ranged from 2.25 years to 15 years or more (Ref.
9). Given the varying estimates, and the lack of detail accompanying
some of those estimates, EPA proposed to further extend the compliance
dates until October 31, 2024, which was consistent with the lower end
of the time estimates provided by commenters. EPA reasoned that this
would avoid significant disruption in the supply chains for certain
articles and would provide the public with regulatory certainty while
EPA determines whether any further compliance date extensions are
necessary for certain industry sectors, based on information submitted
in the context of revisions to the PBT rules more generally. As
announced in March 2021 and in the October 2021 proposal, EPA intends
to consider any additional information of this kind in the context of
revisions to the final PBT rules to further reduce exposures, promote
environmental justice, and better protect human health and the
environment. More information on the March 2021 notification and
request for comments, and a summary of the comments received in
response to the notification, are in the October 2021 proposal (Ref.
10).
III. Comments on the October 2021 Proposal
EPA received a total of 40 public comments on the October 2021
proposal: 38 from industry stakeholders, one from environmental, public
health, children's health organizations, and one from a tribal
partnership group (Ref. 13). Many of the industry commenters on this
proposal also commented on the March 2021 notification and request for
comments, some providing additional details about their efforts to
identify PIP (3:1) in their supply chains since the earlier public
comment period.
A. Comments Supporting the Proposed Compliance Dates or Further
Extensions
Approximately one-third of the industry commenters on the October
2021 proposal expressed qualified support for the proposed compliance
date of October 31, 2024, for the prohibition on the processing and
distribution in commerce of certain PIP (3:1)-containing articles and
the PIP (3:1) used to make those articles.
1. Summary of Public Comments Supporting Extension of Compliance Dates
A commenter from the heating, ventilation, air-conditioning, and
refrigeration (HVACR) industry noted that their comments on the March
2021 notification and request for comments provided two scenarios for
the length of time needed to eliminate PIP (3:1) in their supply chains
(Ref. 14). While the first scenario resulted in an estimate of three
years to complete the phase-out of PIP (3:1), the commenter noted that
this was a best-case scenario, assuming that a number of potential
difficulties with identifying PIP (3:1) in the supply chain and
scheduling scarce laboratory time for recertifications would be
eliminated. The more realistic scenario, according to this commenter,
was the scenario that estimated that a period of five years would be
needed to eliminate PIP (3:1) in their supply chain. This commenter
reiterated concerns with the process for eliminating PIP (3:1), noting
that it remains difficult to obtain information from suppliers, testing
is an expensive and time-consuming alternative, and that it will be
challenging to find and test substitute chemicals with the fire-
retardant characteristics of PIP (3:1) for every application. The
commenter further explained that the industry is dealing with a
shortage of acrylonitrile butadiene styrene plastic due to the ongoing
COVID-19 pandemic as well as a mandatory refrigerant transition.
Finally, this commenter contended that the compliance date should be a
``manufactured-by'' date, rather than a processing and distribution in
commerce prohibition, and expressed concern over the need for
replacement parts for equipment that is produced before the
``manufactured-by'' date.
Commenters from the consumer technology sector noted that they had
originally estimated in their comments on the March 2021 notification
and request for comments that they would need four years to phase PIP
(3:1) out of their articles, but now believe that they can achieve this
by October 31, 2024 (Ref 15). They conditioned their support for the
2024 date on the date being a ``manufactured-by'' date, rather than a
prohibition on processing and distribution in commerce, and also raised
the issue of replacement parts for consumer articles produced before
the ``manufactured-by'' date.
The home appliance industry also supported the October 2024 date,
noting that their comments on the March 2021 notification and request
for comments recommended a three-year extension of the compliance date.
They also requested that the compliance date be applied as a
``manufactured-by'' date, and that there be an exclusion for spare or
replacement parts (Ref. 16).
Other commenters maintained that they would need more time to
complete a phase-out of PIP (3:1) from their supply chains. A commenter
from the electrical manufacturing industry stated that they would need
at least five years to eliminate PIP (3:1) in their articles, and eight
years would be preferred (Ref. 17). The commenter described the
complexity of the sector's supply chains, estimating that six to twelve
months would be needed to identify PIP (3:1) in articles and two to
three years would be needed to identify an alternative, after which it
would be necessary to test and certify components made with the
alternative. This commenter also noted that it would be very expensive
to replace PIP (3:1) throughout the electrical manufacturing industry.
Finally, this commenter stated that an additional three years would be
needed for ``sell-through,'' i.e., allowing articles made with PIP
(3:1) to clear the supply chain.
Several commenters from the semiconductor manufacturing industry
indicated that they would need a phase-out timeline of at least fifteen
years (Refs. 12, 18, and 19). One commenter noted that the same
considerations that led EPA to exclude new and replacement parts for
the aerospace and automotive industry from the January 2021 final rule
could be applied to the semiconductor manufacturing industry and,
therefore, that industry should also be excluded (Ref. 12). This
commenter suggested a fifteen-year delay in the compliance date for the
semiconductor manufacturing industry, which was consistent with the
comments this commenter provided in May 2021. The commenter provided a
chart showing the typical cycle for one part going through an
engineering change under
[[Page 12880]]
normal conditions. While the chart showed that the process could be
completed in ten years, and that process steps could overlap, the
commenter noted that a PIP (3:1) phase-out would involve the entire
industry going through these processes for many parts at once, leading
to numerous logjams. The commenter estimated that 30 months would be
needed to identify PIP (3:1)-containing components in the supply chain,
20 months would be needed to identify and test alternatives, 6 to 48
months would be needed to requalify suppliers to the manufacturer's
requirements, 18 months would be needed to laboratory testing and
recertification, and 36 months would be needed for customer
qualification (Ref. 12).
In addition to comments regarding the extension of compliance dates
for prohibitions, one commenter further requested that EPA make the
compliance date for recordkeeping for excluded articles, such as new
and replacement automotive parts, consistent with the recordkeeping
compliance date for articles that are the subject of this rulemaking
(Ref. 20).
2. EPA Response
EPA notes that one-third of the commenters overall estimated that
impacted industries would be able to comply with the October 2024
compliance date, albeit with some reservations related to replacement
parts, the ability to sell articles produced before the compliance
date, and pandemic impacts on global supply chains. EPA appreciates the
efforts that many of the commenters made to provide the details
requested by EPA in the October 2021 proposal as to:
The specific uses of PIP (3:1) in articles throughout
their supply chains;
Concrete steps taken to identify, test, and qualify
substitutes for those uses, including details on the substitutes tested
and the specific certifications that would require updating;
Estimates of the time required to identify, test, and
qualify substitutes with supporting documentation; and
Documentation of the specific need for replacement parts,
which may include the documented service life of the equipment and
specific identification of any applicable regulatory requirements for
the assurance of replacement parts.
EPA also appreciates the comments that provide updated estimates of
needed time to comply and which provide more detailed information than
was provided in response to the March 2021 notification and request for
comments. Overall, EPA finds the description of concrete steps taken in
some industries to identify alternatives or continue engaging in phase-
outs to provide a compelling rationale for the need for an extension of
the compliance date to October 31, 2024, with an expectation that in
several industries this extension would be sufficient. While EPA
appreciates the information submitted by some commenters to support a
further compliance date extension beyond October 31, 2024, EPA also
recognizes that, for many industries, the collection of this
information is still ongoing. EPA does not find that the Agency has
sufficient information at this time to identify an appropriate
compliance date beyond October 31, 2024, or to justify extending the
compliance date beyond October 31, 2024. As commenters stated,
obtaining information from suppliers continues to present challenges,
and EPA anticipates that additional time to investigate supply chains
as well as substitute chemicals will result in more robust information
regarding the need for compliance date extensions beyond October 31,
2024, including the number of years that will be needed to qualify the
substitutes and distribute them throughout the supply chain. As
discussed in the October 2021 proposal and in more detail in Unit
IV.B., EPA will consider any additional information on this issue in
the context of the broader rulemaking EPA plans to undertake for PIP
(3:1) and other PBTs. As part of that broader rulemaking, EPA will also
review the justifications underlying the exclusions in the January 2021
PIP (3:1) final rule to consider whether to adopt new restrictions for
activities currently excluded, such as new and replacement automotive
and aerospace vehicle parts, consistent with the statutory directive to
reduce exposure to the extent practicable.
Regarding commenters' statements that compliance date extensions
should be combined with a further regulatory change allowing for a
``manufactured-by'' date, rather than a processing and distribution in
commerce prohibition, EPA's response is provided in Unit III.D.2.
Regarding compliance dates for recordkeeping, based on the comments
received from the non-road mobile machinery and other similar
industries (described in more details in comments requesting exclusions
from the prohibitions), EPA understands that the scope of the exclusion
for new and replacement motor vehicle parts is broader than what would
strictly be considered the automotive industry, and not all suppliers
eligible for the motor vehicle parts exclusion participate in the
automotive industry's recordkeeping system. EPA recognizes the benefits
in extending the recordkeeping compliance date in the way described by
the commenter; details of the recordkeeping compliance date extension
are described in Unit IV.B.
B. Comments Supporting Exclusions
A number of commenters from the construction, agriculture, mining,
forestry and utility industries, which EPA is referring to as the non-
road mobile machinery industry, argued that they should be afforded the
same exclusion that was provided in the January 2021 final rule for new
and replacement parts for the aerospace and automotive industries.
1. Summary of Public Comments Supporting Exclusions
One commenter from the non-road mobile machinery industry stated
that this industry faces the same types of safety, design,
manufacturing and purchasing issues experienced by the aerospace and
automotive sectors (Ref. 22). According to the commenter, this leads to
overlapping supply chains with the much-larger aerospace and automotive
industries. As a result of these overlapping supply chains, the
exclusions granted to the aerospace and automotive industries, without
a similar exclusion for the non-road mobile machinery industry, greatly
complicate efforts to comply with the provisions of the January 2021
final rule in that the non-road mobile machinery industry may be forced
to find new suppliers to provide replacements for PIP (3:1)-containing
components at a higher cost.
As an alternative to an exclusion, this commenter stated that they
would need seven years to eliminate PIP (3:1)-containing components
from their supply chain. The commenter provided a detailed timeline in
support of this assertion, as well as an estimate of the costs that
would be incurred in eliminating PIP (3:1). Other commenters supported
a seven-year delayed compliance date as an alternative to their
preferred approach of excluding the heavy machinery industry (Refs. 22
and 23).
Relatedly, commenters representing the automotive and similar
industries, such as the non-road mobile machinery industry, requested
that EPA clarify several provisions. Several commenters noted that EPA
had provided its understanding of the meaning of the term ``motor
vehicle,'' as that term is used in the January 2021 final rule, to
stakeholders upon request (Ref. 20, 22, and 24). These commenters asked
that
[[Page 12881]]
EPA provide its understanding of the term ``motor vehicle'' in the
regulatory text itself, or in a companion guidance document.
2. EPA Response
EPA appreciates the detailed estimates that several commenters
provided describing the time that would be needed to identify PIP (3:1)
in their supply chain, find and test alternatives, recertify and
requalify parts and finished goods, and distribute them through the
supply chain (Ref. 21). EPA notes that some of the articles produced by
these commenters would be considered motor vehicles. As EPA has stated
in response to stakeholder inquiries (Refs. 20, 22, and 24), EPA
generally interprets the term ``motor vehicle'' to mean a transport
vehicle that is propelled or drawn by mechanical power, such as cars,
trucks, motorcycles, boats, and construction, agricultural, and
industrial machinery. To the extent that the commenters produce motor
vehicles, they are currently covered under the exclusion provided in
the January 2021 final rule for new and replacement motor vehicle
parts. However, as EPA announced in the March 2021 notification and
request for comments and further described in the October 2021
proposal, EPA, as part of its planned future rulemaking on all five of
the PBTs, will review the justifications underlying the exclusions in
the January 2021 PIP (3:1) final rule to consider whether to adopt new
restrictions for activities currently excluded, consistent with the
statutory directive to reduce exposure to the extent practicable (Refs.
4 and 10). As noted previously, in the future rulemaking, EPA will also
consider comments addressing any need for a further extension to
compliance dates that have already been extended. For example, in the
upcoming rulemaking, EPA intends to evaluate whether a compliance date
can be established for new automotive parts that contain PIP (3:1). As
part of that evaluation, EPA will consider a similar compliance date
for adjacent industries, such as non-road mobile machinery, given that
they share supply chains. Similarly, EPA appreciates the suggestion
from the commenters regarding a definition of ``motor vehicle'' in the
regulatory text and will consider proposing such a definition in
relevant regulatory text as part of the upcoming broader rulemaking on
PIP (3:1) and other PBT chemicals.
C. Comments Opposed to Further Compliance Date Extensions
In contrast to industry commenters, commenters from environmental,
public health, children's health organizations, or tribal partnership
groups contended that no additional compliance date delay was
warranted.
1. Summary of Public Comments Opposed to Further Compliance Date
Extensions
Two commenters expressed concern over the additional exposures that
could result from further extensions to the compliance date, including
to children, persons who are exposed to PIP (3:1) through multiple
pathways, subsistence fishers and others who are likely to have higher
dietary exposures than those of the general population, and persons
exposed through the disposal of PIP (3:1)-containing materials at
certain landfills and through open burning (Refs. 25 and 26).
One comment from several environmental, public health, and
children's health organizations stated that an extension of the
compliance date would perpetuate exposure to a toxic chemical contrary
to the statutory requirement to take expedited action to reduce
exposure to the extent practicable for the PBT chemicals (Ref. 25). The
comment emphasized that a further extension of the compliance deadline
would reward industry's lack of participation in the regulatory process
that preceded the January 2021 final rules, and stated their position
that EPA failed to justify the proposed compliance extension by
dismissing its impact on exposure risks, instead focusing only on
industry hardship, and that this approach contravenes Congress' intent
in TSCA. The commenter cited EPA's proposed rule to note that PIP (3:1)
is among the highest scoring PBT chemicals based on its scores for
hazard, exposure, and persistence and bioaccumulation. The commenter
also stated that, because the general prohibition against PIP (3:1)
took effect within sixty days, the commenter believed that EPA had not
considered whether there were steps that could be taken during a multi-
year phase-in period to reduce exposure to PIP (3:1), such as public
notifications and labeling of products containing PIP (3:1) or
additional safeguards for the workers who manufacture, recycle, or
dispose of those products (Ref. 25). Additionally, the comment cited
studies in stating that the proposed extension will be especially
harmful to communities where PIP (3:1) is manufactured, imported,
released, and disposed of, and that multiple exposures to PIP (3:1)
would have a disproportionate impact on those communities that raise
environmental justice concerns. The commenter added that the proposed
extension will be especially harmful to children, providing citations
of industry reports of the presence of PIP (3:1) in children's
products. Finally, the commenter requested that EPA initiate
information gathering rulemakings under TSCA section 8(a) to prevent
any future attempts by industry to evade regulatory control on the
basis of ignorance of chemicals present in products and supply chains.
The National Tribal Toxics Council (NTTC), an EPA Tribal
Partnership group, stated that, prior to the original compliance date,
EPA had provided more than adequate advance notice as well as ample
opportunities for stakeholder engagement, and thus further extensions
are not warranted. The commenter emphasized that any regulatory action
that pertains to PBTs has significant tribal implications, and
expressed concern that the rule would result in 31 additional months of
PIP (3:1) products being disposed in or near tribal lands without
monitoring for environmental releases (Ref. 26).
2. EPA Response
EPA appreciates the commenters' descriptions of their concerns,
their input during the current and previous rulemakings, and their
support of EPA's stakeholder engagement process. EPA agrees that
earlier industry stakeholder engagement during the multiple years the
original PIP (3:1) regulation was under development would have been of
great help to EPA in crafting practicable compliance dates for various
industry sectors as is required by TSCA section 6(d)(1). EPA also
acknowledges that PIP (3:1) scores high for hazard, exposure, and
persistence and bioaccumulation. However, EPA finds the information
industry stakeholders have provided in response to the March 2021 and
October 2021 notices to be compelling justification for the necessity
of extension of the relevant compliance dates to October 2024 because
of the potential for significant disruption to the supply chains for
important articles such as HVACR equipment and personal electronics.
EPA appreciates the recommendations for steps that could be taken
to phase out PIP (3:1) or further reduce exposure, such as the public
notifications or worker protections the commenter described. EPA will
consider these recommendations as part of EPA's planned future
rulemaking on
[[Page 12882]]
PIP (3:1) and other PBTs, as described in the October 2021 proposal,
and EPA will be seeking more detailed comments and information on
issues of this kind to determine whether additional measures as
proposed would be practicable. Similarly, as part of that future
rulemaking, EPA will assess how environmental justice could be promoted
through further exposure reduction. While EPA has taken note of the
information provided by the commenters on the reports of PIP (3:1) in
products used by children, as well as the potential impacts on
communities near importers of PIP (3:1), EPA emphasizes that the agency
has not determined at what level exposure to PIP (3:1) represents a
risk to human health or the environment. In the future rulemaking on
PIP (3:1) and other PBTs, EPA intends to identify whether exposure to
PIP (3:1) could be further practicably reduced, including by reducing
or removing current exclusions from prohibitions or by modifying
compliance timeframes. EPA emphasizes that, as part of the future
rulemaking, information such as that provided in the comment will be
considered.
Regarding the concerns raised in both comments regarding tribes and
environmental justice communities, EPA recognizes that while the
compliance date extension may result in the potential for exposures
that might otherwise have been precluded, EPA does not have information
to suggest that such potential exposures are likely to be substantial
or direct. For example, according to another commenter, the risk of
exposure to PIP (3:1) to workers, consumers, and end-users is low
because the PIP (3:1) is generally incorporated into the composition
(polymer matrix) of the components that are internal to equipment
accessible only by trained technicians (Ref. 14). In contrast, EPA does
know that the use of PIP (3:1) for these articles in the near term is
necessary to avoid significant disruption to the supply chains for
certain important articles such as HVACR systems and personal
electronic devices such as cellular telephones. Thus, an earlier
compliance date would not be practicable or provide a reasonable
transition period as is required by TSCA section 6(d)(1). More
information on TSCA section 6(d) is provided in Unit IV.A. As EPA works
to develop planned future rulemakings on PIP (3:1) and other PBTs,
described in the October 2021 proposal, EPA will consider to what
extent impacts to tribes and environmental justice communities could be
reduced further and welcomes NTTC's interest in tribal consultation and
developing a more effective process for determining whether an action
is of tribal significance.
EPA agrees with commenters' concern regarding several industries'
lack of information on the presence of chemicals in their supply
chains, particularly in imported articles. EPA notes that the
commenters' recommendation for promulgation of a rule under TSCA
section 8 is outside the scope of this compliance date extension.
D. Comments on Other Topics
Commenters also provided information on other topics, including
their interest in a ``manufactured-by'' date for articles,
applicability of the rule to replacement parts, and establishment of a
de minimus threshold. Additionally, a commenter requested clarification
of downstream notification requirements.
1. Summary of Comments on Other Topics
Many of the industry commenters stated that the compliance date
referenced in the proposal should be a ``manufactured-by'' date, rather
than a compliance date for a prohibition on processing and distribution
in commerce. By this, the commenters generally meant that any article
manufactured before the ``manufactured-by'' date could be processed and
distributed in commerce at any time in the future without restriction.
One commenter noted that the only date that the industry has control
over is the date by which an article is manufactured (Ref. 15). The
commenter asserted that manufacturers of consumer goods and EPA could
more readily determine compliance using this approach because a
``manufactured-by'' date can be confirmed based on unique product
identifiers, such as lot or serial numbers, that are often marked on
the article. According to the commenter, retailers do not have control
over how quickly goods are sold and do not necessarily operate under a
first-in, first-out system, which adds to the challenge of inventory
management. The commenter further stated that in the absence of a
``manufactured-by'' compliance date, retailers would be unable to
determine whether a good was compliant, i.e., does not contain PIP
(3:1). This commenter stated that an ``imported-by'' date would present
challenges for the industry, primarily due to the potential for import
delays associated with the process itself as well as with shipping,
which have been exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic. However, the
commenter stated that an ``imported-by'' date would be more manageable
for the industry than a compliance date associated with distribution in
commerce.
Another commenter stated that the date of compliance should be a
``manufactured-by'' date for domestically produced articles, and an
``imported-by'' date for those articles produced abroad (Ref. 27). This
commenter noted that distributors do not necessarily ship finished
goods based on when they receive them, and it may be difficult for
manufacturers, importers, distributors, and retailers to differentiate
with certainty between goods that appear the same but may have
different chemical compositions. This commenter further noted that a
distribution in commerce prohibition is also unworkable because
distribution in commerce has been very broadly interpreted by EPA to
include, in some cases, any movement of a regulated product, even among
facilities within the same business enterprise and its affiliates and
subsidiaries.
While some commenters (Refs. 15 and 27) stated that the only
compliance date should be a ``manufactured-by'' date, or ``imported-
by'' date, other commenters indicated that a restriction on
distribution in commerce might be workable as long as sufficient time
was provided for articles manufactured before the ``manufactured-by''
date to move through the channels of trade to the end user. These
commenters often used the phrase ``sell-through'' to describe the date
by which sales of articles manufactured before the ``manufactured-by''
date must cease. Two commenters stated that a three-year ``sell-
through'' date would be adequate (Refs. 17 and 28). One commenter
representing the retail industry indicated that the minimum time needed
would be 18 months, based on more-detailed information provided by a
retailer of electronic products (Ref. 29). This commenter noted that
more time would be needed for products that tend to sell more slowly,
such as furniture.
Many of the industry commenters also expressed concern over the
applicability of the January 2021 final rule's provisions only to some
types of replacement parts. One commenter noted that HVACR and water-
heating equipment can safely remain in operation for as long as fifty
years or more and, in many cases, buildings are designed and built
around such equipment, making it difficult to replace (Ref. 28). This
commenter contended that to ensure that this critical HVACR and water
heating equipment can still function in the future, the components
[[Page 12883]]
and parts used in servicing the equipment must be able to be used
without restriction. Another commenter stated that components or parts
of articles typically are held by the manufacturer until needed for
repair or replacement (Ref. 15). The commenter noted that electronic
finished goods may have warranties upwards of fifteen years, meaning
that components or parts of articles for repair or replacement can be
kept in a manufacturer's warehouse for well over a decade. This
commenter further explained that, when transitioning from one
generation of an electronic finished good to the next, spare parts for
the first generation are bought under a ``last time buy'' from the
supplier to create the inventory of spare parts needed to support
warranty claims. After this ``last time buy'', the tooling needed to
manufacture those parts is decommissioned. The commenter further noted
that spare and replacement parts or articles that contain PIP (3:1)
would be expected to be in inventory well past the proposed October
2024 compliance date, but the ``manufactured-by'' date approach would
solve this problem.
A number of commenters recommended that EPA establish a de minimis
threshold for PIP (3:1) regulation, particularly in articles.
Commenters gave a variety of reasons for why EPA should establish a
threshold level. One commenter stated that the difficulty in
determining whether PIP (3:1) is present in a component article was at
least partly due to potential discomfort with claiming absolute
``zero'' PIP (3:1) when there is ambiguity about how that will be
determined or whether it is feasible to determine due to the potential
for miniscule contamination (Ref. 30). This commenter contended that
ambiguity in the material declaration process makes that process
extremely time consuming and adds months to the process for each
supplier. Other commenters also expressed concern for the potential for
trace contamination and the feasibility of controlling such
contamination (Refs. 15 and 31). Another commenter noted the high
expense that is entailed by having to test down to the detection limit
in the absence of a de minimis threshold (Ref. 21). Yet another
commenter noted that other chemical regulatory programs such as REACH
incorporate a de minimis threshold (Ref. 16).
One commenter requested that EPA clarify the downstream
notification requirements for manufacturers, processors, and
distributors of PIP (3:1) for use in certain articles, and whether
those requirements would be extended along with the compliance dates
for the prohibition on processing and distribution of certain PIP (3:1)
containing articles (Ref. 27).
2. EPA Response
EPA generally recognizes the challenges described by these
commenters in determining whether and where PIP (3:1) is present in
articles in their supply chains, how long it may take to clear those
PIP (3:1)-containing articles through the channels of trade, and the
steps needed to phase PIP (3:1) out of articles in the supply chain.
EPA will consider these comments in the context of the broader
rulemaking EPA plans to undertake for PIP (3:1) and other PBT chemicals
(Ref. 10). In that rulemaking, EPA plans to request public comment on
the utility as well as the drawbacks of a ``manufactured-by'' date and
the amount of time needed for articles to clear the channels of trade,
the applicability of the rule to replacement parts, and a de minimis
threshold in the context of reducing exposure to PIP (3:1) to the
extent practicable. Regarding the request for clarification regarding
downstream notification requirements, EPA is not extending the
compliance date for downstream notification requirements to align with
the extended compliance dates for PIP (3:1)-containing articles in this
final rule. The downstream notification requirements apply only to the
chemical PIP (3:1) and mixtures (products) that contain the chemical
PIP (3:1); they are not applicable to PIP (3:1) containing articles.
However, EPA is conforming the required downstream notification
language with the compliance date extensions. Details of these
amendments are in Unit IV.C.
IV. Provisions of this Final Rule
A. Establishing a Revised Compliance Date
TSCA section 6(d) includes a number of provisions relating to
establishment of effective or compliance dates in rules promulgated
under TSCA section 6. Specifically, TSCA section 6(d)(1)(A) directs EPA
to specify a date on which the TSCA section 6(a) rule is to take effect
that is ``as soon as practicable.'' TSCA section 6(d)(1)(B) requires
EPA to specify mandatory compliance dates for each requirement of a
rule promulgated under TSCA section 6(a), which must be as soon as
practicable but no later than five years after promulgation except as
provided in subsections (C) and (D) or in the case of a use exempted
under TSCA section 6(g). TSCA section 6(d)(1)(C) states that EPA must
specify mandatory compliance dates for the start of ban or phase-out
requirements under a TSCA section 6(a) rule, which must be as soon as
practicable but no later than five years after promulgation, except in
the case of a use exempted under TSCA section 6(g); and TSCA section
6(d)(1)(D) requires EPA to specify mandatory compliance dates for full
implementation of ban or phase-out requirements under a TSCA section
6(a) rule, which must be as soon as practicable. Additionally, TSCA
section 6(d)(1)(E) directs EPA to provide for a reasonable transition
period.
As noted in the preamble to the January 2021 final rule, the term
``practicable'' as used in the phrase ``to the extent practicable'' in
TSCA section 6(h) is undefined, the phrases ``as soon as practicable''
and ``reasonable transition period'' as used in TSCA section 6(d)(1)
are also undefined, and the legislative history on each provision is
limited. Given the ambiguity in the statute, for purposes of the
January 2021 final rule under TSCA section 6(h), EPA presumed a 60-day
compliance date was ``as soon as practicable'' where EPA determined a
prohibition or restriction was practicable, unless there was support
for a lengthier period of time on the basis of reasonably available
information, such as information submitted in comments on the Exposure
and Use Assessment or on the proposed rule, or in stakeholder
dialogues. At the time, EPA believed that such a presumption would
ensure that the compliance schedule is ``as soon as practicable,''
particularly in the context of the TSCA section 6(h) rules for
chemicals identified as persistent, bioaccumulative and toxic, and
given that the expedited timeframe for issuing a TSCA section 6(h)
proposed rule did not allow time for collection and assessment of new
information separate from the comment opportunities during the
development of and in response to the proposed rule. EPA noted that
this approach also allowed for submission of information from the
sources most likely to have the information that would impact an EPA
determination on whether or how best to adjust the compliance deadline
to ensure that the final compliance deadline chosen was both ``as soon
as practicable'' and provides a ``reasonable transition period.''
As noted in the September 2021 final rule and the October 2021
proposal, despite significant outreach efforts, EPA did not receive
timely or specific input from certain stakeholders during any public
comment periods prior to issuance of the January 2021 final rule
regarding the presence of PIP (3:1) in myriad articles (Refs. 2 and
10). Absent
[[Page 12884]]
this input, in the January 2021 final rule, EPA determined that PIP
(3:1) was not widely present in articles outside the aerospace and
automotive sectors and that the presumption that a 60-day compliance
date was practicable was appropriate. The comments received in response
to EPA's March 2021 notification and request for comments, and the
communications received before that document published in in the
Federal Register, presented new information demonstrating that a 60-day
compliance date was not practicable and did not provide a reasonable
transition period for the full implementation of a ban or phase-out for
many industries.
B. Compliance Dates in this Final Rule
Based upon EPA's analysis of the comments received on the October
2021 proposal, along with the information provided in comments received
on the March 2021 notification and request for comments, EPA is
extending until October 31, 2024, the compliance date for the
prohibition on processing and distribution in commerce of PIP (3:1)-
containing articles, and the PIP (3:1) used to make those articles. As
discussed in the October 2021 proposal, and in the response to comments
earlier, the October 2024 compliance date is consistent with the lower
end of the time estimates provided by commenters on the March 2021
notification and request for comments. As described in Unit III.A.,
approximately one-third of the commenters on the October 2021 proposal
estimated that they would be able to comply with the October 2024
compliance date, albeit with some reservations related to replacement
parts, the ability to sell articles produced before the compliance
date, and COVID-19 pandemic impacts on global supply chains. EPA has
determined that this further extension of the March 8, 2022 compliance
date to October 31, 2024, for the prohibition on processing and
distribution in commerce is necessary to avoid significant disruption
in the supply chains for certain articles, such as HVACR equipment and
consumer electronics, and will provide a measure of regulatory
certainty while industry collects and submits additional information to
inform whether a further compliance date extension may be necessary for
certain industry sectors, such as the semiconductor manufacturing
industry. While EPA expects that that in several industries this
extension would be sufficient, EPA also recognizes the challenges
described by commenters with complex supply chains and the potential
need for a longer compliance date extension in certain industries. The
compliance date extension to October 31, 2024, will allow EPA
additional time to further evaluate the need to again extend the
compliance deadlines for PIP (3:1) for certain industries such as the
semiconductor manufacturing industry. As discussed in the October 2021
proposal and in more detail in Unit II.C., EPA plans to consider this
information in the context of revisions to PIP (3:1) and other PBT
rules more generally.
EPA is also extending the recordkeeping compliance date in 40 CFR
751.407(d) for PIP (3:1)-containing articles until October 31, 2024.
Because industry is still in the process of identifying whether and
where PIP (3:1) is present in many of the articles in their supply
chains, it would be difficult, if not impossible, for them to supply
the required information. Additionally, as described earlier, a public
comment requested that EPA make the compliance date for recordkeeping
for excluded articles, such as new and replacement automotive parts,
consistent with the recordkeeping compliance date for articles that are
the subject of this rulemaking (Ref. 20). Based on the comments
received from the non-road mobile machinery and other similar
industries, EPA understands that not all suppliers eligible for the
motor vehicle parts exclusion participate in the automotive industry's
recordkeeping system. Therefore, EPA is extending the recordkeeping
compliance dates specified in paragraphs 40 CFR 751.407 (a)(2)(iii) and
(d)(4) from March 8, 2022, to October 31, 2024. However, the compliance
dates specified in 40 CFR 751.407(a)(2)(ii) remain in effect.
EPA also recognizes that, for many industries, the collection of
information on the presence of PIP (3:1) in their supply chains is
still ongoing. As discussed in the October 2021 proposal, EPA will
consider any additional information of this kind in the context of the
broader rulemaking EPA plans to undertake for PIP (3:1) and other PBT
chemicals (Ref. 10). In that future rulemaking, EPA also plans to
consider the comments, discussed in Unit III.D., regarding a
``manufactured-by'' date, replacement parts, and a de minimis
threshold.
C. Conforming Amendments to the Downstream Notification Requirements
In reviewing the comments received on the October 2021 proposal
(e.g., Ref. 27), EPA realized that the downstream notification
requirements in the January 2021 final rule could be misleading,
resulting in potential confusion for the regulated community. 40 CFR
751.407(e) requires manufacturers, processors, and distributors in
commerce of PIP (3:1) and PIP (3:1)-containing products to provide
notification of the restrictions on the chemical substance to their
customers, either through specific mandatory language on a Safety Data
Sheet (SDS) or a label. EPA notes that the notification requirements
only apply to the chemical PIP (3:1) or to products containing the
chemical PIP (3:1). As discussed in Unit II.A., the term ``product''
excludes articles. Therefore, the downstream notification requirements
on 40 CFR 751.407(e) do not apply to PIP (3:1)-containing articles.
However, the mandatory language in 40 CFR 751.407(e)(3)(i) through
(iii) does not reflect the fact that EPA is extending the compliance
date for the prohibition on processing and distribution in commerce of
certain PIP (3:1)-containing articles. Thus, purchasers of PIP (3:1)
and PIP (3:1)-containing products who intend to use them in articles
may be confused by the mandatory language on an SDS or a label that
says that they may not use the PIP (3:1) or PIP (3:1)-containing
product in this manner. Therefore, EPA is amending the mandatory
language at 40 CFR 751.407(e)(3)(i) through (iii) to conform to the
compliance date extension for the prohibition on processing and
distribution in commerce of certain PIP (3:1)-containing articles.
V. 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
technical person listed under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT.
1. EPA. Phenol, Isopropylated Phosphate (3:1) (PIP (3:1));
Regulation of Persistent, Bioaccumulative, and Toxic Chemicals Under
TSCA Section 6(h); Final Rule. Federal Register (86 FR 894, January
6, 2021) (FRL-10018-88).
2. EPA. Regulation of Persistent, Bioaccumulative, and Toxic
Chemicals Under TSCA Section 6(h); Phenol, Isopropylated Phosphate
(3:1); Compliance Date Extension. Federal Register (86 FR 51823,
September 17, 2021) (FRL-6015.5-03-OCSPP).
[[Page 12885]]
3. Letter from the Consumer Technology Association (CTA) and the
Information Technology Industry Council (ITI) to EPA on March 15,
2021. EPA-HQ-OPPT-2021-0202-0015.
4. EPA. Regulation of Persistent, Bioaccumulative, and Toxic
Chemicals Under TSCA Section 6(h); Phenol, Isopropylated Phosphate
(3:1); Request for Comments. Federal Register (86 FR 14398, March
16, 2021) (FRL-10021-08).
5. 2,4,6-Tris(tert-butyl)phenol (2,4,6-TTBP); Regulation of
Persistent, Bioaccumulative, and Toxic Chemicals Under TSCA Section
6(h); Final Rule. Federal Register (86 FR 866, January 6, 2021)
(FRL-10018-90).
6. EPA. Decabromodiphenyl Ether (DecaBDE); Regulation of Persistent,
Bioaccumulative, and Toxic Chemicals Under TSCA Section 6(h); Final
Rule. Federal Register (86 FR 880, January 6, 2021) (FRL-10018-87).
7. EPA. Pentachlorothiophenol (PCTP); Regulation of Persistent,
Bioaccumulative, and Toxic Chemicals Under TSCA Section 6(h); Final
Rule. Federal Register (86 FR 911, January 6, 2021) (FRL-10018-89).
8. EPA. Hexachlorobutadiene (HCBD); Regulation of Persistent,
Bioaccumulative, and Toxic Chemicals Under TSCA Section 6(h); Final
Rule. Federal Register (86 FR 922, January 6, 2021) (FRL-10018-91).
9. Comments submitted to EPA. Regulation of Persistent,
Bioaccumulative, and Toxic Chemicals Under TSCA Section 6(h). EPA-
HQ-OPPT-2021-0202-0001.
10. EPA. Regulation of Persistent, Bioaccumulative, and Toxic
Chemicals Under TSCA Section 6(h); Phenol, Isopropylated Phosphate
(3:1); Further Compliance Date Extension. Federal Register (86 FR
59684, October 28, 2021) (FRL-6015.6-01-OCSPP).
11. EPA. No Action Assurance Regarding Prohibition of Processing and
Distribution of Phenol Isopropylated Phosphate (3:1), PIP (3:1) for
Use in Articles, and PIP (3:1)-containing Articles under 40 CFR
751.407(a)(1). March 8, 2021. https://www.epa.gov/assessing-and-managing-chemicals-under-tsca/public-comment-period-pbt-rules-and-no-action-assurance.
12. Comment submitted by SEMI to EPA on December 22, 2021. EPA-HQ-
OPPT-2021-0598-0038.
13. Comments submitted to EPA. Regulation of Persistent,
Bioaccumulative, and Toxic Chemicals Under TSCA Section 6(h);
Phenol, Isopropylated Phosphate (3:1); Further Compliance Date
Extension. EPA-HQ-OPPT-2021-0598-0001.
14. Comment submitted by Air Conditioning, Refrigeration, and
Heating Institute (AHRI) to EPA on December 21, 2021. EPA-HQ-OPPT-
2021-0598-0027.
15. Comment submitted by Consumer Technology Association (CTA), IPC
and Information Technology Industry Council (ITI) to EPA on December
21, 2021. EPA-HQ-OPPT-2021-0598-0030.
16. Comment submitted by the Alliance of Home Appliance
Manufacturers (AHAM) to EPA on December 23, 2021. EPA-HQ-OPPT-2021-
0598-0033.
17. Comment submitted by the National Electrical Manufacturers
Association (NEMA) to EPA on December 22, 2021. EPA-HQ-OPPT-2021-
0598-0031.
18. Comment submitted by the Semiconductor Industry Association
(SIA) to EPA on December 21, 2021. EPA-HQ-OPPT-2021-0598-0025.
19. Comment submitted by Hitachi High-Tech America, Inc. (HTA) to
EPA on December 22, 2021. EPA-HQ-OPPT-2021-0598-0041.
20. Comment submitted by Alliance for Automotive Innovation and
Motor & Equipment Manufacturers Association (MEMA) to EPA on
December 23, 2021. EPA-HQ-OPPT-2021-0598-0046.
21. Comment submitted by the Association of Equipment Manufacturers
(AEM) to EPA on December 23, 2021. EPA-HQ-OPPT-2021-0598-0047.
22. Comment submitted by Truck and Engine Manufacturers Association
(EMA) to EPA on December 23, 2021. EPA-HQ-OPPT-2021-0598-0044.
23. Comment submitted by Kubota North America Corporation (KNA) to
EPA on December 21, 2021. EPA-HQ-OPPT-2021-0598-0028.
24. Comment submitted by the Outdoor Power Equipment Institute
(OPEI) to EPA on December 22, 2021. EPA-HQ-OPPT-2021-0598-0032.
25. Comment submitted by Alaska Community Action on Toxics et al. to
EPA on December 23, 2021. EPA-HQ-OPPT-2021-0598-0043.
26. Comment submitted by National Tribal Toxics Council (NTTC) To
EPA on December 27, 2021. EPA-HQ-OPPT-2021-0598-0057.
27. Comment submitted by Chemical Users Coalition (CUC) to EPA on
December 22, 2021. EPA-HQ-OPPT-2021-0598-0036.
28. Comment submitted by Air Conditioning, Heating, and
Refrigeration Institute (AHRI) to EPA on December 21, 2022. EPA-HQ-
OPPT-2021-0598-0027.
29. Comment submitted by the Retail Industry Leaders Association
(RILA) to EPA on December 27, 2021. EPA-HQ-OPPT-2021-0598-0055.
30. Comment submitted by Advanced Medical Technology Association
(AdvaMed) to EPA on December 17, 2021. EPA-HQ-OPPT-2021-0598-0022.
31. Comment submitted by Thermo Fisher Scientific to EPA on December
24, 2021. EPA-HQ-OPPT-2021-0598-0049.
VI. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
Additional information about these statutes and Executive Orders
can be found at https://www2.epa.gov/lawsregulations/laws-and-executive-orders.
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory Planning and Review and Executive
Order 13563: Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review
This action is a significant regulatory action under Executive
Order 12866 (58 FR 51735, October 4, 1993) and was submitted to the
Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for review under Executive Orders
12866 and 13563 (76 FR 3821, January 21, 2011). Any changes made in
response to OMB review have been reflected in the docket for this
action.
B. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
This action does not impose any new information collection
activities or burden subject to OMB review and approval under the PRA,
44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq. Burden is defined in 5 CFR 1320.3(b). OMB has
previously approved the information collection activities contained in
the existing regulations and associated burden under OMB Control No.
2070-0213 (EPA ICR No. 2599.02). An agency may not conduct or sponsor,
and a person is not required to respond to a collection of information
that requires OMB approval under PRA, unless it has been approved by
OMB and displays a currently valid OMB control number. The OMB control
numbers for EPA's regulations in title 40 of the CFR, after appearing
in the Federal Register, are listed in 40 CFR part 9, and included on
the related collection instrument or form, if applicable.
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
I certify that this action will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small entities under the RFA, 5
U.S.C. 601 et seq. In making this determination, EPA concludes that the
impact of concern for this rule is any significant adverse economic
impact on small entities, and the Agency is certifying that this rule
will not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of
small entities because the rule relieves regulatory burden. This action
would extend the compliance date for a prohibition on the processing
and distributing in commerce of PIP (3:1) for use in certain articles
and the processing and distributing in commerce of certain PIP (3:1)-
containing articles, along with the associated recordkeeping
requirements, from March 8, 2022, to October 31, 2024. EPA has
therefore concluded that this action would relieve regulatory burden
for all directly regulated small entities.
[[Page 12886]]
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (UMRA)
This action does not contain any unfunded mandate as described in
UMRA, 2 U.S.C. 1531-1538, and does not significantly or uniquely affect
small governments. The action imposes no enforceable duty on any state,
local or tribal governments or the private sector.
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
This action does not have federalism implications as specified in
Executive Order 13132 (64 FR 43255, August 10, 1999). It will not have
substantial direct effects on the states, on the relationship between
the national government and the states, or on the distribution of power
and responsibilities among the various levels of government.
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation and Coordination With Indian
Tribal Governments
This action does not have tribal implications as specified in
Executive Order 13175 (65 FR 67249, November 9, 2000) because it does
not have substantial direct effects on one or more Indian tribes, on
the relationship between the Federal Government and Indian tribes, or
on the distribution of power and responsibilities between the Federal
Government and Indian tribes. Thus, Executive Order 13175 does not
apply to this action.
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of Children From Environmental
Health Risks and Safety Risks
This action is not a ``covered regulatory action'' under Executive
Order 13045 (62 FR 19885, April 23, 1997) because it is not an
economically significant regulatory action as defined by Executive
Order 12866.
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions Concerning Regulations That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use
This is not a ``significant energy action'' as defined in Executive
Order 13211 (66 FR 28355, May 22, 2001), because it is not likely to
have a significant adverse effect on the supply, distribution or use of
energy and has not otherwise been designated by the Administrator of
the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs as a significant
energy action.
I. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act (NTTAA)
This action does not involve technical standards. As such, NTTAA
section 12(d), 15 U.S.C. 272 note, does not apply to this action.
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions To Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income Populations
EPA believes that this action does not have disproportionately high
and adverse human health or environmental effects on minority
populations, low-income populations and/or indigenous peoples, as
specified in Executive Order 12898 (59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994). As
discussed in Unit II., this action is necessary to avoid widespread
disruptions in the supply chains for a wide variety of essential goods
and would not otherwise materially alter the final rule as published.
K. Congressional Review Act (CRA)
This action is subject to the CRA, 5 U.S.C. 801 et seq., and EPA
will submit a report containing this rule and other required
information to each House of the Congress and to the Comptroller
General of the United States. This action is not a ``major rule'' as
defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 751
Environmental protection, Chemicals, Export notification, Hazardous
substances, Import certification, Reporting and recordkeeping.
Michael S. Regan,
Administrator.
Therefore, for the reasons stated in the preamble, 40 CFR part 751
is amended as follows:
PART 751--REGULATION OF CERTAIN CHEMICAL SUBSTANCES AND MIXTURES
UNDER SECTION 6 OF THE TOXIC SUBSTANCES CONTROL ACT
0
1. The authority citation for part 751 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 2605, 15 U.S.C. 2625(l)(4).
0
2. Amend Sec. 751.407:
0
a. In paragraphs (a)(2)(iii) and (d)(4) by removing ``March 8, 2022''
and adding ``October 31, 2024'' in its place; and
0
b. By revising paragraphs (e)(3)(i) through (iii).
The revisions read as follows:
Sec. 751.407 PIP (3:1).
* * * * *
(e) * * *
(3) * * *
(i) SDS Section 1(c). ``The Environmental Protection Agency
prohibits processing and distribution of this chemical/product for any
use other than: (1) In hydraulic fluids either for the aviation
industry or to meet military specifications for safety and performance
where no alternative chemical is available that meets U.S. Department
of Defense specification requirements, (2) lubricants and greases, (3)
New or replacement parts for motor and aerospace vehicles, (4) as an
intermediate in the manufacture of cyanoacrylate glue, (5) In
specialized engine air filters for locomotive and marine applications,
(6) In adhesives and sealants before January 6, 2025, after which use
in adhesives and sealants is prohibited, and (7) in other articles
before October 31, 2024, after which use in articles other than new or
replacement parts for motor and aerospace vehicles or specialized
engine air filters for locomotive and marine applications is
prohibited. In addition, all persons are prohibited from releasing PIP
(3:1) to water during manufacturing, processing, and distribution in
commerce, and must follow all existing regulations and best practices
to prevent the release of PIP (3:1) to water during the commercial use
of PIP (3:1).''; and
(ii) SDS Section 15. ``The Environmental Protection Agency
prohibits processing and distribution of this chemical/product for any
use other than: (1) In hydraulic fluids either for the aviation
industry or to meet military specifications for safety and performance
where no alternative chemical is available that meets U.S. Department
of Defense specification requirements, (2) lubricants and greases, (3)
new or replacement parts for motor and aerospace vehicles, (4) as an
intermediate in the manufacture of cyanoacrylate glue, (5) In
specialized engine air filters for locomotive and marine applications,
(6) in adhesives and sealants before January 6, 2025, after which use
in adhesives and sealants is prohibited, and (7) in other articles
before October 31, 2024, after which use in articles other than new or
replacement parts for motor and aerospace vehicles or specialized
engine air filters for locomotive and marine applications is
prohibited. In addition, all persons are prohibited from releasing PIP
(3:1) to water during manufacturing, processing, and distribution in
commerce, and must follow all existing regulations and best practices
to prevent the release of PIP (3:1) to water during the commercial use
of PIP (3:1).''; or
(iii) Labeling. ``The Environmental Protection Agency prohibits
processing and distribution of this chemical/product for any use other
than: (1) In hydraulic fluids either for the aviation industry or to
meet military specifications for safety and performance where no
alternative chemical is available that meets U.S. Department of Defense
specification
[[Page 12887]]
requirements, (2) lubricants and greases, (3) new or replacement parts
for motor and aerospace vehicles, (4) as an intermediate in the
manufacture of cyanoacrylate glue, (5) In specialized engine air
filters for locomotive and marine applications, (6) In adhesives and
sealants before January 6, 2025, after which use in adhesives and
sealants is prohibited, and (7) in other articles before October 31,
2024, after which use in articles other than new or replacement parts
for motor and aerospace vehicles or specialized engine air filters for
locomotive and marine applications is prohibited. In addition, all
persons are prohibited from releasing PIP (3:1) to water during
manufacturing, processing, and distribution in commerce, and must
follow all existing regulations and best practices to prevent the
release of PIP (3:1) to water during the commercial use of PIP (3:1).''
* * * * *
[FR Doc. 2022-04945 Filed 3-7-22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560-50-P