Trichloroethylene (TCE); Regulation Under the Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA), 102568-102635 [2024-29274]
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102568
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 242 / Tuesday, December 17, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
telephone number: (202) 554–1404;
email address: TSCA-Hotline@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 751
[EPA–HQ–OPPT–2020–0642; FRL–8317–02–
OCSPP]
RIN 2070–AK83
Trichloroethylene (TCE); Regulation
Under the Toxic Substances Control
Act (TSCA)
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA or Agency) is finalizing a
rule to address the unreasonable risk of
injury to health presented by
trichloroethylene (TCE) under its
conditions of use. TSCA requires that
EPA address by rule any unreasonable
risk of injury to health or the
environment identified in a TSCA risk
evaluation and apply requirements to
the extent necessary so that the
chemical no longer presents
unreasonable risk. EPA’s final rule will,
among other things, prevent serious
illness associated with uncontrolled
exposures to the chemical by preventing
consumer access to the chemical,
restricting the industrial and
commercial use of the chemical while
also allowing for a reasonable transition
period with interim worker protections
in place where an industrial and
commercial use of the chemical is being
prohibited, and provide time-limited
exemptions for critical or essential uses
of TCE for which no technically and
economically feasible safer alternatives
are available.
DATES: This final rule is effective on
January 16, 2025.
ADDRESSES: The docket for this action,
identified by docket identification (ID)
number EPA–HQ–OPPT–2020–0642, is
available online at https://
www.regulations.gov. Additional
information about dockets generally,
along with instructions for visiting the
docket in-person, is available at https://
www.epa.gov/dockets.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
For technical information: Gabriela
Rossner, 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)
565–2426; email address: TCE.TSCA@
epa.gov.
For general information: The TSCAHotline, ABVI-Goodwill, 422 South
Clinton Ave., Rochester, NY 14620;
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SUMMARY:
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I. Executive Summary
A. Does this action apply to me?
1. General Applicability
This action applies to you if you
manufacture, process, distribute in
commerce, use, or dispose of TCE or
products containing TCE. TSCA section
3(9) defines the term ‘‘manufacture’’ to
mean ‘‘to import into the customs
territory of the United States (as defined
in general note 2 of the Harmonized
Tariff Schedule of the United States),
produce, or manufacture.’’ Therefore,
unless expressly stated otherwise,
importers of TCE are subject to any
provisions regulating manufacture of
TCE (see also Unit I.A.2.). The following
list of North American Industrial
Classification System (NAICS) codes is
not intended to be exhaustive, but rather
provides a guide to help readers
determine whether this document
applies to them. Potentially affected
entities include:
• Crude Petroleum Extraction (NAICS
code 211120);
• Fossil Fuel Electric Power
Generation (NAICS code 221112);
• Other Electric Power Generation
(NAICS code 221118);
• Broadwoven Fabric Mills (NAICS
code 313210);
• Narrow Fabric Mills and Schiffli
Machine Embroidery (NAICS code
313220);
• Nonwoven Fabric Mills (NAICS
code 313230);
• Textile and Fabric Finishing Mills
(NAICS code 313310);
• Fabric Coating Mills (NAICS code
313320);
• Wood Window and Door
Manufacturing (NAICS code 321911);
• Prefabricated Wood Building
Manufacturing (NAICS code 321992);
• Paper Bag and Coated and Treated
Paper Manufacturing (NAICS code
322220);
• Petroleum Refineries (NAICS code
324110);
• All Other Petroleum and Coal
Products Manufacturing (NAICS code
324199);
• Petrochemical Manufacturing
(NAICS code 325110);
• Other Basic Inorganic Chemical
Manufacturing (NAICS code 325180);
• Ethyl Alcohol Manufacturing
(NAICS code 325193);
• All Other Basic Organic Chemical
Manufacturing (NAICS code 325199);
• Plastics Material and Resin
Manufacturing (NAICS code 325211);
• Medicinal and Botanical
Manufacturing (NAICS code 325411);
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• Pharmaceutical Preparation
Manufacturing (NAICS code 325412);
• Paint and Coating Manufacturing
(NAICS code 325510);
• Adhesive Manufacturing (NAICS
code 325520);
• Polish and Other Sanitation Good
Manufacturing (NAICS code 325612);
• Photographic Film, Paper, Plate and
Chemical Manufacturing (NAICS code
325992);
• All Other Miscellaneous Chemical
Product and Preparation Manufacturing
(NAICS code 325998);
• Polystyrene Foam Product
Manufacturing (NAICS code 326140);
• Urethane and Other Foam Product
(except Polystyrene) Manufacturing
(NAICS code 326150);
• Tire Manufacturing (except
Retreading) (NAICS code 326211);
• Tire Retreading (NAICS code
326212);
• Rubber and Plastics Hoses and
Belting Manufacturing (NAICS code
326220);
• Rubber Product Manufacturing for
Mechanical Use (NAICS code 326291);
• All Other Rubber Product
Manufacturing (NAICS code 326299);
• Pottery, Ceramics, and Plumbing
Fixture Manufacturing (NAICS code
327110);
• Gypsum Product Manufacturing
(NAICS code 327420);
• Iron and Steel Mills and Ferroalloy
Manufacturing (NAICS code 331110);
• Iron and Steel Pipe and Tube
Manufacturing from Purchased Steel
(NAICS code 331210);
• Rolled Steel Shape Manufacturing
(NAICS code 331221);
• Steel Wire Drawing (NAICS code
331222);
• Nonferrous Metal (except
Aluminum) Smelting and Refining
(NAICS code 331410);
• Copper Rolling, Drawing,
Extruding, and Alloying (NAICS code
331420);
• Nonferrous Metal (except Copper
and Aluminum) Rolling, Drawing and
Extruding (NAICS code 331491);
• Secondary Smelting, Refining, and
Alloying of Nonferrous Metal (except
Copper and Aluminum) (NAICS code
331492);
• Nonferrous Metal Die-Casting
Foundries (NAICS code 331523);
• Iron and Steel Forging (NAICS code
332111);
• Nonferrous Forging (NAICS code
332112);
• Custom Roll Forming (NAICS code
332114);
• Powder Metallurgy Part
Manufacturing (NAICS code 332117);
• Metal Crown, Closure, and Other
Metal Stamping (except Automotive)
(NAICS code 332119);
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• Metal Kitchen Cookware, Utensil,
Cutlery, and Flatware (except Precious)
Manufacturing (NAICS code 332215);
• Saw Blade and Handtool
Manufacturing (NAICS code 332216);
• Metal Window and Door
Manufacturing (NAICS code 332321);
• Sheet Metal Work Manufacturing
(NAICS code 332322);
• Ornamental and Architectural
Metal Work Manufacturing (NAICS code
332323);
• Power Boiler and Heat Exchanger
Manufacturing (NAICS code 332410);
• Metal Tank (Heavy Gauge)
Manufacturing (NAICS code 332420);
• Metal Can Manufacturing (NAICS
code 332431);
• Other Metal Container
Manufacturing (NAICS code 332439);
• Hardware Manufacturing (NAICS
code 332510);
• Spring Manufacturing (NAICS code
332613);
• Other Fabricated Wire Product
Manufacturing (NAICS code 332618);
• Machine Shops (NAICS code
332710);
• Precision Turned Product
Manufacturing (NAICS code 332721);
• Bolt, Nut, Screw, Rivet and Washer
Manufacturing (NAICS code 332722);
• Metal Heat Treating (NAICS code
332811);
• Metal Coating, Engraving (except
Jewelry and Silverware), and Allied
Services to Manufacturers (NAICS code
332812);
• Electroplating, Plating, Polishing,
Anodizing and Coloring (NAICS code
332813);
• Industrial Valve Manufacturing
(NAICS code 332911);
• Fluid Power Valve and Hose Fitting
Manufacturing (NAICS code 332912);
• Plumbing Fixture Fitting and Trim
Manufacturing (NAICS code 332913);
• Other Metal Valve and Pipe Fitting
Manufacturing (NAICS code 332919);
• Ball and Roller Bearing
Manufacturing (NAICS code 332991);
• Small Arms Ammunition
Manufacturing (NAICS code 332992);
• Ammunition (except Small Arms)
Manufacturing (NAICS code 332993);
• Small Arms, Ordnance, and
Ordnance Accessories Manufacturing
(NAICS code 332994);
• Fabricated Pipe and Pipe Fitting
Manufacturing (NAICS code 332996);
• All Other Miscellaneous Fabricated
Metal Product Manufacturing (NAICS
code 332999);
• Farm Machinery and Equipment
Manufacturing (NAICS code 333111);
• Lawn and Garden Tractor and
Home Lawn and Garden Equipment
Manufacturing (NAICS code 333112);
• Construction Machinery
Manufacturing (NAICS code 333120);
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• Mining Machinery and Equipment
Manufacturing (NAICS code 333131);
• Oil and Gas Field Machinery and
Equipment Manufacturing (NAICS code
333132);
• Food Product Machinery
Manufacturing (NAICS code 333241);
• Semiconductor Machinery
Manufacturing (NAICS code 333242);
• Sawmill, Woodworking, and Paper
Machinery Manufacturing (NAICS code
333243);
• Printing Machinery and Equipment
Manufacturing (NAICS code 333244);
• Other Industrial Machinery
Manufacturing (NAICS code 333249);
• Optical Instrument and Lens
Manufacturing (NAICS code 333314);
• Photographic and Photocopying
Equipment Manufacturing (NAICS code
333316);
• Other Commercial and Service
Industry Machinery Manufacturing
(NAICS code 333318);
• Industrial and Commercial Fan and
Blower and Air Purification Equipment
Manufacturing (NAICS code 333413);
• Heating Equipment (except Warm
Air Furnaces) Manufacturing (NAICS
code 333414);
• Air-Conditioning and Warm Air
Heating Equipment and Commercial
and Industrial Refrigeration Equipment
Manufacturing (NAICS code 333415);
• Industrial Mold Manufacturing
(NAICS code 333511);
• Special Die and Tool, Die Set, Jig
and Fixture Manufacturing (NAICS code
333514);
• Cutting Tool and Machine Tool
Accessory Manufacturing (NAICS code
333515);
• Machine Tool Manufacturing
(NAICS code 333517);
• Rolling Mill and Other
Metalworking Machinery Manufacturing
(NAICS code 333519);
• Turbine and Turbine Generator Set
Unit Manufacturing (NAICS code
333611);
• Speed Changer, Industrial HighSpeed Drive and Gear Manufacturing
(NAICS code 333612);
• Mechanical Power Transmission
Equipment Manufacturing (NAICS code
333613);
• Other Engine Equipment
Manufacturing (NAICS code 333618);
• Air and Gas Compressor
Manufacturing (NAICS code 333912);
• Measuring, Dispensing, and Other
Pumping Equipment Manufacturing
(NAICS code 333914);
• Elevator and Moving Stairway
Manufacturing (NAICS code 333921);
• Conveyor and Conveying
Equipment Manufacturing (NAICS code
333922);
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• Overhead Traveling Crane, Hoist
and Monorail System Manufacturing
(NAICS code 333923);
• Industrial Truck, Tractor, Trailer
and Stacker Machinery Manufacturing
(NAICS code 333924);
• Power-Driven Hand Tool
Manufacturing (NAICS code 333991);
• Welding and Soldering Equipment
Manufacturing (NAICS code 333992);
• Packaging Machinery
Manufacturing (NAICS code 333993);
• Industrial Process Furnace and
Oven Manufacturing (NAICS code
333994);
• Fluid Power Cylinder and Actuator
Manufacturing (NAICS code 333995);
• Fluid Power Pump and Motor
Manufacturing (NAICS code 333996);
• Scale and Balance Manufacturing
(NAICS code 333997);
• All Other Miscellaneous General
Purpose Machinery Manufacturing
(NAICS code 333999);
• Audio and Video Equipment
Manufacturing (NAICS code 334310);
• Capacitor, Resistor, Coil,
Transformer, and Other Inductor
Manufacturing (NAICS code 334416);
• Electronic Connector
Manufacturing (NAICS code 334417);
• Printed Circuit Assembly
(Electronic Assembly) Manufacturing
(NAICS code 334418);
• Other Electronic Component
Manufacturing (NAICS code 334419);
• Search, Detection, Navigation,
Guidance, Aeronautical, and Nautical
System and Instrument Manufacturing
(NAICS code 334511);
• Automatic Environmental Control
Manufacturing for Residential,
Commercial and Appliance Use (NAICS
code 334512);
• Instruments and Related Products
Manufacturing for Measuring,
Displaying, and Controlling Industrial
Process Variables (NAICS code 334513);
• Instrument Manufacturing for
Measuring and Testing Electricity and
Electrical Signals (NAICS code 334515);
• Electric Lamp Bulb and Part
Manufacturing (NAICS code 335110);
• Residential Electric Lighting Fixture
Manufacturing (NAICS code 335121);
• Commercial, Industrial and
Institutional Electric Lighting Fixture
Manufacturing (NAICS code 335122);
• Other Lighting Equipment
Manufacturing (NAICS code 335129);
• Major Household Appliance
Manufacturing (NAICS code 335220);
• Power, Distribution and Specialty
Transformer Manufacturing (NAICS
code 335311);
• Motor and Generator Manufacturing
(NAICS code 335312);
• Switchgear and Switchboard
Apparatus Manufacturing (NAICS code
335313);
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• Relay and Industrial Control
Manufacturing (NAICS code 335314);
• Storage Battery Manufacturing
(NAICS code 335911);
• Fiber Optic Cable Manufacturing
(NAICS code 335921);
• Current-Carrying Wiring Device
Manufacturing (NAICS code 335931);
• Carbon and Graphite Product
Manufacturing (NAICS code 335991);
• Automobile Manufacturing (NAICS
code 336111);
• Light Truck and Utility Vehicle
Manufacturing (NAICS code 336112);
• Heavy Duty Truck Manufacturing
(NAICS code 336120);
• Motor Vehicle Body Manufacturing
(NAICS code 336211);
• Truck Trailer Manufacturing
(NAICS code 336212);
• Motor Home Manufacturing (NAICS
code 336213);
• Travel Trailer and Camper
Manufacturing (NAICS code 336214);
• Motor Vehicle Gasoline Engine and
Engine Parts Manufacturing (NAICS
code 336310);
• Motor Vehicle Electrical and
Electronic Equipment Manufacturing
(NAICS code 336320);
• Motor Vehicle Steering and
Suspension Components (except Spring)
Manufacturing (NAICS code 336330);
• Motor Vehicle Brake System
Manufacturing (NAICS code 336340);
• Motor Vehicle Transmission and
Power Train Parts Manufacturing
(NAICS code 336350);
• Motor Vehicle Seating and Interior
Trim Manufacturing (NAICS code
336360);
• Motor Vehicle Metal Stamping
(NAICS code 336370);
• Other Motor Vehicle Parts
Manufacturing (NAICS code 336390);
• Aircraft Manufacturing (NAICS
code 336411);
• Aircraft Engine and Engine Parts
Manufacturing (NAICS code 336412);
• Other Aircraft Part and Auxiliary
Equipment Manufacturing (NAICS code
336413);
• Guided Missile and Space Vehicle
Manufacturing (NAICS code 336414);
• Guided Missile and Space Vehicle
Propulsion Unit and Propulsion Unit
Parts Manufacturing (NAICS code
336415);
• Other Guided Missile and Space
Vehicle Parts and Auxiliary Equipment
Manufacturing (NAICS code 336419);
• Railroad Rolling Stock
Manufacturing (NAICS code 336510);
• Ship Building and Repairing
(NAICS code 336611);
• Boat Building (NAICS code
336612);
• Motorcycle, Bicycle and Parts
Manufacturing (NAICS code 336991);
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• Military Armored Vehicle, Tank
and Tank Component Manufacturing
(NAICS code 336992);
• All Other Transportation
Equipment Manufacturing (NAICS code
336999);
• Wood Kitchen Cabinet and Counter
Top Manufacturing (NAICS code
337110);
• Upholstered Household Furniture
Manufacturing (NAICS code 337121);
• Nonupholstered Wood Household
Furniture Manufacturing (NAICS code
337122);
• Metal Household Furniture
Manufacturing (NAICS code 337124);
• Institutional Furniture
Manufacturing (NAICS code 337127);
• Wood Office Furniture
Manufacturing (NAICS code 337211);
• Surgical Appliance and Supplies
Manufacturing (NAICS code 339113);
• Dental Equipment and Supplies
Manufacturing (NAICS code 339114);
• Jewelry and Silverware
Manufacturing (NAICS code 339910);
• Sporting and Athletic Goods
Manufacturing (NAICS code 339920);
• Gasket, Packing, and Sealing Device
Manufacturing (NAICS code 339991);
• Fastener, Button, Needle and Pin
Manufacturing (NAICS code 339993);
• All Other Miscellaneous
Manufacturing (NAICS code 339999);
• Metal Service Centers and Other
Metal Merchant Wholesalers (NAICS
code 423510);
• Industrial Supplies Merchant
Wholesalers (NAICS code 423510);
• Other Chemical and Allied
Products Merchant Wholesalers (NAICS
code 424690);
• Paint, Varnish, and Supplies
Merchant Wholesalers (NAICS code
424950);
• New Car Dealers (NAICS code
441110);
• Used Car Dealers (NAICS code
441120);
• Sporting Goods Stores (NAICS code
451110);
• Scheduled Passenger Air
Transportation (NAICS code 481111);
• Other Support Activities for Air
Transportation (NAICS code 481111);
• Other Warehousing and Storage
(NAICS code 493190);
• Motion Picture and Video
Production (NAICS code 512110);
• Other Financial Vehicles (NAICS
code 525990);
• Research and Development in the
Physical, Engineering, and Life Sciences
(except Nanotechnology and
Biotechnology) (NAICS code 541715);
• Research and Development in the
Social Sciences and Humanities (NAICS
code 541720);
• Offices of Other Holding Companies
(NAICS code 551112);
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• Carpet and Upholstery Cleaning
Services (NAICS code 561740);
• Hazardous Waste Treatment and
Disposal (NAICS code 562211);
• Solid Waste Landfill (NAICS code
562212);
• Materials Recovery Facilities
(NAICS code 562920);
• Junior Colleges (NAICS code
611210);
• Colleges, Universities and
Professional Schools (NAICS code
611310);
• General Automotive Repair (NAICS
code 811111);
• Automotive Exhaust System Repair
(NAICS code 811112);
• Automotive Transmission Repair
(NAICS code 811113);
• Other Automotive Mechanical and
Electrical Repair and Maintenance
(NAICS code 811118);
• Automotive Body, Paint and
Interior Repair and Maintenance
(NAICS code 811121);
• Automotive Glass Replacement
Shops (NAICS code 811122);
• Automotive Oil Change and
Lubrication Shops (NAICS code
811191);
• All Other Automotive Repair and
Maintenance (NAICS code 811198);
• Consumer Electronics Repair and
Maintenance (NAICS code 811211);
• Computer and Office Machine
Repair and Maintenance (NAICS code
811212);
• Communication Equipment Repair
and Maintenance (NAICS code 811213);
• Other Electronic and Precision
Equipment Repair and Maintenance
(NAICS code 811219);
• Commercial and Industrial
Machinery and Equipment (except
Automotive and Electronic) Repair and
Maintenance (NAICS code 811310);
• Home and Garden Equipment
Repair and Maintenance (NAICS code
811411);
• Other Personal and Household
Goods Repair and Maintenance (NAICS
code 811490);
• Coin-Operated Laundries and
Drycleaners (NAICS code 812310);
• Drycleaning and Laundry Services
(except Coin-Operated) (NAICS code
812320); and
• Industrial Launderers (NAICS code
812332).
2. Applicability to Importers and
Exporters
This action may also affect certain
entities subject to import certification
and export notification requirements
under TSCA (https://www.epa.gov/tscaimport-export-requirements). Persons
who import any chemical substance in
bulk form, as part of a mixture, or as
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part of an article (if required by rule) are
subject to TSCA section 13 (15 U.S.C.
2612) import certification requirements
and the corresponding regulations at 19
CFR 12.118 through 12.127 (see also 19
CFR 127.28(i)). Those persons must
certify that the shipment of the chemical
substance complies with all applicable
rules and orders under TSCA (see 19
CFR 12.121). The EPA policy in support
of import certification appears at 40 CFR
part 707, subpart B.
In addition, any persons who export
or intend to export a chemical substance
that is the subject of this final rule are
subject to the export notification
provisions of TSCA section 12(b) (15
U.S.C. 2611(b)) and must comply with
the export notification requirements in
40 CFR part 707, subpart D. Any person
who exports or intends to export TCE
must comply with the export
notification requirements in 40 CFR part
707, subpart D.
If you have any questions regarding
the applicability of this action to a
particular entity, consult the technical
information contact listed under FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT.
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES8
B. What is the Agency’s authority for
taking this action?
Under TSCA section 6(a) (15 U.S.C.
2605(a)), if the Agency determines
through a TSCA section 6(b) risk
evaluation that a chemical substance
presents an unreasonable risk of injury
to health or the environment, EPA must
by rule apply one or more requirements
listed in TSCA section 6(a) to the extent
necessary so that the chemical
substance or mixture no longer presents
such risk.
C. What action is the Agency taking?
Pursuant to TSCA section 6(b), EPA
determined in 2023 that TCE presents
an unreasonable risk of injury to health,
without consideration of costs or other
non-risk factors, including an
unreasonable risk to potentially exposed
or susceptible subpopulations (PESS)
identified by EPA as relevant to the
2020 Risk Evaluation for TCE under the
conditions of use (Refs. 1, 2). A
description of the conditions of use that
contribute to EPA’s determination that
TCE presents an unreasonable risk is in
III.B.1. of the proposed rule (88 FR
74712, October 31, 2023 (FRL–8317–01–
OCSPP), with a summary in Unit II.C.4
of this final rule. Accordingly, to
address the unreasonable risk, EPA is
issuing this final rule to:
(i) Prohibit the manufacture
(including import), processing, and
distribution in commerce of TCE for all
uses (including all consumer uses (see
Unit IV.B.2.)), as described in Unit
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IV.B., with longer compliance
timeframes for manufacture, processing,
and distribution in commerce related to
certain industrial and commercial uses;
(ii) Prohibit the industrial and
commercial use of TCE, as described in
Unit IV.B.1., with longer compliance
timeframes for certain uses;
(iii) Prohibit the manufacture
(including import) and processing of
TCE as an intermediate for the
manufacturing of hydrofluorocarbon
134a (HFC–134a), following an 8.5-year
phase-out, as described in Unit IV.B.3.;
(iv) Prohibit the industrial and
commercial use of TCE as a solvent for
closed-loop batch vapor degreasing for
rayon fabric scouring for end use in
rocket booster nozzle production by
Federal agencies and their contractors,
following a 10-year phase-out, outlined
in Unit IV.B.4.;
(v) Prohibit the manufacture
(including import), processing,
distribution in commerce, and use of
TCE as a laboratory chemical for asphalt
testing and recovery, following a 10-year
phase-out, outlined in Unit IV.B.5.;
(vi) Prohibit the manufacture
(including import), processing,
distribution in commerce, and
industrial and commercial use of TCE as
a solvent in batch vapor degreasing for
essential aerospace parts and
components and narrow tubing used in
medical devices, following a 7-year
TSCA section 6(g) exemption, outlined
in Unit IV.G.1.;
(vii) Prohibit the manufacture
(including import), processing,
distribution in commerce, and
industrial and commercial use of TCE as
a solvent in closed loop vapor
degreasing necessary for rocket engine
cleaning by Federal agencies and their
contractors, following a 7-year TSCA
section 6(g) exemption, outlined in Unit
IV.G.2.;
(viii) For vessels of the Armed Forces
and their systems, and in the
maintenance, fabrication, and
sustainment for and of such vessels and
systems, prohibit the industrial and
commercial use of TCE as: potting
compounds for naval electronic systems
and equipment; sealing compounds for
high and ultra-high vacuum systems;
bonding compounds for materials
testing and maintenance of underwater
systems and bonding of nonmetallic
materials; and cleaning agents to satisfy
cleaning requirements (which includes
degreasing using wipes, sprays, solvents
and vapor degreasing) for: materials and
components required for military
ordnance testing; temporary resin
repairs in vessel spaces where welding
is not authorized; ensuring
polyurethane adhesion for electronic
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systems and equipment repair and
installation of elastomeric materials;
various naval combat systems, radars,
sensors, equipment; fabrication and
prototyping processes to remove coolant
and other residue from machine parts;
machined part fabrications for naval
systems; installation of topside rubber
tile material aboard vessels; and vapor
degreasing required for substrate surface
preparation prior to electroplating
processes, following a 10-year TSCA
section 6(g) exemption, outlined in Unit
IV.G.3.;
(ix) Prohibit the emergency industrial
and commercial use of TCE in
furtherance of the NASA mission for
specific conditions which are critical or
essential and for which no technically
and economically feasible safer
alternative is available, following a 10year TSCA section 6(g) exemption,
outlined in Unit IV.G.4.;
(x) Prohibit the manufacture
(including import), processing,
distribution in commerce, disposal, and
use of TCE as a processing aid for
manufacturing battery separators for
lead acid batteries, following a 20-year
TSCA section 6(g) exemption, as
described in Unit IV.G.5.;
(xi) Prohibit the manufacture
(including import), processing,
distribution in commerce, disposal, and
use of TCE as a processing aid for
manufacturing specialty polymeric
microporous sheet materials following a
15-year TSCA section 6(g) exemption, as
described in Unit IV.G.6.;
(xii) Prohibit the manufacture
(including import), processing,
distribution in commerce, and use of
TCE as a laboratory chemical for
essential laboratory activities and some
research and development activities,
following a 50-year TSCA section 6(g)
exemption, as described in Unit IV.G.7.;
(xiii) Require strict workplace
controls to limit exposure to TCE,
including compliance with a TCE
workplace chemical protection program
(WCPP), which would include
requirements for an interim existing
chemical exposure limit (ECEL) revised
from the proposed rule, as well as
dermal protection, for conditions of use
with long term phase-outs or timelimited exemptions under TSCA section
6(g), as described in Unit IV.C., or
prescriptive workplace controls, as
described in Unit IV.D.;
(xiv) Prohibit the disposal of TCE to
industrial pre-treatment, industrial
treatment, or publicly owned treatment
works, through a phaseout allowing for
longer timeframes for disposal necessary
for certain industrial and commercial
uses as described in Unit IV.B.6., along
with a 50-year TSCA section 6(g)
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exemption for disposal for cleanup
projects before prohibition, as described
in Unit IV.G.8., and interim
requirements for wastewater worker
protection, as described in Unit IV.E.;
and
(xv) Establish recordkeeping and
downstream notification requirements,
as described in Unit IV.F.
EPA notes that all TSCA conditions of
use of TCE are subject to this final rule.
‘‘Conditions of use’’ is defined in TSCA
section 3(4) to mean the circumstances,
as determined by EPA, under which a
chemical substance is intended, known,
or reasonably foreseen to be
manufactured, processed, distributed in
commerce, used, or disposed of.
D. Why is the Agency taking this action?
Under TSCA section 6(a), ‘‘[i]f the
Administrator determines in accordance
with subsection (b)(4)(A) that the
manufacture, processing, distribution in
commerce, use or disposal of a chemical
substance or mixture, or that any
combination of such activities, presents
an unreasonable risk of injury to health
or the environment, the Administrator
shall by rule . . . apply one or more of
the [section 6(a)] requirements to such
substance or mixture to the extent
necessary so that the chemical
substance no longer presents such risk.’’
TCE was the subject of a risk evaluation
under TSCA section 6(b)(4)(A) that was
issued in November 2020 (Ref. 1). In
addition, EPA issued a revised
unreasonable risk determination for TCE
in January 2023 (Ref. 2), determining
that TCE, as a whole chemical
substance, presents an unreasonable risk
of injury to health under the conditions
of use. On October 31, 2023, EPA issued
a proposed rule (88 FR 74712) (FRL–
8317–01–OCSPP) under TSCA section
6(a) to regulate TCE so that it no longer
presents unreasonable risk (hereinafter
‘‘2023 TCE proposed rule’’). The Agency
received public comment on the
proposed rule, and with this action,
EPA is finalizing the 2023 TCE
proposed rule with modifications so
that TCE no longer presents an
unreasonable risk. The conditions of use
that contribute to the unreasonable risk
from TCE are described in Unit III.B.1.
of the 2023 TCE proposed rule.
EPA emphasizes that while some of
the adverse effects from TCE exposure
are experienced following acute single
exposures, other risks are incurred
following long-term repeated exposures.
Risks of non-cancer effects, specifically
fetal cardiac defects and autoimmunity,
are the most sensitive adverse effects
following exposure. In addition, risks of
other significant adverse outcomes
associated with TCE exposure include:
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non-cancer effects (liver toxicity, kidney
toxicity, neurotoxicity,
immunosuppression, reproductive
toxicity, and developmental toxicity), as
well as cancer (liver, kidney, and nonHodgkin’s lymphoma). This final rule
will eliminate the unreasonable risk to
human health from TCE, as identified in
the 2020 Risk Evaluation for TCE (Ref.
1) and the 2023 Revised Unreasonable
Risk Determination for TCE (Ref. 2).
While EPA’s rule will result in a ban
of TCE, the timeframes for the phaseouts differ across conditions of use and
are described in fuller detail in Unit
IV.B. One phase-out is for uses that may
impact the Agency’s efforts to address
climate-damaging HFCs (and the
associated adverse impacts on human
health and the environment) under the
American Innovation and
Manufacturing Act of 2020 (AIM Act)
(42 U.S.C. 7675). EPA is implementing
a longer phase-out in tandem with strict
workplace controls for the
manufacturing (including import) and
processing of TCE as an intermediate in
the generation of HFC–134a, one of the
regulated substances subject to a
phasedown under the AIM Act. More
information on HFC–134a is in Unit
V.A.1. of the 2023 TCE proposed rule.
Additionally, the Agency recognizes
that alternatives to TCE may not be
readily available for some important
conditions of use. As an example, EPA
is finalizing a longer phase-out
timeframe for industrial and commercial
use of TCE as a solvent for closed-loop
batch vapor degreasing for rayon fabric
scouring for end use in rocket booster
nozzle production by Federal agencies
and their contractors. Currently,
substitutes and alternative processes do
not meet the technical specifications
required to clean the rayon fabric in
order to safely produce rockets.
Similarly, EPA is finalizing a longer
phase-out for the industrial and
commercial use of TCE in laboratory use
for asphalt testing and recovery, based
on information provided by state
departments of transportation and
regulated entities regarding the
timeframes needed for revising state
certifications that currently include this
use of TCE for, among other activities,
enabling the recycling of asphalt.
Additionally, EPA recognizes that
some conditions of use may be
important for national security
applications or for other critical needs.
For these reasons, this final rule
includes a 15-year exemption under
TSCA section 6(g) for industrial and
commercial use of TCE as a processing
aid for battery separator manufacturing
in the production of lead-acid battery
separators, as well as for the
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manufacturing, processing, and
distribution in commerce of TCE for this
use. EPA recognizes that battery
separators are essential components of
batteries that power vehicles and
systems in the U.S. supply chain for
multiple critical infrastructure sectors
within the national economy. Further,
there are a number of critical uses
required for DoD vessels. EPA is
finalizing a 10-year exemption under
TSCA section 6(g) for DoD vessel
requirements for potting, bonding and
sealing compounds, and bonding and
cleaning requirements for naval combat
systems, radars, sensors, equipment,
and fabrication and prototyping
processes. Additionally, EPA is
finalizing a 50-year exemption under
TSCA section 6(g) for the industrial and
commercial use of TCE for critical
laboratory activities; for example,
laboratory activities associated with
ongoing environmental cleanup projects
that fall under the Superfund program
or other similar EPA authorities, in
which it is necessary to use TCE as a
laboratory chemical for the analysis of
contaminated soil, air, and water
samples.
EPA proposed and is finalizing a
requirement to comply with a WCPP,
which includes monitoring, adherence
to industrial hygiene best practices, and
requirements to meet an interim ECEL
as a condition for most of the conditions
of use for which a phase-out or timelimited exemption was provided. For
the remaining conditions of use for
which a phase-out or time-limited
exemption was provided, EPA is
requiring prescriptive worker controls.
For many of the conditions of use for
which EPA is finalizing longer phaseouts or time-limited exemptions under
the WCPP, data were submitted to
support many commenters’ position that
a higher interim ECEL than the limit
proposed is necessary for successful
implementation of worker protections
before those conditions of use are
prohibited. These comments were
submitted to inform the risk evaluation,
Small Business Advocacy Review
(SBAR) Panel process, the comment
period following publication of the 2023
TCE proposed rule, or during
stakeholder outreach, and are available
in the corresponding public dockets
(EPA–HQ–OPPT–2020–0642; EPA–HQ–
OPPT–2019–0500; EPA–HQ–OPPT–
2016–0737, respectively).
E. What are the estimated incremental
impacts of this action?
EPA has prepared an Economic
Analysis of the potential incremental
impacts associated with this rulemaking
that can be found in the rulemaking
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docket (Ref. 3). As described in more
detail in the Economic Analysis (Ref. 3),
EPA was unable to quantify all
incremental costs of this rule. The
quantifiable cost of the rule is estimated
to be $64.1 million annualized over 20
years at a 2% discount rate, $71.3
million annualized at 3%, and $102.4
million annualized at a 7% discount
rate. These costs take into consideration
costs of compliance with
implementation of an interim WCPP for
certain conditions of use, based on an
interim ECEL of 0.2 ppm (1.07 mg/m3)
for inhalation exposures as an 8-hour
time-weighted average (TWA), costs for
transitioning to alternatives, where
possible, and reformulation costs of
numerous products. Estimated costs for
the interim WCPP include costs for
monitoring and applicable personal
protective equipment (PPE). There are a
number of notable unquantified costs.
These are described in this Unit and
more fully in section 7.12 of the
Economic Analysis.
Alternative products with similar cost
and efficacy are available for most of the
products that are formulated with TCE.
However, for some applications, there
may be additional unquantified costs
associated with the alternatives
including costs to develop alternatives
where they are not currently available.
For instance, in some cases, some effort
might be required by firms using TCE
products to identify suitable
alternatives, test them for their desired
applications, learn how to use them
safely and effectively, and implement
new processes for using the alternative
products. There may also be some
safety-critical applications, such as
energized electrical equipment cleaners
and adhesives and sealants specifically
for aerospace applications, where
alternatives would need to undergo
extensive safety reviews and testing
before they could replace the TCE
products. The information to estimate
how often these costs might be incurred
or what the specific costs would be peruser or per-firm when they are incurred
is not available. Therefore, EPA is
unable to consider these costs
quantitatively.
There also may be some unquantified
costs associated with the
implementation of a WCPP. EPA used
available air monitoring data as well as
modelled data to estimate a distribution
of exposure concentrations, but since
these data were not collected in the
same way monitoring data under a
WCPP would be collected, these
estimated distributions are uncertain
and therefore, the costs of compliance
with the WCPP are uncertain. The
WCPP costs also assume that when the
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exposure levels exceed the interim
ECEL, compliance is achieved by
implementing a respirator PPE program.
However, and consistent with the
hierarchy of controls, the final rule
requires implementation of feasible
engineering and administrative controls
before using PPE to reduce exposure to
or below the interim ECEL. These costs
would be specific to individual firms,
and EPA does not have sufficient
information to estimate these costs.
The costs of alternative identification,
testing, and potential process changes
could not be estimated for battery
separator manufacturers, synthetic
paper processors, and fluoroelastomer
producers. It is expected that these
facilities would need to adopt process
and/or physical plant changes in order
to comply with the rule. EPA does not
have sufficient information to estimate
the costs of the prohibition to these
sectors.
EPA expects the processing of TCE as
an intermediate for the manufacture of
HFC–134a to decline over time, in light
of the AIM Act requirements (Ref. 4). At
some point, the domestic manufacture
of HFC–134a may be discontinued.
While the timing for this
discontinuation is uncertain, it is
unclear whether this rule will hasten
the closure of plants that use TCE to
produce HFC–134a. There could be
some unknown cost impacts associated
with hastening the closure of these two
plants.
EPA is finalizing a 10-year phase-out
for the industrial and commercial use of
TCE as a solvent for closed-loop batch
vapor degreasing for rayon fabric
scouring for end use in rocket booster
nozzle production by Federal agencies
and their contractors, conditioned on
Federal agencies performing within 5
years a final pre-launch test of rocket
booster nozzles that have been produced
without using TCE. EPA does not have
information to estimate the cost of such
a test. The prohibition of TCE used in
vapor degreasing for narrow tubing for
aerospace and medical devices is
expected to require testing and
certification of alternative solvents and/
or processes to meet strict safety and
performance requirements. These costs
will be specific to a facility’s design,
selected alternative, and end use of the
product. EPA does not have information
to estimate the costs associated with
meeting these safety and performance
requirements.
The disposal of TCE from cleanup
projects to industrial pre-treatment,
industrial treatment, or publicly owned
treatment works is prohibited after the
TSCA section 6(g) exemption ends, 50
years after the rule is finalized. If
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cleanup is not finished by the end of
this time period and the TSCA section
6(g) exemption has not been extended,
cleanup sites will need to identify and
implement alternative disposal or
treatment methods and will likely also
need to renegotiate Resource
Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA)
permits or Comprehensive
Environmental Response,
Compensation, and Liability Act
(CERCLA) agreements to include those
changes. These approaches could be
more costly to implement and/or
increase the duration of cleanups
allowing any potential environmental or
human health impacts to continue for a
longer period of time. The information
to estimate how often these costs might
be incurred or what the specific costs
would be per site when they are
incurred is not available.
During the timeframe of the
exemptions, this rule requires owners
and operators of cleanup sites with TCE
exposures to potentially exposed
persons (e.g., workers or others in the
workplace, such as persons directly
handling the chemical or in the area
where the chemical is being used) as
well as publicly owned treatment works
(POTWs) receiving TCE wastes from
cleanup sites, battery separator
manufacturers, and specialty polymeric
microporous sheet material
manufacturers to comply with the
Occupational Safety and Health
Administration’s (OSHA’s) Hazardous
Waste Operations and Emergency
Response (HAZWOPER) requirements
modified to incorporate the interim
ECEL (for cleanup sites) and WCPP
requirements modified to include a
water screening method (for POTWs).
EPA does not have sufficient
information to estimate the number of
sites and workers that may need to meet
the requirements to protect potentially
exposed persons and could not estimate
the costs for those protections. In
addition, the economic analysis does
not estimate costs regarding disposal of
TCE or TCE-containing products after
the effective date prohibiting the
industrial and commercial use and
disposal of TCE to industrial pretreatment, industrial treatment, or
publicly owned treatment works. The
final rule includes a staggered
compliance timeline throughout the
supply chain to allow for much of the
TCE to be used before disposal is
necessary. However, some unused
product may need to be disposed of as
hazardous waste. Since there is no
reliable way of estimating the volume of
this waste, the additional disposal costs
are not quantified in this economic
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analysis. Finally, EPA could not
estimate any potential business closures
or off-shoring of businesses that might
result from the rule. Vapor degreasing is
one use of TCE where switching to a
suitable alternative may be challenging
and where closing or off-shoring may be
a compliance strategy. EPA estimates
that 366 facilities still use TCE in vapor
degreasers, a majority of which are
small businesses. There is no standard
generally accepted approach for
estimating the cost impacts of a firm
closure. Despite information EPA has
sought from stakeholders and
commenters, including through a SBAR
Panel, it is not clear whether or how
many firms might choose closure as a
compliance strategy, nor what the costs
might be.
Following the mandate of TSCA to
address unreasonable risk to health as
well as in alignment with the goals of
President Biden’s Cancer Moonshot, the
rule will protect people from cancer and
other significant adverse health effects
of TCE by prohibiting the manufacture
(including import), processing, and
distribution in commerce of TCE for all
uses while allowing for a longer
reasonable transition period or timelimited exemptions for certain uses (Ref.
5). The actions in this final rule are
expected to achieve health benefits for
the American public, some of which can
be monetized and others that, while
tangible and significant, cannot be
monetized due to data and methodology
limitations. The monetized benefits of
this rule are approximately $22.9
million to $ 23.2 million annualized
over 20 years at a 2% discount rate,
$18.2 million to $18.3 million
annualized over 20 years at 3%, and
$8.7 million to $ 8.9 million annualized
over 20 years at a 7% discount rate.
These monetized benefits only include
potential reductions in risk of liver,
kidney, and non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma
cancers associated with reducing
chronic TCE exposure.
There are a number of non-cancer
endpoints associated with exposure to
TCE, including liver toxicity, kidney
toxicity, reproductive effects,
neurotoxicity, immunotoxicity effects
and fetal cardiac defects (Ref. 1). There
is human evidence for hepatitis
accompanying immune-related
generalized skin diseases, jaundice,
hepatomegaly, hepatosplenomegaly, and
liver failure in TCE-exposed workers
and changes in the proximal tubules of
the kidney following exposure to TCE,
and occupational studies have shown
increased levels of kidney damage
(proximal tubules) and end-stage renal
disease in TCE-exposed workers.
Evidence exists to associate TCE with
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reproductive effects. Most human
studies support an association between
TCE exposure and alterations in sperm
density and quality, as well as changes
in sexual drive or function and serum
endocrine levels. Fewer epidemiological
studies exist linking decreased
incidence of fecundability (time-to
pregnancy) and menstrual cycle
disturbances in women with TCE
exposures. Human studies have
consistently reported vestibular system
related symptoms such as headaches,
dizziness, and nausea following TCE
exposure. Several newer
epidemiological studies have found an
association between TCE exposure and
neurodegenerative disorders such as
amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and
Parkinson’s disease (Ref. 1). EPA does
not have sufficient information to
estimate the monetized benefits of the
rule with respect to these noncancer
effects, and therefore monetized benefits
are likely underestimated.
EPA does estimate that there 67,869
workers and occupational non-users
(ONUs, or people who do not directly
handle the chemical, but are in close
proximity) exposed to TCE and of those,
approximately 1,162 pregnant workers
and ONUs annually that may potentially
benefit from a reduced risk of fetal
cardiac defects resulting from reduced
TCE exposure. Although EPA has not
developed a complete estimate of the
monetized benefits associated with
avoiding fetal cardiac defects, as
described in the Economic Analysis
(Ref. 3), Arth, Tinker et al. (Ref. 6)
estimated a mean annual cost of $41,166
(2013$) (median $14,552) for each fetal
cardiac defects-associated
hospitalization. For critical fetal cardiac
defects, mean and median costs were
estimated at $79,011 and $29,886
(2013$), respectively, for each
incidence. In addition to hospitalization
costs, individuals with fetal cardiac
defects will likely incur healthcare costs
associated with physician visits and
outpatient care. They are also more
likely to require specialized healthcare
such as medications, physical or speech
therapy, or treatment for developmental
or behavioral problems (Ref. 7).
Additional social costs may include
caregiver burden and mental health
services (Ref. 8), as well as non-market
costs such as pain and suffering and
fetal cardiac defect-related mortality.
Because these costs are not accounted
for, monetized benefits are likely
underestimated. The severity of specific
types of fetal cardiac defects and
associated costs will vary depending on
the type of heart defect.
Additionally, to the extent that the
rule reduces the amount of TCE in
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drinking water systems and thereby
exposures to populations using those
drinking water sources, there could be
potential health-related benefits related
to improved drinking water quality that
EPA was unable to quantify.
II. Background
A. Overview of TCE
As described in more detail in the
2023 TCE proposed rule, TCE is an
immunotoxicant and developmental
toxicant and is carcinogenic to humans
by all routes of exposure. This final rule
is specifically intended to address the
unreasonable risk of injury to health
that EPA has identified in the 2020 Risk
Evaluation for TCE (Ref. 1) and 2023
Revised Unreasonable Risk
Determination (Ref. 2), as described in
Unit II.D. of the 2023 TCE proposed
rule. TCE is a volatile organic
compound (VOC) used in industry as
well as in commercial and consumer
products. The total aggregate annual
production volume ranged from 100 to
250 million pounds between 2016 and
2019 according to the most recent (2020)
Chemical Data Reporting (CDR) data
(Ref. 9). The majority of TCE is
processed as an intermediate during the
manufacture of refrigerants, specifically
HFC–134a, which accounts for about
83.6% of TCE’s annual production
volume (Ref. 1). TCE is also used as a
solvent, frequently in cleaning and
degreasing (including spot cleaning,
vapor degreasing, cold cleaning, and
aerosol degreasing), which accounts for
another 14.7% of TCE production
volume. Other uses account for
approximately 1.7% of TCE production
volume. TCE is used as a solvent in a
variety of commercial and consumer
applications including in lubricants,
adhesives and sealants, paints and
coatings, and other miscellaneous
products.
B. Regulatory Actions Pertaining to TCE
Because of its significant adverse
health effects, TCE is subject to
numerous State, Federal, and
international regulations restricting and
regulating its use. A summary of EPA
regulations pertaining to TCE, as well as
other Federal, State, and international
regulations, is in the docket (Ref. 10).
As described in more detail in the
2023 TCE proposed rule and in the
Response to Public Comments
document (Ref. 11), EPA considered the
adequacy of the current regulation of
TCE by OSHA for protection of workers.
EPA notes that the standards for
chemical hazards that OSHA
promulgates under the Occupational
Safety and Health (OSH) Act share a
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broadly similar purpose with the worker
protection-related standards that EPA
promulgates under TSCA section 6(a).
The control measures OSHA and EPA
require to satisfy the objectives of their
respective statutes may also, in many
circumstances, overlap or coincide.
However, there are important
differences between EPA’s and OSHA’s
regulatory approaches and jurisdiction,
and EPA considers these differences
when deciding whether and how to
account for OSHA requirements when
evaluating and addressing potential
unreasonable risk to workers so that
compliance requirements are clearly
explained to the regulated community.
TSCA risk evaluations are subject to
statutory science standards, an explicit
requirement to consider risks to
potentially exposed or susceptible
subpopulations, and a prohibition on
considering costs and other non-risk
factors when determining whether a
chemical presents an unreasonable risk
that warrants regulatory actions—all
requirements that do not apply to
development of OSHA regulations. As
such, EPA may find unreasonable risk
for purposes of TSCA notwithstanding
OSHA requirements. In addition, health
standards issued under section 6(b)(5) of
the OSH Act must reduce significant
risk only to the extent that it is
technologically and economically
feasible. OSHA’s legal requirement to
demonstrate that its section 6(b)(5)
standards are technologically and
economically feasible at the time they
are promulgated often precludes OSHA
from imposing exposure control
requirements sufficient to ensure that
the chemical substance no longer
presents a significant risk to workers.
While it is possible in some cases that
the OSHA standards for some chemicals
reviewed under TSCA will eliminate
unreasonable risk, based on EPA’s
experience thus far in conducting
occupational risk assessments under
TSCA, EPA believes that OSHA
chemical standards would in general be
unlikely to address unreasonable risk to
workers within the meaning of TSCA,
since TSCA section 6(b) unreasonable
risk determinations may account for
unreasonable risk to more sensitive
endpoints and working populations
than OSHA’s risk evaluations typically
contemplate and EPA is obligated to
apply TSCA section 6(a) risk
management requirements to the extent
necessary so that the unreasonable risk
is no longer presented. Because the
requirements and application of TSCA
and OSHA regulatory analyses differ, it
is necessary for EPA to conduct risk
evaluations and, where it finds
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unreasonable risk to workers, develop
risk management requirements for
chemical substances that OSHA also
regulates, and it is expected that EPA’s
findings and requirements may
sometimes diverge from OSHA’s.
Additional considerations of OSHA
standards in the revised unreasonable
risk determination are discussed further
in the 2023 Revised Unreasonable Risk
Determination for TCE (88 FR 1222,
January 9, 2023 (FRL–9945–02–
OCSPP)).
C. Summary of EPA’s Risk Evaluation
Activities on TCE
In July 2017, EPA published the scope
of the TCE risk evaluation (82 FR 31592,
July 7, 2017 (FRL–9963–57)), and, after
receiving public comments, published
the problem formulation in June 2018
(83 FR 26998, June 11, 2018 (FRL–9978–
40)). In February 2020, EPA published
a draft risk evaluation (85 FR 11079,
February 26, 2020 (FRL–10005–52)),
and, after public comment and peer
review by the Science Advisory
Committee on Chemicals (SACC), EPA
issued the 2020 Risk Evaluation for TCE
in November 2020 in accordance with
TSCA section 6(b) (85 FR 75010,
November 24, 2020 (FRL–10016–91)).
EPA subsequently issued a draft revised
TSCA risk determination for TCE (87 FR
40520, July 7, 2022 (FRL–9945–01–
OCSPP)), and, after public notice and
comment, published a Revised Risk
Determination for TCE in January 2023
(88 FR 1222, January 9, 2023 (FRL–
9945–02–OCSPP)). The 2020 Risk
Evaluation for TCE and supplemental
materials are in Docket ID No. EPA–
HQ–OPPT–2019–0500, and the January
2023 Revised Unreasonable Risk
Determination for TCE and additional
materials supporting the risk evaluation
process are in Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–
OPPT–2016–0737. Both dockets can be
accessed online through https://
www.regulations.gov.
1. 2020 Risk Evaluation for TCE
In the 2020 Risk Evaluation for TCE,
EPA evaluated risks associated with 54
conditions of use within the following
categories: manufacture (including
import), processing, distribution in
commerce, industrial and commercial
use, consumer use, and disposal (Ref. 1).
Descriptions of these conditions of use
are in Unit III.B.1. of the 2023 TCE
proposed rule. The 2020 Risk
Evaluation for TCE identified significant
adverse health effects associated with
short- and long-term exposure to TCE. A
further discussion of the hazards of TCE
is presented in Unit III.B.2. of the 2023
TCE proposed rule.
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2. 2023 Revised Unreasonable Risk
Determination for TCE
As described in more detail in EPA’s
2023 TCE proposed rule, EPA revised
the original unreasonable risk
determination based on the 2020 Risk
Evaluation for TCE and issued a final
revised unreasonable risk determination
in January 2023 (Ref. 2). EPA revised the
risk determination for the 2020 Risk
Evaluation for TCE pursuant to TSCA
section 6(b) and consistent with
Executive Order 13990 (‘‘Protecting
Public Health and the Environment and
Restoring Science to Tackle the Climate
Crisis’’) and other Administration
priorities. The revisions consisted of
making the risk determination based on
the whole chemical substance instead of
making risk determinations for each
individual condition of use, which
resulted in the revised risk
determination superseding the prior ‘‘no
unreasonable risk’’ determinations for
specific conditions of use (Ref. 2), the
withdrawal of the associated TSCA
section 6(i)(1) ‘‘no unreasonable risk’’
order, and clarification that the risk
determination does not reflect an
assumption that all workers are always
provided and appropriately wear PPE
(Ref. 2).
EPA determined that TCE presents an
unreasonable risk of injury to health and
did not identify risks of injury to the
environment that contribute to the
unreasonable risk determination for
TCE. The TCE conditions of use that
contribute to EPA’s determination that
the chemical substance poses
unreasonable risk to health are listed in
the unreasonable risk determination
(Ref. 2) and the 2023 TCE proposed rule,
with descriptions to aid chemical
manufacturers, processors, and users in
determining how their particular use or
activity would be addressed under the
final regulatory action.
3. Description of Unreasonable Risk
EPA has determined that TCE
presents an unreasonable risk of injury
to human health under the conditions of
use based on acute and chronic noncancer risks and cancer risks (Ref. 2). As
described in the TSCA section 6(b) 2020
Risk Evaluation for TCE, EPA identified
non-cancer adverse effects from acute
and chronic inhalation and dermal
exposures to TCE, and for cancer from
chronic inhalation and dermal
exposures to TCE (Ref. 1). In the TCE
risk characterization, the endpoints
identified by EPA as the basis for the
unreasonable risk determination in the
Risk Conclusions were
immunosuppression effects for acute
inhalation and dermal exposures, and
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autoimmunity effects for chronic
inhalation and dermal exposures (Ref.
1). Additional risks associated with
other non-cancer adverse effects (e.g.,
developmental toxicity,
immunosuppression, liver toxicity,
kidney toxicity, neurotoxicity,
autoimmunity, and reproductive
toxicity) were identified for acute and
chronic inhalation and dermal
exposures. EPA also concluded, based
on EPA’s Guidelines for Carcinogen
Risk Assessment (Ref. 12), that TCE is
carcinogenic by all routes of exposure,
and identified cancer risk (liver, kidney,
and non-Hodgkin lymphoma) from
chronic inhalation and dermal
exposures (Ref. 2). Unit VII. of the 2023
TCE proposed rule summarizes the
health effects and the magnitude of the
exposures.
To make the unreasonable risk
determination for TCE, EPA evaluated
exposures to PESS including workers,
ONUs, consumer users, and bystanders
to consumer use by using reasonably
available monitoring and modeling data
for inhalation and dermal exposures
(Ref. 1). EPA conducted a screeninglevel analysis to assess potential risks
from the air and water pathways to
fenceline communities. A discussion of
EPA’s analysis and the expected effects
of this rulemaking on fenceline
communities is in Unit VII.A. of the
2023 TCE proposed rule.
For the 2020 Risk Evaluation for TCE,
and as discussed in Unit II.D.1. and Unit
III.A.3. of the 2023 TCE proposed rule,
EPA considered PESS. EPA identified
the following groups as PESS: workers
and ONUs, including men and women
of reproductive age, adolescents, and
biologically susceptible subpopulations;
and consumer users and bystanders (of
any age group, including infants,
toddlers, children, and elderly),
including biologically susceptible
subpopulations. Additionally, older
pregnant women are identified as
especially susceptible to cardiac defects
in their developing fetus based on
epidemiological data (Ref. 1). All PESS
are included in the quantitative and
qualitative analyses described in the
2020 Risk Evaluation for TCE and were
considered in the determination of
unreasonable risk for TCE (Refs. 1, 2).
4. Conditions of Use Subject to This
Regulatory Action
As noted in Unit I.C. of this final rule,
the term ‘‘conditions of use’’ is defined
in TSCA section 3(4). Condition of use
descriptions are provided in Unit III.B.1.
of the 2023 TCE proposed rule and were
obtained from EPA sources such as CDR
use codes, the 2020 Risk Evaluation for
TCE and related documents, as well as
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the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development harmonized
use codes, and stakeholder
engagements. EPA did not receive
public comments identifying
inaccuracies or necessitating changes to
those descriptions; however, EPA
received some comments requesting
clarification for particular uses, which
can be found in the Response to
Comments document (Ref. 11).
Additionally, to assist with
implementation and compliance with
the final rule, in Units IV.C.1., IV.D.1.,
and IV.E.1. of this final rule, EPA has
provided a description of the conditions
of use that are subject to the WCPP or
other workplace controls during
phaseout or time-limited exemption
before prohibition.
For the purposes of this final rule,
‘‘occupational conditions of use’’ refers
to the TSCA conditions of use other
than consumer use as described in Units
III.B.1.a., b., c., and e. of the 2023 TCE
proposed rule. Although EPA identified
both industrial and commercial uses in
the 2020 Risk Evaluation for TCE (Ref.
1) for purposes of distinguishing
scenarios, the Agency clarified then and
clarifies now that EPA interprets the
authority Congress gave to the Agency
to ‘‘regulat[e] any manner or method of
commercial use’’ under TSCA section
6(a)(5) to reach both industrial and
commercial uses.
Additionally, as described in the 2023
TCE proposed rule and in the 2020 Risk
Evaluation for TCE (Ref. 1), EPA
identified and assessed all known,
intended, and reasonably foreseen
industrial, commercial, and consumer
uses of TCE. EPA determined that all
industrial, commercial, and consumer
uses of TCE evaluated in the 2020 Risk
Evaluation for TCE contribute to the
unreasonable risk of injury to health. As
such, for purposes of this risk
management rule, ‘‘consumer use’’
refers to all known, intended, or
reasonably foreseen TCE consumer uses.
Likewise, for the purpose of this risk
management rule, ‘‘industrial and
commercial use’’ refers to all known,
intended, or reasonably foreseen TCE
industrial and commercial uses.
EPA further notes that this rule does
not apply to any substance excluded
from the definition of ‘‘chemical
substance’’ under TSCA section
3(2)(B)(i) through (vi). Those exclusions
include, but are not limited to, any
pesticide (as defined by the Federal
Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide
Act) when manufactured, processed, or
distributed in commerce for use as a
pesticide; and any food, food additive,
drug, cosmetic, or device, as defined in
section 201 of the Federal Food, Drug,
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and Cosmetic Act, when manufactured,
processed, or distributed in commerce
for use as a food, food additive, drug,
cosmetic or device.
D. EPA’s 2023 Proposed Rule for TCE
1. Description of TSCA Section 6(a)
Requirements
Under TSCA section 6(a), if the
Administrator determines through a
TSCA section 6(b) risk evaluation that a
chemical substance presents an
unreasonable risk of injury to health or
the environment, without consideration
of costs or other non-risk factors,
including an unreasonable risk to a
PESS identified as relevant to the
Agency’s risk evaluation, under the
conditions of use, EPA must by rule
apply one or more of the section 6(a)
requirements to the extent necessary so
that the chemical substance no longer
presents such risk.
The TSCA section 6(a) requirements
can include one or more of the
following actions alone or in
combination:
• Prohibit or otherwise restrict the
manufacturing (including import),
processing, or distribution in commerce
of the substance or mixture, or limit the
amount of such substance or mixture
which may be manufactured, processed,
or distributed in commerce (section
6(a)(1)).
• Prohibit or otherwise restrict the
manufacturing, processing, or
distribution in commerce of the
substance or mixture for a particular use
or above a specific concentration for a
particular use (section 6(a)(2)).
• Limit the amount of the substance
or mixture which may be manufactured,
processed, or distributed in commerce
for a particular use or above a specific
concentration for a particular use
specified (section 6(a)(2)).
• Require clear and adequate
minimum warning and instructions
with respect to the substance or
mixture’s use, distribution in commerce,
or disposal, or any combination of those
activities, to be marked on or
accompanying the substance or mixture
(section 6(a)(3)).
• Require manufacturers and
processors of the substance or mixture
to make and retain certain records or
conduct certain monitoring or testing
(section 6(a)(4)).
• Prohibit or otherwise regulate any
manner or method of commercial use of
the substance or mixture (section
6(a)(5)).
• Prohibit or otherwise regulate any
manner or method of disposal of the
substance or mixture, or any article
containing such substance or mixture,
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by its manufacturer or processor or by
any person who uses or disposes of it
for commercial purposes (section
6(a)(6)).
• Direct manufacturers or processors
of the substance or mixture to give
notice of the unreasonable risk
determination to distributors, certain
other persons, and the public, and to
replace or repurchase the substance or
mixture (section 6(a)(7)).
In the 2023 TCE proposed rule, EPA
analyzed how the TSCA section 6(a)
requirements could be applied to
address the unreasonable risk from TCE
so that it no longer presents such risk.
This unit summarizes the TSCA section
6 considerations for issuing regulations
under TSCA section 6(a), and Unit IV.
outlines how EPA applied these
considerations while managing the
unreasonable risk from TCE.
As required, EPA developed a
proposed regulatory action and one
primary alternative regulatory action,
which are described in Units V.A. and
V.B. of the 2023 TCE the proposed rule,
respectively. To identify and select a
regulatory action, EPA considered the
two routes of exposure driving the
unreasonable risk, inhalation and
dermal, and the exposed populations.
For occupational conditions of use, EPA
considered how it could directly
regulate manufacturing (including
import), processing, distribution in
commerce, industrial and commercial
use, or disposal to address the
unreasonable risk. EPA also considered
how it could exercise its authority
under TSCA to regulate the
manufacturing (including import),
processing, and/or distribution in
commerce of TCE at different levels in
the supply chain to eliminate exposures
or restrict the availability of TCE and
TCE-containing products for consumer
use in order to address the unreasonable
risk.
As required by TSCA section 6(c)(2),
EPA considered several factors, in
addition to identified unreasonable risk,
when selecting among possible TSCA
section 6(a) regulatory requirements for
the proposed rule. EPA’s considerations
regarding TSCA section 6(c)(2) for TCE
are discussed in full in Unit VII. of the
2023 TCE proposed rule, including the
statement of effects with respect to the
section 6(c)(2)(A) considerations.
As described in more detail in the
2023 TCE proposed rule, EPA also
considered regulatory authorities under
statutes administered by other agencies
such as the Occupational Safety and
Health (OSH) Act, the Consumer
Product Safety Act (CPSA), and the
Federal Hazardous Substances Act
(FHSA), as well as other EPA-
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administered statutes, to examine (1)
Whether there are opportunities to
address unreasonable risk under other
statutes, such that a referral may be
warranted under TSCA section 9(a) or
9(b); or (2) Whether TSCA section 6(a)
regulation could include alignment of
requirements and definitions in and
under existing statutes and regulations
to minimize confusion to the regulated
entities and the general public.
Additionally, as described in more
detail in EPA’s 2023 TCE proposed rule
in Unit VI.B, EPA considered the
availability of alternatives when
finalizing a prohibition or a substantial
restriction (TSCA section 6(c)(2)(C)),
and in setting final compliance dates in
accordance with the requirements in
TSCA section 6(d)(1).
To the extent information was
reasonably available, EPA considered
pollution prevention strategies and the
hierarchy of controls adopted by OSHA
and the National Institute for
Occupational Safety and Health
(NIOSH) when developing its proposed
rule, with the goal of identifying risk
management control methods that
would be permanent, feasible, and
effective. EPA also considered how to
address the unreasonable risk while
providing flexibility to the regulated
community where appropriate and took
into account the information presented
in the 2020 Risk Evaluation for TCE
(Ref. 1), input from stakeholders, insight
received during consultations, and
anticipated compliance strategies from
regulated entities.
Taken together, these considerations
led EPA to the proposed regulatory
action and primary alternative action
described in this Unit. Additional
details related to how the requirements
in this Unit were incorporated into
development of the proposed rule and
primary alternative action are in Unit
VI. of the 2023 TCE proposed rule.
2. Consultations and Other Engagement
a. Consultations
EPA conducted consultations and
outreach as part of development of the
2023 TCE proposed rule. The Agency
held a federalism consultation from July
22, 2021, until October 22, 2021, as part
of the rulemaking process and pursuant
to Executive Order 13132 (Ref. 13).
EPA also consulted with tribal
officials during the development of the
2023 TCE proposed rule. The Agency
held a tribal consultation from May 17,
2021, to August 20, 2021, with meetings
on June 15 and July 8, 2021 (Ref. 14).
EPA received no written comments as
part of this consultation.
EPA’s environmental justice (EJ)
consultation occurred from June 3,
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2021, through August 20, 2021. On June
16 and July 6, 2021, EPA held public
meetings as part of this consultation.
These meetings were held pursuant to
Executive Orders 12898 and 14008. EPA
received three written comments
following the EJ meetings, in addition to
oral comments provided during the
consultations (Refs. 15, 16, 17, 18). A
brief summary of the comments is in
Unit III.A.1 of the 2023 TCE proposed
rule.
As required by section 609(b) of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA), EPA
convened a SBAR Panel to obtain advice
and recommendations from Small Entity
Representatives (SERs) that potentially
would be subject to the rule’s
requirements. EPA met with SERs
before and during Panel proceedings, on
October 28, 2022, and January 31, 2023.
Panel recommendations were presented
in the SBAR Panel report (Ref. 19) and
were addressed in Unit XI.C. of the 2023
TCE proposed rule and in the Initial
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (IRFA)
(Ref. 20). EPA has also prepared a Final
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (FRFA)
(Ref. 21).
More information about these
consultations is presented in Units
III.A.1., XI.C., XI.E., XI.F., and XI.J. of
the 2023 TCE proposed rule.
b. Other Stakeholder Consultations
For development of the proposed rule,
in addition to the formal consultations
described in Unit XI. of the 2023 TCE
proposed rule, EPA provided an
overview of the TSCA risk management
process and the risk evaluation findings
for TCE on December 15, 2020 (Ref. 22).
EPA also presented on the TSCA risk
management process and the findings in
the 2020 Risk Evaluation for TCE at a
Small Business Administration (SBA)
Office of Advocacy Environmental
Roundtable on December 18, 2020 (Ref.
19). Attendees of these meetings were
given an opportunity to voice their
concerns regarding the risk evaluation
and risk management.
Furthermore, during development of
the proposed rule, EPA engaged in
discussions with representatives from
different industries, non-governmental
organizations, technical experts,
organized labor, and users of TCE. A list
of external meetings held during the
development of the 2023 TCE proposed
rule is in the docket (Ref. 23); meeting
materials and summaries are also in the
docket. See Unit III.A.2. of the 2023 TCE
proposed rule for a summary of the
topics discussed during the meetings.
c. Children’s Environmental Health
The Agency’s 2021 Policy on
Children’s Health (Ref. 24) requires EPA
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to protect children from environmental
exposures by consistently and explicitly
considering early life exposures (from
conception, infancy, and early
childhood and through adolescence
until 21 years of age) and lifelong health
in all human health decisions through
identifying and integrating children’s
health data and information when
conducting risk assessments. TSCA
section 6(b)(4)(A) also requires EPA to
conduct risk evaluations ‘‘to determine
whether a chemical substance presents
an unreasonable risk of injury to health
or the environment . . . including an
unreasonable risk to a PESS identified
as relevant to the risk evaluation by the
Administrator, under the conditions of
use.’’ In addition, TSCA section 6(a)
requires EPA to apply one or more risk
management requirements so that TCE
no longer presents an unreasonable risk
(which includes unreasonable risk to
any relevant PESS). Information about
the health and risk assessments
supporting this action and how the
Policy was applied is presented in Unit
II.C., II.D., and IV.A. of the 2023 TCE
proposed rule, as well as in the 2020
Risk Evaluation for TCE, and the
Economic Analysis for this rule (Refs.
25, 1, 3).
3. Proposed Regulatory Action
EPA’s 2023 TCE proposed rule under
TSCA section 6(a) to address the
unreasonable risk presented by TCE
under its conditions of use included the
following:
(i) Prohibition of the manufacture
(including import), processing, and
distribution in commerce of TCE for all
uses (including all consumer uses), with
longer compliance timeframes for
manufacture and processing related to
certain uses;
(ii) Prohibition of the industrial and
commercial use of TCE, with longer
compliance timeframes for certain uses;
(iii) Prohibition of the manufacture
(including import) and processing of
TCE as an intermediate for the
manufacturing of HFC–134a, following
an 8.5-year phase-out;
(iv) Prohibition of the industrial and
commercial use of TCE as a solvent for
closed-loop batch vapor degreasing for
rayon fabric scouring for end use in
rocket booster nozzle production by
Federal agencies and their contractors,
following a 10-year phase-out;
(v) For vessels of the Armed Forces
and their systems, and in the
maintenance, fabrication, and
sustainment for and of such vessels and
systems, prohibition of the industrial
and commercial use of TCE as: potting
compounds for naval electronic systems
and equipment; sealing compounds for
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high and ultra-high vacuum systems;
bonding compounds for materials
testing and maintenance of underwater
systems and bonding of nonmetallic
materials; and cleaning agents to satisfy
cleaning requirements (which includes
degreasing using wipes, sprays, solvents
and vapor degreasing) for: materials and
components required for military
ordinance testing; temporary resin
repairs in vessel spaces where welding
is not authorized; ensuring
polyurethane adhesion for electronic
systems and equipment repair and
installation of elastomeric materials;
various naval combat systems, radars,
sensors, equipment; fabrication and
prototyping processes to remove coolant
and other residue from machine parts;
machined part fabrications for naval
systems; installation of topside rubber
tile material aboard vessels; and vapor
degreasing required for substrate surface
preparation prior to electroplating
processes, following a 10-year TSCA
section 6(g) exemption;
(vi) Prohibition of the manufacture
(including import), processing,
distribution in commerce, and use of
TCE as a processing aid for battery
separator manufacturing, following a 10year TSCA section 6(g) exemption;
(vii) Prohibition of the manufacture
(including import), processing,
distribution in commerce, and use of
TCE as a laboratory chemical for
essential laboratory activities and some
research and development activities,
following a 50-year TSCA section 6(g)
exemption;
(viii) Prohibition of the manufacture
(including import), processing,
distribution in commerce, and
industrial and commercial use of TCE as
a solvent in closed loop vapor
degreasing necessary for human-rated
rocket engine cleaning by NASA and its
contractors, following a 7-year TSCA
section 6(g) exemption;
(ix) Prohibition of the emergency
industrial and commercial use of TCE in
furtherance of the NASA mission for
specific conditions which are critical or
essential and for which no technically
and economically feasible safer
alternative is available, following a 10year TSCA section 6(g) exemption;
(x) Requirements for strict workplace
controls, including compliance with a
TCE WCPP, which would include
requirements for an inhalation exposure
limit and dermal protection to limit
exposure to TCE, for conditions of use
with long term phase-outs or timelimited exemptions under TSCA section
6(g);
(xi) Prohibition of, due to worker
risks, the disposal of TCE to industrial
pre-treatment, industrial treatment, or
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publicly owned treatment works, with a
50-year TSCA section 6(g) exemption for
cleanup projects; and
(xii) Requirements for recordkeeping
and downstream notification.
EPA notes that all TSCA conditions of
use of TCE were subject to the 2023 TCE
proposed rule and are subject to this
final rule.
The proposed rule included
timeframes for implementation. The
prohibitions EPA proposed would take
effect in phases, beginning at the top of
the supply chain, and coming into full
effect, for most conditions of use, after
90 days for manufacturers, in 180 days
for processors, and in 270 days for most
industrial and commercial users, with
different timeframes related to specific
conditions of use. Specifically, for
processing TCE as a reactant/
intermediate, EPA proposed that the
compliance dates for the proposed
prohibitions would come into effect in
1.5 years for manufacturers and 2 years
for processors EPA proposed additional
exceptions from the prohibition for the
manufacturing and processing
associated with certain processing and
industrial and commercial uses,
including phase-outs (see Units
V.A.1.b., d., and e., of the 2023 TCE
proposed rule or time-limited
exemptions under TSCA section 6(g)
(see Unit V.A.3.b. of the 2023 TCE
proposed rule). Likewise, for the WCPP
that would be required for several
conditions of use before prohibitions
went into effect, EPA proposed
timeframes for phases of compliance,
beginning with monitoring at 180 days
and full implementation after 1 year, as
described in Unit V.A.1. of the 2023
TCE proposed rule.
As required under TSCA section
6(c)(2)(A)(iv)(II) through (III), EPA
presented its consideration of an
alternative regulatory action in the Unit
V.B. of the 2023 TCE proposed rule.
Similar to the proposed regulatory
action, the alternative regulatory action
combined prohibitions with
requirements for a WCPP for certain
conditions of use before they would be
prohibited, to address the unreasonable
risk from TCE under its conditions of
use. The primary alternative regulatory
action described in the proposed rule
differed from the proposed regulatory
action by providing longer timeframes
for prohibitions, and by describing an
ECEL based on a different health
endpoint (i.e., immunotoxicity), as part
of the WCPP that would be required for
the conditions of use of TCE that would
be permitted to continue for longer than
one year after publication of the final
rule until the prohibition compliance
dates. The ECEL for the WCPP under the
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proposed rule’s primary alternative
regulatory action was based on the
endpoint used for EPA’s unreasonable
risk determination for TCE under TSCA
(i.e., immunotoxicity (Ref. 2)). In
contrast, the ECEL for the WCPP under
the proposed regulatory action was
based on the most sensitive health
endpoint (developmental toxicity). The
rationale for these differences is
discussed in Unit V.A, of this rule and
Unit VI.A.1.a. of the 2023 TCE proposed
rule.
For a comprehensive overview of the
alternative regulatory action, refer to
Unit V.B. of the 2023 TCE proposed
rule, with the rationale for the primary
alternative regulatory action provided in
Unit VI.B. of the 2023 TCE proposed
rule.
4. Public Comments Received
EPA requested comment on all
aspects of the 2023 TCE proposed rule.
During the public comment period, EPA
held a webinar on November 14, 2023,
providing an overview of the proposed
rule and TSCA section 6; during the
webinar, members of the public had the
opportunity to share their perspectives
(Ref. 26). The comment period closed on
December 15, 2023. EPA received
almost 30,000 public comments, with a
vast majority received from individuals
participating in mass mailer campaigns
organized by non-governmental
organizations. The public comments
also include approximately 200 unique
comments from industry stakeholders,
trade associations, environmental
groups, unions, non-governmental
health advocacy organizations,
academics, State and local governments,
and members of the regulated
community. A summary of the
comments, as well as EPA’s responses,
is in the docket for this rulemaking (Ref.
11). Additionally, Unit III. contains
summaries of public comments that
informed EPA’s regulatory approach in
this final rule.
After the close of the public comment
period for the proposed rule, EPA held
meetings with stakeholders to receive
clarifying information on their
comments, including affected industry
and interested groups, related to the use
of TCE. Topics of these meetings
included exposure controls, process
descriptions, monitoring data, and
specific conditions of use. EPA received
data as part of and following these
stakeholder meetings and has made the
information available to the public in
the rulemaking docket (EPA–HQ–
OPPT–2020–0642) (Ref. 27).
After review of the public comments
received from the 2023 TCE proposed
rule, EPA revised certain preliminary
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considerations that impacted the length
of time-limited exemptions from
prohibition under TSCA section 6(g)
and key provisions of the WCPP
(including identification of a new,
interim ECEL), among other changes.
Similarly, based on public comments
received, EPA modified for this final
rule several proposed compliance
timeframes, with details provided in
Unit III. of this final rule.
III. Changes From the Proposed Rule
This unit summarizes the main
changes from the 2023 TCE proposed
rule to the final rule, based on the
consideration of the public comments.
A. Changes to the WCPP
As part of the conditions for
exemptions under TSCA section 6(g) or
phase-outs for several conditions of use
before prohibition, EPA proposed to
require owners or operators to comply
with a WCPP to reduce exposures and
risks to potentially exposed persons.
Numerous commenters expressed
concern regarding the requirements of
the WCPP. While EPA is finalizing as
proposed many aspects of the WCPP,
the final rule includes several
significant changes, based on
consideration of public comments. The
details of and rationale for these
changes are described in this Unit and
EPA notes that in the event that
sensitive information relating to
national security or critical
infrastructure is submitted to EPA, the
Agency will protect such information in
accordance with applicable authorities.
1. Interim Occupational Exposure Limit
EPA proposed requirements to
comply with the TCE WCPP for all
conditions of use that would continue
for one year or more before prohibition,
as an interim measure to reduce
exposures to TCE in the workplace. As
part of the TCE WCPP, EPA proposed
that each owner or operator of a
workplace subject to the TCE WCPP
ensure that no person is exposed to
airborne concentrations above the
occupational exposure limit to the
extent possible. EPA proposed an
existing chemical exposure limit, or
ECEL, of 0.0011 ppm as an 8-hour TWA.
In proposing to set this risk-based
exposure limit, EPA described in Unit
IV.A. of the 2023 TCE proposed rule
how the ECEL is based on
developmental toxicity, the most
sensitive acute and chronic non-cancer
health endpoint, specifically calculated
based on the occupational acute, noncancer human equivalent concentration
for fetal cardiac defects (Ref. 28).
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EPA also described in Unit V.A.2. of
the 2023 TCE proposed rule how a
WCPP provides regulated entities with
some flexibility in the manner in which
they implement modifications, within
certain parameters, or otherwise aim to
prevent exceedances of inhalation
exposure limits at their facilities. EPA
proposed or finalized a WCPP for
several conditions of use for other
chemicals regulated under TSCA
section 6, such as methylene chloride
(89 FR 39254, May 8, 2024 (FRL–8155–
01–OCSPP)), perchloroethylene (PCE)
(88 FR 39652, June 16, 2023 (FRL–8329–
02–OCSPP)), and carbon tetrachloride
(88 FR 49180, July 28, 2023) (FRL–
8206–01–OCSPP)). The proposed TCE
WCPP differed from those other
proposals in two key ways. First, EPA
intended for the TCE WCPP to be in
place only as an interim measure before
prohibitions take effect (rather than
continuing in perpetuity, as was the
case in the other proposed rules cited
previously). Second, for the reasons
described in Unit VI. of the 2023 TCE
proposed rule, the proposed rule,
including the challenges of reliably
reducing exposure below the ECEL and
being able to monitor at the appropriate
action level, EPA’s proposed
requirement for the TCE WCPP was that
owners or operators ensure that no
person is exposed to TCE in excess of
the ECEL of 0.0011 ppm as an 8-hr TWA
to the extent possible rather than (as has
been proposed in other rules under
TSCA section 6) a requirement that
exposures do not exceed the ECEL. Due
to these challenges in reducing
exposure, as well as the severity of the
hazard from TCE, EPA emphasizes that,
even with the proposed ECELs, EPA
cannot ensure that TCE does not present
unreasonable risk to workers and,
therefore, it is not a substitute for a ban
as a long-term risk management
solution. Thus, prohibition of all
conditions of use ultimately is necessary
to address the unreasonable risk.
In the 2023 TCE proposed rule, EPA
requested comment on the proposed
ECEL (including the feasibility of the
limit, the associated action level of
0.00055 ppm as an 8-hr TWA,
monitoring methods, and whether a
phased approach is desirable). EPA also
requested comment on the ECEL
described in the alternative regulatory
action (0.004 ppm as an 8-hr TWA,
based on the immunotoxicity endpoint).
Numerous commenters expressed
concern that EPA proposed that
compliance with the WCPP would be
measured by reaching and documenting
the lowest exposure level that could be
achieved, instead of a requirement to
meet an exposure limit (Refs. 29, 30,
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and 31). Additional commenters stated
it would not be technically feasible to
meet the proposed ECEL (Refs. 32, 33),
despite what they described as robust
implementation of engineering and
administrative controls (Refs. 34, 35).
These and other commenters described
how they are not aware of any
additional feasible engineering or
administrative controls that would
enable them to avoid, under the TCE
WCPP, having employees wear
supplied-air respirators at all times
(Refs. 34, 35, 36, 37). Commenters
expressed several concerns with
requiring employees to wear suppliedair respirators at all times (Refs. 34, 35).
Industry commenters requested a higher
interim occupational exposure limit that
would not require an unworkably
burdensome level of PPE; commenters
provided numerous suggestions for
alternate ECEL values such as 0.36 ppm,
5 ppm, or 6 ppm, each expressed as 8hr TWAs (Refs. 38, 39, 40, 41).
Commenters offered these alternate
occupational exposure limits based on
either their current monitoring or on
regulatory values set in other countries,
to reduce reliance on extensive
respiratory PPE. Commenters noted that
setting an ECEL at the level proposed
level or at the alternative regulatory
action ECEL would require potentially
exposed persons across all industries to
use high levels of respiratory protection
that EPA acknowledges can represent an
occupational hazard on its own. EPA
recognizes the challenges of respiratory
PPE. As detailed in the proposed rule in
Unit VI.A.1.b., and in OSHA’s 1998
final rule to update its respiratory
protection standard, which cited
communication problems, vision
problems, worker fatigue, and reduced
work efficiency among such challenges.
(63 FR 1152, January 8, 1998). As OSHA
explained, ‘‘improperly selected
respirators may afford no protection at
all (for example, use of a dust mask
against airborne vapors), may be so
uncomfortable as to be intolerable to the
wearer, or may hinder vision,
communication, hearing, or movement
and thus pose a risk to the wearer’s
safety or health.’’ (63 FR 1189 through
1190).
In addition to describing anticipated
challenges in meeting the proposed or
the alternative regulatory action ECEL,
commenters also described the
challenges they would expect in
attempting to monitor indoor air TCE
concentrations at or below the ECEL and
ECEL action level of 0.00055 ppm or the
alternative ECEL and alternative ECEL
action level of 0.0002 ppm. Specifically,
several commenters emphasized that
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laboratories would need to transition
from typical methods that use sorbent
tubes and sample media solvent
desorption (OSHA Method 1001) to a
more sensitive method that may involve
a completely different approach, such as
a relevant EPA Compendium Method,
and that these may still not be sufficient
due to a level of detection of volatile
organic compounds above 0.5 parts per
billion by volume (ppbv), which is
above the proposed ECEL action level
(Refs. 38, 39, 42). The commenters also
discussed the EPA TO–17 Method,
which uses a sorbent tube/thermal
desorption/gas chromatographic-based
monitoring method for VOCs, but
emphasized the use of thermal
desorption is not common across the
industry (Refs. 38, 39). EPA agrees that
while available monitoring and
analytical methods for TCE are possible
in the low parts-per-billion range,
typical occupational sampling methods
such as OSHA method 1001 (i.e.,
personal breathing zone monitoring)
used in industrial hygiene generally
allow detection in the 10 to 100 ppb
range (or 0.010 ppm to 0.100 ppm) (Ref.
38). Widespread adoption of monitoring
and sampling methods that could meet
a TCE ECEL in the low parts-per-billion
range would be difficult, expensive, and
take at least several years. Public
commenters specifically requested the
option to be able to use methods
common in occupational sampling, both
for familiarity and from a commercial
lab capacity perspective, and pointed
out the proposed ECEL would not
provide that ability (Ref. 38).
Additionally, setting a regulatory
occupational exposure limit at 0.0011
ppm would be incompatible with the
NIOSH-recommended best practice of
monitoring to a fraction (specifically
10%) of the occupational exposure limit
in order to quantify results, because
0.0011ppm is significantly lower than
the detection limits of available
monitoring and analytical methods for
TCE.
One commenter, a union, stated that
setting an ECEL at a level that cannot be
measured would render the rule
unenforceable and would therefore be
meaningless for employees continuing
to work with TCE during the phase-out
period (Ref. 29). Another commenter, an
industry trade organization, asserted
that lowering exposures ‘‘to the extent
possible’’ is unenforceable (Ref. 43).
Based on the significant feasibility
challenges described by commenters;
the need for a robust, implementable,
and enforceable WCPP for conditions of
use that would continue for more than
a year before prohibition; EPA’s strong
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interest in rapidly putting into place the
TCE WCPP and resulting exposure
reductions; and the forthcoming future
prohibitions that will take effect on
these conditions of use, EPA is
finalizing an interim ECEL of 0.2 ppm
as an 8-hr TWA with an associated
interim ECEL action level of 0.1 ppm as
an 8-hr TWA. This occupational
exposure level is achievable to meet,
can be reliably and consistently
monitored, and will provide an interim
level of protection for conditions of use
with longer timeframes until
prohibition.
Several commenters supported the
risk-based exposure limit that was
proposed, and stated that, in their view,
it is supported by sound scientific
evidence (Refs. 31, 44, 29, 45). The
proposed ECEL is based on data
presented in the risk evaluation, which
is the best available science. EPA
emphasizes that modifying the final
TCE WCPP to include an interim ECEL
does not diminish the scientific
rationale for the risk-based exposure
limit that EPA proposed. EPA’s
justification for identification of the
ECEL that would address unreasonable
risk as 0.0011 ppm as an 8-hr TWA is
described in detail in the notice of
proposed rulemaking and highlighted
section 5 of the Response to Comments
document (Ref. 11). EPA also
emphasizes that this interim ECEL is
specific to TSCA and incorporates
different considerations than limits or
levels set for TCE exposures in other
contexts or inhalation exposures that are
regulated under other authorities, such
as RCRA. EPA’s action to finalize an
interim ECEL for TCE under TSCA is
based on feasibility considerations
during ongoing occupational use of TCE
beyond one year. Specifically, the
interim ECEL takes into account
significant challenges potentially
exposed persons would experience from
extensive respiratory PPE use in an
occupational setting.
EPA is finalizing an interim ECEL of
0.2 ppm as an 8-hr TWA. This interim
ECEL takes into account considerations
raised by the commenters, such as
feasibility of implementation in several
critical or essential industries,
Specifically, EPA expects that the
various industries subject to the interim
ECEL can meet the interim ECEL with
exposure controls that are feasible for
owners and operators to implement for
potentially exposed persons over a full
shift, using engineering controls and, in
some instances, respiratory PPE. While
certain supplied air respirators could be
used to reduce exposures below the
proposed exposure limit, these
respirators are burdensome and EPA is
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not confident that they could be
effectively and consistently
implemented on an ongoing basis in a
way that fully addresses the
unreasonable risk. EPA views extremely
high levels of PPE (e.g., assigned
protection factor (APF) 10,000) as
unable to consistently and over a long
timeframe address occupational risk. As
noted earlier, setting an ECEL at the
level proposed would require
potentially exposed persons across all
industries to use high levels of
respiratory protection, such as APF
10,000 supplied air respirators, that EPA
acknowledges could represent an
occupational hazard on its own due to
communication problems, vision
problems, worker fatigue, and reduced
work efficiency. The interim ECEL
allows for more robust use of the
hierarchy of controls.
The interim ECEL was also developed
with consideration for risk reduction
and health protectiveness. EPA
estimates that the 0.2 ppm interim ECEL
would reduce estimated baseline
chronic workplace exposure by 97%
(Ref. 28). The reduction in the baseline
excess cancer risk is estimated to be
proportional to the reduction in
exposure. Acute health effects would
also be reduced to the extent that they
are proportional to exposure reduction.
For example, based on EPA’s TSCA TCE
risk evaluation, the 0.2 ppm interim
ECEL is protective of the acute
immunotoxicity endpoint.
Lastly, the interim ECEL allows for
occupational monitoring methodologies
based on validated active, passive, and
direct-read instrumentation. There are
several available active sampling
methods (e.g., OSHA 1001, OSHA 5000)
that are fully validated methods that
readily allow for compliance with the
interim ECEL value of 0.2 ppm for all
affected industries. As described
elsewhere in this preamble, this rule is
also finalizing an interim ECEL action
level that serves as a trigger for certain
compliance activities (e.g., periodic
monitoring). Therefore, it is important
for regulated entities to be able to
reliably and accurately measure both the
interim action level and the interim
ECEL value. The interim ECEL also
enables use of the NIOSH 1003 (active
sampling) method as well as field
portable instruments that use the
NIOSH 3701 method for occupational
monitoring. While real-time monitoring
with a digital measure device is not
required for rule compliance, EPA
understands the practical benefits of
field portable and/or real-time
occupational exposure monitoring. In
the near term, the interim ECEL and the
associated interim action level aids with
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implementation of the WCPP from the
perspective of monitoring methodology
and availability. Setting the interim
ECEL at a value of 0.2 ppm allows for
the immediate implementation of the
WCPP, as monitoring methods are
currently available and widely
recognized and used. A lower value
interim ECEL would pose technical
challenges (i.e., achievable with only a
subset of monitoring methods) and be
less feasible.
EPA emphasizes that the regulatory
limit adopted in this final rule (0.2 ppm
as an 8-hr TWA) will be a significant
reduction from the current regulatory
occupational exposure limit (i.e., 500
times lower than the current OSHA PEL
of 100 ppm as an 8-hr TWA) as well as
more than 50 times lower than the
voluntary standard frequently cited by
commenters (10 ppm as an 8-hr TWA).
EPA expects that regulated entities may
need to make significant, but feasible,
changes from current practice by
adopting the WCPP to reduce inhalation
exposures sufficiently and provide risk
reduction to potentially exposed
persons. EPA also recognizes that the
interim ECEL of 0.2 ppm as an 8-hr
TWA does not fully address the
unreasonable risk from TCE, hence, the
term ‘‘interim.’’ Potentially exposed
persons may continue to be at risk for
the developmental and immunotoxicity
effects that provide the basis for EPA’s
ultimate prohibition. Given the risk
profile for TCE, EPA is addressing the
unreasonable risk through prohibition,
and acknowledging the critical or
essential nature of several conditions of
use affected by providing reasonable
timeframes and time-limited
exemptions for a TCE prohibition. A
WCPP including the interim ECEL will
be required as an interim measure for
each of the conditions of use listed in
Unit IV.C.
The requirement to meet an interim
ECEL for the conditions of use for which
EPA is finalizing exemptions under
TSCA section 6(g) is supported by TSCA
section 6(g)(4), which states that ‘‘the
Administrator may impose conditions
that are necessary to protect health and
environment while achieving the
purposes of the exemption.’’ EPA has
determined the interim ECEL of 0.2 ppm
is a condition that, as explained in this
Unit, allows for implementation and
monitoring feasibility, thus achieving
the purposes of the exemption, while
providing health protectiveness for
potentially exposed persons during the
duration of the TSCA section 6(g)
exemptions. As a condition of the
exemption, it protects health by
reducing exposure and thus risk
significantly: as stated previously, the
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interim ECEL will reduce estimated
baseline chronic workplace exposure by
97%.
For the conditions of use that
continue for more than one year subject
to the interim ECEL but for which there
is no TSCA section 6(g) exemption, EPA
also finds that the interim ECEL of 0.2
ppm and interim action level of 0.1 ppm
are necessary to reduce the risk during
the TSCA section 6(d) timeframe for
those conditions of use. Throughout the
proposed rule and this final rule, EPA
has emphasized the high risk posed by
TCE. Due to this risk, the proposed
health protective air exposure
concentration (proposed ECEL) was so
low that facilities would encounter
significant difficulty mitigating
occupational exposures to this level.
Based on information in the 2020 Risk
Evaluation (Ref. 1) and on the extensive
public comments, facilities would need
to augment their existing controls with
unreasonably extensive use of
burdensome PPE. EPA determined
reliance on extreme respiratory
protection measures is unlikely to
mitigate the occupational risk of TCE, a
view corroborated by commenters. In
particular, commenters noted that air
supplied respirators would present
health and safety concerns for workers
due to their weight, bulk, impairment of
hearing and vision, and interference
with use of other safety equipment
(Refs. 34, 46, 29). Respiratory protection
is considered a last resort because
respirators cannot be worn by all
persons, are not suitable for all
situations, and due to worker discomfort
and fatigue, cannot be worn for long
periods of time. In addition, as
discussed in this Unit, compliance with
the WCPP would be challenging; while
specialized monitoring and analytical
methods are available for TCE in the
low parts-per-billion range, typical
methods allow for detection in the 10 to
100 ppb (0.01 to 0.1 ppm) range. As a
result, EPA determined that any
measures short of prohibition are
insufficient to address the unreasonable
risk from TCE.
2. Worker Protection Measures for
Workers Disposing of TCE in
Wastewater to Industrial Pre-Treatment,
Industrial Treatment, or Publicly
Owned Treatment Works
EPA proposed requirements to
comply with the TCE WCPP for all
conditions of use that would continue
for one year or more before prohibition,
as an interim measure to reduce
exposures to TCE in the workplace. As
discussed in Unit III.A.1, numerous
commenters stated it would not be
technically feasible to monitor to or
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meet the proposed ECEL. Commenters
emphasized that for wastewater
disposal, unlike a typical workplace
where a WCPP could apply, work at a
cleanup site happens so intermittently
that a regular monitoring program
would be extremely difficult to develop,
requiring owners and operators to
implement sampling every time they
were in the field. Additionally, the
WCPP requires additional monitoring to
occur after a change in workplace
conditions as a commenter pointed out,
which could create a requirement for
constant monitoring because cleanup
sites are dynamic systems (Ref. 43). In
particular regarding the feasibility of
compliance with the WCPP,
commenters associated with wastewater
disposal described that even with the
maximum available engineering
controls, workers would have to rely on
PPE of APF 10,000 to meet the proposed
ECEL at cleanup sites (Ref. 47).
As stated in Unit III.A.1, EPA
recognizes the challenges of high levels
of respiratory protection which include,
as described by OSHA, communication
problems, vision problems, worker
fatigue, and reduced work efficiency.
Commenters involved in wastewater
cleanup operations were among those
who submitted public comments in
favor of an interim exposure level that
could be reliably measured using
current analytical methods (Ref. 33).
Additionally, these commenters
emphasized that existing RCRA permits
require HAZWOPER training for all
employees who are exposed or
potentially exposed to hazardous
substances at cleanup sites. The
HAZWOPER standard is a set of
established policies, practices, and
procedures found in 29 CFR 1910.120.
This standard is designed to protect
workers who may be exposed to
hazardous substances resulting from
uncontrolled releases such as natural
disasters, equipment malfunctions, or
other emergencies (Ref. 48). Operations
that fall within the scope of the
HAZWOPER standard include cleanup
operations required by a government
body and corrective actions involving
hazardous waste and sites covered by
RCRA. Commenters also provided
information to EPA on the variety of
remediation methods used for TCE
contaminated water and groundwater,
noting a difference between ex situ
treatment systems that remove TCEcontaminated groundwater from the
ground, and in situ treatment systems
that remediate the groundwater in its
place (Ref. 35). A commenter requested
that the HAZWOPER standard,
currently implemented at thousands of
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clean-up sites, should continue to be
used instead of EPA’s proposed WCPP
(Ref. 45). Cleanup sites are dynamic
systems that often involve multiple
chemical contaminants, and EPA agrees
with commenters that the structure and
procedures under the HAZWOPER
standard are best suited for the unique
worker protection scenarios at cleanup
sites. However, OSHA’s PEL for TCE is
100 ppm as an 8-hour time-weighted
average. See 29 CFR 1910.1000, Table
Z–2. As discussed in the proposed rule,
the OSHA PEL has not been changed
since the 1970s (Ref. 49).
For the purposes of the TSCA section
6(g) exemption from prohibition for 50
years for disposal of TCE to industrial
pre-treatment, industrial treatment, or
publicly owned treatment works for the
purposes of facilitating cleanup projects
of TCE-contaminated water and
groundwater, based on public comments
and coordination across Federal
programs, EPA has determined it is
appropriate that owners and operators
of cleanup sites where potentially
exposed persons are involved in the
disposal of TCE-contaminated water or
groundwater for the purposes of cleanup
projects of TCE-contaminated water and
groundwater, including industrial pretreatment and industrial treatment
activities, must ensure that potentially
exposed persons involved with the
activity of removing the contaminated
water or groundwater from the location
where it was found and treating the
removed contaminated water or
groundwater on site continue to comply
with HAZWOPER requirements but
with exposures for potentially exposed
persons limited to the interim ECEL for
TCE (0.2 ppm as an 8-hr TWA, for
reasons discussed in Unit III.A.1.).
Specifically, EPA has determined that at
cleanup sites, the TCE interim ECEL
would apply to any potentially exposed
person involved in the disposal of TCEcontaminated water or groundwater to
industrial treatment, industrial pretreatment, or POTWs. A potentially
exposed person most likely includes a
person who is involved with the activity
of removing TCE-contaminated water or
groundwater from the location where it
was found and the on-site treatment of
the TCE-contaminated water or
groundwater. EPA generally considers
workers in and around those locations
to be potentially exposed persons as that
term is defined is 40 CFR 751.5. For
example, EPA’s requirements would
apply to protect workers conducting
remediation through pump and treat
systems or workers sampling
groundwater in conjunction with
extraction or treatment (e.g.,
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remediation or cleanup) activities. EPA
considers treatment activities that are
performed at the cleanup site on TCEcontaminated wastewater that has been
removed from the subsurface, surface
water impoundments, or aquifers, and
that are recognized as industrial
treatment, industrial pretreatment, or
discharge to a POTW to be covered
under the provisions described in this
unit. To further clarify, the workplace
protections for this exemption are not
intended to cover potentially exposed
persons who may be exposed to TCE
from other contaminated media.
Additionally, the workplace protections
for this exemption are not intended to
cover potentially exposed persons who
are sampling groundwater to monitor
the presence of a plume, but specifically
only those sampling wastewater at the
site of extraction and active treatment
activities. EPA also notes that while the
cross-referenced OSHA regulations do
not require the establishment of
regulated areas, the OSHA regulations
do suggest excluding non-essential
persons during certain operations as a
feasible work practice control.
For cleanup sites involved in the
disposal of TCE-contaminated water or
groundwater to industrial treatment,
industrial pre-treatment, or POTWs,
rather than implementing the
monitoring, notification, and exposure
control plan requirements of the WCPP,
in light of the special circumstances of
these sites, and the likely presence of
multiple contaminants, EPA is requiring
compliance with the current
requirements in 29 CFR 1910.120
(HAZWOPER) except that for those
provisions in 29 CFR 1910.120 that
reference a PEL, owners and operators
will instead comply with the TSCA
interim ECEL. EPA’s requirement for
cleanup sites to meet specific existing
OSHA health and safety requirements in
29 CFR 1910.120 combined with EPA’s
interim ECEL differs from the
requirements for the WCPP that will be
in effect in other workplaces. EPA
emphasizes that this standard is only for
cleanup sites involved in the disposal of
TCE contaminated groundwater and
wastewater from cleanup sites under the
applicable condition of use and that no
other remedial actions at cleanup sites
will be covered or affected. More
specifically, EPA notes that this rule
only includes within its scope
remediation methods that would be
considered industrial wastewater
pretreatment, industrial wastewater
treatment or discharge to a POTW. As
such, a remediation method would need
to be considered one of these three types
of disposal to fall within this condition
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of use under TSCA, and if not would
not be subject to the prohibition or other
requirements of the rule.
Similarly, some commenters asked
EPA to clarify what responsibility the
receiver of waste, specifically POTWs,
would have regarding compliance with
the WCPP and highlighted the
challenges of the WCPP in the context
of POTWs, some of which may be
outdoors and thus unable to demarcate
a regulated area in a straightforward
way (Refs. 35, 45). EPA emphasizes that
disposal of TCE-containing wastewater
to and from POTWs is within the
disposal condition of use. As exposures
to TCE are likely to continue in POTWs
for the duration of the exemption for
TCE disposal under TSCA section 6(g)
for industrial pre-treatment, industrial
treatment, or POTWs for the purposes of
cleanup projects of TCE-contaminated
water and groundwater, and as EPA is
interested in reducing to the extent
possible exposures to TCE during the
time period of this exemption, EPA
proposed the WCPP as an appropriate
measure. However, under the proposal,
the ECEL was so low that, as one
commenter stated, ‘‘receivers of
groundwater from cleanup sites would
be forced to assume that TCE is present,
since it is not currently possible to
measure down to the ECEL’’ (Ref. 45).
Even with a new interim ECEL, based
on the public comments and
information reasonably available to the
agency, EPA recognizes that POTWs
have more experience in water
monitoring. As an example, commenters
described that TCE is measured in
wastewater at POTWs as water
concentrations, not ambient air levels.
Commenters described regular water
monitoring schedules of the
concentration of TCE in wastewater at
the POTWs to which they disposed
(Refs. 36, 50, and 51). For this reason,
in the final rule, POTW’s must comply
with either solely the WCPP, or a water
monitoring structure already more
familiar and implementable for POTWs
as the initial screening before the WCPP
in the interim until prohibition.
To ease monitoring implementation,
EPA has determined that POTWs that
can reasonably expect TCE to be
present, because of existing industrial
users discharging into the POTW, will
be able to determine the need to comply
with the WCPP by conducting an initial
screening of their wastewater. This
approach follows EPA’s 1992 ‘‘Guidance
to Protect POTW Workers from Toxic
and Reactive Gases and Vapors’’ (Ref.
52) which sets wastewater screening
levels for toxic chemicals using Henry’s
Law constants to translate toxicity-based
air exposure concentrations to
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wastewater concentrations. This
monitoring approach also is consistent
with water screenings described by
several public commenters (Refs. 36, 50,
51). The methodology assumes that
wastewater and air are in equilibrium,
e.g., that the system is closed and water
agitation is negligible; that temperature
is defined and constant; and that other
constituents in the wastewater do not
affect a chemical’s volatilization to air.
The water screening requirement that
EPA is finalizing follows the
methodology in the 1992 guidance,
using the Henry’s Law constant for TCE
(378 (mg/m3)/(mg/L) at 25 °C) to
calculate a screening level for TCE in
wastewater, 0.00284 mg/L, that
corresponds to the interim ECEL (0.2
ppm). This screening level is a level
specific to TSCA, to regulate
unreasonable risk to workers performing
wastewater disposal that are exposed to
TCE. This differs from maximum
contaminant levels (MCLs) which
regulate public water systems under a
different federal statute and do not
address exposures to TCE through
wastewater. While the screening level is
lower than the current enforceable MCL
for TCE (0.005 mg/L), the values are
within a factor of 2. EPA believes that
the conservative assumptions used to
derive 0.00284 mg/L are appropriate
here because this is a screening
approach, and the TCE occupational
exposure profile of wastewater workers
may be variable.
If the concentration of TCE in
wastewater received by a POTW is less
than or equal to the screening level, the
POTW can assume that the
concentration of TCE in air that results
from TCE volatilization from wastewater
is equal to or less than the interim
ECEL. If a POTW’s water screening
detects TCE in wastewater at a
concentration greater than 0.00284 mg/
L of TCE, then the WCPP is required.
More information is in Unit IV.E.
3. Exposure Monitoring Requirements
As part of the WCPP, EPA proposed
to require that owners or operators meet
certain documentation requirements for
each instance of monitoring of TCE,
including compliance with the Good
Laboratory Practice (GLP) Standards in
accordance with 40 CFR part 792.
Numerous commenters expressed
concern regarding the requirement that
the WCPP include compliance with the
GLP Standards at 40 CFR part 792.
Commenters stated that it is atypical to
use this standard for air sampling of
TCE for industrial hygiene purposes
(Refs. 39, 38). According to the
commenters, it is common practice
within the industrial hygiene
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community to have analyses performed
by American Industrial Hygiene
Association (AIHA) accredited labs
(Refs. 38, 39). A commenter further
reasoned that because labs in the United
States are certified by International
Organization for Standards (ISO) and
the International Electrochemical
Commission (IEC) standard 17025
(Testing and Calibration Laboratories), a
standard that differs from the proposed
GLP, they recommended that provisions
of monitoring results and recordkeeping
in the final rule be allowed from any
accredited laboratory, without regard to
a specific type (Refs. 38, 39).
EPA agrees with the commenters that
the WCPP for TCE is incompletely
served by solely relying on the GLP
standard as proposed. EPA has
considered laboratory capacity concerns
raised by some commenters (i.e., that
potential increases in demand for
professional safety services and
sampling laboratories may strain the
broader availability of laboratory service
and result in sampling limitations (Refs.
38, 39), and agrees that sufficient
infrastructure must be in place to ensure
that the regulated community can
successfully implement the WCPP while
TCE use is ongoing. For the final rule,
EPA is requiring that exposure samples
be analyzed using an appropriate
analytical method by a laboratory that
complies with the GLP Standards in 40
CFR part 792 or that otherwise
maintains a relevant third-party
laboratory accreditation (e.g., under the
AIHA Laboratory Accreditation
Programs, LLC Policy Module 2A/B/E of
Revision 17.3) or other analogous
industry-recognized programs. The
laboratory must also retain related
records.
Another commenter noted that EPA’s
proposal did not make clear that
‘‘personal breathing zone’’ air samples
to monitor occupational exposures are
to be taken without regard to respirator
use. More specifically, the commenter
pointed to the importance of EPA being
explicit that occupational monitoring
only occurs in the absence of respiratory
protection (Ref. 29). EPA agrees with the
commenter that exposure monitoring
should be conducted to reflect ambient
occupational conditions (i.e., without
respiratory protection) to best inform
engineering control options and
respiratory protection considerations for
potentially exposed persons. Therefore,
the final rule now explicitly states that
occupational air sampling is required to
measure ambient concentrations for TCE
without taking respiratory protection
into account when air sampling is
performed. This will ensure the highest
degree of protection to potentially
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exposed persons by requiring
measurement of ambient air
concentrations of TCE, thus
empowering owners or operators to
appropriately consider the hierarchy of
controls.
Additionally, as part of the WCPP,
EPA proposed to require owners and
operators to re-monitor within 15
working days after receipt of any
exposure monitoring if results indicated
non-detect or air monitoring equipment
malfunction, unless an Environmental
Professional, as defined at 40 CFR
312.10, or a Certified Industrial
Hygienist reviews the monitoring results
and determines re-monitoring is not
necessary. EPA received several
comments disagreeing with the
proposed requirement to review nondetect air monitoring samples. The
commenters stated that the requirement
is inconsistent with OSHA rules, is an
unnecessary step that adds no value to
reduce risk to workers, and could be
costly, especially for smaller companies
(Refs. 53, 54, 55, 47, 56, 57, 58). One
commenter suggested that EPA
incorporate a six-sample rolling average
as the statistical evaluation would
incorporate ongoing validation of
exposure levels for a particular task and
thus remove any need for resampling
based on a non-detect result.
EPA disagrees with commenters that
expressed the opinion that re-evaluating
non-detect results adds no value and is
inappropriate. A sampling result that is
non-detectable does not necessarily
imply negligible occupational exposure
to the chemical. A non-detect result is
indicative that the chemical was not
detected by the particular sampling and
analytical procedures used at the time of
sampling. Multiple factors can
contribute to a non-detect result. For
example, the chemical may simply not
be present in appreciable quantities. An
alternative possibility is that the
chemical is present at a level below the
limit of detection for the particular
sampling and analytical method used.
Depending on the chemical and ambient
conditions, interference from another
chemical during occupational sampling
sometimes results in an incorrect
reporting of non-detectable levels. This
interference may or may not be known
by the owner or operator at the time of
sampling, or by the laboratory at the
time of analysis. It is also possible that
the owner’s or operator’s sampling
technique or the laboratory’s analytical
procedure was not particularly effective,
or that the chosen sampling and
analytical method was not very efficient
or precise for the particular chemical of
interest. Therefore, re-evaluating nondetectable sampling results is often
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appropriate and desirable. In each of the
examples described in this paragraph, a
nondetectable sampling result, along
with supporting documentation about
the sampling and analytical method
used to get that result, is a meaningful
part of the potentially exposed person’s
exposure record required under the
WCPP. Monitoring results from
malfunctioning air monitoring
equipment are not valid monitoring and
require resampling consistent with
§ 751.315(b)(3)(i)(A) through (D).
The provisions proposed for the
WCPP did not require re-monitoring in
all cases. Re-monitoring may not be
necessary based on a professional
evaluation by an Environmental
Professional as defined at 40 CFR 312.10
or a Certified Industrial Hygienist. The
final rule provides flexibility in the
event of a non-detect by allowing
owners or operators to either re-monitor
or seek a determination from a qualified
professional that re-monitoring is not
necessary. From an owner and
operator’s perspective, a non-detect
sampling result—when effective
sampling and analysis procedures are
used—is valuable because it suggests
effective implementation of exposure
controls. Potentially exposed persons
may also use these records in
discussions with owners and operators,
in collective bargaining situations, or in
compliance assistance inquiries to EPA
or other federal agencies. Exposure
monitoring results may also improve
overall workplace health and reduce
owner and operator liability through
effective detection, treatment, and
prevention of occupational disease or
illness. All of these scenarios are
valuable for owners and operators,
potentially exposed persons, and for
effective mitigation of occupational
exposures. In consideration of these
factors, EPA has removed the air
monitoring equipment malfunction from
the monitoring activities that do not
require resampling based on
professional evaluation by an
Environmental Professional or Certified
Industrial Hygienist. While professional
discretion may be warranted in
determining whether re-monitoring is
needed following results that indicate
non-detect, EPA has determined this
discretion is not appropriate in the
event of air monitoring equipment
malfunction, which warrants remonitoring. This is due to the
importance of air monitoring in
ensuring that the requirements of the
WCPP are met, and the importance of
the WCPP in reducing risks from
exposures to TCE in the workplace.
Monitoring results from malfunctioning
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air monitoring equipment are not valid
monitoring.
Additionally, while statistical
methods may be useful in establishing
and analyzing an occupational
monitoring program, EPA determined
that information presented in support of
amending the evaluation of remonitoring to rely on six sample rolling
average of exposure measurements in
place of the proposal is not persuasive,
as discussed in detail in section 5.5.3 of
the Response to Comments document
(Ref. 11). Occupational monitoring (and
associated recordkeeping) is a topic on
which EPA may develop guidance as
part of final rule implementation efforts.
Therefore, based on consideration of
public comment, EPA is finalizing as
proposed with slight modification the
requirement to re-monitor within 15
working days after receipt of any
exposure monitoring if results indicated
non-detect, unless an Environmental
Professional, as defined at 40 CFR
312.10, or a Certified Industrial
Hygienist reviews the monitoring results
and determines re-monitoring is not
necessary. EPA has modified the remonitoring recordkeeping requirement
to clarify what would suffice as
justification for when re-monitoring is
not necessary, and has therefore
updated the recordkeeping requirements
associated with the WCPP exposure
records required under 40 CFR
751.319(b)(1). EPA has also removed air
monitoring equipment malfunction from
the monitoring activities that do not
require resampling if determined
unnecessary by an Environmental
Professional or Certified Industrial
Hygienist.
EPA proposed to require under the
WCPP that each owner or operator
conduct additional exposure monitoring
whenever a change in the production,
process, control equipment, personnel,
or work practices may reasonably be
expected to result in new or additional
exposures at or above the ECEL action
level, or when the owner or operator has
any reason to believe that new or
additional exposures at or above the
ECEL action level occurred. In the event
of start-up, shutdown, spills, leaks,
ruptures, or other breakdowns that may
lead to employee exposure, EPA
proposed to require that each owner or
operator conduct additional initial
exposure monitoring to potentially
exposed persons (using personal
breathing zone sampling) after the
cleanup of the spill or repair of the leak,
rupture, or other breakdown. EPA is
finalizing that requirement, with a
compliance timeframe requiring that
this type of additional exposure
monitoring must be conducted within
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30 days (see Unit IV.C.4.d.), which is a
change from the proposed rule, in
which a timeframe was not specified.
4. Designated Representatives
As part of the WCPP, EPA proposed
to require that owners and operators
(i.e., any person who owns, leases,
operates, controls, or supervises a
workplace covered by the rule) provide
potentially exposed persons or their
designated representatives regular
access to the exposure control plans,
exposure monitoring records, and PPE
program implementation and
documentation. Additionally, EPA
proposed to require that owners or
operators document the notice to and
ability of any potentially exposed
person who may reasonably be affected
by TCE exposure to readily access the
exposure control plans, facility
exposure monitoring records, PPE
program implementation, or any other
information relevant to TCE inhalation
exposure in the workplace.
EPA solicited and received public
comments on the role of designated
representatives in the WCPP. One
commenter, a group of labor unions,
urged EPA to incorporate requirements
similar to OSHA’s access standard at 29
CFR 1910.1020 (entitled, ‘‘Access to
employee exposure and medical
records’’) to ensure that exposure
information is promptly and fully
shared with both potentially exposed
persons and their designated
representatives (Ref. 29). The
commenter also suggested that EPA
include a requirement that employers
provide employees and their designated
representatives an opportunity to
observe monitoring events. The
commenter observed that workers and
their designated representatives have a
critical role to play in ensuring effective
control of toxic substances and further
noted that, often, unions are the
organizations with expertise in
understanding occupational exposure
information.
EPA recognizes the importance of
having the ability for potentially
exposed persons and their designated
representative(s), such as labor union
representatives, to observe exposure
monitoring and have prompt access to
exposure records. EPA additionally
recognizes that, in some instances,
individual workers may be hesitant to
ask owners or operators for information
relating to their chemical exposure or
may be less familiar with disciplinespecific industrial hygiene practices.
EPA determined that it is appropriate in
this final rule to revise, to some extent,
the requirements regarding designated
representatives included in the
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proposed rule, consistent with existing
OSHA precedent in certain 29 CFR part
1910, subpart Z regulations, to allow
designated representatives the ability to
observe occupational exposure
monitoring and have access to exposure
monitoring records. The WCPP
provisions of the final rule include a
requirement that owners and operators
provide potentially exposed persons or
their designated representatives an
opportunity to observe any exposure
monitoring that is designed to
characterize their exposures and is
conducted under the WCPP. With
respect to facilities classified in the
interest of national security, only
persons authorized to have access to
such facilities must be allowed to
observe exposure monitoring.
The final rule also requires that
designated representatives have access
to relevant exposure records, similar to
provisions in certain OSHA regulations
under 29 CFR part 1910, subpart Z, such
as 29 CFR 1910.1020. EPA is requiring
owners and operators to notify
potentially exposed persons and their
designated representatives of the
availability of the exposure control plan
and associated records of exposure
monitoring and PPE program
implementation within 30 days of the
date that the exposure control plan is
completed and at least annually
thereafter.
EPA’s definition of ‘‘designated
representative’’ in 40 CFR 751.5 was
established in the recently promulgated
final rule under TSCA section 6(a) that
addresses the unreasonable risk
presented by PCE (RIN 2070–AK84).
This term means any individual or
organization to whom a potentially
exposed person gives explicit, written
authorization to exercise a right of
access. A recognized or certified
collective bargaining agent must be
treated automatically as a designated
representative without regard to written
authorization, analogous to OSHA
requirements set forth in 29 CFR
1910.1200. Additionally, with respect to
Federal Government employees, EPA,
like OSHA at 29 CFR 1960.2(e), will
interpret these designated representative
requirements consistent with the
Federal Service Labor Management
Relations Statute (5 U.S.C. 71), or
collective bargaining or other labormanagement arrangements that cover
the affected employees.
Should a request be initiated for such
records by the potentially exposed
person or their designated
representative(s), the owner or operator
will be required to provide the specified
records at a reasonable time, place, and
manner, analogous to OSHA
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requirements set forth at 29 CFR
1910.1020(e)(1)(i). If the owner or
operator is unable to provide the
requested records within 15 working
days, the owner or operator must,
within those 15 days, inform the
potentially exposed person or
designated representative(s) requesting
the record of the reason for the delay
and the earliest date when the record
can be made available. Additionally, in
the event that a designated
representative is observing exposure
monitoring, the owner or operator must
ensure that designated representatives
are provided with PPE appropriate for
the observation of monitoring. Finally,
this rule requires owners or operators to
provide notice to potentially exposed
persons and their designated
representatives of exposure monitoring
results and of the availability of the
exposure control plan and associated
records. For purposes of this
requirement, the owner or operator is
only required to provide notice to those
designated representatives that the
owner or operator is aware of, such as
representatives designated in writing or
a recognized collective bargaining agent
for the owner or operator’s own
employees.
5. Changes to WCPP Timeframes for
Federal Agencies
EPA understands that certain
departments and agencies of the Federal
government, as well as Federal
contractors acting for or on behalf of the
Federal government, need additional
time to comply with these timeframes.
For example, complying with these
timeframes could impact the ability of
NASA or the Department of Defense to
continue to engage in vapor degreasing
necessary for rockets key to national
security and critical infrastructure.
While, for example, 29 CFR part 1960
sets forth procedures and guidelines for
ensuring that Federal workers are
protected in comparable ways to their
non-Federal counterparts, EPA believes
that compliance with this final rule will
require increased and different
preparations on the part of Federal
agencies. For example, Federal agencies
must follow procurement requirements,
which will likely result in increased
compliance timelines. In addition, these
requirements will require support in the
Federal budget, which, for some
agencies, is a multi-year process.
Therefore, EPA is providing additional
time for agencies of the Federal
government and their contractors, when
acting for or on behalf of the Federal
government, to comply with the WCPP,
including 915 days for initial
monitoring, 1,005 days to ensure that no
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person is exposed to an airborne
concentration of TCE that exceeds the
interim ECEL, and 1,095 days to
implement an exposure control plan.
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B. Modifications to the TSCA Section
6(g) Exemptions
1. Industrial and Commercial Use of
TCE as a Processing Aid in Battery
Separator Manufacturing
EPA proposed a 10-year exemption
from prohibition under TSCA section
6(g)(1)(B) for the industrial and
commercial use of TCE as a processing
aid in battery separator manufacturing,
for lead acid and lithium batteries. EPA
is finalizing with modifications a timelimited exemption from prohibition for
this specific condition of use of TCE.
These modifications, based on
information provided in public
comments, include: (1) narrowing the
exemption to apply only to use of TCE
as a processing aid in manufacturing
separators for lead acid batteries; (2)
extending the time period of the
exemption for lead acid batteries from
ten to 20 years; and (3) allowing the
disposal of wastewater containing TCE
following lead acid and lithium battery
separator manufacture under a separate
TSCA section 6(d) phase-out for
disposal of TCE to industrial pretreatment, industrial treatment, or
POTWs (see Unit III.C.4.). Separate from
the modified 6(g) exemption, EPA is
finalizing a 5-year phase-out under
TSCA section 6(d) for use of TCE in
manufacturing separators for lithium
batteries.
As described in the proposed rule,
based on information provided by
commenters and other information
reasonably available to the agency, EPA
understands that separators are
fundamental components in batteries
that provide the necessary separation
between the internal anode and cathode
components that make batteries work,
and that restrictions on the production
of battery separators could critically
impact the United States battery
manufacturing supply chain and
impede the expansion of domestic
battery production capacity. EPA
understands that battery separator
manufacturing processes are highly
engineered, and that the separators are
specialty products designed precisely to
meet stringent technical specifications
that are essential in powering vehicles
and systems in the United States’
supply chain for multiple critical
infrastructure sectors.
Based on information provided in
public comments regarding
specifications around the final battery
separator product, such as the required
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thickness of the separator itself and the
feasibility of substitute chemicals for
TCE, EPA determined that battery
separators for lead acid and lithium
batteries should be treated separately.
Thus, EPA is distinguishing between the
industrial and commercial use of TCE as
a processing aid in battery separator
manufacture for each type of battery
(lead acid or lithium (also referred to in
comments as lithium-ion batteries)) and
providing different exemption or phaseout timeframes for each type of battery
separator manufacturing. More details
are in this Unit.
a. Lithium Battery Separator
Manufacturing
EPA is finalizing a prohibition on the
manufacture (including import),
processing, distribution in commerce,
and industrial and commercial use of
TCE as a processing aid for lithium
battery separator manufacturing, which
will come into effect 5 years after the
publication date of this rule. In response
to EPA’s proposal to establish a 10-year
TSCA section 6(g) exemption for the use
of TCE in battery separatory
manufacturing, EPA received
substantiative public comments that
described feasible alternatives to TCE in
the manufacture of lithium battery
separators, as well as information on
why the two types of battery separator
manufacturing should be treated as
distinct.
One company uses TCE in the
manufacture of lithium battery
separators (Ref. 46). In their public
comment, the company described how
they could transition out of TCE within
5 years and retracted its request for an
exemption under TSCA section 6(g) for
lithium battery separators (Ref. 46). EPA
is unaware of any other domestic
manufacturer that uses TCE to produce
lithium battery separators. In public
comments on a separate rulemaking for
methylene chloride under TSCA section
6, at least five commenters described
their plans to construct manufacturing
plants for lithium-ion battery separators,
specifically for electric vehicles, that
would use methylene chloride as a
processing aid (Refs. 59, 60, 61, 62, 63,
64), rather than TCE. (The final rule
under TSCA section 6(a) to address the
unreasonable risk for the use of
methylene chloride as a processing aid
to continue with the implementation of
a WCPP (40 CFR 751.109) (89 FR 39254,
May 8, 2024 (FRL–8155–01–OCSPP)).
TSCA section 6(d) requires the
Agency to establish compliance
deadlines that are as soon as practicable.
TSCA section 6(g) requires that any
exemptions be adequately justified. For
the final rule, the exemption under
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TSCA section 6(g) applies only to lead
acid battery separator manufacturing,
and the Agency is prohibiting
manufacture, processing, and
commercial use of TCE for the
manufacture of lithium battery
separators after the five years specified
under TSCA section 6(d). During the
time before prohibition, manufacturers
and processors of TCE for use in the
manufacture of lithium battery
separators and the users of TCE in the
manufacture of lithium battery
separators are required to comply with
the WCPP, as described in Units III.A.,
and IV.C.
b. Lead Acid Battery Separator
Manufacturing
EPA is finalizing a 20-year TSCA
section 6(g) exemption from prohibition
for the manufacture (including import),
processing, distribution in commerce,
and industrial and commercial use of
TCE as a processing aid for lead acid
battery separator manufacturing. While
EPA proposed a 10-year section 6(g)
exemption for the use of TCE in battery
separator manufacturing, in the primary
alternative regulatory action in the
proposed rule EPA presented a 15-year
exemption from the prohibition on TCE
for the industrial and commercial use of
TCE as a processing aid for battery
separator manufacturing. EPA received
substantiative information in follow up
meetings based on public comments
that 20 years would be the minimum
timeframe needed to transition to an
alternative for manufacturing separators
for lead-acid batteries (Refs. 34, 39, 64,
65). While EPA received comments that
more than 20 years may be needed, for
the reasons described in this Unit, EPA
is finalizing the exemption for use of
TCE in manufacture of lead acid battery
separators at 20 years.
EPA emphasizes that alternatives to
TCE in lithium battery separator
manufacturing are not expected to be
feasible substitutes for TCE in lead-acid
battery manufacturing due to differences
in the processes for each separator type.
This is primarily due to the difference
in thickness of the battery separators:
lithium battery separators are typically
only 9 to 10 microns thick, while leadacid battery separators range from 6 to
50 times thicker than lithium battery
separators. Given the chemistry of the
alternative solvent reacting with the
mineral oil and metal sheets that
constitute the process of manufacturing
a battery separator, it would therefore
require between 225 to 625 times longer
to physically extract lead acid
separators compared to lithium
separators using an alternative solvent.
TCE is about 50% to 80% (depending
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on temperature) more effective at
extracting process oil during the battery
separator manufacturing process than
the alternative product used in the
manufacturer’s new lithium separator
process (Ref. 64). Overall, while
alternatives to TCE are suitable for
lithium battery separator manufacturing
and may be feasibly substituted in
domestic manufacturing within five
years, these alternatives are not feasible
for lead acid battery separator
manufacturing.
Numerous commenters submitted
information on the use of TCE as a
processing aid in lead-acid battery
manufacturing. Industry commenters
and trade associations involved in
battery manufacture agreed that EPA
correctly categorized battery separator
manufacturing as critical and essential.
In public comments, battery separator
manufacturers described the need for
the exemption to be extended to 25
years, citing the lack of a currently
identified alternative and once
identified, the time necessary for testing
and recertification for any alternatives
to TCE. As described by commenters,
the steps for such a process include:
identifying and/or developing an
alternative chemical as a processing aid,
sample trials, battery testing, second
level battery testing, changing battery
separator production lines, and testing
and production approval processes from
battery end users (e.g., automobile
manufacturers). This step-wise process
is consistent with EPA’s understanding
of developing and implementing
alternatives for other chemicals and
uses. In follow-up conversations with
battery separator manufactures, EPA
gained further clarity that timeframes
could be expedited somewhat, and on
an expedited timeline would take 20
years (Ref. 64). Because TSCA section
6(g) requires that any exemptions be
adequately-justified, in consideration of
public input, and that the period of the
exemption is reasonable, EPA is
lengthening the proposed TSCA section
6(g) exemption from the prohibition for
manufacture (including import),
processing, distribution in commerce,
and use of TCE in manufacturing
separators for lead acid batteries from 10
years to 20 years (i.e., to December 18,
2044.). EPA encourages manufacturers
of battery separators to identify early in
their substitution efforts if any further
time would be needed.
2. Industrial and Commercial Use of
TCE as a Processing Aid for Specialty
Polymeric Microporous Sheet Materials
EPA is finalizing a 15-year TSCA
section 6(g) exemption from prohibition
for the manufacture (including import),
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processing, distribution in commerce,
and industrial and commercial use of
TCE as a processing aid for specialty
polymeric microporous sheet materials.
While EPA proposed to prohibit
industrial and commercial use of TCE as
a processing aid for specialty polymeric
microporous sheet materials, EPA’s
primary alternative regulatory action
described a 15-year TSCA section
6(g)(1)(A) exemption from prohibition
for this use. EPA received substantiative
information in public comments to
support finalizing this exemption, as
well as support for 15 years as the
appropriate timeframe for this
exemption (Ref. 40).
As noted in the initial exemption
request and in the public comments
submitted to EPA, specialty polymeric
microporous sheet materials are
fundamental components in the
production of critical or essential
products such as drivers’ licenses,
passports, and chemical drum labels
(Refs. 66, 40). EPA agrees that TCE is a
critical and essential component in the
manufacturing process for these
products. EPA also agrees that certain
applications of these specialty
polymeric microporous sheet materials
are critical and essential uses for which
no technically and economically
feasible safer alternative is available. In
public comments, the manufacturer of
specialty polymeric microporous sheet
materials disagreed with EPA’s proposal
to restrict the end uses of the specialty
polymeric microporous sheet materials
to critical and essential products, stating
that all end products of the material use
the same production line. EPA is
finalizing with modifications a timelimited exemption from prohibition for
this specific condition of use of TCE.
These modifications, based on
information provided in public
comments, include: (1) modifying the
exemption from the proposal to allow
for this exempted use of TCE as a
processing aid to apply broadly to any
end product; (2) allowing the disposal of
wastewater containing TCE associated
with manufacture of specialty polymeric
microporous sheet materials under a
separate TSCA section 6(d) phase-out
for disposal of TCE to industrial pretreatment, industrial treatment, or
POTWs (see Unit III.C.4.); and (3), in an
effort to minimize worker exposure
during the period of the exemption, EPA
is requiring that the industrial and
commercial use of TCE as a processing
aid in the manufacture of specialty
polymeric microporous sheet materials
can only continue at existing facilities
already using TCE to manufacture
specialty polymeric microporous sheet
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materials. EPA expects that
development of any new facilities for
the manufacture of specialty polymeric
microporous sheet materials could
innovate new processes that do not
include use of TCE.
3. Industrial and Commercial Use of
TCE in Batch Vapor Degreasing for
Essential Aerospace Parts and
Components and Narrow Tubing Used
in Medical Devices
EPA is finalizing the proposed
primary alternative 7-year TSCA section
6(g)(1)(B) exemption from prohibition
for industrial and commercial use of
TCE in batch vapor degreasing for
essential aerospace parts and
components and 7-year TSCA section
6(g)(1)(A) exemption from prohibition
for industrial and commercial use of
TCE in batch vapor degreasing for
narrow tubing used in medical devices.
EPA received substantiative information
in public comments to support the need
for these exemptions. Based on the
information received, EPA determined it
is necessary to finalize these
exemptions.
Numerous commenters urged EPA to
finalize the alternative exemptions,
citing strict safety and performance
standards that TCE is currently used to
meet and a recertification process that
would take a longer timeframe than the
1 year that was proposed (Refs. 36, 43,
32, 56, 67, 43, 32, 56). Given that under
this condition of use TCE is used to
clean parts for highly specialized end
uses in the aerospace and medical
fields, commenters stressed that a
significant length of time would be
needed for safety recertification of an
alternative. These commenters also
described how all currently known
potentially effective drop-in substitutes
to TCE for this highly specialized use
are also chemicals currently being
evaluated or regulated by EPA under
TSCA, and, as such, they do not view
these substitutes as viable long-term
alternatives to TCE. In many cases,
according to commenters, the transition
to a TCE substitute would require the
transformation or complete replacement
of complex equipment. One
manufacturer indicated in their public
comments that they had identified an
alternative that could meet the
cleanliness required for their end
products; however, using this substitute
chemical solvent would also require
changing to a different machine type
(i.e., to vacuum vapor degreasers).
According to that commenter, it would
take seven years to install vacuum
degreasers, implement the necessary
infrastructure upgrades, obtain permits,
notify customers, and validate existing
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contracts (Ref. 36). EPA agrees that the
significant amount of infrastructure and
equipment changes needed to transition
out of TCE for this specific vapor
degreasing condition of use support
finalizing a longer timeline until
prohibition.
Regarding section 6(g) criteria,
commenters agreed with EPA’s
characterization of TCE as being
essential to meet unique cleanliness
demands for narrow tubing used in
medical devices as well as for aerospace
parts. A public commenter noted the
intensity of these safety concerns
particularly in medical tubing, noting
that in implanted devices
‘‘manufacturing residues may ‘pose an
inflammatory or autoimmune trigger
risk’ that can lead to death’’ (Ref. 36).
For these reasons, EPA is finalizing a
time-limited exemption under TSCA
section 6(g)(1)(A) for seven years for the
industrial and commercial use of TCE in
batch vapor degreasing for narrow
tubing used in medical devices, and a
time-limited exemption under TSCA
section 6(g)(1)(B) for seven years for the
industrial and commercial use of TCE in
batch vapor degreasing for essential
aerospace parts.
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4. Industrial and Commercial Use in
Closed-Loop Batch Vapor Degreasing
Necessary for Rocket Engine Cleaning
by Federal Agencies and Their
Contractors
EPA proposed a 7-year TSCA section
6(g)(1)(B) exemption from the
prohibition on the industrial and
commercial use of TCE as a solvent in
closed-loop vapor degreasing necessary
for human-rated rocket engine cleaning
by NASA and its contractors, and the
manufacture (including import),
processing, and distribution in
commerce of TCE for this use. EPA is
finalizing with modifications the timelimited exemption from prohibition for
this specific condition of use of TCE.
EPA received information that this
exemption should include all Federal
agencies, rather than just NASA, due to
Federal agencies having similar critical
infrastructure and national security
needs of rocket engines. Due to the
commonality of the United States’
rocket engine industrial base, other
Federal agencies like NASA use TCE in
the same condition of use to support
their rocket engine cleaning. EPA has
made this change and is finalizing a
time-limited exemption under TSCA
section 6(g)(1)(B) for industrial and
commercial use of TCE as a solvent in
closed-loop batch vapor degreasing
necessary for rocket engine cleaning by
Federal agencies and their contractors.
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C. Changes to Compliance Dates for
Prohibitions Under TSCA Section 6(d)
EPA proposed a compliance
timeframe of 1 year for the prohibitions
on industrial and commercial use of
TCE and requested public comments on
the appropriateness of this timeline for
specific conditions of use. This unit
describes modifications EPA made to
proposed timeframes for prohibitions
under TSCA section 6(d) for the two
conditions of use for which EPA is
finalizing different timeframes for
prohibition. (Changes to timeframes for
proposed TSCA section 6(g) exemptions
or modifications of a section 6(g)
exemption to a section 6(d) timeframe
are described in Unit III.B.). Given that
the part of the rule affecting the most
significant volume of TCE is unchanged
between proposal and final, the overall
impact of these changes is expected to
be minor.
1. Industrial and Commercial Use of
TCE in Energized Electrical Cleaner
As described in this Unit, EPA is
finalizing a prohibition in three years
for the industrial and commercial use of
TCE in energized electrical cleaner
rather than the prohibition within 1 year
as proposed for this condition of use.
EPA notes that energized electrical
cleaner is a sub-use of the industrial and
commercial use of TCE as solvent for
aerosol spray degreaser/cleaner. During
the timeframe before prohibition, EPA is
finalizing requirements to comply with
either specific prescriptive controls or
the WCPP for the industrial and
commercial use of TCE in energized
electrical cleaner, which is a sub-use of
the industrial and commercial use of
TCE as solvent for aerosol spray
degreaser/cleaner, as described in Unit
IV.D.1.
In the proposed rule, EPA solicited
comment on whether some activities
would need longer compliance
timeframes in order to appropriately
transition, and specifically mentioned
uses such as energized electrical
cleaning, where TCE may be desired
due to its low flammability. EPA also
requested comment on the feasibility
and appropriateness of the WCPP. EPA
subsequently received several
comments expressing concern over the
proposed prohibition on TCE in
energized electrical cleaner (Refs. 51,
68). In addition to describing the need
for additional time to transition to
alternatives to TCE in energized
electrical cleaner, commenters
described the work practices and
context that support the potential for
exposure reduction to TCE through
workplace controls, including, but not
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limited to, the WCPP. For example, one
commenter described how energized
electrical cleaners are typically used
only by professionals for specialized
uses in which strict workplace controls
already exist (Ref. 51). As another
example, in a separate rulemaking
under TSCA section 6 for PCE (RIN
2070–AK84), one commenter described
work practices and controls for use of
energized electrical cleaners, stating that
facilities that require cleaning of
energized equipment rely on skilled
technicians or other professional users
who typically have education and
training that may include two years at
lineman school, time as an apprentice,
licensing or certifications, and
continuing education (Ref. 69). The
commenter also stated that OSHA
General Industry and Construction
standards include requirements specific
to electrical work under 29 CFR part
1926, subparts E, K, and V. Commenters
differed on whether the WCPP or other
workplace controls would be most
suitable. Several commenters stated that
the WCPP would be impractical for use
of TCE in energized electrical cleaner
because trained technicians often travel
to different facilities to conduct work,
including facilities that may not
otherwise use a chemical for which the
WCPP is required, and suggested that
instead of a WCPP, a training and
certification program would be
sufficient to address the unreasonable
risk (Refs. 51, 68).
Based on the information submitted to
EPA as part of the comment period
regarding this condition of use,
supported by subsequent discussions for
clarification, and in consideration of
existing best practices and regulations
for work in electrical spaces as well as
the need for additional time to certify
and transition to substitutes, EPA is
finalizing a prohibition on the use of
TCE in energized electrical cleaner after
December 18, 2027. In addition, EPA
has determined that either the WCPP or
specific prescriptive controls specified
in the final rule, including dermal PPE
and respiratory protection, are necessary
and appropriate for reducing exposures
to potentially exposed persons until the
prohibition takes effect.
EPA notes the importance of existing
OSHA regulations designed to protect
workers exposed to dangers such as
electric shock, electrocution, fires, and
explosions. Specifically, in addition to
the requirements for electrical work
under OSHA General Industry and
Construction standards at 29 CFR part
1926, subparts E, K, and V that one
commenter mentioned in their public
comment, OSHA regulates electrical
work under Occupational Safety and
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Health standards at 29 CFR part 1910.
For example, OSHA requires safetyrelated work practices on electrical
equipment under the Electrical
Standard at 29 CFR part 1910, subpart
S (29 CFR 1910.301 to 1910.399), which
was significantly updated in 2007 (72
FR 7136, February 14, 2007). OSHA also
sets forth requirements for the operation
and maintenance of electrical power
generation, control, transformation,
transmission, and distribution lines and
equipment under the Electric Power
Generation, Transmission, and
Distribution standard at 29 CFR
1910.269, which was significantly
updated in 2014 (79 FR 20316, April 11,
2014). Additionally, OSHA regulates
electrical protective equipment under
the Electrical Protective Equipment
standard at 29 CFR part 1910, subpart I
(29 CFR 1910.137), which was
significantly updated in 2014 (79 FR
20316, April 11, 2014). Other standards
and best practices apply to electrical
safety in the workplace, for example the
National Fire Protection Association
(NFPA) 70E Standard for Electrical
Safety in the Workplace (Ref. 70).
As discussed in the proposed rule,
given the risk profile of TCE, EPA
determined that it is necessary to
require worker protection measures
such as the WCPP for those conditions
of use that will continue beyond 1 year.
In view of the relatively short timeframe
for transitioning to an alternative,
combined with the specialized nature of
this use of TCE and the existing OSHA
regulations and other best practices for
performing work on energized
equipment, EPA recognizes that the
WCPP may not be the best approach to
addressing occupational exposures in
the interim. EPA understands that
trained technicians performing this
activity often travel to different facilities
to conduct their work, including
facilities that may not otherwise use
TCE. EPA also determined that owners
and operators who perform this kind of
work should focus their efforts on
transitioning to alternatives, rather than
setting up comprehensive exposure
control plans and programs. EPA is
therefore providing an alternative to the
WCPP in the form of prescriptive
controls, including respiratory and
dermal protection to protect workers in
the interim. Considering all of these
factors, as well as the workplace
requirements for energized electrical
cleaner in the final regulation of PCE
under TSCA section 6 (RIN 2070–AK84)
and the burdens associated with higher
APF respirators, EPA has determined
that the use of respirators with an APF
of 50 or greater and impermeable gloves
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will minimize the exposure to the
potentially exposed persons engaged in
this use of TCE during the interim
period before the prohibition takes
effect, as further described in Unit IV.D.
In addition, requiring PPE similar to
that required by the PCE regulation is
expected to ease the transition to PCE,
which is a possible replacement for TCE
in these products. The upstream
manufacturing and processing of TCE
for the use in energized electrical
cleaner will be subject to the WCPP as
described in Unit IV.C. until the use is
prohibited.
EPA emphasizes that other industrial
and commercial use of TCE as a solvent
for aerosol spray degreasers/cleaners is
prohibited in the final rule, consistent
with the proposal for that condition of
use.
2. Industrial and Commercial Use in
Adhesives and Sealants for Aerospace
Applications
EPA is finalizing a prohibition in five
years for the industrial and commercial
use of TCE in adhesives and sealants for
aerospace applications. EPA proposed a
compliance timeframe of 1 year for the
prohibitions on industrial and
commercial use, and in public
comments requested feedback on the
appropriateness of this timeline for
specific applications. EPA received
public comments highlighting that the
industrial and commercial use of TCE in
adhesives and sealants specifically for
aerospace applications has safety
implications and involves longer
recertification timelines (Ref. 56). EPA’s
rationale for the short timeframe until
prohibition for this condition of use was
based on the understanding that
alternative formulations or products
exist that do not contain TCE. During
the public comment period, EPA
received public comments highlighting
the safety considerations for industrial
and commercial use of TCE in adhesives
and sealants specifically for aerospace
applications and longer recertification
timelines. A public commenter stated
that TCE is still critically necessary in
adhesives and sealants; particularly in
aircraft pneumatic deicing boots; in
solvent bonding of plastic components,
including on Oxygen Container
Assemblies for Passenger Service Unit
products used in aircraft; and as an
adhesive or sealant for flight-critical
equipment on new and existing aircraft,
both commercial and military (Ref. 56).
Regarding compliance timeframes, this
commenter requested that adhesives
and sealants for aerospace be allowed to
continue in perpetuity under a WCPP.
EPA has determined that prohibition of
this use is necessary to address the
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unreasonable risk. EPA did consider the
information raised by this commenter in
determining an appropriate timeframe
for the prohibition on use of TCE in
adhesives and sealants for aerospace
applications. Specifically, the
commenter provided information that
for uses in the aerospace and defense
sector, changes in response to a
prohibition on TCE would be a
multiyear process that requires redesign
and recertification that a product meets
performance standards such as
customers’ technical requirements, UL
and Conformité Européenne (CE)
marking requirements, military
specifications, and specifications from
other government agencies such as the
Federal Aviation Administration and
NASA (Ref. 56).
EPA recognizes that the recertification
process for uses in aerospace
applications is lengthy and agrees that
one year is not a sufficient timeframe. In
identifying a reasonable timeframe, EPA
considered public comments on the
proposed rulemaking and follow-up
clarifying conversations with
commenters, as well as information
submitted during the public comment
period on EPA’s proposed rule under
TSCA section 6 for methylene chloride
(88 FR 28284, May 3, 2023 (FRL–8155–
02–OCSPP)) regarding anticipated
timeframes to recertify adhesives and
sealants used in the aerospace field. As
such, EPA has determined that a 5-year
timeframe until prohibition for the
industrial and commercial use of TCE in
adhesives and sealants for aerospace
applications is appropriate and will be
sufficient to allow for a reasonable
transition from TCE. During this time,
EPA is requiring compliance with the
WCPP, as detailed in Unit IV.C. The
issuance of this final rule does not
preclude these users from presenting
additional information to EPA on their
redesign and recertification progress in
the future.
3. Industrial and Commercial Use of
TCE in Laboratory Use for Asphalt
Testing and Recovery
EPA is finalizing a phase-out of ten
years for the industrial and commercial
use of TCE in laboratory use for asphalt
testing and recovery, with a prohibition
on use of TCE in manual centrifuge
processes at 5 years. In the proposed
rule, EPA proposed to prohibit the
laboratory use of TCE (which falls
within the condition of use ‘‘Industrial
and commercial use of TCE in hoof
polish; gun scrubber; pepper spray; and
other miscellaneous industrial and
commercial uses’’) within 1 year. EPA
proposed a TSCA section 6(g)(1)(A)
exemption from prohibition for the
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industrial and commercial use of TCE in
laboratory use for essential laboratory
activities that are critical (e.g.,
occupational sampling and monitoring,
the support of environmental cleanup
activities, wax removal from NASA
infrared sensors, and equipment
calibration related to the search for
chlorinated hydrocarbons on Mars; for a
full list of critical activities see Unit
V.A.3.a.iii. of the 2023 TCE proposed
rule). In the 2023 TCE proposed rule,
EPA specifically noted that the use of
TCE in laboratory settings for testing
asphalt would not be included in the
TSCA section 6(g) exemption due to
information available to EPA that
indicated it was not critical nor
essential, and because alternative testing
methods exist, including the Nuclear
Asphalt Content Gauge and the Ignition
Method.
During the public comment period,
EPA received numerous comments
providing new information on the
importance of TCE in asphalt testing
and recovery as a laboratory use, and
the challenges of using a substitute that
had appeared theoretically feasible.
Many commenters, including several
state departments of transportation,
emphasized to EPA that 23 state
specifications require TCE to be used for
solvent extraction for asphalt testing
accuracy (Refs. 55, 57, 58, 71, 72, 73, 74,
75, 76, 77). Commenters described how
this use of TCE is critical or essential;
specifically, numerous commenters
emphasized that in the current
landscape for asphalt testing and
recycling, TCE is widely used at this
time because it can be easily recovered
and the asphalt test sample can then be
reused rather than discarded. Further, as
commenters described, using TCE in
laboratory testing allows departments of
transportation to recycle asphalt paving
and shingles into new asphalt by
determining how much asphalt binder
is present. The ability to determine the
amount of remaining asphalt binder has
resulted in, according to commenters,
asphalt being one of the most recycled
materials. The Nuclear Asphalt Content
Gauge that EPA had identified as an
alternative in the proposed rule does not
allow for asphalt recycling, as it
destroys the asphalt sample during the
test which makes it impossible to test
the asphalt binder as well.
In consideration of public comments,
EPA has determined that a prohibition
after 1 year is not reasonable. States are
currently invested heavily in extraction
equipment that uses TCE and EPA
agrees with commenters who stated that
transitioning from TCE would take years
and incur significant costs as a result of
equipment changes. Commenters
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expressed an interest in ceasing their
use of TCE and requested between 5
years and 20 years until prohibition of
this use of TCE in order to facilitate a
transition away from TCE. In
determining a reasonable timeframe for
a phase-out, EPA considered significant
information provided in public
comments about the potential
alternatives to TCE in laboratory asphalt
testing that would allow for testing as
well as recovery. While alternatives
have already been identified, fully
implementing use of those substitutes
would require the complete retrofit of
existing laboratory equipment.
Additionally, numerous state
departments of transportation standards
would need to be updated, which would
take time.
EPA does not view the 50-year
timeframe proposed (and finalized) for
the exemption for laboratory use of TCE
for essential laboratory uses as
appropriate for use of TCE in asphalt
testing and recovery, so is not finalizing
the laboratory asphalt testing and
recovery use as part of the TSCA section
6(g) exemption for essential laboratory
activities. Based on public comments
and discussions with the U.S.
Department of Transportation, EPA has
determined that 10 years is a reasonable
timeframe until the prohibition on TCE
use in laboratory use for asphalt testing
and recovery and is finalizing an
extended phase-out of ten years for the
industrial and commercial use of TCE in
laboratory use for asphalt testing and
recovery. Associated with this phaseout, EPA will require the establishment
of the TCE WCPP, outlined in Unit IV.C.
within 180 days after publication of the
final rule, as workplace protections
during the period of the phase-out.
Additionally, EPA has identified asphalt
testing and recovery conducted through
manual centrifuge methods as specific
activities that would be prohibited
within five years as part of the phaseout, due to the higher level of worker
exposure from this activity and
information received from commenters
about automated alternatives.
In public comments, numerous users
of TCE for asphalt testing and recovery
provided information to EPA regarding
technological advances in this sector—
namely the transition from manual
centrifuge methods of testing to
automated machines (Refs. 71, 72, 57).
Many laboratories have invested in
automated extraction machines. These
machines are expensive and currently
are calibrated to be chemical-specific,
with TCE-calibrated machines unable to
use a different or replacement solvent,
such as PCE (Refs. 71, 72, 55). EPA’s
identification of a 10-year timeframe for
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prohibition is partly based on the time
it would take to replace or retrofit the
current laboratory practices with nonTCE automatic extraction machines.
Based on public comments, EPA
understands that the industry favors
automated extraction machines due to
the extremely high worker exposures
inherent with manual centrifuge
processes. Commenters describe manual
centrifuge processes as resulting in
worker exposure to TCE for the entire
task duration, with constant handling of
the solvent by stirring, repouring,
straining, and vaporizing it at times
(Ref. 71). EPA agrees with commenters
on the high risk of asphalt testing and
recovery using TCE in manual methods.
As such, as part of the phase-out, any
lab use of TCE for asphalt testing or
recovery which uses manual centrifuge
processes is prohibited in 5 years.
Between 5 and 10 years, labs must
either use TCE in automated machines
only, or use alternative solvents in
automated machines or manual
centrifuge processes (such as methylene
chloride or PCE, for which EPA has
finalized provisions requiring chemical
specific WCPPs). Therefore, EPA is
finalizing an extended phase-out of ten
years for the industrial and commercial
use of TCE in laboratory use for asphalt
testing and recovery, with a prohibition
on use of TCE in manual centrifuge
processes at 5 years, rather than the
prohibition within 1 year as proposed
for all other industrial and commercial
uses without extended phase-outs or
exemptions.
4. Disposal of TCE to Industrial PreTreatment, Industrial Treatment, and
POTWs
For disposal of TCE to industrial pretreatment, industrial treatment, and
POTWs, EPA is finalizing a phase-out
over 20 years. In the proposed rule, EPA
proposed to prohibit the disposal of TCE
to industrial pre-treatment, industrial
treatment, and POTWs in 1 year after
the rule finalization. In the proposal,
EPA requested comment on whether the
prohibition timeframes and compliance
dates were appropriate. In public
comments, EPA received substantive
information from several industrial and
commercial users of TCE as a processing
aid that wastewater disposal should
continue on a timeframe to facilitate
those uses.
Commenters manufacturing battery
separators provided details on why the
industrial and commercial use of TCE in
battery separator manufacturing
necessitates the disposal of wastewater
containing TCE (Refs. 46, 34). As
described by commenters, in battery
separator manufacturing, TCE enters the
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wastewater stream following contact
between cooling tower blowdown,
processes involving TCE, and water
generated from the plant’s steam
distillation process, which is a key
process step in battery separator
manufacture. Water used in these
processes becomes wastewater
containing TCE. These manufacturers
perform on-site treatment of this
wastewater through air stripping and
carbon absorption. The pre-treated
water is then either recycled and reused
in the process or discharged to a POTW.
Wastewater discharges by battery
separator manufacturers are regulated
under existing wastewater discharge
permits and have limits for volatile
organic compounds such as TCE. EPA
agrees with commenters assertions that
TCE wastewater is inherently leftover as
part of the process and agrees that no
other form of disposal is acceptable.
Given that the generation of wastewater
containing TCE cannot be avoided as it
results from an intrinsic component of
battery separator manufacture, and
EPA’s determination that use of TCE in
battery separator manufacture is either a
critical and essential function for which
there is no technically or economically
feasible safer alternative (in the case of
lead acid batteries) or for which five
years before prohibition is as soon as
practicable (in the case of lithium
batteries), EPA is modifying the
associated timelines for the prohibition
on disposal for these uses, with worker
protections, to continue disposal of
wastewater containing TCE that is a
necessary part of this process.
Based on public comments, EPA also
finds that disposal of wastewater is a
necessary part of the use of TCE as a
processing aid in the manufacture of
specialty polymeric microporous sheet
materials. Like the battery separator
manufacturers, comments submitted
from the specialty polymeric
microporous sheet materials
manufacturer explained that TCE enters
the facility wastewater that is generated
in cooling tower blowdown water and
subsequently discharged to a POTW
(Ref. 40). Wastewater discharges are
regulated under existing wastewater
discharge permits and have limits for
volatile organic compounds such as
TCE. Given the determination of the
critical and essential need for the longer
timeframes for this industrial and
commercial use, EPA is modifying the
TSCA section 6(d) phaseout for disposal
of TCE for this use to allow disposal of
wastewater containing TCE that is a
necessary part of this process.
As such, the disposal of TCE to
industrial pre-treatment, industrial
treatment, and POTWs is prohibited
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with the following phase-out structure.
For the majority of industrial and
commercial uses, such disposal is
prohibited at one year. For industrial
and commercial users of TCE as a
processing aid in lithium battery
separator manufacturing, such disposal
is prohibited at 5 years. For industrial
and commercial users of TCE as a
processing aid in specialty polymeric
microporous sheet materials
manufacturing, such disposal is
prohibited after 15 years. For industrial
and commercial users of TCE as a
processing aid in lead-acid battery
separator manufacturing, such disposal
is prohibited after 20 years. Industrial
and commercial users who are allowed
to continue disposing of TCE to
wastewater for more than one year must
follow the WCPP provisions as laid out
in Unit IV.C, and POTWs receiving
wastewater must follow the wastewater
worker protection provisions discussed
in Unit IV.E.3.
5. Industrial and Commercial Use of
TCE for Batch Vapor Degreasing for
Land-Based DoD Defense Systems by
Federal Agencies and Their Contractors
EPA is finalizing a prohibition in five
years for the industrial and commercial
use of TCE in batch vapor degreasing for
land-based DoD defense systems by
Federal agencies and their contractors.
EPA proposed a compliance timeframe
of one year for the prohibitions on
industrial and commercial use of TCE in
vapor degreasing. EPA received
information indicating that this use
needs to continue for a longer period of
time due to the national security
implications of the end products, and
the need for a reasonable transition
period for that use that is as soon as
practicable but longer than the one year
proposed. TCE vapor degreasing is
necessary due to technical challenges
with other substitute chemicals or
alternative methods. The cleanliness
standards of certain parts as required by
DOD specifications or other
specifications included in existing
contracts within the supply chain
currently require TCE. A reasonable
transition period for this technically
challenging use requires substantial
investment and time to develop viable
alternatives, because conversion from
vapor degreasing to other methods of
cleaning is a capital-intensive
investment that would require several
years to plan, permit, construct, and
install. TCE has been used in vapor
degreasing to meet required levels of
cleanliness of certain supplied parts by
long-standing design specifications that
are incorporated into contracts of a
complex supply chain. As such, the
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industrial and commercial use of TCE
for batch vapor degreasing for landbased DoD defense systems is
prohibited after 5 years, rather than at
1 year with vapor degreasing for other
purposes.
D. Other Changes
1. Regulatory Threshold
In the 2023 TCE proposed rule, EPA
requested comment on whether the
Agency should consider a de minimis
threshold of TCE in formulations when
finalizing prohibitions, and, if so, what
threshold should be considered. EPA
received comments in support of the
inclusion of a de minimis threshold, as
well as comments opposing such a
threshold. Of the supportive
commenters, many agreed with the EPA
request for comment on using 0.1% by
weight as the threshold for the
applicability of prohibitions and
restrictions on TCE (Refs. 53, 78, 51),
which EPA is referring to in this final
rule as a regulatory threshold.
Commenters provided a variety of
reasons in support of a regulatory
threshold, such as the difficulty of
proving the absence of a chemical (Refs.
38, 79) and the importance of providing
for very small amounts of a chemical
that cannot be reasonably eliminated
(Ref. 37). Commenters observed that
TCE is unintentionally manufactured as
a byproduct in small amounts in the
manufacture of chlorinated organics and
noted that this cannot be prevented in
the production process (Ref. 39). In
some cases, commenters noted that a
0.1% threshold would be consistent
with the requirements under the OSHA
Hazard Communication Standard at 29
CFR 1910.1200 (Refs. 78, 51). One of
these commenters observed that,
because levels below 0.1% are not
required to be reported on Safety Data
Sheets (SDSs) under the OSHA
Standard, there is likely to be a lack of
awareness of products that contain TCE
below this level.
To aid the regulated community with
implementing the prohibitions on TCE
and to account for TCE as a byproduct
or impurity in products, EPA is
establishing a regulatory threshold of
0.1% for TCE, indicating that TCE at
concentrations less than 0.1% by weight
are not subject to the prohibitions and
restrictions outlined in this rulemaking.
EPA views the regulatory threshold as
an appropriate policy approach
necessary to aid in the rule
implementation and to clarify which
products are subject to the final rule. As
defined in 40 CFR 751.5, ‘‘product’’
means ‘‘the chemical substance, a
mixture containing the chemical
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substance, or any object that contains
the chemical substance or mixture
containing the chemical substance that
is not an article.’’
This 0.1% regulatory threshold for
TCE is in alignment with Appendix A
of 29 CFR 1910.1200 Health Hazard
Criteria developed by OSHA; OSHA
described this threshold in the 2012
modifications to the hazard
communication standard: ‘‘When data
on the mixture as a whole are not
available, the mixture is considered to
present the same health hazards as any
ingredients present at a concentration of
1% or greater, or, in the case of
carcinogens, concentrations of 0.1% or
greater. The current HCS [hazard
communication standard] also
recognizes that risk may remain at
concentrations below these cut-offs, and
where there is evidence that that is the
case, the mixtures are considered
hazardous under the standard.’’ (89 FR
44144, May 20, 2024). Under 29 CFR
1910.1200, a health hazard is defined as
‘‘a chemical which is classified as
posing one of the following hazardous
effects: acute toxicity (any route of
exposure); skin corrosion or irritation;
serious eye damage or eye irritation;
respiratory or skin sensitization; germ
cell mutagenicity; carcinogenicity;
reproductive toxicity; specific target
organ toxicity (single or repeated
exposure); or aspiration hazard.’’ The
criteria for determining whether a
chemical is classified as a health hazard
are detailed in Appendix A to 29 CFR
1910.1200—Health Hazard Criteria.
Appendix A.6.3.1 and A.7.3.1.1 of 29
CFR 1910.1200 indicate that a mixture
must be classified as a carcinogen or a
reproductive toxicant, respectively, if it
includes greater than or equal to 0.1%
of a substance that, like TCE, is
classified as a carcinogen or a
reproductive toxicant. Other EPA
programs, such as the Toxics Release
Inventory (TRI) program, have adopted
the OSHA threshold of 0.1% for
chemicals which are defined as
carcinogens or as a potential carcinogen
under the National Toxicology Program,
International Agency for Research on
Cancer, or OSHA (see 40 CFR 372.38(a)).
EPA is finalizing a regulatory
threshold of 0.1% so that products
containing TCE at concentrations less
than 0.1% by weight are not subject to
the prohibitions and restrictions of this
final rule. EPA is finalizing this
threshold for many of the reasons stated
by commenters, such as the difficulty of
proving the absence of a chemical (and
the resulting uncertainty in various
supply chains), the fact that the
manufacture of chlorinated organics
results in the unintentional manufacture
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of small amounts of TCE (and other
chlorinated compounds) as a byproduct
that becomes an impurity that is not
feasible to remove, and the fact that it
would be consistent with the OSHA
Hazard Communication Standard and
other programs to which industry has
already calibrated its processes. EPA
believes that adopting a regulatory
threshold of 0.1% for TCE, which is a
carcinogen and a reproductive toxicant,
will increase regulatory certainty and
ease implementation of the eventual
prohibition of this chemical. This
regulatory threshold is well below the
concentration used for any products that
contributed to the unreasonable risk. By
prohibiting TCE concentrations of 0.1%
or greater in products, EPA prevents any
functional uses of TCE, which generally
rely on a higher concentration of the
chemical in order to make use of TCE’s
chemical properties. The manufacture
(including import), processing, and
distribution in commerce of products
that contain TCE at concentrations equal
to or above the regulatory threshold of
0.1% are still subject to the prohibitions
and restrictions of this final rule,
regardless of the concentration of TCE
in the end product.
2. Processing of TCE Manufactured as a
Byproduct
In the 2023 TCE proposed rule, EPA
noted that TCE that is manufactured as
a byproduct (such as during the
manufacture of other chemicals, e.g.,
1,2-dichloroethane (1,2–DCA)) is not
considered to be within the condition of
use of TCE manufacturing. EPA has not
changed this determination. However,
in the 2023 TCE proposed rule, EPA did
consider processing (including reuse) of
TCE that was manufactured as a
byproduct to be under the processing as
a reactant/intermediate condition of use
of TCE. Specifically, in Unit III.B.1.b.i.
of the 2023 TCE proposed rule
(‘‘processing as a reactant/
intermediate’’), EPA noted that ‘‘this
condition of use includes reuse of
byproduct or residual TCE as a
reactant.’’ EPA received numerous
public comments on how the proposed
rule addressed TCE as a byproduct that
was then processed, with several
commenters providing detailed
information on how TCE is
unintentionally manufactured as a
byproduct during complex chemical
processing streams and then processed
and re-processed within those streams
alongside other, similar chemicals (Refs.
42, 80, 39, 81, and 56). For clarity, EPA
is using the terms reuse, recycling, and
re-processing within this section as
specifically used by commenters to refer
to actions that occur under the larger
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condition of use of ‘‘processing.’’ One
commenter pointed out that without
excluding from the prohibitions any
subsequent processing of TCE
manufactured as a byproduct, chemical
facilities would experience significant
disruptions when trying to isolate and
remove the TCE that was
unintentionally manufactured, and that
would otherwise be processed and
consumed (Ref. 43). This commenter
also emphasized the anticipated
negative waste and upstream production
impacts from a prohibition on the reuse
of TCE manufactured as a byproduct,
and highlighted how TCE is produced
in the 1,2–DCA manufacturing process
and how it is processed and recycled in
the reactor manufacturing process for
PCE and carbon tetrachloride (CTC).
This commenter highlighted that if TCE
byproduct processing was prohibited,
this would significantly increase the
quantity of hazardous waste disposed of
and increase the use of virgin raw
material in chemical manufacturing
(Ref. 43). The commenter also provided
a description of controls in place at
chlorinated organic facilities to mitigate
risk associated with TCE byproduct
creation and recycling as well as
citations to communications with EPA
regarding these processes (Ref. 43).
As described in more detail in the
Response to Comments document (Ref.
11), EPA agrees with commenters that
TCE manufactured as a byproduct
should logically be able to be processed,
including recycled, during or
concurrent with the processing of the
intended manufactured chemical
substance(s) so long as the TCE is
processed in a site-limited, physically
enclosed system within the same
reaction process. EPA also recognizes
the significant risks to workplace safety
if all facilities manufacturing TCE as a
byproduct had to distill, remove, and
destroy all traces of TCE before further
chemical processing could commence.
For this reason, EPA is excluding from
this rule the processing of TCE as a
byproduct when that byproduct TCE is
processed within a site-limited,
physically enclosed system that is part
of the same overall manufacturing
process from which the byproduct
substance was generated. In this rule,
EPA is incorporating the definition of
‘‘site-limited’’ in 40 CFR 711.3 and also
aligning with the description of sitelimited, physically enclosed systems in
40 CFR 711.10(d)(1), which identifies
activities for which reporting on certain
byproducts is not required under the
CDR Rule.
In proposing the CDR definition, EPA
described enclosed systems for the
purposes of CDR as system of
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equipment directly connected to the
production process that is designed,
constructed, and operated in a manner
which prevents emissions, or the release
of any chemical substance into the
facility or environment during the
production process. (84 FR 17692, April
25, 2019) (FRL–9982–16). Such
emissions, including fugitive emissions,
could lead to exposures to workers, the
public, or the environment. For an
enclosed system, exposure and release
could only occur due to loss of integrity
or failure of the manufacturing process
equipment or control systems. To meet
the EPA enclosed system scenario, any
equipment that the byproduct is present
in at any point during the process
sequence, such as tanks, reaction
vessels, reactors, processing units (e.g.,
a drum filter), and/or connecting lines,
must: (1) Be of high structural integrity
and contained on all sides, (2) pose no
foreseeable potential for escape of
constituents to the facility or
environment during normal use, and (3)
be connected directly by pipeline or
similarly enclosed device to a
production process. Also, any transfers
or holding steps occurring in this
system must be necessary to the recycle
process and must take place within
physically enclosed equipment that
meet the enclosed system scenario. For
example, hard piping or completely
sealed (i.e., welded) equipment would
meet these criteria if connected directly
to other enclosed equipment, preventing
potential releases including fugitive
emissions.
EPA is finalizing an exclusion from
this rule for TCE manufactured and then
processed as a byproduct in a sitelimited, physically enclosed system that
is part of the same overall
manufacturing process from which the
byproduct TCE was generated. EPA
plans to interpret the exclusion for
processing byproduct TCE in this rule in
a similar way as the exemption for
certain byproducts from CDR.
EPA recognizes the concerns that
other commenters raised regarding
potential risks from TCE manufactured
as a byproduct; several commenters
stated that rather than expand
exclusions for TCE manufactured as a
byproduct, EPA should evaluate all
aspects of manufacture of a chemical
substance and that byproducts could
pose a risk to fenceline communities
(Refs. 44, 30). As described in the
proposed rule, EPA is including the
evaluation of TCE manufactured as a
byproduct during the manufacture of
1,2–DCA in the risk evaluation for 1,2–
DCA. Additionally, unless it is for the
purposes of disposal (see Unit
IV.C.1.d.), TCE that exits the site-
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limited, physically enclosed systems in
which it was manufactured by removal
from the system, by relocation, or by
conclusion of the manufacturing process
is subject to the restrictions,
prohibitions, and other provisions of
this final rule. EPA notes that for the
manufacturing of two chemicals, PCE
and CTC, which may produce TCE as a
byproduct within site-limited,
physically enclosed systems, EPA is
requiring a WCPP for PCE or CTC,
which would provide a level of
protection from TCE for potentially
exposed persons while addressing the
unreasonable risk from PCE or CTC.
EPA received additional information
from a chemical manufacturer (Ref. 82)
that manufactures TCE as a byproduct
during other processes and then sends
the TCE offsite for RCRA hazardous
waste disposal. EPA notes that in the
Risk Evaluation for TCE, EPA explained
that it had tailored the scope of the risk
evaluation to exclude the disposal
pathway of TCE, except for limited
disposal of TCE-containing wastewater
discussed in Unit IV.B.6. Thus, the
disposal of TCE and the processing and
distribution in commerce for such
disposal is out of scope for this rule
unless otherwise specified. EPA
understands that some facilities, such as
those that produce substances critical to
the battery supply chain, may
manufacture TCE as a byproduct and
that TCE is not further processed onsite
but rather is disposed of offsite. Such
activity is not covered by this rule.
3. Industrial and Commercial Use of
TCE as a Solvent for Closed-Loop Batch
Vapor Degreasing for Rayon Fabric
Scouring for Rocket Booster Nozzle
Production for Federal Agencies and
Their Contractors
In the 2023 TCE proposed rule, EPA
included several longer timeframes for
TCE uses specifically to foster and
support Federal Agencies’ missions
related to national security and critical
infrastructure. EPA received public
comment on one of these conditions of
use and provisions that relate to
compliance. The comment relates to the
phase-out of TCE in industrial and
commercial use as a solvent for closedloop batch vapor degreasing for rayon
fabric scouring for rocket booster nozzle
production. EPA proposed that within 5
years of the publication date of the final
rule the Federal agency that is the end
user of the rayon fabric for rocket
booster nozzle production (e.g., the U.S.
Department of Defense (DOD) or NASA)
would need to conduct a final prelaunch test of rocket boosters without
using TCE. By 10 years from the
publication date of the final rule, the
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phase-out would be complete and
industrial and commercial use of TCE as
a solvent for closed-loop batch vapor
degreasing would be prohibited. A
commenter brought to EPA’s attention
that although EPA proposed to require
the testing of an alternative process, the
proposed regulation did not include a
requirement to switch to an alternative
once a suitable one was fully validated
(Ref. 44). As the commenter noted, such
a requirement is necessary to prompt
users to discover and implement
effective and safer alternatives to TCE.
EPA agrees, as the intention of this
phase-out and the 5-year testing
requirement is to incentivize TCE users
to transition away as fast as practicable.
Based on this public comment, EPA has
modified the regulatory text to require
use of the tested alternative if it proves
to be an adequate substitute.
4. Definitions
EPA proposed to add definitions for
‘‘Authorized person,’’ ‘‘ECEL,’’
‘‘Exposure group,’’ ‘‘Owner or
operator,’’ ‘‘Potentially exposed
person,’’ ‘‘Regulated area,’’ and
‘‘Retailer’’ to 40 CFR part 751, subpart
A. The final rule under TSCA section 6
to address the unreasonable risk
presented by methylene chloride (89 FR
39254, May 8, 2024 (FRL–8155–01–
OCSPP)) added the definitions for
‘‘Authorized person,’’ ‘‘Owner or
operator,’’ ‘‘Potentially exposed
person,’’ ‘‘Regulated area,’’ and
‘‘Retailer’’ to subpart A. The final rule
under TSCA section 6 to address the
unreasonable risk presented by PCE
(RIN 2070–AK84) added the definition
for ‘‘Exposure group’’ and ‘‘ECEL’’ to
subpart A.
In this final rule, EPA is adding a
definition for ‘‘interim ECEL’’ to subpart
D to incorporate the interim ECEL value
discussed in Unit III.A.1. and to make
it clear that the interim ECEL is only
applicable during the phaseout and
TSCA section 6(g) exemption periods.
EPA has also revised the proposed
subpart D definition of ‘‘ECEL action
level’’ to refer to an ‘‘interim ECEL
action level’’ and to incorporate the
interim ECEL action level value
described in Unit III.A.1.
Lastly, to provide additional clarity,
EPA has revised its proposed
descriptions in the preamble of
industrial and commercial use of TCE as
solvent for open-top or closed-loop
batch vapor degreasing for essential
aerospace parts and for narrow tubing
for medical devices. The revised
descriptions appear in Unit IV.B.1.
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IV. Provisions of the Final Rule
EPA intends that each provision of
this rulemaking be severable. In the
event of litigation staying, remanding, or
invalidating EPA’s risk management
approach for one or more conditions of
use in this rule, EPA intends to preserve
the risk management approaches in the
rule for all other conditions of use to the
fullest extent possible. The Agency
evaluated the risk management options
in TSCA section 6(a)(1) through (7) for
each condition of use and generally
EPA’s regulation of one condition of use
to address its contribution to the
unreasonable risk from TCE functions
independently from EPA’s regulation of
other conditions of use, which may have
different characteristics leading to EPA’s
risk management decisions. Further, the
Agency crafted this rule so that different
risk management approaches are
reflected in different provisions or
elements of the rule that are capable of
operating independently. Accordingly,
the Agency has organized the rule so
that if any provision or element of this
rule is determined by judicial review or
operation of law to be invalid, that
partial invalidation will not render the
remainder of this rule invalid.
There are many permutations of this.
For example, as discussed in Unit IV.B.,
this final rule prohibits industrial and
commercial use of adhesives and
sealants that contain TCE (with subsets
of this use with a delayed compliance
date as described in Unit IV.B.2. or an
exemption as described in Unit IV.G.).
This final rule also prohibits all
consumer uses of TCE as discussed in
Unit IV.B.1. To the extent that a court
were to find that EPA lacked substantial
evidence to support its prohibition of
adhesives and sealants or otherwise
found legal issues with EPA’s approach
to that condition of use, it would have
no bearing on other similarly situated
conditions of use, such as those
involving consumer use of TCE, unless
the specific issue also applies to the
particular facts associated with
consumer use. This is reflected in the
structure of the rule, which describes
the specific prohibitions separately by
compliance date. EPA also intends all
TSCA section 6(a) risk management
elements in this rule to be severable
from each TSCA section 6(g) exemption.
EPA has the authority to promulgate
TSCA section 6(g) exemptions ‘‘as part
of a rule promulgated under [TSCA
section 6(a)].’’ However, EPA’s risk
management decisions under TSCA
sections 6(a) and 6(c) are independent
from EPA’s consideration of whether it
is appropriate, based on the factors in
TSCA section 6(g), to exempt specific
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conditions of use from the requirements
of the TSCA section 6(a) risk
management elements in the rule. In
other words, EPA first decides whether
and how to regulate each condition of
use, per TSCA sections 6(a) through (c),
and only then determines whether an
exemption under TSCA section 6(g) is
appropriate. Accordingly, the
underlying TSCA section 6(a) risk
management elements would not be
impacted if a TSCA section 6(g)
exemption is determined by judicial
review or operation of law to be invalid.
Rather, the exempted condition of use
would become subject to the underlying
TSCA section 6(a) risk management
element(s).
EPA also notes that there are multiple
avenues to ask EPA to revisit issues in
this TSCA section 6(a) rulemaking, both
before and after the mandatory
compliance dates are set consistent with
TSCA section 6(d). EPA has the
authority under TSCA section 6(g) to
consider whether an exemption is
appropriate and, consistent with TSCA
section 6(g)(1), may propose such
exemptions independently from this
rulemaking. Additionally, any person
could petition EPA to request that EPA
issue or amend a rule under TSCA
section 6.
A. Applicability
This final rule sets prohibitions and
restrictions on the manufacture
(including import), processing,
distribution in commerce, commercial
use, and disposal of TCE to prevent
unreasonable risk of injury to health in
accordance with TSCA section 6(a), 15
U.S.C. 2605(a). Additionally, pursuant
to TSCA section 12(a)(2), this rule
applies to TCE even if being
manufactured, processed, or distributed
in commerce solely for export from the
United States because EPA has
determined that TCE presents an
unreasonable risk to health within the
United States.
As discussed in Unit III.D., EPA’s
final rule is adopting a regulatory
threshold of 0.1% of TCE (in the 2023
proposed rule, this was referred to as a
de minimis threshold). In other words,
the provisions of this rulemaking only
apply when TCE is present in a product
at 0.1% or greater by weight.
Additionally, the provisions of this final
rule only apply to chemical substances
as defined under TSCA section 3.
Notably, TSCA Section 3(2) excludes
from the definition of chemical
substance ‘‘any food, food additive,
drug, cosmetic, or device (as such terms
are defined in Section 201 of the Federal
Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act [21 U.S.C.
321]) when manufactured, processed, or
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distributed in commerce for use as a
food, food additive, drug, cosmetic, or
device’’ and ‘‘any pesticide (as defined
in the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide,
and Rodenticide Act [7 U.S.C. 136 et
seq.]) when manufactured, processed, or
distributed in commerce for use as a
pesticide.’’ Additional details regarding
TSCA statutory authorities can be found
in section 2 of the Response to
Comments document (Ref. 11).
As discussed in Unit III.D. of this final
rule, TCE that is manufactured as a
byproduct (such as during the
manufacture of other chemicals) is not
considered to be within the condition of
use of TCE manufacturing. Relatedly,
EPA is excluding from this rule
processing of byproduct TCE when that
byproduct TCE is processed within a
site-limited, physically enclosed system
that is part of the same overall
manufacturing process from which the
byproduct substance was generated.
Site-limited means a chemical substance
is manufactured and processed only
within a site and is not distributed for
commercial purposes as a chemical
substance or as part of a mixture or
product outside the site. In this way,
EPA is aligning with the definition of
‘‘site-limited’’ in 40 CFR 711.3 and sitelimited, physically enclosed systems in
40 CFR 711.10(d)(1).
Finally, as discussed in the 2023 TCE
proposed rule, while EPA generally
views the disposal condition of use
under TSCA broadly, this rule is
intended to address identified risks
resulting from disposal of TCE to
industrial pre-treatment, industrial
treatment, or a POTW. Thus, only these
limited disposal activities, including
remediation methods that would be
considered industrial wastewater
pretreatment, industrial wastewater
treatment, or discharge to a POTW, are
included within the disposal condition
of use in this rule. A remediation
method would need to be considered
one of these three types of disposal to
fall within the condition of use under
TSCA, and if not, would not be subject
to the prohibition or other requirements
of the rule.
B. Prohibition of Manufacture,
Processing, Distribution in Commerce,
Use, and Disposal
In general, EPA is finalizing the
prohibitions as proposed with some
modifications, including for compliance
timeframes to provide for reasonable
transitions and based on consideration
of the public comments, as described in
Unit III. This unit describes the
prohibitions and associated compliance
timeframes EPA is finalizing in this
rule. As discussed in Unit IV.A. and in
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the Response to Comments document
(Ref. 11), the prohibitions do not apply
to any substance that is excluded from
the definition of ‘‘chemical substance’’
under TSCA section 3(2)(B)(ii) through
(vi) (Ref. 11).
1. Prohibition of Manufacture,
Processing, Distribution, and Industrial
and Commercial Use of TCE
The final rule prohibits manufacture,
processing, distribution in commerce,
and all industrial and commercial use of
TCE and TCE-containing products. The
final regulation will impose
prohibitions in a staggered timeframe,
beginning at the top of the supply chain,
as proposed. EPA is finalizing as
proposed the timeframes for prohibition
on manufacturing, processing,
distribution in commerce, and
industrial and commercial use of TCE
unless otherwise specified. These
timeframes are: a prohibition on
manufacturing (including importing)
TCE beginning 90 days from publication
of this final rule, a prohibition on
processing TCE beginning 180 days
from publication of this final rule, a
prohibition on distribution in commerce
of TCE or TCE-containing products
beginning 180 days from publication of
this final rule, and a prohibition on
industrial or commercial use of TCE and
TCE-containing products beginning 270
days after publication of this final rule.
For several conditions of use, EPA is
finalizing prohibitions that would take
effect over a longer timeframe. After
consideration of public comments, EPA
is finalizing timeframes longer than
proposed for prohibition of
manufacture, processing, distribution,
and commercial use of TCE for four
uses: industrial and commercial use of
TCE in energized electrical cleaner;
industrial and commercial use of TCE in
adhesives and sealants for aerospace
applications; laboratory use of TCE in
asphalt testing and recovery; and
disposal of TCE to industrial pretreatment, industrial treatment, or
POTWs. EPA is finalizing a prohibition
after 5 years, a timeframe shorter than
proposed, for the industrial and
commercial use of TCE as a processing
aid for lithium battery separator
manufacturing. The details of these and
other timeframes for prohibition are
described in this unit, and the rationale
for these changes from the proposed
rule is in Unit III.B.1. and Unit III.C.
(EPA notes that for several conditions of
use, in consideration of public
comments and to provide for reasonable
transitions, EPA is finalizing phase-outs
ahead of immediate prohibitions (e.g.,
for the processing of TCE for
manufacture of HFC–134a), which are
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detailed in Units IV.B.3., 4., 5., and 6.,
or several time limited exemptions
under TSCA section 6(g) (e.g., for the
industrial and commercial use of TCE
for essential laboratory uses), which are
detailed in Unit IV.G.)).
For two batch vapor degreasing
conditions of use (open-top and closedloop), EPA is finalizing as proposed the
compliance dates for the prohibitions
described in this unit. With certain
exceptions, the prohibition on
manufacturing and processing for this
use comes into effect in 180 days for
manufacturers and in 270 days for
processors, including for processing into
a formulation and for recycling. After 1
year, the prohibition on the industrial
and commercial uses of TCE in open-top
and closed-loop batch vapor degreasers
comes into effect (see Unit III.B.1.c.i.
and ii. of the 2023 TCE proposed rule
for descriptions of these conditions of
use and Unit VI.A.1. of the 2023 TCE
proposed rule for a rationale for the
slightly longer timeframe). As an
exception, the use of TCE for batch
vapor degreasing by Federal agencies
and their contractors for land-based DoD
defense systems will be prohibited after
5 years. (For a sub-set of the open-top
and closed-loop batch vapor degreasing
conditions of use, EPA is finalizing a
phase-out for industrial and commercial
use of TCE as a solvent for closed-loop
batch vapor degreasing for rayon fabric
scouring for end use in rocket booster
nozzle production for Federal agencies
and their contractors, as described in
Unit IV.B.4. EPA is also finalizing
several exemptions related to vapor
degreasing, which are described in Unit
IV.G.).
Additionally, for uses not separately
distinguished under longer phase-out or
exemption timeframes, EPA is finalizing
as proposed the compliance dates for
the prohibitions on the commercial use
of TCE as a processing aid and the
relevant upstream uses. Specifically,
aside from several exceptions, the
prohibitions on manufacturing and
processing for this use would come into
effect 540 days months after the date of
publication for manufacturers and in 2
years for processors. The prohibition
would come into effect after 2 years for
industrial and commercial use of TCE as
a processing aid for several applications
(as specified in the condition of use
name and description, this includes use
of TCE as a processing aid in battery
separator manufacturing; process
solvent used in polymer fiber spinning,
fluoroelastomer manufacture and
Alcantara manufacture; extraction
solvent used in caprolactam
manufacture; and precipitant used in
beta-cyclodextrin manufacture) (see
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Unit III.B.1.c.xvi. of the 2023 TCE
proposed rule for a description of this
condition of use and Unit V.A.1. of the
2023 TCE proposed rule for a rationale
for the different timeframe). For a subset
of the industrial and commercial use of
TCE as a processing aid, specifically for
the use of TCE as a processing aid in
lithium battery separator manufacture,
EPA is finalizing a longer timeframe of
5 years before prohibition.
EPA is finalizing as proposed the
prohibition on manufacturing of TCE for
processing as a reactant/intermediate
after 540 days and the prohibition for
processing TCE as a reactant/
intermediate after two years, unless
otherwise noted. EPA is finalizing as
proposed an extended phase-out for a
subset of this condition of use,
specifically processing TCE as a
reactant/intermediate for the
manufacture of HFC–134a, which is
detailed in Unit IV.B.3.
As described earlier in this unit, for
three conditions of use, EPA is
finalizing prohibition timeframes longer
than proposed. EPA is providing 3 years
after publication of the final rule (rather
than within a year, as proposed) for the
industrial and commercial use of TCE in
energized electrical cleaner, and the
manufacture, processing, and
distribution in commerce for such use.
Additionally, for the industrial and
commercial use of TCE in adhesives and
sealants for aerospace applications, and
the manufacture, processing, and
distribution in commerce for such use,
prohibitions would take effect 5 years
after publication of the final rule (rather
than within a year, as proposed). For the
industrial and commercial use of TCE in
batch vapor degreasing for land-based
DoD defense systems by Federal
agencies and their contractors, and the
manufacture, processing, and
distribution in commerce for such use,
prohibitions would take effect 5 years
after publication of the final rule. These
changes are based on consideration of
the public comments, and the rationale
is detailed in Unit III.C. and the
Response to Comments document (Ref.
11).
Also in consideration of public
comment, EPA is changing the
timeframe for prohibition on the
industrial and commercial use of TCE as
a processing aid in manufacturing
lithium battery separators. EPA had
proposed that industrial and
commercial use of TCE as a processing
aid for all battery separators would,
under TSCA section 6(g), be exempt
from prohibition for 10 years. As
detailed in Unit III.B.1., EPA has
modified the exemption to apply only to
use of TCE for manufacturing lead-acid
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battery separators, and for the industrial
and commercial use of TCE as a
processing aid in lithium battery
separator manufacture, and for its
associated upstream uses and disposal,
EPA is finalizing a separate prohibition
that will take effect in five years.
To aid with implementation of the
compliance dates for the prohibitions on
manufacturing, processing, and
industrial and commercial use of TCE,
and ensure that those prohibitions
effectively address the unreasonable risk
identified, EPA is also finalizing
prohibitions on distribution in
commerce of TCE. Generally, for most
conditions of use EPA is finalizing a
compliance date for the prohibition on
distribution in commerce of TCE that
will come into effect 180 days following
publication of the final rule. In
instances where EPA is finalizing a
prohibition on manufacturing and
processing TCE for a particular
industrial and commercial use that is
later than 180 days after publication of
the final rule, the compliance date for
the prohibition on distribution in
commerce will generally be the same as
the compliance date of the prohibition
on manufacturing and processing TCE.
In consideration of the irreversible
health effects associated with TCE
exposure and public comment, EPA is
finalizing prohibition timeframes that
allow for successful implementation of
the prohibitions in a manner that is as
soon as practicable while providing for
a reasonable transition period,
consistent with TSCA section 6(d). EPA
has no reasonably available information
indicating that the compliance dates are
not practicable for the activities that
would be prohibited, or that additional
time is needed for products to clear the
channels of trade.
2. Prohibition of Manufacture,
Processing, and Distribution in
Commerce for Consumer Use of TCE
The final rule prohibits the
manufacture, processing, and
distribution in commerce of TCE and
TCE-containing products for all
consumer use.
EPA emphasizes that the consumer
uses evaluated in the 2020 Risk
Evaluation for TCE constitute all
known, intended, and reasonably
foreseen consumer uses of TCE. As
described in this unit, EPA is
prohibiting all manufacturing (including
import) and processing of TCE to
address the unreasonable risk to
workers and ONUs driven by those
conditions of use (Ref. 2). EPA
determined any extended phase-outs or
6(g) exemptions are unnecessary for
prohibitions on manufacture (including
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import), processing, or distribution in
commerce of TCE for consumer use.
EPA notes that all but one of the 24
consumer uses of TCE evaluated in the
2020 Risk Evaluation for TCE
contributed to the unreasonable risk
determination for TCE (Refs. 1, 2).
Additionally, a prohibition on the
manufacture (including import) and
processing of TCE for consumer uses
generally supports reducing risk to
workers and ONUs from these upstream
uses, as further discussed in Unit V.A.
EPA also considered the risk of
irreversible health effects associated
with TCE exposure when finalizing
these compliance dates. For these
reasons, including the severity of the
hazards of TCE, EPA is prohibiting the
manufacturing (including import),
processing, and distribution in
commerce of TCE for all uses, which
includes all consumer uses.
The compliance dates for the final
prohibitions described in this unit
relevant to consumer uses will come
into effect for manufacturers in 90 days,
for processors in 180 days, and for
distributors (including all retailers)
within 180 days. EPA has no reasonably
available information indicating these
compliance dates are not practicable for
the activities that are prohibited or that
additional time is needed for products
to clear the channels of trade.
EPA emphasizes that retailers are
prohibited from distributing any TCE or
TCE-containing products after June 16,
2025, including those TCE-containing
products that can continue to be
distributed or used commercially for a
longer period of time. EPA is finalizing
as proposed the prohibition on
distributing in commerce TCE and all
TCE-containing products to consumers,
in order to prevent products intended
for industrial and commercial use that
have longer timeframes before
prohibition from being purchased by
consumers, and is clarifying that this
prohibition applies to distribution by
retailers. A retailer is any person or
business entity that distributes or makes
available products to consumers,
including through e-commerce internet
sales or distribution. If a person or
business entity distributes or makes
available any product to at least one
consumer, then it is considered a
retailer (40 CFR 751.5). For a distributor
not to be considered a retailer, the
distributor must distribute or make
available products solely to commercial
or industrial end-users or businesses.
Prohibiting manufacturers (including
importers), processors, and distributors
from distributing TCE, or any products
containing TCE, to retailers prevents
retailers from making these products
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available to consumers, which addresses
that part of the unreasonable risk from
TCE contributed by consumer use.
In consideration of the irreversible
health effects associated with TCE
exposure and public comment, in this
final rule EPA is finalizing prohibition
timeframes that allow for successful
implementation of the prohibitions in a
manner that is as soon as practicable
while providing for a reasonable
transition period, consistent with TSCA
section 6(d). EPA has no reasonably
available information indicating these
compliance dates are not practicable for
the activities that are prohibited or that
additional time is needed for products
to clear the channels of trade.
3. Phase-Out for Processing TCE as an
Intermediate for the Manufacture of
HFC–134a
As described in this unit, EPA is
finalizing as proposed a longer phaseout timeframe for the manufacturing
(including import) and processing of
TCE as an intermediate for the
manufacture of HFC–134a (1,1,1,2tetrafluroethane; CASRN 811–97–2).
EPA is finalizing an 8.5-year phase-out
subject to the requirements discussed in
this unit. All other processing of TCE as
a reactant/intermediate will be subject
to the prohibitions described in Unit
IV.B.2. EPA will require a phase-out for
processing of TCE as an intermediate for
the manufacture of HFC–134a, which
EPA will begin at the final rule’s
publication date and end 8.5 years after
the publication of the final rule.
Associated with this phase-out, EPA
will require the establishment of the
TCE WCPP, outlined in Unit IV.C.
within 180 days after publication of the
final rule, as workplace protections
during the period of the phase-out. To
set the volume reductions during the
phase-out, EPA will require any facility
processing TCE as an intermediate to
manufacture HFC–134a in the United
States to establish a baseline of the
annual quantity of TCE processed by the
facility as a feedstock to manufacture
HFC–134a. EPA is requiring that within
180 days after the publication of the
final rule the manufacturer could use
the average of any 12 consecutive
months in the 3 years preceding the
publication of the final rule to calculate
their baseline, based on records that
demonstrate how the baseline annual
volume was calculated. Following the
establishment of a baseline volume, the
regulated entity will then be required to
implement a 4-step phase-out process;
specifically, the phase-out will be a 25
percent reduction from the baseline
volume every 2 years as follows: (1) 2.5
years after the publication of the final
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rule each manufacturer of HFC–134a
who processes TCE as an intermediate
is not permitted to process TCE as an
intermediate at an annual volume
greater than 75 percent of the baseline;
(2) 4.5 years after the publication of the
final rule each manufacturer of HFC–
134a who processes TCE as an
intermediate is not permitted to process
TCE as an intermediate at an annual
volume greater than 50 percent of the
baseline; (3) 6.5 years after the
publication of the final rule each
manufacturer of HFC–134a who
processes TCE as an intermediate is not
permitted to process TCE as an
intermediate at an annual volume
greater than 25 percent of the baseline;
and (4) 8.5 years after the publication of
the final rule each manufacturer of
HFC–134a is prohibited from processing
TCE as an intermediate.
EPA notes that the prohibition for
manufacture (including importing),
processing, and distribution in
commerce of TCE for this condition of
use will occur after 8.5 years to account
for availability of TCE through the
supply chain during the period of the
phase-out of processing of TCE as an
intermediate for the manufacture of
HFC–134a. This timeframe will be
longer than the prohibitions on
manufacturing and processing TCE
described in Unit IV.B.1. of this final
rule.
EPA is also finalizing the requirement
that regulated entities keep records of
the annual quantity of TCE purchased
and processed from the year 2023 until
the termination of all processing of TCE
as an intermediate. These records, along
with the records demonstrating how the
baseline annual volume was calculated,
must be kept until five years after the
processing of TCE as an intermediate
ends.
EPA notes, per TSCA section
6(c)(2)(C), that although the processing
of TCE to produce HFC–134a is
prohibited eventually, processing PCE
to produce HFC–134a will continue
under a WCPP (RIN 2070–AK84).
Although PCE is an alternative
intermediate for the manufacture of
HFC–134a, EPA has found that an 8.5year phaseout for TCE is necessary
because manufacturers who use TCE as
an intermediate are not able to simply
retrofit plants to use PCE. Therefore, a
more immediate prohibition of the use
of TCE for this condition of use could
abruptly disrupt the domestic supply of
HFC–134a and could adversely affect
the gradual transition to new
technologies driven by the AIM Act.
However, EPA believes the transition
period is reasonable because over the
time period of the phaseout, EPA
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determined the transition to imported
HFC–134a or HFC–134a manufactured
with PCE could be made and, as such,
the refrigerant would remain available
while protecting workers.
4. Phase-Out of Industrial and
Commercial Use of TCE as a Solvent for
Closed-Loop Batch Vapor Degreasing for
Rayon Fabric Scouring for Rocket
Booster Nozzle Production
EPA is finalizing as proposed a longer
phase-out timeframe for industrial and
commercial use of TCE as a solvent for
closed-loop batch vapor degreasing for
rayon fabric scouring for end use in
rocket booster nozzle production by
Federal agencies and their contractors.
This is the industrial and commercial
use of TCE in a closed-loop batch vapor
degreaser to clean, or ‘scour,’ rayon
fabric to remove sizing (i.e., protective
filler or glaze on textiles), oils, and other
contaminants from the rayon fabric that
is used to line the inside of rocket
booster nozzles; the degreasing is
essential in preparing the rayon fabric
before a carbonization process ahead of
being used in the rocket booster nozzles.
If contaminants are not removed
properly from the rayon, the result
could include nozzle failure (Ref. 44).
More information on this use and the
rationale for the phase-out are in Unit
VI.A.1. of the proposed rule. For this
sub-set of the vapor degreasing
condition of use, when conducted by
Federal agencies and their contractors,
EPA is finalizing a 10-year phase-out
subject to the requirements discussed in
this unit. (All other industrial and
commercial use of TCE as a solvent for
vapor degreasing, including use of TCE
in closed-loop batch vapor degreasing of
other parts or materials, will be subject
to the prohibitions described in Unit
IV.B.2.). For the phase-out, within 5
years of the publication date of the final
rule the Federal agency that is the end
user of the rayon fabric for rocket
booster nozzle production (e.g., the DOD
or NASA) will need to conduct a final
pre-launch test of rocket boosters
without using TCE; this test is further
discussed in Unit VI.A.1.a. of the 2023
TCE proposed rule. By 10 years from the
publication date of the final rule, the
phase-out will be complete and
industrial and commercial use of TCE as
a solvent for closed-loop batch vapor
degreasing, including for rayon fabric
scouring for end use in rocket booster
nozzle production by Federal agencies
and their contractors, is prohibited. As
part of this phase-out, EPA is requiring
a TCE WCPP, described in Unit IV.C.,
within 180 days after publication of the
final rule, as workplace protections
during the period of the phase-out until
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the full prohibition takes effect.
Additionally, this phase-out will
include recordkeeping requirements
beginning 270 days after publication of
the final rule related to the rayon fabric
scouring for end use in rocket booster
nozzle production. The entity must have
records from a Federal agency
indicating that their closed-loop batch
vapor degreasing with TCE is for rayon
fabric scouring for end use in rocket
booster nozzle production for a Federal
agency or a contractor. Beginning 5
years after the publication of the final
rule, to continue to use TCE for closedloop batch vapor degreasing for this
specific use, the user must have records
from a Federal agency indicating that a
final pre-launch test for the rayon fabric
scouring has been conducted with an
alternative chemical or process. As a
condition of this phase-out, entities will
be required to transition from TCE and
to switch to use of the tested alternative
if it proves to be a suitable alternative.
5. Phase-Out of Laboratory Use of TCE
in Asphalt Testing And Recovery
As discussed in more detail in Unit
III.C.3., EPA is finalizing a longer phaseout timeframe for industrial and
commercial use of TCE in laboratory
testing of asphalt. Specifically, EPA is
finalizing a phase-out of 10 years for the
industrial and commercial use of TCE in
asphalt testing and recovery, with a
prohibition on use of TCE in manual
centrifuge processes at 5 years. As part
of this phase-out, EPA is requiring a
TCE WCPP, described in Unit IV.C.,
within 180 days after publication of the
final rule, as workplace protections
during the period of the phase-out until
the full prohibition takes effect.
6. Phase-Out of Disposal of TCE to
Industrial Pre-Treatment, Industrial
Treatment, or POTWs
EPA is prohibiting the disposal of
TCE to industrial pre-treatment,
industrial treatment, or publicly owned
treatment works, i.e., wastewater that
contains TCE that is collected and/or
treated on site or transported to a third
party site, and includes the mixing of
TCE with wastewater and the discharge
of TCE-contaminated wastewater
(description of disposal for the purposes
of this rulemaking is in Units IV.C.1.d.
and IV.E.1.). TSCA section 6(a) provides
EPA the authority to prohibit or
otherwise regulate any manner or
method of disposal of a chemical
substance by its manufacturer,
processor, or any other person who uses
or disposes of the chemical substance
for commercial purposes. Facilities
generating solid waste with TCE
concentrations at or above the RCRA
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regulatory level of 0.5 mg/L using the
Toxicity Characteristic Leaching
Procedure (see 40 CFR 261.24) (or solid
waste that is otherwise hazardous under
RCRA Subtitle C) will need to manage
the waste in compliance with all
applicable RCRA requirements. This
includes a ban on dilution as a
substitute for adequate treatment (40
CFR 268.3).
The compliance date for the
prohibition described in this unit will
be September 15, 2025 for
manufacturers, processors, distributors,
and industrial and commercial users
disposing of TCE to industrial pretreatment, industrial treatment, or
publicly owned treatment works. EPA
has no reasonably available information
indicating that for the majority of users
the proposed compliance dates would
not be as soon as practicable and would
not provide a reasonable transition
period for converting to an alternative
disposal method.
For a small set of uses, EPA has
determined that wastewater disposal is
an essential part of the ongoing
industrial and commercial use, as
described in Units III.B.1. and III.B.2.
EPA is therefore finalizing extended
phase-outs of wastewater disposal for
certain conditions of use that have
extended compliance timeframes or an
exemption under TSCA section 6(g).
The following conditions of use will be
able to continue to dispose of TCE to
industrial pre-treatment, industrial
treatment, and POTWs: the industrial
and commercial use of TCE as a
processing aid in lithium battery
separator manufacturing will have 5
years after the publication date of the
final rule; the industrial and commercial
use of TCE as a processing aid for
specialty polymeric microporous sheet
material manufacturing will have 15
years; and the industrial and
commercial use of TCE as a processing
aid in lead-acid battery separator
manufacturing will have 20 years.
During the time these conditions of use
are continuing consistent with a TSCA
section 6(d) phase-out or 6(g)
exemption, EPA is requiring that the
industrial pre-treatment and/or
industrial treatment of wastewater
containing TCE from these conditions of
use will also be subject to the WCPP
described in Unit IV.C. This is distinct
from conditions for workplace
requirements for the time-limited
exemption under TSCA section 6(g) for
disposal of TCE to industrial pretreatment and/or industrial treatment, to
support ongoing critical processing aid
uses and to facilitate cleanup projects of
TCE-contaminated groundwater and
other wastewater generated from the
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cleanup of historical waste disposal
sites, which are described in Unit
IV.E.2. POTWs receiving TCEcontaining wastewater, regardless of
source, will be required to meet the
worker protections described in Unit
IV.E.3.
C. WCPP for Certain Conditions of Use
1. Applicability
EPA is finalizing a WCPP for those
conditions of use that will continue
temporarily for more than 1 year under
a phase-out or a TSCA section 6(g)
exemption. The final WCPP differs in
certain aspects from the WCPP as
proposed; the rationale for these
changes are discussed in Unit III.A. EPA
is finalizing the WCPP for the following
conditions of use of TCE: domestic
manufacturing; import; processing as a
reactant/intermediate; processing into
formulation, mixture or reaction
product; processing by repackaging;
recycling; industrial and commercial
use as a processing aid in process
solvent used in battery manufacture;
process solvent used in polymer fabric
spinning, fluoroelastomer manufacture
and Alcantara manufacture; extraction
solvent used in caprolactam
manufacture; precipitant used in betacyclodextrin manufacture; industrial
and commercial use as an adhesive and
sealant for essential aerospace
applications; industrial and commercial
use of in batch vapor degreasing for
land-based DoD defense systems;
industrial and commercial use in other
miscellaneous industrial and
commercial uses (laboratory use)
industrial and commercial use as a
solvent in closed-loop batch vapor
degreasing for rayon fabric scouring for
end use in rocket booster nozzle
production by Federal agencies and
their contractors; industrial and
commercial use in closed-loop or opentop batch vapor degreasing for essential
aerospace parts and narrow tubing used
for medical devices; industrial and
commercial use for vessels of the Armed
Forces and their systems; industrial and
commercial use of TCE as a solvent in
closed-loop vapor degreasing necessary
for rocket engine cleaning by Federal
agencies and their contractors; and
disposal to industrial pre-treatment,
industrial treatment, and POTWs. This
Unit provides a description of those
uses that will continue for more than 1
year under the WCPP to assist with
compliance. In some instances, the
description is of a subset of a larger
condition of use assessed in the 2020
Risk Evaluation for TCE.
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a. Manufacturing (Includes Import)
i. Domestic Manufacture
This condition of use refers to the
making or producing of a chemical
substance within the United States
(including manufacturing for export), or
the extraction of a component chemical
substance from a previously existing
chemical substance or a complex
combination of substances. For
purposes of this rule, this description
does not apply to TCE production as a
byproduct, including during the
manufacture of 1,2-dichloroethane,
which EPA intends to consider in the
risk evaluation for 1,2-dichloroethane
(Ref. 83).
ii. Import
This condition of use refers to the act
of causing a chemical substance or
mixture to arrive within the customs
territory of the United States.
b. Processing
i. Processing as a Reactant/Intermediate
This condition of use refers to
processing TCE in chemical reactions
for the manufacturing of another
chemical substance or product. Through
processing as a reactant or intermediate,
TCE serves as a feedstock in the
production of another chemical product
via a chemical reaction in which TCE is
completely consumed. For example,
TCE is processed as an intermediate in
the production of 1,1,1,2tetrafluoroethane, an HFC also known as
HFC–134a, which is used as a
refrigerant and in fluorocarbon blends
for refrigerants. This condition of use
includes reuse of TCE, including TCE
originally generated as a byproduct or
residual TCE, as a reactant.
ii. Processing: Incorporation Into a
Formulation, Mixture, or Reaction
Product
This condition of use refers to when
TCE is added to a product (or product
mixture) prior to further distribution of
the product. Such products include, but
are not limited to, solvents (for cleaning
or degreasing), adhesives and sealant
chemicals, and solvents that become
part of a product formulation or mixture
(e.g., lubricants and greases, paints and
coatings, other uses).
iii. Processing: Repackaging
This condition of use refers to the
preparation of a chemical substance for
distribution in commerce in a different
form, state, or quantity. This includes
but is not limited to transferring the
chemical from a bulk container into
smaller containers.
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iv. Processing: Recycling
This condition of use refers to the
process of managing used solvents that
are collected, either on-site or
transported to a third-party site, for
commercial purposes other than
disposal. Spent solvents can be restored
via solvent reclamation/recycling. Waste
solvents can be restored to a condition
that permits reuse via solvent
reclamation/recycling. The recovery
process may involve an initial vapor
recovery or mechanical separation step
followed by distillation, purification,
and final packaging.
c. Industrial and Commercial Use
i. Industrial and Commercial Use as a
Processing Aid in: Process Solvent Used
in Battery Manufacture; Process Solvent
Used in Polymer Fabric Spinning,
Fluoroelastomer Manufacture and
Alcantara Manufacture; Extraction
Solvent Used in Caprolactam
Manufacture; and Precipitant Used in
Beta-Cyclodextrin Manufacture
This condition of use refers to
industrial and commercial use of TCE to
improve the processing characteristics
or the operation of process equipment
when added to a process or to a
substance or mixture to be processed.
The chemical substance is not intended
to remain in or to become a part of the
reaction product nor has function in the
reaction product.
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ii. Industrial and Commercial Use as an
Adhesive and Sealant for Essential
Aerospace Applications
This condition of use refers to the
industrial and commercial use of TCE in
adhesive and sealant products, e.g., in
products to promote bonding between
other substances, promote adhesion of
surfaces, or prevent seepage of moisture
or air, for essential aerospace
applications. In particular, this includes
use of TCE as an adhesive or sealant in
aircraft pneumatic deicing boots; in
solvent bonding of plastic components,
including on Oxygen Container
Assemblies for Passenger Service Unit
products used in aircraft; and as an
adhesive or sealant for flight-critical
equipment on new and existing aircraft,
both commercial and military.
iii. Miscellaneous Industrial and
Commercial Uses: Laboratory Use
This condition of use refers to the
industrial and commercial use of TCE in
an established laboratory, for example a
laboratory program accredited by the
AIHA (e.g., AIHA LAP, LLC Policy
Module 2A/B/E of Revision 17.3), or
other analogous industry-recognized
program for chemical analysis (e.g., to
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test hot mix asphalt binder content, as
a reference standard, etc.), chemical
synthesis, extracting and purifying other
chemicals, dissolving other substances,
and similar activities.
iv. Industrial and Commercial Use as
Solvent for Closed-Loop Batch Vapor
Degreasing for Rayon Fabric Scouring
for End Use in Rocket Booster Nozzle
Production
This condition of use refers to the
process of heating TCE to its
volatilization point and using its vapor
to remove dirt, oils, greases, and other
surface contaminants (such as drawing
compounds, cutting fluids, coolants,
solder flux, and lubricants) for rayon
fabric scouring for end use in rocket
booster nozzle production by Federal
agencies and their contractors, in
closed-loop batch vapor degreasers.
v. Industrial and Commercial Use as
Solvent for Closed-Loop or Open-Top
Batch Vapor Degreasing for Essential
Aerospace Parts and for Narrow Tubing
for Medical Devices
This condition of use refers to the
process of heating TCE to its
volatilization point and using its vapor
to remove dirt, oils, greases, and other
surface contaminants (such as drawing
compounds, cutting fluids, coolants,
solder flux, and lubricants) from
essential aerospace parts and
components where alternatives present
technical feasibility or cleaning
performance challenges in meeting
Federal agency specifications or longstanding design specifications and from
narrow tubing intended for use in
medical devices (e.g., tubing where a
portion of the outside diameter is 0.625
inches or less), in open-top batch or
closed-loop batch vapor degreasers.
vi. Industrial and Commercial Use for
Vessels of the Armed Forces and Their
Systems, and in the Maintenance,
Fabrication, and Sustainment for and of
Such Vessels and Systems
This condition of use refers to the
industrial and commercial use of TCE
for vessels of the Armed Forces and
their systems, and in the maintenance,
fabrication, and sustainment for and of
such vessels and systems: as potting
compounds for naval electronic systems
and equipment; sealing compounds for
high and ultra-high vacuum systems;
bonding compounds for materials
testing and maintenance of underwater
systems and bonding of nonmetallic
materials; and cleaning agents to satisfy
cleaning requirements (which includes
degreasing using wipes, sprays, solvents
and vapor degreasing) for: materials and
components required for military
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ordnance testing; temporary resin
repairs in vessel spaces where welding
is not authorized; ensuring
polyurethane adhesion for electronic
systems and equipment repair and
installation of elastomeric materials;
various naval combat systems, radars,
sensors, equipment; fabrication and
prototyping processes to remove coolant
and other residue from machine parts;
machined part fabrications for naval
systems; installation of topside rubber
tile material aboard vessels; and vapor
degreasing required for substrate surface
preparation prior to electroplating
processes.
vii. Industrial and Commercial Use as a
Solvent for Closed-Loop Batch Vapor
Degreasing Necessary for Rocket Engine
Cleaning by Federal Agencies and Their
Contractors
This condition of use refers to the
process of heating TCE to its
volatilization point and using its vapor
to remove dirt, oils, greases, and other
surface contaminants (such as drawing
compounds, cutting fluids, coolants,
solder flux, and lubricants), for rocket
engine cleaning by Federal agencies and
their contractors. This involves cleaning
small diameter parts, such as rocket
engine nozzle coolant tubes, and
removing the fluids used for
manufacturing.
viii. Industrial and Commercial Use of
TCE for Batch Vapor Degreasing for
Land-Based DoD Defense Systems by
Federal Agencies and Their Contractors
This condition of use refers to the
process of heating TCE to its
volatilization point and using its vapor
to remove dirt, oils, greases, and other
surface contaminants (such as drawing
compounds, cutting fluids, coolants,
solder flux, and lubricants), for landbased DoD defense systems cleaning by
Federal agencies and their contractors.
d. Disposal
This condition of use generally refers
to the process of disposing of generated
waste streams that are either collected
on-site or transported to a third-party
site and typically includes both
processing for disposal as well as
distribution in commerce for disposal.
For this rule, this includes the mixing
of TCE with wastewater and the
discharge of TCE-contaminated
wastewater pursuant to a National
Pollutant Discharge Elimination System
(NPDES) permit, and specifically
includes discharge to industrial pretreatment, industrial treatment, or
publicly owned treatment works. The
evaluation of the disposal condition of
use in the 2020 Risk Evaluation for TCE
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(Ref. 1) was limited to the disposal of
TCE-containing wastewater and did not
address disposal activities not involving
TCE in wastewater. Therefore, EPA
considers disposal activities not
involving TCE in wastewater to be
outside of the scope of this rule. This
means that, for example, a facility that
generates TCE as a byproduct, isolates
the TCE from the process for the sole
purpose of disposal, and sends it off-site
for disposal to a hazardous waste
incinerator permitted under RCRA is
not covered by this final rule.
2. Overview
A WCPP encompasses inhalation
exposure thresholds, includes
monitoring and recordkeeping
requirements to verify that those
thresholds are not exceeded, and may
include other components, such as
dermal protection. Under a WCPP,
owners or operators have some
flexibility, within the parameters
outlined in this Unit, regarding how
they prevent exceedances of the
identified EPA exposure limit
thresholds. In the case of TCE, EPA has
determined that meeting the EPA
exposure limit thresholds for certain
occupational conditions of use is
necessary to protect health from
inhalation risks during phaseouts and
while exempted activities are ongoing.
Implementation of the WCPP would
have to begin by June 16, 2025 or within
30 days of introduction of TCE into the
workplace, whichever is later, at which
point entities would have to have
completed their initial monitoring (as
described in Unit IV.C.4.b.).
Additionally, EPA requires that each
owner or operator ensure that the
airborne concentration of TCE does not
exceed the interim ECEL for all
potentially exposed persons no later
than September 15, 2025, and the
implementation of any needed exposure
controls based on initial monitoring and
development of an exposure control
plan no later than September 15, 2025
(as described in Unit IV.C.6.).
EPA uses the term ‘‘potentially
exposed person’’ in this Unit and in the
regulatory text to include workers,
ONUs, employees, independent
contractors, employers, and all other
persons in the work area where TCE is
present and who may be exposed to TCE
under the conditions of use for which a
WCPP or specific prescriptive controls
would apply. As defined in 40 CFR
751.5, ‘‘Potentially exposed person
means any person who may be exposed
to a chemical substance or mixture in a
workplace as a result of a condition of
use of that chemical substance or
mixture.’’ EPA notes that this definition
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is intended to apply to occupational
workspaces as part of implementation of
the WCPP and other restrictions. One
important reason to define a potentially
exposed person for the purposes of a
WCPP as any person who may be
exposed in the workplace is to
emphasize the broad scope of exposures
which must be categorized when
implementing a WCPP. EPA notes that
this definition is intended to apply only
in the context of risk management, and
specifically in the context of a WCPP
(e.g., workers directly using the
chemical, workers in the vicinity of the
use, students in a laboratory setting).
The term is not intended as a
replacement for the term Potentially
Exposed or Susceptible Subpopulation
as defined by TSCA section 3(12). EPA
additionally recognizes that other
individuals or communities may be
exposed to TCE as consumers, members
of fenceline communities, or members
of the general population, which is
separate and apart from those
potentially exposed for the purposes of
the regulatory requirements of the
WCPP. In those instances, where
regulatory requirements address
exposures unrelated to a WCPP, EPA
would use distinct terminology to refer
to those other populations. For
conditions of use that will continue for
longer than 1 year, such as those under
a phaseout or a TSCA section 6(g)
exemption, EPA requires a
comprehensive WCPP, prescriptive
controls, or wastewater worker
protections to reduce exposures to TCE
for potentially exposed persons, e.g.,
persons directly handling the chemical
or in the area where the chemical is
being used. Similarly, the 2020 Risk
Evaluation for TCE (Ref. 1) did not
distinguish between employers,
contractors, or other legal entities or
businesses that manufacture, process,
distribute in commerce, use, or dispose
of TCE. For this reason, EPA uses the
term ‘‘owner or operator’’ to describe
the entity responsible for implementing
the WCPP, prescriptive controls, or
wastewater worker protection
provisions in any workplace where an
applicable condition of use identified in
the following paragraph and subject to
the WCPP or controls is occurring. The
term includes any person who owns,
leases, operates, controls, or supervises
such a workplace. While owners or
operators remain responsible for
ensuring compliance with the WCPP
requirements, prescriptive controls, or
wastewater worker protections in the
workplace, they may contract with
others to provide training or implement
a respiratory protection program, for
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example. For the provisions in this rule,
any requirement for an owner or
operator or an owner and operator is a
requirement for any individual that is
either an owner or an operator.
EPA emphasizes that this approach is
essential for protecting health from the
risks presented by TCE during the term
of a phaseout or exemption, including to
individuals who may not be covered by
OSHA requirements, such as volunteers,
self-employed persons, and state and
local government workers who are not
covered by an OSHA-Approved State
Plan. EPA uses the term ‘‘owner or
operator’’ in TSCA programs because
the term is used in other EPA programs
to describe persons with responsibilities
for implementing statutory and
regulatory requirements at particular
locations. See, for example, section 113
of the Clean Air Act (CAA), 42 U.S.C.
7412, which defines ‘‘owner or
operator’’ as a person who owns, leases,
operates, controls, or supervises a
stationary source. There is a similar
definition in section 306 of the Clean
Water Act (CWA), 33 U.S.C. 1316. EPA
understands that the use of this term
may result in multiple entities bearing
responsibility for complying with
provisions of this final rule, including
the WCPP. However, this is also the case
for workplaces regulated by OSHA,
including those regulated under OSHA’s
general industry standards at 29 CFR
part 1910.
OSHA’s 1999 Multi-Employer
Citation Policy explains which
employers should be cited for a hazard
that violates an OSHA standard (Ref.
84). The Policy describes four different
roles that employers may fill at a
workplace and describes who should be
cited for a violation based on factors
such as whether the employer created
the hazard, had the ability to prevent or
correct the hazard, and knew or should
have known about the hazard. More
than one employer may be cited for the
same hazard. This final rule will have
similar results, in that more than one
owner or operator may be responsible
for compliance.
The OSHA multi-employer citation
policy is an example of a guidance
governing situations where more than
one regulated entity is present. EPA has
received several requests for
clarification of the applicability of the
term ‘‘owner or operator’’ to sites where
more than one entity owns, leases, or
controls a workplace where a TCE
condition of use is ongoing and where
implementation of the WCPP is
required. EPA understands that there
are a wide variety of situations where
these questions could arise, and plans to
issue guidance consistent with TSCA
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authorities that explains how EPA will
approach the issue of responsibility for
implementation of, and compliance
with, the WCPP requirements in
practice.
EPA’s implementation of the interim
ECEL as part of a WCPP aligns with, to
the extent possible, certain elements of
the existing OSHA standards for
regulating toxic and hazardous
substances under 29 CFR part 1910,
subpart Z. However, EPA is finalizing a
new, lower occupational exposure limit
for TCE, based on the TSCA 2020 Risk
Evaluation for TCE, public comments,
and other information as discussed in
Unit III.A.1., while aligning with
existing requirements wherever
possible. For TCE, the WCPP and other
workplace controls in this final rule are
necessary to protect against health risks
from exposures to TCE while conditions
of use are being phased out or are
ongoing during the term of a TSCA
section 6(g) exemption and provide the
familiarity of a pre-existing framework
for the regulated community.
This Unit includes a summary of the
WCPP, including a description of the
finalized exposure limits including an
interim ECEL and an interim ECEL
action level; implementation
requirements including monitoring
requirements; a description of potential
exposure controls in accordance with
the hierarchy of controls, including
engineering controls, administrative
controls, and PPE as it relates to dermal
protection and respirator selection; and
additional finalized requirements for
recordkeeping, workplace participation,
and notification. This Unit also
describes compliance timeframes
revised from the proposed rule, changes
by EPA to certain provisions of the
WCPP based on public comments, and
addition of new provisions in the WCPP
based on public comments used to
inform this final rule.
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3. Interim Existing Chemical Exposure
Limit (ECEL), EPA Action Level
As discussed in Unit III.A.1., EPA is
finalizing an interim ECEL under TSCA
section 6(a) of 0.2 ppm as an 8-hour
TWA based on the health effects of TCE,
the infeasibility of measuring the
proposed ECEL of 0.0011 ppm, and
other factors. By interim ECEL, EPA
means an ECEL that is in place only for
the timeframes indicated for each
condition of use, after which
prohibitions would take effect. EPA has
determined that ensuring exposures
remain at or below the 8-hour TWA
ECEL of 0.2 ppm is necessary to protect
health for those conditions of use that
will continue for more than a year.
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EPA is also finalizing an interim ECEL
action level at half of the 8-hour interim
ECEL, or 0.1 ppm as an 8-hour TWA.
The interim ECEL action level is a
definitive cut-off point below which
certain compliance activities, such as
periodic monitoring, are not required as
described further in this Unit. In this
way, EPA’s WCPP for TCE aligns with
other familiar chemical-specific
frameworks in the OSHA standards for
regulating toxic and hazardous
substances under 29 CFR part 1910,
subpart Z that establish an action level.
As explained by OSHA, the decision to
set the action level at one-half the PEL
was based on its successful experience
using this fraction as the action level in
many standards (e.g., arsenic, ethylene
oxide, vinyl chloride and benzene); for
most workplaces, the agency found that
variability in employee exposures is
normally such that an action level set at
one-half the TWA PEL is appropriate
(Ref. 85).
In summary, this final rule requires
owners or operators to ensure the
airborne concentration of TCE within
the personal breathing zone of
potentially exposed persons remains at
or below 0.2 ppm as an 8-hour TWA
ECEL after September 15, 2025, or
beginning 120 days after introduction of
TCE into the workplace if TCE use
commences after June 16, 2025. EPA is
also finalizing an action level of 0.1
ppm as an 8-hour TWA. For the
purposes of this rulemaking, EPA will
interpret personal breathing zone
consistent with how OSHA defines it, as
a hemispheric area forward of the
shoulders within a six-to-nine-inch
radius of a worker’s nose and mouth
and requires that exposure monitoring
air samples be collected from within
this space (Ref. 86). EPA is finalizing the
interim ECEL for most of those
occupational conditions of use that will
continue for more than a year to ensure
that no person is exposed to inhalation
of TCE in excess of these concentrations
resulting from those conditions of use
(for a small number of occupational
conditions of use, EPA is finalizing
prescriptive controls or other workplace
requirements, as described in more
detail in Units IV.D and E). As
discussed in Unit III.A.1., one of the
considerations in finalizing this interim
ECEL is the availability of sampling and
analytical methods sufficient to
accurately detect TCE concentrations at
the proposed ECEL and ECEL action
level. OSHA, NIOSH, and EPA sampling
methods (both active and passive) with
sufficient limits of quantification are
available to support WCPP
implementation (Ref. 87).
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4. Monitoring Requirements
a. In General
Initial monitoring for TCE is critical
for establishing a baseline of exposure
for potentially exposed persons;
similarly, periodic exposure monitoring
assures continued compliance over time
so that potentially exposed persons are
not exposed to levels above the interim
ECEL. Exposure monitoring could be
suspended if certain conditions
described in this Unit are met. Also, in
some cases, a change in workplace
conditions with the potential to impact
exposure levels would warrant
additional monitoring, which is also
described.
EPA is finalizing with modifications
from proposal its requirement that
owners or operators determine each
potentially exposed person’s exposure
by either taking a personal breathing
zone air sample of each potentially
exposed person’s exposure or by taking
personal breathing zone air samples that
are representative of each potentially
exposed person with a similar exposure
profile to a chemical substance or
mixture based on the substantial
similarity of tasks performed, the
manner in which the tasks are
performed, and the materials and
processes with which they work
(hereinafter identified as an ‘‘exposure
group’’). Personal breathing zone air
samples are representative of the 8-hour
TWA of all potentially exposed persons
in an exposure group if the samples are
of the full shift-exposure of at least one
person who represents the highest
potential TCE exposures in that
exposure group. In addition, the initial
monitoring will be required when and
where the operating conditions are best
representative of each potentially
exposed person’s work-shift exposures.
Personal breathing zone air samples
taken during one work shift may be
used to represent potentially exposed
person exposures on other work shifts
where the owner or operator can
document that the tasks performed and
conditions in the workplace are similar
across shifts. Additionally, air sampling
is required to measure ambient
concentrations for TCE without taking
respiratory protections into account as
sampling is being performed. For
purposes of exposure monitoring
requirements, owners and operators are
only required to monitor potentially
exposed persons that are expected to be
present in the workplace.
EPA is also finalizing requirements
that the owner or operator ensure, for
initial and periodic monitoring, that
their exposure monitoring methods are
accurate to a confidence level of 95%
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and are within (plus or minus) 25% of
airborne concentrations of TCE above
the 8-hour TWA interim ECEL. To
ensure compliance for monitoring
activities, EPA is finalizing
recordkeeping requirements and will
require that owners or operators
document their choice of monitoring
method outlined in this Unit. As
described in Unit III.A.3., EPA is
finalizing the requirement that owners
or operators meet certain documentation
requirements for each monitoring event
of TCE, including compliance with GLP
Standards in accordance with 40 CFR
part 792 or use of a laboratory
accredited by the AIHA (e.g., AIHA
LAP, LLC Policy Module 2A/B/E of
Revision 17.3), or other analogous
industry-recognized program.
Additionally, as described in Unit
III.A.3., EPA is finalizing the
requirement that owners or operators
must re-monitor within 15 working days
after receipt of any exposure monitoring
when results indicate non-detect, unless
an Environmental Professional as
defined at 40 CFR 312.10 or a Certified
Industrial Hygienist reviews the
monitoring results and determines remonitoring is not necessary.
For each monitoring event of TCE,
EPA is requiring that the owner or
operator record relevant information,
including but not limited to, the
quantity, location(s), and manner of TCE
in use at the time of each monitoring
event; the dates, durations, and results
of each sample taken; and the name,
work shift, job classification, work area,
and type of respiratory protection (if
any) worn by each monitored person.
EPA further requires documentation of
the following whenever monitoring for
the WCPP is required:
(i) All measurements that may be
necessary to determine the conditions
(e.g., work site temperatures, humidity,
ventilation rates, monitoring equipment
type and calibration dates) that may
affect the monitoring results;
(ii) Identification of all other
potentially exposed persons that a
monitored person is intended to
represent if using a representative
sample;
(iii) Use of appropriate sampling and
analytical methods;
(iv) Compliance with the GLP
Standards at 40 CFR part 792 or any
accredited lab including AIHA (e.g.,
AIHA LAP, LLC Policy Module 2A/B/E
of Revision 17.3), or other analogous
industry-recognized program;
(v) Information regarding air
monitoring equipment, including type,
maintenance, calibrations, performance
tests, limits of detection, and any
malfunctions.
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b. Initial Exposure Monitoring
Under the final rule, each owner or
operator of a facility engaged in one or
more of the conditions of use listed
earlier in Unit IV.C.1., except disposal,
is required to perform initial exposure
monitoring by June 16, 2025 or within
30 days of introduction of TCE into the
workplace, whichever is later, to
determine the extent of exposure of
potentially exposed persons to TCE.
Initial monitoring will notify owners
and operators of the magnitude of
possible exposures to potentially
exposed persons with respect to their
work conditions and environments.
Based on the magnitude of possible
exposures in the initial exposure
monitoring, the owner or operator may
need to increase or decrease the
frequency of future periodic monitoring,
adopt new exposure controls (such as
engineering controls, administrative
controls, and/or a respiratory protection
program), or to continue or discontinue
certain compliance activities such as
periodic monitoring. In addition, the
initial monitoring will be required when
and where the operating conditions are
best representative of each potentially
exposed person’s work-shift exposures.
If the owner or operator chooses to use
a sample that is representative of
potentially exposed persons’ work-shift
exposures (rather than monitor every
individual), such sampling should be
representative (i.e., taken from the
breathing zone of potentially exposed
persons and reflect duration appropriate
exposure) of the most highly exposed
persons in the workplace. Additionally,
EPA expects that owners and operators
will conduct initial exposure
monitoring representative of all tasks
that potential exposed persons are
expected to do. EPA understands that
certain tasks may occur less frequently
or may reflect accidental exposures (for
example, due to malfunction).
EPA also recognizes that some entities
may already have objective exposure
monitoring data. If the owner or
operator has monitoring data conducted
within five years prior to the
publication date of the final rule and the
monitoring satisfies all other
requirements in Unit IV., including the
requirement that the data represents the
highest TCE exposures likely to occur
under reasonably foreseeable conditions
of use, the owner or operator may rely
on such earlier monitoring results for
the initial baseline monitoring sample.
Prior monitoring data cannot be used
where there has been a change in work
conditions or practices that is expected
to result in new or additional exposures.
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As described in more detail later in
this unit, the owner or operator must
conduct periodic monitoring at least
once every five years since its last
monitoring. This periodic monitoring
must be representative of all the
potentially exposed persons in the
workplace and the tasks that they are
expected to do.
c. Periodic Exposure Monitoring
EPA is finalizing as proposed the
following periodic monitoring for
owners or operators. These finalized
requirements are also outlined in Table
1.
• If the samples taken during the
initial exposure monitoring reveal a
concentration below the interim ECEL
action level (<0.1 ppm 8-hour TWA),
ECEL periodic monitoring is required at
least once every five years, except when
additional exposure monitoring (Unit
IV.C.4.d.) measurements require it.
• If the most recent exposure
monitoring concentration is at or above
the interim ECEL action level (≥0.1 ppm
8-hour TWA) but at or below the interim
ECEL (≤0.2 ppm 8-hour TWA), the
owner or operator must repeat the
periodic exposure monitoring within
180 days of the most recent exposure
monitoring.
• If the most recent exposure
monitoring concentration is above the
interim ECEL (>0.2 ppm 8-hour TWA),
the owner or operator must repeat the
periodic exposure monitoring within 90
days of the most recent exposure
monitoring.
• If the most recent (non-initial)
exposure monitoring indicates that
airborne exposure is below the interim
ECEL action level, the owners or
operators must repeat such monitoring
within 180 days of the most recent
monitoring until two consecutive
monitoring measurements, taken at least
seven days apart, are below the interim
ECEL action level (<0.1 ppm 8-hour
TWA), at which time the owner or
operator must repeat the periodic
exposure monitoring at least once every
five years.
• In instances where an owner or
operator does not manufacture, process,
use, or dispose of TCE for a condition
of use for which the WCPP is required
over the entirety of time since the last
required periodic monitoring event, the
owner or operator is permitted to forgo
the next periodic monitoring event.
However, documentation of cessation of
use of TCE is required and periodic
monitoring must resume when the
owner or operator restart any of the
conditions of use listed in Unit IV.C.1.,
except disposal.
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TABLE 1—PERIODIC MONITORING REQUIREMENTS
Air concentration condition
Periodic monitoring requirement
If the initial exposure monitoring concentration is below the interim
ECEL action level.
If the most recent exposure monitoring concentration is at or above the
interim ECEL action level but at or below the interim ECEL.
If the most recent exposure monitoring concentration is above the interim ECEL.
If the two most recent (non-initial) exposure monitoring measurements,
taken at least seven days apart within a 6-month period, indicate that
airborne exposure is below the interim ECEL action level (<0.1 ppm
8-hr TWA).
If the owner or operator engages in a condition of use for which WCPP
is required but does not manufacture, process, use, or dispose of
TCE in that condition of use over the entirety of time since the last
required monitoring event.
Periodic exposure monitoring at least once every 5 years.
Periodic exposure monitoring is required every 180 days of the most
recent exposure monitoring.
Periodic exposure monitoring is required every 90 days of the most recent exposure monitoring.
Periodic exposure monitoring is required within five years of the most
recent exposure monitoring.
The owner or operator may forgo the next periodic monitoring event.
However, documentation of cessation of use of TCE is required and
periodic monitoring is required when the owner or operator resumes
the condition of use.
Note: Additional scenarios in which monitoring may be required are discussed in Unit IV.C.4.d.
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d. Additional Exposure Monitoring
EPA is finalizing that each owner or
operator conduct additional exposure
monitoring within 30 days after there
has been a change in the production,
process, control equipment, personnel
or work practices that may reasonably
be expected to result in new or
additional exposures at or above the
interim ECEL action level, or when the
owner or operator has any reason to
believe that new or additional exposures
at or above the interim ECEL action
level have occurred, for example if an
owner or operator receives information
from potentially exposed person(s)
suggesting that such new or additional
exposures may have occurred. Prior
monitoring data cannot be used to meet
this requirement. In the event of startup or shutdown, or spills, leaks,
ruptures or other breakdowns or
unexpected releases that may lead to
exposure to potentially exposed
persons, EPA is finalizing that each
owner or operator must conduct
additional exposure monitoring of
potentially exposed persons (using
personal breathing zone sampling)
within 30 days after the conclusion of
the start-up or shutdown and/or the
cleanup of the spill or repair of the leak,
rupture, or other breakdown. Prior
monitoring data cannot be used to meet
this requirement. An additional
exposure monitoring event may result in
an increased frequency of periodic
monitoring. For example, if the initial
monitoring results from a workplace are
above the interim ECEL action level, but
below the interim ECEL, periodic
monitoring is required every 180 days.
If additional monitoring is performed
because increased exposures are
suspected, and the results are above the
interim ECEL, subsequent periodic
monitoring would have to be performed
every 90 days. The required additional
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exposure monitoring should not delay
implementation of any necessary
cleanup or other remedial action to
reduce the exposures to persons in the
workplace.
5. Regulated Area
EPA is finalizing its requirement that
the owner or operator demarcate any
area where airborne concentrations of
TCE exceeds or are reasonably expected
to exceed the interim ECEL by
September 15, 2025, or within 90 days
after receipt of any exposure monitoring
that indicates exposures exceeding the
interim ECEL. To provide more clarity
regarding how regulated areas must be
demarcated, EPA has incorporated the
language analogous to OSHA’s regulated
area requirements under the standards
for toxic and hazardous substances (29
CFR part 1910, subpart Z) into this final
rule. Owners and operators must
demarcate regulated areas from the rest
of the workplace in any manner that
adequately establishes and alerts
potentially exposed persons to the
boundaries of the area and minimizes
the number of authorized persons
exposed to TCE within the regulated
area. This can be accomplished using
administrative controls (e.g., highly
visible signifiers) in multiple languages
as appropriate (e.g., whenever
potentially exposed persons who are
primarily Spanish-speaking are likely to
be present, owners and operators should
post additional highly visible signifiers
in Spanish), placed in conspicuous
areas. The owner or operator is required
to restrict access to the regulated area
from any potentially exposed person
who lacks proper training or is
otherwise unauthorized to enter.
6. Exposure Control Plan
EPA is finalizing its requirement that
owners or operators implementing the
WCPP use feasible exposure controls,
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including one or a combination of
elimination, substitution, engineering
controls, and administrative controls,
prior to requiring the use of PPE (i.e.,
respirators or gloves) as a means of
controlling exposures below EPA’s
interim ECEL and/or prevent direct
dermal contact with TCE for all
potentially exposed persons, in
accordance with the hierarchy of
controls (Ref. 88). As this rule finalizes
phaseout or time-limited exemption
before prohibition, EPA encourages
owners and operators to thoroughly
investigate and implement elimination,
substitution, and available engineering
controls during the phase-out. If an
owner or operator chooses to replace
TCE with a substitute, EPA recommends
careful review of the available hazard
and exposure information on the
potential substitutes to avoid a
substitute chemical that might later be
found to present an unreasonable risk of
injury to health or the environment or
be subject to regulation (sometimes
referred to as a ‘‘regrettable
substitution’’). EPA expects that, for
conditions of use for which EPA is
finalizing a WCPP, compliance at most
workplaces would be part of an
established industrial hygiene program
that aligns with the hierarchy of
controls.
EPA is finalizing the requirement that
regulated entities use the hierarchy of
controls, instituting one or a
combination of controls to the extent
feasible, and supplement such
protections using PPE, where necessary,
including respirators for potentially
exposed persons at risk of inhalation
exposure above the interim ECEL. If
efforts of elimination, substitution,
engineering controls, and administrative
controls are not sufficient to reduce
exposures to or below the interim ECEL
for all potentially exposed persons in
the workplace, EPA requires that the
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owner or operator use feasible controls
to reduce TCE concentrations in the
workplace to the lowest levels
achievable and supplement these
controls with respiratory protection and
PPE as needed to achieve the interim
ECEL before potentially exposed
persons enter a regulated area. During
the phase-out period, EPA encourages
investment in elimination and
substitution along with the use of
readily available engineering controls.
In cases where respiratory PPE is
necessary to supplement feasible
controls, EPA requires that the owner or
operator provide potentially exposed
persons reasonably likely to be exposed
to TCE by inhalation to concentrations
above the interim ECEL with respirators
affording sufficient protection against
inhalation risk and appropriate training
on the proper use of such respirators, to
ensure that their exposures do not
exceed the interim ECEL, as described
in this Unit. Furthermore, EPA also
requires that the owner or operator
document their efforts in using
elimination, substitution, engineering
controls, and administrative controls to
reduce exposure to or below the interim
ECEL in an exposure control plan.
EPA is finalizing its requirement that,
no later than December 18, 2025, the
owner or operator include and
document in the exposure control plan
or through any existing documentation
of the facility’s safety and health
program developed as part of meeting
OSHA requirements or other safety and
health standards, the following:
• Identification in the exposure
control plan of available exposure
controls and rationale for using or not
using available exposure controls in the
following sequence (i.e., elimination
and substitution, then engineering
controls and administrative controls) to
reduce exposures in the workplace to
either at or below the interim ECEL or
to the lowest level achievable, and the
exposure controls selected based on
feasibility, effectiveness, and other
relevant considerations;
• For each exposure control
considered, exposure controls selected
based on feasibility, effectiveness, and
other relevant considerations;
• A description of actions the owner
or operator must take to implement
exposure controls selected, including
proper installation, regular inspections,
maintenance, training, or other steps
taken;
• A description of each regulated
area, how they are demarcated, and
persons authorized to enter the
regulated areas;
• A description of activities
conducted by the owner or operator to
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review and update the exposure control
plan to ensure effectiveness of the
exposure controls, identify any
necessary updates to the exposure
controls, and confirm that all persons
are properly implementing the exposure
controls; and
• An explanation of the procedures
for responding to any change that may
reasonably be expected to introduce
additional sources of exposure to TCE,
or otherwise result in increased
exposure to TCE, including procedures
for implementing corrective actions to
mitigate exposure to TCE.
Under this final rule, owners or
operators are prohibited from using
rotating work schedules to comply with
the interim ECEL 8-hour TWA, in
alignment with certain elements of
existing OSHA’s standards for toxic and
hazardous substances under 29 CFR part
1910, subpart Z. Owners or operators
must maintain the effectiveness of any
engineering controls, administrative
controls, or work practices instituted as
part of the exposure control plan. They
must also review and update the
exposure control plan as necessary, but
at least every five years, to reflect any
significant changes in the status of the
owner or operator’s approach to
compliance with the exposure control
requirements. EPA intends that the
exposure control plan identify the
available exposure controls and, for the
exposure controls not selected,
document the efforts identifying why
these are not feasible, not effective, or
otherwise not implemented. For entities
for which significant amounts of time
are needed to verify suitability of
alternatives or procure funds or
authorization for additional engineering
controls, for example, EPA expects that
as those controls become available the
exposure control plan would be updated
accordingly. EPA requires that the
exposure control plan be revisited under
certain conditions and encourages
updates as more sophisticated controls
are available.
This final rule requires owners or
operators to make the exposure control
plan and associated records, including
interim ECEL exposure monitoring
records, interim ECEL compliance
records, and workplace participation
records, available to potentially exposed
persons and their designated
representatives. Owners or operators
must notify potentially exposed persons
and their designated representatives of
the availability of the exposure control
plan and associated records within 30
days of the date that the exposure
control plan is completed and at least
annually thereafter. The notice of the
availability of the plan and associated
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records must be provided in plain
language writing to each potentially
exposed person in a language that the
person understands or posted in an
appropriate and accessible location
outside the regulated area with an
English-language version and a nonEnglish version representing the
language of the largest group of workers
who do not read English. This final rule
also requires the owner or operator to
provide the exposure control plan and
associated records at a reasonable time,
place, and manner to a potentially
exposed person or their designated
representative upon request. As
explained in Unit III.A.4., if the owner
or operator is unable to provide the
specified records within 15 working
days, the owner or operator must inform
the potentially exposed person or
designated representative requesting the
record within 15 working days that
reason for the delay and the earliest date
when the record can be made available.
7. Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)
Where elimination, substitution,
engineering, and administrative controls
are not feasible or sufficiently protective
to reduce the air concentration to or
below the interim ECEL, EPA is
finalizing as proposed, with slight
modifications to improve clarity or for
greater consistency with OSHA’s
regulations, to require owners and
operators to provide PPE, including
respiratory protection and dermal
protection selected in accordance with
the guidelines described in Units
IV.C.7.a. and b. and to implement a PPE
program described in this Unit. This
Unit includes a description of the PPE
Program, including required PPE as it
relates to respiratory protection,
required PPE as it relates to dermal
protection, and other requirements such
as additional training for respirators and
recordkeeping to support
implementation of a PPE program.
Compliance with these requirements
must occur no later than September 15,
2025, or, for requirements related to
respiratory protection, within 90 days
after the receipt of any exposure
monitoring that indicates exposures
exceeding the interim ECEL.
a. Respiratory Protection
Where elimination, substitution,
engineering, and administrative controls
are not feasible or sufficiently protective
to reduce the air concentration to or
below the interim ECEL, or if inhalation
exposure above the interim ECEL is still
reasonably likely, EPA is finalizing,
with slight modification from the
proposed rule, minimum respiratory
PPE requirements based on an owner or
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operator’s most recent measured air
concentration for one or more
potentially exposed persons and the
level of PPE needed to reduce exposure
to or below the interim ECEL. In those
circumstances, EPA is finalizing
requirements for a respiratory protection
PPE program with worksite-specific
procedures and elements for required
respirator use. Owners or operators
must develop and administer a written
respiratory protection program in
accordance with OSHA’s respiratory
protection standard under 29 CFR
1910.134(c)(1), (c)(3), and (c)(4). EPA is
finalizing requirements that owners and
operators provide training to all persons
required to use respiratory protection
consistent with 29 CFR 1910.134(k)
prior to or at the time of initial
assignment to a job involving potential
exposure to TCE. Owners and operators
must retrain all persons required to use
PPE at least annually, or whenever the
owner or operator has reason to believe
that a previously trained person does
not have the required understanding
and skill to properly use PPE, or when
changes in the workplace or in PPE to
be used render the previous training
obsolete.
EPA is finalizing requirements that
each owner or operator supply a
respirator, selected in accordance with
this Unit, to each person who enters a
regulated area after September 15, 2025,
or within 90 days after the receipt of any
exposure monitoring that indicates
exposures exceeding the interim ECEL,
and thereafter must ensure that all
persons within the regulated area are
using the provided respirators whenever
TCE exposures exceed or can reasonably
be expected to exceed the interim ECEL.
EPA is also finalizing requirements
that owners or operators who are
required to administer a respiratory
protection PPE program must supply a
respirator selected based on a medical
evaluation consistent with the
requirements of 29 CFR 1910.134(e). If
a potentially exposed person cannot use
a negative-pressure respirator, then the
owner or operator must provide that
person with an alternative respirator.
The alternative respirator must have less
breathing resistance than the negativepressure respirator and provide
equivalent or greater protection. If the
person is unable to use an alternative
respirator, then the person must not be
permitted to enter the regulated area.
Additionally, EPA is requiring owners
and operators to select respiratory
protection that properly fits each
affected person and communicate
respirator selections to each affected
person in accordance with the
requirements of 29 CFR 1910.134(f).
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Consistent with requirements of 29 CFR
1910.134(g) through (j), EPA is requiring
owners and operators to provide, ensure
use of, and maintain (in a sanitary,
reliable, and undamaged condition),
respiratory protection that is of safe
design and construction.
EPA is finalizing the requirements to
establish minimum respiratory
protection requirements, such that any
respirator affording a higher degree of
protection than the following
requirements may be used. In instances
where respiratory protection is
appropriate, NIOSH Approved®
equipment must be used. NIOSH
Approved is a certification mark of the
U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services (HHS) registered in the United
States and several international
jurisdictions. EPA is finalizing the
following requirements for respiratory
protection, based on the most recent
exposure monitoring concentrations
results measured as an 8-hour TWA that
exceed the interim ECEL (0.2 ppm):
• If the measured exposure
concentration is at or below 0.2 ppm: no
respiratory protection is required.
• If the measured exposure
concentration is above 0.2 ppm and less
than or equal to 2 ppm (10 times interim
ECEL): Any NIOSH Approved airpurifying half mask respirator equipped
with organic vapor cartridges or
canisters; or any NIOSH Approved
Supplied-Air Respirator (SAR) or
Airline Respirator operated in demand
mode equipped with a half mask; or any
NIOSH Approved Self-Contained
Breathing Apparatus (SCBA) in a
demand mode equipped with a half
mask [APF 10].
• If the measured exposure
concentration is above 2 ppm and less
than or equal to 5 ppm (25 times interim
ECEL): Any NIOSH Approved Powered
Air-Purifying Respirator (PAPR)
equipped with a loose-fitting facepiece
or hood/helmet equipped with organic
vapor cartridges or canisters; or any
NIOSH Approved SAR or Airline
Respirator in a continuous-flow mode
equipped with a loose-fitting facepiece
or helmet/hood [APF 25].
• If the measured exposure
concentration is above 5 ppm and less
than or equal to 10 ppm (50 times
interim ECEL): Any NIOSH Approved
air-purifying full facepiece respirator
equipped with organic vapor cartridges
or canisters; any NIOSH Approved
PAPR with a half mask equipped with
organic vapor cartridges or canisters;
any NIOSH Approved SAR or Airline
Respirator in a continuous flow mode
equipped with a half mask; any NIOSH
Approved SAR or Airline Respirator
operated in a pressure-demand or other
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positive-pressure mode with a half
mask; or any NIOSH Approved SCBA in
demand-mode equipped with a full
facepiece or helmet/hood [APF 50].
• If the measured exposure
concentration is above 10 ppm and less
than or equal to 200 ppm (1,000 times
interim ECEL): Any NIOSH Approved
PAPR equipped with a full facepiece
equipped with organic vapor cartridges
or canisters; any NIOSH Approved SAR
or Airline Respirator in a continuousflow mode equipped with full facepiece;
any NIOSH Approved SAR or Airline
Respirator in pressure-demand or other
positive-pressure mode equipped with a
full facepiece and an auxiliary selfcontained air supply; or any NIOSH
Approved SAR or Airline Respirator in
a continuous-flow mode equipped with
a helmet or hood and has been tested to
demonstrate performance at a level of
protection of APF 1,000 or greater. [APF
1,000].
• If the measured exposure
concentration is greater than 200 ppm
(1,000+ times interim ECEL) or the
concentration is unknown: Any NIOSH
Approved SAR equipped with a full
facepiece and operated in a pressure
demand or other positive pressure mode
in combination with an auxiliary selfcontained breathing apparatus operated
in a pressure demand or other positive
pressure mode [APF 1000+]; or any
NIOSH Approved SCBA in a pressuredemand or other positive-pressure mode
equipped with a full facepiece or
helmet/hood [APF 10,000].
• If the exposure concentration is
unknown: Any NIOSH Approved
combination supplied air respirator
equipped with a full facepiece and
operated in pressure demand or other
positive pressure mode with an
auxiliary self-contained air supply; or
any NIOSH Approved SCBA operated in
pressure demand or other positive
pressure mode and equipped with a full
facepiece or hood/helmet [APF 1000+].
Additionally, EPA is finalizing
requirements that owners or operators
select and provide respirators in
accordance with the requirements of 29
CFR 1910.134(d)(1)(iv) and with
consideration of workplace and user
factors that affect respirator performance
and reliability. EPA is requiring that the
owner or operator must ensure that all
filters, cartridges, and canisters used in
the workplace are labeled and color
coded per NIOSH requirements and that
the label is not removed and remains
legible. Consistent with 29 CFR
1910.134(d)(3)(iii), EPA is requiring
either the use of NIOSH Approved
respirators with an end-of-life service
indicator for the contaminant, in this
case TCE, or implementation of a
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change schedule for canisters and
cartridges that ensures that they are
changed before the end of their service
life. EPA is also requiring owners and
operators to ensure that respirators are
used in compliance with the terms of
the respirator’s NIOSH approval.
EPA is finalizing requirements that
owners and operators must conduct
regular evaluations of the workplace,
including consultations with potentially
exposed persons using respiratory
protection, consistent with the
requirements of 29 CFR 1910.134(l), to
ensure that the provisions of the written
respiratory protection program
described in this Unit are being
effectively implemented.
EPA is finalizing that owners and
operators document respiratory
protection used and PPE program
implementation. EPA is finalizing
requirements that owners and operators
document in the exposure control plan
or other documentation of the facility’s
safety and health program information
relevant to the respiratory program,
including records on the name,
workplace address, work shift, job
classification, work area, and type of
respirator worn (if any) by each
potentially exposed person,
maintenance, and fit-testing, as
described in 29 CFR 1910.134(f), and
training in accordance with 29 CFR
1910.132(f) and 29 CFR 1910.134(k).
b. Dermal Protection
This final rule requires owners and
operators to provide and require the use
of chemically resistant gloves by
potentially exposed persons for tasks
where TCE is present and dermal
exposure can be expected to occur
under the conditions of use. Compliance
with this requirement must occur no
later than September 15, 2025. Owners
and operators should also consider
other glove factors, such as
compatibility of multiple chemicals
used simultaneously while wearing
TCE-resistant gloves or with glove
liners, permeation, degree of dexterity
required to perform a task, and
temperature, as identified in the Hand
Protection section of OSHA’s Personal
Protection Equipment Guidance (Ref.
89), when selecting appropriate PPE.
Owners and operators can select gloves
that have been tested in accordance
with the American Society for Testing
Material F739 ‘‘Standard Test Method
for Permeation of Liquids and Gases
through Protective Clothing Materials
under Conditions of Continuous
Contact.’’
Owners and operators must provide
dermal PPE that is of safe design and
construction for the work to be
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performed and that properly fits each
potentially exposed person who is
required to use dermal PPE. Owners and
operators must also communicate
dermal PPE selections to each affected
person and ensure that each potentially
exposed person who is required by this
unit to wear PPE uses and maintains
PPE in a sanitary, reliable, and
undamaged condition. Activity-specific
training (e.g., glove selection (type,
material), expected duration of glove
effectiveness, actions to take when glove
integrity is compromised, storage
requirements, procedure for glove
removal and disposal, chemical
hazards) must be provided in
accordance with 29 CFR 1910.132(f).
8. Additional Finalized Requirements
a. Workplace Information and Training
EPA is also finalizing its requirements
to implement a training program in
alignment with the OSHA Hazard
Communication Standard (29 CFR
1910.1200) and chemical-specific
standards, such as the OSHA General
Industry Standard for Methylene
Chloride (29 CFR 1910.1052). To ensure
that potentially exposed persons in the
workplace are informed of the hazards
associated with TCE exposure, EPA is
finalizing as proposed with slight
modification to require that owners or
operators of workplaces subject to the
WCPP institute a training and
information program by September 15,
2025 for potentially exposed persons
and assure their participation in the
program. For purposes of workplace
information and training, owners and
operators are only required to train
potentially exposed persons that are
expected to be present in the regulated
area or to directly handle TCE or handle
equipment or materials on which TCE
may present.
As part of the training requirement,
the owner or operator is required to
provide information and comprehensive
training in an understandable manner
(i.e., plain language), considering factors
such as the skills required to perform
the work activity and the existing skill
level of the staff performing the work,
and in multiple languages as
appropriate (e.g., based on languages
spoken by potentially exposed persons)
to potentially exposed persons. This
training and information must be
provided prior to or at the time of initial
assignment to a job involving potential
exposure to TCE. Owners and operators
are required to provide information and
training, as referenced in the OSHA
Hazard Communication Standard, to all
potentially exposed persons that
includes:
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• The requirements of the TCE WCPP
and how to access or obtain a copy of
the requirements of the WCPP,
including but not limited to the
exposure control plan, monitoring
requirements, and PPE program;
• The quantity, location, manner of
use, release, and storage of TCE and the
specific operations in the workplace
that could result in TCE exposure,
particularly noting where each regulated
area is located;
• Principles of safe use and handling
of TCE in the workplace, including
specific measures the owner or operator
has implemented to reduce inhalation
exposure at or below the interim ECEL
or prevent dermal contact with TCE,
such as work practices and PPE used;
• The methods and observations that
may be used to detect the presence or
release of TCE in the workplace (such as
monitoring conducted by the owner or
operator, continuous monitoring
devices, visual appearance, or odor of
TCE when being released, etc.); and
• The acute and chronic health
hazards of TCE as detailed on relevant
SDSs.
In addition to providing training at
the time of initial assignment to a job
involving potential exposure to TCE,
owners and operators subject to the TCE
WCPP are required to re-train each
potentially exposed person annually to
ensure they understand the principles of
safe use and handling of TCE in the
workplace. EPA is finalizing its
requirements that owners and update
the training as necessary whenever there
are changes in the workplace, such as
new tasks or modifications of tasks, in
particular, whenever there are changes
in the workplace that increase exposure
to TCE or where potentially exposed
persons’ exposure to TCE can
reasonably be expected to exceed the
action level or increase the potential for
direct dermal contact with TCE. To
support compliance, EPA is finalizing as
proposed that each owner or operator of
a workplace subject to the WCPP is
required to provide to the EPA, upon
request, all available materials related to
workplace information and training.
b. Workplace Participation
EPA encourages owners and operators
to consult with potentially exposed
persons and their designated
representatives on the development and
implementation of exposure control
plans and PPE/respirator programs. EPA
is finalizing the requirement that
owners and operators provide
potentially exposed persons and their
designated representatives regular
access to the exposure control plans,
exposure monitoring records, and PPE
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program implementation. To ensure
compliance with workplace
participation, EPA is finalizing its
requirement that the owner or operator
document the notice to and ability of
any potentially exposed person who
may reasonably be affected by TCE
exposure to readily access the exposure
control plans, facility exposure
monitoring records, PPE program
implementation, or any other
information relevant to TCE exposure in
the workplace.
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c. Notification of Monitoring Results
EPA is finalizing the requirement that
the owner or operator must, within 15
working days after receipt of the results
of any exposure monitoring, notify each
person whose exposures are monitored
or who is part of a monitored exposure
group and their designated
representatives in writing, in plain
language, either individually to each
potentially exposed person or by
posting the information in an
appropriate and accessible location,
such as public spaces or common areas,
for potentially exposed persons outside
of the regulated area. The notice is
required to identify the exposure
monitoring results, the interim ECEL
and interim ECEL action level,
statement of whether the monitored
airborne concentration of TCE exceeds
the interim ECEL and the interim ECEL
action level, and any corresponding
respiratory protection required. If the
interim ECEL is exceeded, the notice
must also include a description of the
actions taken by the owner or operator
to reduce inhalation exposures to or
below the interim ECEL. The notice
must also include the quantity, location,
and manner of TCE use at the time of
monitoring. The notice must also
include identified releases of TCE. The
notice must be provided in multiple
languages if necessary. Specifically,
notice must be provided in a language
that each potentially exposed person
understands, or posted in a non-English
language version representing the
language of the largest group of workers
who cannot readily comprehend or read
English).
d. Recordkeeping
For owners and operators to
demonstrate compliance with the WCPP
provisions, EPA is requiring that owners
and operators must retain compliance
records for five years (although this
requirement does not supplant any
longer recordkeeping retention time
periods such as those required under 29
CFR 1910.1020, or other applicable
regulations). EPA is requiring the owner
or operator to retain records of:
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• Exposure control plan;
• Regulated areas and authorized
personnel;
• Facility exposure monitoring
records;
• Notifications of exposure
monitoring results;
• PPE and respiratory protection used
and program implementation; and
• Information and training provided
by the owner or operator to each
potentially exposed person prior to or at
the time of initial assignment to a job
involving potential exposure to TCE.
EPA emphasizes that all records
required to be maintained can be kept
in the most administratively convenient
form: electronic record form or paper
form. The owner or operator is required
to document training or re-training of
any potentially exposed person as
necessary to ensure that, in the event of
monitoring results that indicate
exposure or possible exposures above
the interim ECEL action level, the
potentially exposed person has
demonstrated understanding of how to
use and handle TCE and how to
appropriately use required PPE.
D. Prescriptive Controls for Energized
Electrical Cleaner
In contrast to the non-prescriptive
requirements of the WCPP, where
regulated entities would have flexibility
to select controls in accordance with the
hierarchy of controls to comply with the
parameters outlined in Unit IV.C., EPA
has found it appropriate for certain
activities in certain circumstances to
allow owners and operators the choice
of either complying with the WCPP or
require complying with specific
prescriptive controls for certain
occupational conditions of use. EPA is
finalizing specific prescriptive controls
for the industrial and commercial use of
TCE in energized electrical cleaner. The
rationale for these changes, after
consideration of public comments, is in
Unit III.C.1. This Unit provides a
description of the condition of use
subject to specific prescriptive controls,
the specific prescriptive control
requirements, and the compliance
timeframes for the requirements.
Considering the time needed to
transition away from this use of TCE, to
protect health from inhalation and
dermal exposures to TCE from the
industrial and commercial use of TCEcontaining energized electrical cleaners,
which is a sub-use of the industrial and
commercial use as an aerosol spray
degreaser/cleaner, EPA is requiring
owners and operators to comply with
either (i) specific prescriptive controls
outlined in this Unit, including dermal
PPE and respiratory protection, or (ii)
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implementation of the WCPP outlined
in Unit IV.C. As described in Unit
III.C.1., EPA’s workplace requirements
to reduce exposures to TCE in the
timeframe before prohibitions for
energized electrical cleaner are
consistent to the extent possible with
existing regulations and best practices
for work in electrical spaces. EPA
acknowledges the existing OSHA
requirements for electrical protective
equipment under 29 CFR 1910.137 and
determined the requirements in this
Unit do not interfere with a potentially
exposed person’s ability to safely use
electrical protective equipment, such as
rubber insulating gloves and rubber
insulating sleeves, as required under
OSHA.
1. Applicability
The industrial and commercial use of
TCE in energized electrical cleaner
refers to the use of TCE in a product to
clean and/or degrease electrical
equipment, where cleaning and/or
degreasing is accomplished when
electrical current exists, or when there
is a residual electrical potential from a
component, such as a capacitor (i.e.,
energized equipment use only). In this
final rule, energized electrical cleaner
does not include general purpose
degreaser, electrical cleaner, or
electronic cleaner, for example for use
in motorized vehicle maintenance and
their parts, which is subject to the
prohibitions described in Unit IV.B.1.
2. Workplace Requirements for
Energized Electrical Cleaner
EPA is requiring that owners or
operators must either implement (i)
specific prescriptive controls that
provide dermal PPE and respiratory
protection or (ii) implement the WCPP
for industrial and commercial use in
energized electrical cleaner. Owners and
operators must maintain a statement
regarding whether the business is
complying with the specified
prescriptive controls or with the WCPP.
a. Prescriptive Controls
i. Dermal Protection
This rule requires dermal PPE,
including impermeable gloves, in
combination with comprehensive
training for each potentially exposed
person who uses TCE in energized
electrical cleaner. For dermal PPE, EPA
is requiring that each owner or operator
comply with the requirements outlined
in Unit IV.C.7.b. for selection of dermal
PPE and training for all potentially
exposed persons.
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ii. Respiratory Protection
This final rule requires the use of
specific respiratory protection, in
combination with comprehensive
training, for use of energized electrical
cleaner containing TCE. Specifically,
EPA is requiring owners or operators to
provide to potentially exposed persons,
and potentially exposed persons to use,
the following: any NIOSH Approved airpurifying full facepiece respirator
equipped with organic vapor cartridges
or canisters; any NIOSH Approved
PAPR with a half mask equipped with
organic vapor cartridges or canisters;
any NIOSH Approved SAR or Airline
Respirator in a continuous flow mode
equipped with a half mask; any NIOSH
Approved SAR or Airline Respirator
operated in a pressure-demand or other
positive-pressure mode with a half
mask; or any NIOSH Approved SCBA in
demand-mode equipped with a full
facepiece or helmet/hood [APF 50]; or
any NIOSH Approved respirator
affording a higher degree of protection.
In providing the specified respirators
and training, EPA is requiring owners or
operators to administer a PPE program
with procedures and elements for
required respirator use as described in
Unit IV.C.7.a., for proper use,
maintenance, fit-testing, medical
evaluation, and training. EPA is
requiring that the owner or operator
must ensure that all filters, cartridges,
and canisters used in the workplace are
labeled and color coded per NIOSH
requirements and that the label is not
removed and remains legible.
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b. WCPP
EPA understands that there may be
instances where a performance-based
standard is more appropriate to reduce
exposures from the industrial and
commercial use of TCE in energized
electrical cleaner, instead of the specific
prescriptive dermal and respiratory
protection requirements described in
this Unit. For example, the WCPP may
be preferred by owners or operators that
regularly use TCE to clean energized
electrical equipment onsite at their
facility or by owners or operators that
are implementing the WCPP at their
facility for another condition of use of
TCE. In these instances, the final rule
permits owners or operators to comply
with the WCPP requirements, including
the interim ECEL, direct dermal contact
controls, and ancillary provisions,
outlined in Unit IV.B, instead of the
prescriptive controls described in this
Unit.
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c. Recordkeeping
Owners and operators subject to the
energized electrical cleaner
requirements must maintain a statement
regarding whether the owner or operator
is complying with the prescriptive
control requirements or the WCPP
requirements. They must also maintain
records of the dermal and respiratory
protection used by each potentially
exposed person and of PPE program
implementation or the WCPP records
described in Unit IV.C.8.d.
Distributors of TCE, including TCE
containing products, for use in
energized electrical cleaner must retain
sale records, including the name of the
purchaser, sale date, and quantity sold.
E. Wastewater Worker Protection
Provisions
1. Applicability
The disposal of TCE to wastewater
refers to the disposal of TCE to
industrial pre-treatment, industrial
treatment, or publicly owned treatment
works, which includes the mixing of
TCE with wastewater and the discharge
of TCE-contaminated wastewater
pursuant to a NPDES permit. EPA is
finalizing distinct workplace protection
provisions, separate from the WCPP
described in Unit IV.C., for owners and
operators of facilities or sites involved
in the industrial treatment and pretreatment of TCE wastewater at cleanup
sites, that fall under the 50-year TSCA
section 6(g) exemption for disposal of
TCE for the purposes of facilitating
cleanup projects of TCE-contaminated
groundwater and other wastewater. EPA
is also finalizing distinct workplace
protection provisions for owners and
operators of publicly owned treatment
works who receive wastewater
associated with TCE disposal for:
industrial and commercial use as a
processing aid for lithium battery
separator manufacturing, industrial and
commercial use of TCE as a processing
aid for lead-acid battery separator
manufacturing, industrial and
commercial use of TCE as a processing
aid for specialty polymeric microporous
sheet material manufacturing, and
facilitating cleanup projects of TCEcontaminated groundwater and other
wastewater. Owners and operators of
facilities or sites involved in the
industrial treatment and pre-treatment
sub-categories of TCE wastewater
disposal for industrial and commercial
conditions of use are not included
within these distinct wastewater
provisions and are subject to the WCPP
described in Unit IV.C. For the purposes
of this rulemaking, EPA does not
consider wastewater to be a product that
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is eligible for the regulatory threshold
discussed in Units III.D.1 and IV.A. As
discussed in Unit III.D.1., EPA finds that
a regulatory threshold is necessary to
avoid impacts on numerous supply
chains, particularly chlorinated organic
products. These considerations are not
applicable to wastewater disposal.
2. Workplace Requirements for
Facilitating Cleanup Projects of TCEContaminated Groundwater and Other
Wastewater
This final rule requires that owners
and operators of facilities or sites
involved in disposal of TCE-containing
wastewater for the purposes of cleanup
projects of TCE-contaminated water and
groundwater follow the requirements set
forth in 29 CFR 1910.120(c)(5) and (h),
known as the Hazardous Waste
Operations and Emergency Response
standard, with notable modifications:
this rule requires that, for those
provisions in 29 CFR 1910.120 that
reference a PEL, owners and operators
will instead comply with the TSCA
interim ECEL of 0.2ppm. As explained
in Unit III.A.2., owners and operators of
these cleanup sites must ensure that
potentially exposed persons involved
with the activity of removing the
wastewater from the location where it
was found and treating the removed
wastewater on-site are protected to the
interim ECEL level of 0.2 ppm and
protected from dermal contact with
TCE-containing wastewater.
3. Workplace Requirements for Workers
at Publicly Owned Treatment Works
To protect workers and facilitate
successful implementation, EPA is
finalizing the requirement that POTWs
must either (i) implement the WCPP or
(ii) where there is a reasonable
possibility of the presence of TCE screen
the wastewater they receive, in a
manner consistent with the approach
outlined in EPA’s 1992 ‘‘Guidance to
Protect POTW Workers from Toxic and
Reactive Gases and Vapors’’ (Ref. 52).
Owners and operators must compare the
concentration of TCE in wastewater to a
screening level that EPA calculated as
described in section III.A.2. EPA is
finalizing a provision that if the
wastewater concentration is equal to or
less than 0.00284 mg/L of TCE, the
POTW where there is a reasonable
possibility of the presence of TCE can
assume that the concentration of TCE in
air that results from TCE volatilization
from wastewater is equal to or less than
the interim ECEL. If a POTW’s
wastewater screening detects TCE at
concentration greater than 0.00284 mg/
L of TCE then EPA is requiring that
owners and operators comply with the
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WCPP, as described in Unit IV.C.,
except that owners and operators do not
have to perform initial air monitoring.
F. Other Requirements
1. Recordkeeping
EPA is finalizing as proposed the
requirement that manufacturers,
processors, industrial and commercial
users, and distributors maintain
ordinary business records, such as
invoices and bills-of-lading, that
demonstrate compliance with
restrictions and other provisions of this
final regulation; and that they maintain
such records for a period of five years
from the date the record is generated.
This requirement begins on February 18,
2025. For enforcement purposes, EPA
will have access to such businesses
records plus additional records required
under 40 CFR 751.323. Recordkeeping
requirements ensure that owners or
operators can demonstrate compliance
with the regulations if necessary.
2. Downstream Notification
EPA is finalizing as proposed the
requirements that manufacturers
(including importers), processors, and
distributors of TCE and TCE-containing
products provide downstream
notification of certain prohibitions
through SDSs by adding the language
set forth in § 751.321(c) to sections 1(c)
and 15 of the SDS. To provide adequate
time to update the SDS and ensure that
all products in the supply chain include
the revised SDS, EPA’s final rule
requires manufacturers revise their SDS
within 60 days of publication and
processors and distributors revise their
SDS within 180 days of publication of
the final rule.
The intention of downstream
notification is to spread awareness
throughout the supply chain of the
restrictions on TCE under TSCA and to
provide information to commercial endusers about the timeframes for use until
prohibition.
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G. TSCA Section 6(g) Exemptions
Under TSCA section 6(g)(1), EPA may
grant an exemption from a requirement
of a TSCA section 6(a) rule for a specific
condition of use of a chemical substance
or mixture if the Agency makes one of
three findings. TSCA section 6(g)(1)(A)
permits such an exemption if the
specific condition of use is a critical or
essential use for which no technically
and economically feasible safer
alternative is available. Under TSCA
section 6(g)(1)(B), EPA must find that
compliance with the requirement would
significantly disrupt the national
economy, national security, or critical
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infrastructure to provide an exemption.
Finally, TSCA section 6(g)(1)(C) allows
for an exemption based on an EPA
finding that the specific condition of use
of the chemical substance or mixture, as
compared to reasonably available
alternatives, provides a substantial
benefit to health, the environment, or
public safety. This unit presents the
TSCA section 6(g) exemptions EPA is
finalizing in this rule. See Units V.A.3.
and V.B.3. of the 2023 TCE proposed
rule for an analysis of the need for such
exemptions pursuant to TSCA section
6(g)(2). EPA notes that EPA is able to
extend or modify TSCA section 6(g)
exemptions by rulemaking as
appropriate but is unable to incorporate
automatic extensions to TSCA section
6(g) exemptions. Given the nature of
Agency rulemaking, EPA notes that
such requests to extend or modify a
TSCA section 6(g) exemption be
submitted to EPA several years in
advance of the expiration of the
exemption.
Unless otherwise specified, for each
condition of use subject to a timelimited TSCA section 6(g) exemption in
this final rule, EPA is requiring owners
and operators of the location where
such use occurs to comply with the
WCPP provisions described in Unit
IV.C. and the recordkeeping provisions
described in Unit IV.F. Additionally, for
each condition of use subject to a timelimited TSCA section 6(g) exemption,
EPA is requiring manufacturers
(including importers) and processors of
TCE for such use to comply with the
WCPP provisions described in Unit
IV.C. until the prohibition compliance
date. The prohibition compliance date
for the manufacture (including import),
processing, and distribution in
commerce for each condition of use
subject to a time-limited TSCA section
6(g) exemption, except for disposal, is
the same as the expiration date of the
exemption for that use.
1. 7-Year Exemption for Industrial and
Commercial Use of TCE in Closed-Loop
and Open-Top Batch Vapor Degreasing
for Essential Aerospace Parts and
Components and Narrow Tubing Used
in Medical Devices
EPA is finalizing a seven-year TSCA
section 6(g)(1)(B) exemption from the
prohibition for the industrial and
commercial use of TCE in batch vapor
degreasing for essential aerospace parts
and components and a seven-year TSCA
section 6(g)(1)(A) exemption from the
prohibition for the industrial and
commercial use of TCE in batch vapor
degreasing for narrow tubing used in
medical devices. As described in Unit
V.B.3. in the proposed rule, EPA’s
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primary alternative regulatory action
described 7-year TSCA section 6(g)
exemptions from prohibition for
industrial and commercial use of TCE in
batch vapor degreasing for essential
aerospace parts and components and
narrow tubing used in medical devices.
EPA is finalizing these exemptions. The
specific condition for these exemptions
is that TCE can only be used for batch
vapor degreasing of: (1) essential
aerospace parts and components
(including rayon fabric) where cleaning
alternatives present technical feasibility
or performance challenges to meet
specifications from other Federal
agencies or other long-standing design
specifications that are included in
existing contracts, or (2) narrow tubing
for medical devices.
2. 7-Year Exemption for Industrial and
Commercial Use of TCE as a Solvent in
Closed-Loop Batch Vapor Degreasing
Necessary for Rocket Engine Cleaning
by Federal Agencies and Their
Contractors
EPA is finalizing as proposed a 7-year
TSCA section 6(g)(1)(B) exemption from
the prohibition on the industrial and
commercial use of TCE as a solvent in
closed-loop vapor degreasing necessary
for rocket engine cleaning by Federal
agencies and their contractors, and the
manufacture (including import),
processing, and distribution in
commerce of TCE for this use.
3. 10-Year Exemption for TCE for
Certain Industrial and Commercial Uses
for Vessels of the Armed Forces and
Their Systems
EPA is finalizing a 10-year TSCA
section 6(g)(1)(B) exemption from the
prohibition on industrial and
commercial use of TCE for the industrial
and commercial use of TCE for vessels
of the Armed Forces and their systems,
and in the maintenance, fabrication, and
sustainment for and of such vessels and
systems: as potting compounds for naval
electronic systems and equipment;
sealing compounds for high and ultrahigh vacuum systems; bonding
compounds for materials testing and
maintenance of underwater systems and
bonding of nonmetallic materials; and
cleaning agents to satisfy cleaning
requirements (which includes
degreasing using wipes, sprays,
solvents, and vapor degreasing) for:
materials and components required for
military ordinance testing; temporary
resin repairs in vessel spaces where
welding is not authorized; ensuring
polyurethane adhesion for electronic
systems and equipment repair and
installation of elastomeric materials;
various naval combat systems, radars,
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sensors, equipment; fabrication and
prototyping processes to remove coolant
and other residue from machine parts;
machined part fabrications for naval
systems; installation of topside rubber
tile material aboard vessels; and vapor
degreasing required for substrate surface
preparation prior to electroplating
processes. EPA is finalizing this TSCA
section 6(g)(1)(B) exemption as
proposed, with the modification of the
term ‘‘DoD naval vessels’’ to ‘‘vessels of
the Armed Forces’’ to make it clear that
Coast Guard vessels are included in this
exemption because they serve similar
national security interests.
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4. 10-Year Exemption for the Emergency
Use of TCE in Furtherance of NASA’s
Mission
For the reasons discussed in Unit
V.A.3.a.vi. of the proposed rule, EPA is
finalizing as proposed a 10-year TSCA
section 6(g)(1)(A) exemption for
emergency use of TCE in furtherance of
NASA’s mission for the following
specific conditions of use:
(1) Industrial and commercial use as
solvent for open-top or closed-loop
batch vapor degreasing;
(2) Industrial and commercial use as
a solvent for cold cleaning;
(3) Industrial and commercial use as
a solvent for aerosol spray degreaser/
cleaner and mold release;
(4) Industrial and commercial use as
a lubricant and grease in tap and die
fluid;
(5) Industrial and commercial use as
a lubricant and grease in penetrating
lubricant;
(6) Industrial and commercial use as
an adhesive and sealant in solventbased adhesives and sealants;
(7) Industrial and commercial use as
a functional fluid in heat exchange
fluid;
(8) Industrial and commercial use in
corrosion inhibitors and anti-scaling
agents;
(9) Industrial and commercial use of
TCE as a processing aid; and
(10) Manufacturing (including
importing) and processing of TCE for
the industrial and commercial uses
listed in (1) through (9).
EPA is also finalizing as proposed the
inclusion of additional requirements as
part of the exemption, pursuant to
TSCA section 6(g)(4), including required
notification and controls for exposure,
to the extent feasible: (1) NASA and its
contractors must provide notice to the
EPA Administrator of each instance of
emergency use within 15 days; and (2)
NASA and its contractors would have to
comply with the WCPP to the extent
feasible.
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EPA is finalizing to require that
NASA notify EPA within 15 days of the
emergency use. The notification would
include a description of the specific use
of TCE in the context of one of the
conditions of use for which this
exemption is being finalized, an
explanation of why the use described
qualifies as an emergency, and an
explanation with regard to the lack of
availability of technically and
economically feasible alternatives. EPA
notes that in the event that sensitive
information relating to national security
or critical infrastructure is submitted to
EPA, the Agency will protect such
information in accordance with
applicable authorities.
EPA expects NASA and its
contractors have the ability to
implement a WCPP as described in Unit
IV.C. for the identified uses in the
context of an emergency. Therefore,
EPA is finalizing the requirement that
during emergency use, NASA and its
contractors must comply with the WCPP
to the extent technically feasible in light
of the particular emergency.
Under the finalized exemption, NASA
and its contractors will still be subject
to the general recordkeeping
requirements discussed in Unit IV.F.
5. 20-Year Exemption for Industrial and
Commercial Use of TCE as a Processing
Aid for Lead-Acid Battery Separator
Manufacturing
EPA is finalizing a 20-year TSCA
section 6(g)(1)(B) exemption from the
prohibition on the industrial and
commercial use of TCE as a processing
aid, specific to battery separator
manufacturing for lead-acid batteries.
The conditions for the exemption are:
(1) The use of TCE is limited to use as
a processing aid for lead-acid battery
separator manufacturing; and (2) This
specific industrial and commercial use
of TCE as a processing aid is required
to be conducted at industrial facilities
using TCE to manufacture lead acid
battery separators prior to February 18,
2025.
6. 15-Year Exemption for Industrial and
Commercial Use of TCE as a Processing
Aid for Specialty Polymeric
Microporous Sheet Materials
EPA is finalizing a 15-year TSCA
section 6(g)(1)(A) exemption from the
prohibition on TCE for the industrial
and commercial use of TCE as a
processing aid for specialty polymeric
microporous sheet material
manufacturing. As described in more
detail in Unit III.B.2., while EPA
proposed to prohibit industrial and
commercial use of TCE as a processing
aid for specialty polymeric microporous
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sheet materials, EPA’s primary
alternative regulatory action described a
15-year TSCA section 6(g) exemption
from prohibition for this use. EPA
received substantiative information in
public comments to support the
finalization of this exemption, as well as
support for 15 years as the appropriate
timeframe for this exemption.
The conditions for the exemption are:
(1) The use of TCE is limited to use as
a processing aid for the manufacturing
of specialty polymeric microporous
sheet materials; (2) This specific
industrial and commercial use of TCE as
a processing aid can only be used at
industrial facilities in which TCE is
already in use to manufacture specialty
polymeric microporous sheet materials
prior to February 18, 2025.
7. 50-Year Exemption for Laboratory
Use of TCE for Essential Laboratory
Uses
EPA is finalizing a 50-year TSCA
section 6(g)(1)(A) exemption from the
prohibition on industrial and
commercial use of TCE, for industrial
and commercial use of TCE in
laboratory use for essential laboratory
activities, excluding the testing of
asphalt which is subject to a ten-year
phase-out as described in Units III.C.3.
and IV.B.5. The conditions for the
exemption are: (1) The use of TCE is
limited to use in an industrial or
commercial laboratory for essential
laboratory activities, including chemical
analysis, chemical synthesis, extracting
and purifying other chemicals,
dissolving other substances, and
research and development for the
advancement of cleanup activities, and
analytical methods for monitoring
related to TCE contamination or
exposure monitoring, with the exclusion
of laboratory testing for asphalt; and (2)
Federal agencies and their contractors
are permitted to conduct research and
development activities, test and
evaluation method activities, and
similar laboratory activities, provided
the use is essential to the agency’s
mission.
8. 50-Year Exemption for Disposal of
TCE to Industrial Pre-Treatment,
Industrial Treatment, or Publicly
Owned Treatment Works, for the
Purposes of Facilitating Cleanup
Projects of TCE-Contaminated Water
and Groundwater
EPA is finalizing a 50-year TSCA
section 6(g)(1)(A) exemption from the
prohibition on disposal of TCE to
industrial pre-treatment, industrial
treatment, or publicly owned treatment
works for the purposes of cleanup
projects of TCE-contaminated water and
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groundwater. The conditions for the
exemption are: (1) The disposal of TCE
to industrial pre-treatment, industrial
treatment, or publicly owned treatment
works must only be for the purposes of
cleanup projects of TCE-contaminated
water and groundwater and is limited to
sites undergoing cleanup under
CERCLA, RCRA, or other Federal, state,
and local government laws, regulations
or requirements; and (2) Owners and
operators of the cleanup site locations
where TCE industrial treatment or
pretreatment occurs are required to
comply with the wastewater workplace
protection requirements described in
Unit IV.E.2., and owners and operators
of publicly owned treatment works that
receive TCE wastewater, are required to
comply with the workplace protection
requirements described in Unit IV.E.3.
Owners and operators of either type of
location must comply with the
recordkeeping requirements described
in Unit IV.F.1. until the expiration of
the exemption and the prohibition
compliance date. EPA notes that a
remediation method would need to be
considered one of the previous types of
disposal to fall within the condition of
use, and if not would be out of scope of
this TSCA rule and not subject to the
prohibition or other requirements of the
rule.
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V. TSCA Section 6(c)(2) Considerations
A. Health Effects and the Magnitude of
Human Exposure
EPA’s analysis of the health effects of
TCE and the magnitude of human
exposure to TCE are in the 2020 Risk
Evaluation for TCE and the 2023
Revised Risk Determination for TCE
(Refs. 1, 2). A summary is presented
here.
As described in Unit IV. of the 2023
TCE proposed rule, TCE has a large
database of human health toxicity data.
The 2020 Risk Evaluation for TCE
identified several endpoints, such as
kidney toxicity, immunotoxicity, or
developmental toxicity, and often a
single endpoint was examined by
multiple studies. For acute exposures,
EPA identified non-cancer effects
(developmental toxicity and
immunosuppression). For chronic
exposures, EPA identified non-cancer
effects (liver toxicity, kidney toxicity,
neurotoxicity, autoimmunity,
reproductive toxicity, and
developmental toxicity) as well as
cancer (liver, kidney, and nonHodgkin’s lymphoma), with kidney
cancer identified as acting through a
mutagenic mode of action (Ref. 1). The
2020 Risk Evaluation for TCE contains
quantitative risk estimates using several
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points of departure (PODs), including
immunotoxicity endpoints as well as
the more sensitive developmental
toxicity endpoints, specifically fetal
cardiac defects, and both demonstrate
that TCE presents risk.
Additionally, in developing the 2020
Risk Evaluation for TCE, EPA analyzed
the reasonably available information to
ascertain whether some human
subpopulations may have greater
exposure or greater susceptibility than
the general population to the hazard
posed by the chemical substance.
Factors affecting susceptibility
examined in the reasonably available
studies on TCE include lifestage, sex,
genetic polymorphisms, race/ethnicity,
preexisting health status, lifestyle
factors, and nutrition status. Groups of
individuals for which one or several of
these factors apply may be considered
PESS (Ref. 1).
Because TSCA section 6(c)(2)(B)
directs EPA to factor in, to the extent
practicable, the health effects of TCE
under TSCA section 6(c)(2)(A) when
selecting among options, TSCA section
6(c) thereby provides EPA with the
flexibility to tailor the regulatory
restrictions to account for particular
health effects identified in the
underlying risk evaluation. With this
consideration, EPA found that, in some
cases, a regulatory option that could
reduce exposures such that they would
achieve the benchmark margin of
exposure for the most sensitive noncancer endpoint (developmental
toxicity) would address any risk for
other non-cancer endpoints. Older
pregnant workers and ONUs, who may
be especially susceptible to TCEinduced cardiac defects in their
developing fetus, are classified as a
PESS, and the associated POD and risk
estimates were included in the 2020
Risk Evaluation in consideration of
PESS groups. EPA has carefully
considered the health effects of TCE on
pregnant workers and ONUs as part of
the Agency’s requirements and
prohibitions. In order for this
rulemaking to appropriately address risk
to all workers and ONUs exposed to
TCE through occupational conditions of
use, EPA has factored in consideration
of additional health effects applicable to
PESS, including older pregnant workers
and ONUs (the group identified as most
susceptible to fetal cardiac defects)
pursuant to TSCA section 6(c)(2).
In the risk characterization section of
the 2020 Risk Evaluation for TCE, EPA
acknowledged that fetal cardiac defects
are an acute, non-cancer endpoint of
concern, particularly for older pregnant
women, while also acknowledging
uncertainty surrounding the use of this
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endpoint to inform the determination of
whether TCE presents unreasonable risk
of injury to health for all affected human
populations. In the 2020 Risk
Evaluation for TCE, EPA presented the
Agency’s findings with respect to
different endpoints and characterized
the immunotoxicity endpoints as the
‘‘best overall’’ non-cancer endpoints for
use in the risk conclusions and risk
determination. The endpoints were
characterized in this way precisely
because of the quantitative uncertainties
surrounding the use of the fetal cardiac
defects endpoint and other
considerations. Further, as noted in Unit
II.D.1. of the 2023 TCE proposed rule,
EPA received numerous comments on
EPA’s 2020 TSCA Risk Evaluation
policy choice regarding endpoint
selection that have raised concerns
pertaining to political interference and
scientific integrity, among other issues.
EPA received significant feedback on
this aspect of the 2020 Risk Evaluation
for TCE, including focused attention on
this issue from the SACC and public
commenters reacting to the draft Risk
Evaluation for TCE (Ref. 90). Moreover,
based on the discussion included in the
peer review report of the 2020 Risk
Evaluation, EPA also concluded that
reasonable scientists would not disallow
the use of the fetal cardiac defects
studies, and that therefore other EPA
program reliance on the fetal cardiac
defects endpoint is scientifically valid
(e.g., Integrated Risk Information System
(https://iris.epa.gov)).
The 2020 Risk Evaluation for TCE
identified the developmental toxicity
endpoint of fetal cardiac defects, which
presents a lower POD than the
immunotoxicity endpoints. The
magnitude of the unreasonable risk from
exposures to TCE would have been
greater had the Agency relied upon the
developmental toxicity endpoint (Ref.
1). Specifically, EPA identified the risk
of fetal cardiac defects most strongly
associated with offspring of older
mothers, and therefore included risk
estimates for fetal cardiac defects that
account for susceptible mothers and
their offspring in addition to PESS
groups with other susceptibilities (e.g.,
diabetes, infection status, drug
exposure, stress, and metabolic
sensitivity due to increased enzymatic
activity of cytochrome P450 2E1
(CYP2E1) (Ref. 1).
EPA recognizes that among the noncancer adverse health effects of TCE, the
drivers for EPA’s whole chemical
unreasonable risk determination for TCE
under TSCA were identified as
immunotoxicity, namely acute
immunosuppression and chronic
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autoimmunity from inhalation and
dermal exposures (Ref. 2).
Regarding the magnitude of human
exposure, one factor EPA considers for
the conditions of use that contribute to
the unreasonable risk is the size of the
exposed population, which, for TCE,
EPA estimates is 53,210 workers, 14,659
ONUs, and 20,600 consumers (Ref. 3).
In addition to these estimates of
numbers of workers, ONUs, consumers,
and bystanders to consumer use directly
exposed to TCE, EPA recognizes there is
exposure to the general population from
air and water pathways for TCE. (While
bystanders are individuals in proximity
to a consumer use of TCE, fenceline
communities are a subset of the general
population who may be living in
proximity to a facility where TCE is
being used in an occupational setting).
EPA separately conducted a screening
analysis to assess whether there may be
risks to the general population from
these exposure pathways. This analysis
is summarized in full in the 2023 TCE
proposed rule, which includes
information on the SACC peer review of
the methodology. This Unit addresses
those areas where some risk was
indicated with regard to expected
exposures to fenceline communities that
are associated with conditions of use for
which EPA is finalizing longer
compliance timeframes (including
under a TSCA section 6(g) time-limited
exemption).
EPA’s analysis was presented to the
SACC peer review panel in March 2022,
and EPA is including SACC
recommendations, as appropriate, in
assessing general population exposures
in upcoming risk evaluations. Overall,
EPA’s fenceline analysis for the air and
water pathways for TCE did not allow
EPA to rule out unreasonable risk to
fenceline communities with confidence.
Additionally, based on the fenceline
analysis for the ambient air and water
pathways for TCE, including the
strengths, limitations, and uncertainties
associated with the information used to
inform the analysis, EPA is unable to
determine with this analysis whether
those risks drive the unreasonable risk
of injury to health presented by TCE.
Although EPA did not make a
determination of unreasonable risk
based on the fenceline screening
analysis, this final regulatory action is
expected to eliminate the potential risks
identified in the screening analysis to
any general population or fenceline
communities close to facilities engaging
in TCE manufacturing, processing, or
use.
EPA’s fenceline analysis for the water
pathway for TCE, based on methods
presented to the SACC, found potential
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risks from several occupational
exposure scenarios from exposure to
drinking water or incidental dermal or
incidental oral exposure to ambient
waters. The estimated exposure values
for the screening level assessed water
pathway resulted in estimated acute
noncancer, chronic noncancer, or cancer
risk relative to their respective
benchmark values for various evaluated
occupational exposure scenarios (Ref.
91). As described in more detail in Unit
VII.A.2. of the 2023 TCE proposed rule,
EPA identified potential risks that
exceed the benchmark for non-cancer
endpoints for several facilities,
representing benchmark exceedances for
between 1 and 10 occupational
exposure scenarios, depending on
whether the drinking water, incidental
oral, or incidental dermal exposures are
considered. In each case for the
screening level analysis, risks were
identified only for the maximum risk
scenarios (or facilities with the highest
reported results), and for a relatively
small number of facilities. In instances
where a facility may be engaging in a
condition of use with a longer phaseout,
EPA notes that in no instances did EPA
identify drinking water intakes within
10 miles of a discharging facility and
emphasizes that the scenarios analyzed
include significant uncertainties and
assumptions within the high-end risk
estimates due to reliance on the highestreported results from several facilities
(Ref. 91). Regarding cancer risks, while
the analysis identified facilities with
some indication of releases and
potential drinking water exposure with
associated increased cancer risk that
exceeds more than 1 in 1,000,000, the
analysis did not identify any facilities
with a risk exceeding 1 in 10,000; the
highest potential risk estimate is in the
1 in 100,000 range (Ref. 91).
Under the regulatory actions finalized
in this rule and described in Unit IV.,
all conditions of use will ultimately be
prohibited and so any potential risk
indicated by this screening analysis will
be eliminated. The potential risks to
fenceline communities from exposure
through water further strengthen the
impetus for EPA’s prohibition of TCE.
EPA therefore does not intend to revisit
the water pathway for TCE as part of a
supplemental risk evaluation.
EPA’s fenceline analysis for the air
pathway for TCE, using the
methodology presented to SACC, and
the multi-year analysis conducted in
response to SACC feedback indicated
potential exposure and associated risks
to select populations within the general
population at particular facilities (Ref.
92). As described in the 2023 TCE
proposed rule, EPA conducted an
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ambient air analysis to assess noncancer and cancer risk for real and
generic, or modeled, facilities. The three
components of the ambient air fenceline
analysis were: (1) A single-year ambient
air analysis; (2) A multi-year ambient air
analysis; and (3) A land use analysis.
After doing an initial screen (the single
year ambient air screening analysis) that
did not rule out unreasonable risk, EPA
conducted additional analyses (the
multi-year ambient air analysis). The
single year ambient air screening
analysis and the multi-year ambient air
analysis allow EPA to mathematically
calculate a cancer risk in fenceline
communities. The Agency then
conducted a land use analysis as part of
both the single-year and multi-year
analyses to determine if EPA could
reasonably expect an exposure to
fenceline communities to occur within
the modeled distances for facilities
where there was an indication of risk.
This review consisted of a visual
analysis using aerial imagery and
interpreting land/use zoning practices
around each facility to identify where
residential, industrial/commercial
businesses, or other public spaces are
present within those radial distances
indicating risk (as opposed to
uninhabited areas), as well as whether
the radial distances lie outside the
boundaries of the facility.
There are some uncertainties
associated with the fenceline analysis
for the air pathway for TCE. The TRI
dataset used for the single- and the
multi-year fenceline analysis and land
use analysis does not include actual
release point locations, which can affect
the estimated concentrations at varying
distances modeled. To identify the
release location for each facility, EPA
used a local-coordinate system based on
latitude/longitude coordinates reported
in TRI. The latitude/longitude
coordinates may represent the mailing
address location of the office building
associated with a very large facility or
some other area of the facility rather
than the actual release location (e.g., a
specific process stack). This discrepancy
between the coordinates reported in TRI
and the actual release point could result
in an exposure concentration that does
not represent the actual distance where
fenceline communities may be exposed.
The fenceline analysis also evaluated
the most ‘‘conservative exposure
scenario’’ that consists of a facility that
operates year-round (365 days per year,
24 hours per day, 7 days per week) in
a South Coastal meteorologic region and
a rural topography setting (Ref. 92).
Therefore, the modeled exposures to
people who live in fenceline
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communities may be overestimated if
there are fewer exposure days per year
or hours per day.
Additionally, the ambient air
fenceline analysis (as well as the water
pathway analysis, described in Unit
VII.A.2.) organizes facilities and
associated risks by Occupational
Exposure Scenario (OES) and generally
crosswalks each OES with the
associated condition of use of TCE (Ref.
92). For some OES, EPA identified the
associated conditions of use to the
category level in the November 2020
Risk Evaluation for TCE, but, for the air
pathway, was unable to identify the
conditions of use to the subcategory
level due to limited information on
activities and use of TCE reported under
TRI. Therefore, some OES indicating
increased risk from ambient air
exposures to TCE in the air fenceline
analysis may be associated with one or
more conditions of use of TCE. See Unit
VII.A.1. of the 2023 TCE proposed rule
for additional information on this
analysis.
EPA’s analysis included inhalation
hazard values for cancer and non-cancer
risk (acute and chronic immunological
and developmental endpoints). Because
risk estimates did not exceed the
benchmarks for any risks of non-cancer
effects, the results presented focus on
cancer risks. Standard cancer
benchmarks used by EPA and other
regulatory agencies are an increased
cancer risk above benchmarks ranging
from 1 in 1,000,000 (one in a million)
to 1 in 10,000 (i.e., 1×10¥6 to 1×10¥4).
For example, when setting standards
under CAA section 112(f)(2), EPA uses
a two-step process, with ‘‘an analytical
first step to determine an ‘acceptable
risk’ that considers all health
information, including risk estimation
uncertainty, and includes a presumptive
limit on maximum individual risk (MIR)
of approximately 1-in-10 thousand’’
(Ref. 93). In this fenceline analysis for
the ambient air pathway for TCE,
estimates of risk to fenceline
communities were calculated using
1×10¥6 as the benchmark for cancer risk
in fenceline communities. While EPA is
unable to determine, based on the
screening level fenceline analysis,
whether risks to the general population
drive the unreasonable risk, as a matter
of risk management policy EPA
typically considers the range of 1×10¥6
to 1×10¥4 as the appropriate benchmark
for increased cancer risk for the general
population, including fenceline
communities. The benchmark value is
not a bright line, and the Agency
considers a number of factors when
determining unreasonable risk, such as
the endpoint under consideration, the
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reversibility of effect, and exposurerelated considerations (e.g., duration,
magnitude, or frequency of exposure, or
population exposed).
The multi-year analysis evaluated 217
facilities and found risk estimates above
one in a million for cancer for 133 of
those facilities at a distance of 100
meters from the releasing facility. Based
on the multi-year analysis, 58 of these
133 facilities either had cancer risks
above one in a million at distances
farther than 100 meters when compared
to the single year analysis or are
facilities that were not captured in the
single-year analysis. The analysis did
not identify any facilities with risk
exceeding 1 in 10,000 at a distance
greater than 100 meters; the highest risk
estimate is in the 1 in 100,000 range
(Ref. 92).The land use analysis of the 58
facilities indicating risk in the multiyear fenceline analysis (i.e., facilities
where cancer risk estimates were above
one in a million at distances farther out
when compared to the single-year
analysis or facilities that were not
captured in the single year analysis)
identified a total of 55 facilities with
expected exposure to fenceline
communities. Those facilities represent
10 occupational exposure scenarios and
include: degreasing (open-top batch
vapor degreasing; closed-loop batch
vapor degreasing; conveyorized vapor
degreasing; web vapor degreasing; cold
cleaning); formulation of aerosol and
non-aerosol products; industrial
processing aid; manufacturing;
metalworking fluids; other industrial
uses; process solvent recycling and
worker handling of wastes; processing
as a reactant; recycling and disposal;
and repackaging (Ref. 92).
Under this regulatory action, each of
the conditions of use that indicate risk
relative to the one in a million cancer
risk benchmark will ultimately be
prohibited, many of them within one
year. As a result, exposures to any
fenceline communities from these
facilities will be eliminated under the
prohibitions in this rulemaking. The
risks to fenceline communities from
TCE exposure further strengthens the
impetus for EPA’s prohibition of TCE.
As described earlier in this Unit, EPA
notes that TSCA section 6(c)(2) provides
for the consideration of health effects in
promulgating a rule under TSCA section
6(a).
EPA recognizes that there are some
facilities for which the screening
analysis estimates that cancer risks are
indicated that may exceed one in a
million and with expected exposure to
fenceline communities. These facilities
may be associated with the following
conditions of use that EPA is
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prohibiting under longer compliance
timeframes: degreasing (open-top batch
vapor degreasing; closed-loop batch
vapor degreasing); industrial processing
aid; manufacturing; and processing as a
reactant. For processing as a reactant,
EPA notes that while the analysis
identified facilities with some
indication of releases and potential
exposure with associated increased
cancer risk that exceeds one in a million
at a distance of 100 meters from the
releasing facility, the analysis did not
identify any facilities exceeding the 1 in
10,000 benchmark; the highest risk
estimate is in the 1 in 100,000 range. For
this and other conditions of use that
may be associated with facilities that
indicate risks with expected exposure to
fenceline communities, the rule requires
strict workplace exposure controls via
implementation of a WCPP as described
in Unit IV.C., until the prohibition
compliance date.
In the instances where efforts to
reduce exposures in the workplace to
levels below the interim ECEL could
lead to adoption of engineering controls
that ventilate more TCE outside, EPA
expects that in some situations potential
exposure may be limited through
facility compliance with existing
National Emissions Standards for
Hazardous Air Pollutants (NESHAP)
that cover TCE or through state-issued
air permits that limit TCE emissions.
Potentially applicable NESHAP include:
40 CFR part 63, subpart F, Synthetic
Organic Chemical Manufacturing
Industry; 40 CFR part 63, subpart DD,
Off-Site Waste and Recovery
Operations; 40 CFR part 63, subpart
VVV, Publicly Owned Treatment Works;
40 CFR part 63, subpart VVVVVV,
Chemical Manufacturing Area Sources;
40 CFR part 63, subpart GG, Aerospace
Manufacturing and Rework Facilities;
and 40 CFR part 63, subpart T,
Halogenated Solvent Cleaning. NESHAP
impose emission standards and/or work
practice requirements reflecting
maximum achievable control
technology or impose emission
standards and/or work practice
requirements reflecting generally
available control technology. The CAA
requires residual risk reviews for
standards reflecting maximum
achievable control technologies, and
technology reviews are required every 8
years for all NESHAP.
In the 2023 TCE proposed rule, EPA
requested comment on any anticipated
increases or decreases in future releases
of TCE, as well as any modifications to
requirements in the exposure control
plan to account for air monitoring or
fenceline impacts. As described in more
detail in Section 8.1 of the Response to
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Comments document (Ref. 11), several
commenters provided input on EPA’s
fenceline analysis, with some stating
their position that the fenceline analysis
is not suitable for purposes of risk
determination and should not be used to
inform risk management (Refs. 35, 81,
78, 94), while other commenters stated
that EPA’s fenceline analysis
insufficiently considered increased
susceptibility to harm from TCE
exposures in populations more likely to
experience adverse health effects (Ref.
95). Regarding the management of any
risks to fenceline communities from
ambient air or water exposures, several
commenters emphasized the need to
protect fenceline communities at risk
from TCE exposure related to conditions
of use with longer phase-out periods
(Ref. 45) and described their efforts, as
a local government agency, to protect
community members at risk of releases
of TCE from neighboring businesses
(Ref. 47). Several commenters stated
they would support a requirement for
additional monitoring or attesting in a
WCPP that controls would not increase
TCE emissions and impact fenceline
communities (Refs. 31, 45, 44, 96).
Industry commenters disagreed, stating
that attestations or monitoring would be
burdensome or redundant with
requirements under NESHAP that
regulate TCE (Refs. 39, 38, 78). Instead,
these commenters recommended that
any necessary release information
should instead be documented through
the results of the sampling done when
processes change.
As discussed in more detail in the
Response to Comments document (Ref.
11), EPA agrees that the screening level
fenceline analyses for the water
pathway and ambient air pathway for
TCE do not allow EPA to conclude
whether those risks of injury to
fenceline communities contribute to the
unreasonable risk because those
fenceline screening methodologies were
not developed for that purpose. EPA is
eventually prohibiting all of the
conditions of use that are associated
with facilities that indicate potential
exposure to fenceline communities,
which would eventually address such
exposure. Additionally, EPA
determined facility resources should be
focused on transitioning as quickly as
possible to alternatives for TCE.
Requiring owners and operators to attest
to whether and why the exposure
controls they have selected would not
result in increased air releases of TCE
from the workplace could divert
resources from transitioning to
alternatives. Therefore, in the WCPP
requirements in this final rule, EPA is
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not requiring owners and operators to
attest to whether and why the exposure
controls they have selected would not
result in increased air releases of TCE
from the workplace and keep records of
that statement as part of the WCPP
exposure control plan. EPA emphasizes
that the ultimate prohibition of
manufacture, processing, distribution in
commerce, use, and disposal of TCE is
expected to address the risks identified
in the screening analysis to any general
population or fenceline communities
close to facilities engaging in TCE use.
EPA therefore does not intend to revisit
the air pathway for TCE as part of a
supplemental risk evaluation.
B. Environmental Effects and the
Magnitude of Environmental Exposure
EPA’s analysis of the environmental
effects of TCE and the magnitude of
exposure of the environment to TCE are
in the 2020 Risk Evaluation for TCE
(Ref. 1). The unreasonable risk
determination for TCE is based solely on
risks to human health (Ref. 2); based on
the TSCA 2020 Risk Evaluation for TCE,
EPA determined that exposures to the
environment did not drive the
unreasonable risk. A summary is
presented here.
For all conditions of use, amphibian,
fish, and aquatic invertebrate acute and
chronic exposures to TCE do not drive
the unreasonable risk. To characterize
the exposure to TCE by aquatic
organisms, EPA assessed environmental
exposures derived from predicted and
measured concentrations of TCE in
surface water in the United States.
Specifically, the aquatic exposures
associated with the industrial and
commercial conditions of use were
predicted through modeling, and the
aquatic exposure assessment also
includes an analysis of collected
measured surface water concentrations
from monitoring data. EPA considered
the biological relevance of the species to
determine the concentrations of concern
for the location of surface water
concentration data to produce risk
quotients, as well as frequency and
duration of the exposure. EPA
determined that the evaluation does not
support an unreasonable risk
determination based on risk to aquatic
organisms.
The toxicity of TCE to sedimentdwelling invertebrates is similar to the
toxicity to aquatic invertebrates. TCE is
expected to remain in aqueous phases
and not adsorb to sediment due to its
water solubility and low partitioning to
organic matter. TCE has relatively low
partitioning to organic matter and
biodegrades slowly, so TCE
concentrations in sediment pore water
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are expected to be similar to the
concentrations in the overlying water or
lower in the deeper part of sediment
where anaerobic condition prevails.
Thus, the TCE detected in sediments is
likely from the pore water. Therefore,
for sediment-dwelling organisms, the
risk estimates, based on the highest
ambient surface water concentration, do
not support an unreasonable risk
determination based on risk to
sediment-dwelling organisms from
acute or chronic exposures.
For terrestrial organisms, TCE
exposure is expected to be low since
physical-chemical properties do not
support an exposure pathway through
water and soil pathways to these
organisms. Therefore, for terrestrial
organisms, the risk estimates for acute
or chronic exposures, based on the EPA
2003 Guidance for Ecological Soil
Screening Levels, do not support an
unreasonable risk determination.
C. Benefits for Various Uses
As described in the 2023 TCE
proposed rule, TCE has a wide range of
uses, including as an intermediate
during the manufacture of refrigerants,
specifically HFC–134a, and is also used
as a solvent, frequently in cleaning and
degreasing (including spot cleaning,
vapor degreasing, cold cleaning, and
aerosol degreasing). A variety of
consumer and commercial products use
TCE as adhesives and sealants, in paints
and coatings, and in other
miscellaneous products. TCE is subject
to Federal and State regulations and
reporting requirements.
The largest uses of TCE, by
production volume, are for processing
as a reactant/intermediate as well as
aerosol and vapor degreasing uses.
Based on the 2020 Risk Evaluation for
TCE, over 84% of the production
volume of TCE is processed as a
reactant/intermediate. The majority of
the volume is for TCE processed as an
intermediate in the production of HFC–
134a, a refrigerant widely used in a
broad range of applications. The second
largest use of TCE is in industrial and
commercial uses for aerosol and vapor
degreasing. TCE is a relatively
inexpensive solvent useful for cleaning
contaminated metal parts and other
fabricated materials (Ref. 1).
TCE has many other uses, which,
based on the 2020 Risk Evaluation for
TCE, collectively constitute about 1% of
the production volume (Ref. 1). In
battery separator manufacturing, TCE is
used as an extraction solvent to produce
the desired porosity in lead-acid and
lithium battery separators, which are
essential to power vehicles and systems
in the U.S. supply chain.
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D. Reasonably Ascertainable Economic
Consequences of the Final Rule
1. Likely Effect of the Rule on the
National Economy, Small Business,
Technological Innovation, the
Environment, and Public Health
The reasonably ascertainable
economic consequences of this rule
include several components, all of
which are described in the Economic
Analysis for this rule (Ref. 3). With
respect to the anticipated effects of this
rule on the national economy, EPA
considered the number of businesses
and workers that would be affected and
the costs and benefits to those
businesses and workers and did not find
that there would be an impact on the
national economy (Ref. 3). The
economic impact of a regulation on the
national economy becomes measurable
only if the economic impact of the
regulation reaches 0.25% to 0.5% of
Gross Domestic Product (GDP) (Ref. 3).
Given the current (real) GDP [of $60.4
trillion (2022)], this is equivalent to a
cost of $151 billion to $302 billion.
Therefore, because EPA has estimated
that the monetized costs of the rule at
$64.1 million annualized over 20 years
at a 2% discount rate, $ 71.2 million
annualized over 20 years at a 3%
discount rate, and $102.4 million
annualized over 20 years at a 7%
discount rate, EPA has concluded that
this action is highly unlikely to have
any measurable effect on the national
economy (Ref. 3). EPA does not have
data to quantify employment impacts of
the final rule. Instead, workers currently
using TCE are expected to continue
employment while shifting away from
TCE use and towards alternatives.
However, EPA acknowledges that
transitional employment impacts may
be experienced by some workers at
facilities that opt to close or shift
operations abroad instead of complying
with requirements at the facilities
currently using TCE. EPA considered
the employment impacts of this final
rule and found that the direction of
change in employment is uncertain, but
EPA expects the short-term and longerterm employment effects to be small.
Of the small businesses potentially
impacted by this rule, 98.5% are
expected to have impacts of less than
1% to their firm revenues, 0% are
expected to have impacts between 1 and
3% to their firm revenues, and 1.5% are
expected to have impacts greater than
3% to their firm revenues. The largest
segment of businesses that will be
affected by this regulation are
commercial users of liquid and aerosol
degreasers. Costs of alternatives were
found to be both higher and lower than
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products containing TCE. For most
product types, alternatives with similar
efficacy are available with costs that
both lower and higher than TCE
products. However, there may be some
applications where TCE is more
effective, reducing labor time and wait
time, and/or where extensive safety
testing might be required. EPA was
unable to quantify these costs.
With respect to this rule’s effect on
technological innovation, EPA expects
this action to spur more innovation than
it will hinder. A prohibition or
significant restriction on the
manufacture, processing, and
distribution in commerce of TCE for
uses covered in this final rule may
increase demand for safer chemical
substitutes. This rule is not likely to
have significant effects on the
environment because TCE does not
present an unreasonable risk to the
environment, though this rule does
present the potential for small
reductions in air emissions and soil
contamination associated with improper
disposal of products containing TCE.
The effects of this rule on public health
are estimated to be positive, due to the
reduced risk of cancer and other noncancer endpoints from exposure to TCE.
2. Costs and Benefits of the Regulatory
Action and of the One or More Primary
Alternative Regulatory Actions
Considered by the Administrator
The costs and benefits that can be
monetized for this rule are described at
length in in the Economic Analysis (Ref.
3). The monetized costs for this rule are
estimated to range from $64.1 million
annualized over 20 years at a 2%
discount rate, $71.2 million annualized
over 20 years at a 3% discount rate, and
$102.4 million annualized over 20 years
at a 7% discount rate. The monetized
benefits are estimated to range from
$22.9 to $23.2 million annualized over
20 years at a 2% discount rate, $18.2 to
$18.3 million annualized over 20 years
at a 3% discount rate and $8.7 to $8.9
million annualized over 20 years at a
7% discount rate.
EPA considered the estimated costs to
regulated entities as well as the cost to
administer and enforce an alternative
regulatory action. Estimated costs for
regulatory alternative can be found in
the Economic Analysis for this final rule
(Ref. 3).
This final rule is expected to achieve
health benefits for the American public,
some of which can be monetized and
others that, while tangible and
significant, cannot be monetized. EPA
determined that the balance of costs and
benefits of this rule cannot be fairly
described without considering the
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additional, non-monetized benefits of
mitigating the non-cancer adverse
effects. These effects may include
neurotoxicity, kidney toxicity, liver
toxicity, immunological and
hematological effects, reproductive
effects, and developmental effects. The
multitude of adverse effects from TCE
exposure can profoundly impact an
individual’s quality of life, as discussed
in the proposed rule in Unit II.A.
(overview), in this rule in Unit II.C.3.
(description of the unreasonable risk),
Unit V.A. (discussion of the health
effects), and the 2020 Risk Evaluation
for TCE. Chronic adverse effects of TCE
exposure include both cancer and the
non-cancer effects listed in this
paragraph. Acute effects of TCE
exposure could be experienced for a
shorter portion of life but are
nevertheless significant in nature. The
incremental improvements in health
outcomes achieved by given reductions
in exposure cannot be quantified for
non-cancer health effects associated
with TCE exposure, and therefore
cannot be converted into monetized
benefits. The qualitative discussion
throughout this rulemaking and in the
Economic Analysis highlights the
importance of the non-cancer effects.
The value of reducing these effects
includes willingness-to-pay to avoid
illness, which includes cost of illness
and other personal costs such as pain
and suffering. Considering only
monetized benefits underestimates the
impacts of TCE adverse outcomes and
therefore underestimates the benefits of
this rule.
3. Cost Effectiveness of the Regulatory
Action and of One or More Primary
Alternative Regulatory Actions
Considered by the Administrator
Cost effectiveness is a method of
comparing certain actions in terms of
the expense per item of interest or goal.
A goal of this regulatory action is to
prevent unreasonable risk resulting from
exposure to TCE. The final rule would
cost $15.4 million per potential
prevented cancer case while the
alternative regulatory action would cost
$18.6 million using annualized costs for
the 2 percent discount rate and cancer
cases avoided from one year of reduced
exposure under the policy options (the
average across the 20-year analytical
timeframe). Thus, the final rule has a
lower cost per cancer case avoided
compared to the alternative option,
making it the most cost-effective of the
two options considered. The primary
differences between the final and
alternative option are that the
alternative includes fewer TSCA section
6(g) exemptions delaying prohibitions
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on some uses which fall under interim
WCPP in the final rule and a lower
interim ECEL (0.0011 ppm). EPA
received multiple public comments
providing information on the impacts of
a lower ECEL level and the need for
longer duration and additional limited
exemptions.
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VI. TSCA Section 9 Analysis and
Section 14 and 26 Considerations
A. TSCA Section 9(a) Analysis
TSCA section 9(a) provides that, if the
Administrator determines, in the
Administrator’s discretion, that an
unreasonable risk may be prevented or
reduced to a sufficient extent by an
action taken under a Federal law not
administered by EPA, the Administrator
must submit a report to the agency
administering that other law that
describes the risk and the activities that
present such risk. TSCA section 9(a)
describes additional procedures and
requirements to be followed by EPA and
the other Federal agency after
submission of the report. As discussed
in this Unit, the Administrator does not
determine that unreasonable risk from
TCE under the conditions of use may be
prevented or reduced to a sufficient
extent by an action taken under a
Federal law not administered by EPA.
EPA’s section 9(a) analysis can be found
in full in Unit VIII.A. of the 2023 TCE
proposed rule, and responses to
comments on that 9(a) analysis can be
found in the Response to Comments
document, section 9.1 (Ref. 11).
TSCA section 9(d) instructs the
Administrator to consult and coordinate
TSCA activities with other Federal
agencies for the purpose of achieving
the maximum enforcement of TSCA
while imposing the least burden of
duplicative requirements. For this
rulemaking, EPA has coordinated with
appropriate Federal executive
departments and agencies including but
not limited to OSHA and the Consumer
Product Safety Commission (CPSC), to,
among other things, identify their
respective authorities, jurisdictions, and
existing laws with regard to the risk
evaluation and risk management of TCE.
As discussed in more detail in the
2023 TCE proposed rule, OSHA requires
that employers provide safe and
healthful working conditions by setting
and enforcing standards and by
providing training, outreach, education,
and assistance. OSHA, in 1971,
established a PEL for TCE of 100 ppm
of air as an 8-hour TWA with an
acceptable ceiling concentration of 200
ppm and an acceptable maximum peak
above the acceptable ceiling
concentration for an eight-hour shift of
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300 ppm, with a maximum duration of
5 minutes in any 2 hours. However, the
exposure limits established by OSHA
are higher than the exposure limit that
EPA determined will be sufficient to
address the unreasonable risk identified
under TSCA from occupational
inhalation exposures associated with
certain conditions of use. Gaps exist
between OSHA’s authority to set
workplace standards under the OSH Act
and EPA’s obligations under TSCA
section 6 to eliminate unreasonable risk
presented by chemical substances under
the conditions of use. The U.S. CPSC,
under authority provided to it by
Congress in the CPSA, protects the
public from unreasonable risk of injury
or death associated with consumer
products. Under the CPSA, CPSC has
the authority to regulate TCE in
consumer products, but not in other
sectors such as automobiles, some
industrial and commercial products, or
aircraft for example.
EPA therefore concludes that TSCA is
the only regulatory authority able to
prevent or reduce unreasonable risk of
TCE to a sufficient extent across the
range of conditions of use, exposures,
and populations of concern. An action
under TSCA is also able to address
occupational unreasonable risk and
would reach entities that are not subject
to OSHA. Moreover, the timeframe and
any exposure reduction as a result of
updating OSHA or CPSC regulations for
TCE cannot be estimated, while TSCA
imposes a much more accelerated twoyear statutory timeframe for proposing
and finalizing requirements to address
unreasonable risk. Regulating TCE’s
unreasonable risk utilizing TSCA
authority will also avoid the situation
where a patchwork of regulations among
several Agencies using multiple laws
and differing legal standards would
occur and is therefore a more efficient
and effective means of addressing the
unreasonable risk of TCE. Finally, as
discussed in greater detail in the 2023
TCE proposed rule, the 2016
amendments to TSCA altered both the
manner of identifying unreasonable risk
and EPA’s authority to address
unreasonable risk, such that risk
management is increasingly distinct
from provisions of the CPSA, FHSA, or
OSH Act. For these reasons, in the
Administrator’s discretion, the
Administrator has analyzed this issue
and does not determine that
unreasonable risk from TCE may be
prevented or reduced to a sufficient
extent by an action taken under a
Federal law not administered by EPA.
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B. TSCA Section 9(b) Analysis
If EPA determines that actions under
other Federal laws administered in
whole or in part by EPA could eliminate
or sufficiently reduce a risk to health or
the environment, TSCA section 9(b)
instructs EPA to use these other
authorities to protect against that risk
‘‘unless the Administrator determines,
in the Administrator’s discretion, that it
is in the public interest to protect
against such risk’’ under TSCA. In
making such a public interest finding,
TSCA section 9(b)(2) states: ‘‘the
Administrator shall consider, based on
information reasonably available to the
Administrator, all relevant aspects of
the risk . . . and a comparison of the
estimated costs and efficiencies of the
action to be taken under this title and
an action to be taken under such other
law to protect against such risk.’’
Although several EPA statutes have
been used to limit TCE exposure (Ref.
10), regulations under those EPA
statutes largely regulate releases to the
environment, rather than occupational
or consumer exposures. While these
limits on releases to the environment
are protective in the context of their
respective statutory authorities,
regulation under TSCA is also
appropriate for occupational and
consumer exposures and in some cases
can provide upstream protections that
would prevent the need for release
restrictions required by other EPA
statutes (e.g., RCRA, CAA, CWA).
Updating regulations under other EPA
statutes would not be sufficient to
address the unreasonable risk of injury
to the health of workers, occupational
non-users, consumers, and bystanders
who are exposed to TCE under its
conditions of use. EPA’s section 9(b)
analysis can be found in full in Unit
VIII.B. of the 2023 TCE proposed rule,
and EPA’s responses to comments on
that section 9(b) analysis can be found
in the Response to Comments
document, section 9.2 (Ref. 11).
For these reasons, the Administrator
does not determine that unreasonable
risk from TCE under its conditions of
use, as evaluated in the 2020 Risk
Evaluation for TCE (Ref. 1), could be
eliminated or reduced to a sufficient
extent by actions taken under other
Federal laws administered in whole or
in part by EPA.
C. TSCA Section 14 Requirements
EPA is also providing notice to
manufacturers, processors, and other
interested parties about potential
impacts to CBI. Under TSCA sections
14(a) and (b)(4), if EPA promulgates a
rule pursuant to TSCA section 6(a) that
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establishes a ban or phaseout of a
chemical substance, the protection from
disclosure of any CBI regarding that
chemical substance and submitted
pursuant to TSCA will be ‘‘presumed to
no longer apply,’’ subject to the
limitations identified in TSCA section
14(b)(4)(B)(i) through (iii). Pursuant to
TSCA section 14(b)(4)(B)(iii), the
presumption against protection from
disclosure will apply only to
information about the specific
conditions of use that this rule prohibits
or phases out. Per TSCA section
14(b)(4)(B)(i), the presumption against
protection will not apply to information
about certain emergency uses that this
rule exempts from a ban or phaseout
pursuant to TSCA section 6(g).
Manufacturers or processors seeking to
protect such information may submit a
request for nondisclosure as provided
by TSCA sections 14(b)(4)(C) and
14(g)(1)(E). Any request for
nondisclosure must be submitted within
30 days after receipt of notice from EPA
under TSCA section 14(g)(2)(A) stating
EPA will not protect the information
from disclosure. EPA anticipates
providing such notice via the Central
Data Exchange.
D. TSCA Section 26 Considerations
As explained in the 2023 TCE
proposed rule, EPA fulfilled TSCA
section 26(h) by using scientific
information, technical procedures,
measures, methods, protocols,
methodologies, and models consistent
with the best available science.
Comments received on the proposed
rule about whether EPA adequately
assessed reasonably available
information under TSCA section 26 on
the risk evaluation, and responses to
those comments, can be found in the
Response to Comments document,
sections 2.1 and 3.1 (Ref. 11).
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VII. 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 itself physically located
in the docket. For assistance in locating
these other documents, please consult
the person listed under FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT.
1. EPA. Risk Evaluation for
Trichloroethylene. EPA Publication No.
740–R18008. November 2020.
2. EPA. Unreasonable Risk Determination,
Trichloroethylene. December 2022.
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3. EPA. Economic Analysis of the Final
Regulation of Trichloroethylene Under
TSCA Section 6(a).
4. EPA. Phasedown of Hydrofluorocarbons:
Establishing the Allowance Allocation
and Trading Program Under the
American Innovation and Manufacturing
Act; Final Rule. October 5, 2021.
5. President Biden. The President and First
Lady’s Cancer Moonshot: Ending Cancer
As We Know It. Accessed February 26,
2024. https://www.whitehouse.gov/
cancermoonshot/.
6. A. Tinker et al. Inpatient Hospitalization
Costs Associated with Birth Defects
Among Persons of All Ages—United
States, 2013. MMWR. Morbidity and
mortality weekly report vol. 66,2 41–46.
January 20, 2017.
7. M. Chen et al. Children with Heart
Conditions and Their Special Health
Care Needs—United States, 2016.
MMWR. Morbidity and mortality weekly
report vol. 67,38 1045–1049. 28. Sept.
28, 2018.
8. N. McClung et al. Financial burdens and
mental health needs in families of
children with congenital heart disease.
Congenital heart disease 13.4 (2018):
554–562. April 6, 2018.
9. EPA. ChemView: Trichloroethylene (TCE),
79–01–6. Last updated on June 2, 2023.
https://chemview.epa.gov/chemview/
?tf=0&ch=79-016&su=256737574985&as=
31098&ac=115166378999&ma=4-111981377-4_16848473-4_16848474-4_
49007566&gs=&tds=
0&tdl=10&tas1=1&tas2=asc&tas3=
undefined&tss=&modal=
detail&modalId=100616&modalSrc=2-510-1-6378999-4-11-1981377.
10. EPA. Appendix: Regulatory Actions
Pertaining to Trichloroethylene. July
2023.
11. EPA. Trichloroethyelene (TCE);
Regulation Under the Toxic Substances
Control Act (TSCA); Final Rule;
Response to Public Comments. December
2024.
12. EPA. Guidelines for Carcinogen Risk
Assessment. March 2005.
13. EPA. Notes from Federalism Consultation
on Forthcoming Proposed Rulemakings
for Trichloroethylene,
Perchloroethylene, and nMethylpyrrolidone under TSCA Section
6(a). July 22, 2021.
14. EPA. Notes from Tribal Consultations on
Forthcoming Proposed Rulemakings for
Trichloroethylene (TCE) and
Perchloroethylene (PCE). June 15 and
July 8, 2021.
15. W. Heiger-Bernays and G. Nielsen.
Environmental Justice Consultation
Comment 1 for TCE and PCE. July 5,
2021.
16. S. Rayasam. Environmental Justice
Consultation Comment 2 for TCE and
PCE. June 16, 2021.
17. S. Liu. Environmental Justice
Consultation Comment 3 for TCE and
PCE. August 20, 2021.
18. EPA. Notes from Environmental Justice
Consultations on Forthcoming Proposed
Rulemakings for Trichloroethylene (TCE)
and Perchloroethylene (PCE). July 2021.
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19. Small Business Advocacy Review Panel.
Final Report of the Small Business
Advocacy Review Panel on EPA’s
Planned Proposed Rule; Toxic
Substances Control Act (TSCA) Section
6(a) for Trichloroethylene (TCE). April 4,
2023.
20. EPA. Initial Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis for Trichloroethylene;
Regulation of Trichloroethylene under
TSCA section 6(a) Proposed Rule; RIN
2070–AK83. June 2023.
21. EPA. Final Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis for Trichloroethylene;
Regulation under the Toxic Substances
Control Act (TSCA); Final Rule; RIN
2070–AK83. December 2024.
22. EPA. Public Webinar on
Trichloroethylene (TCE): Risk Evaluation
and Risk Management under TSCA
Section 6. December 15, 2020.
23. EPA. Stakeholder Meeting List for
Proposed Rulemaking for
Trichloroethylene under TSCA Section
6(a). May 19, 2023.
24. EPA. 2021 Policy on Children’s Health.
October 5, 2021.
25. EPA. Trichloroethylene (TCE); Regulation
Under the Toxic Substances Control Act
(TSCA); Proposed Rule. Federal
Register. 88 FR 74712. October 31, 2023
(FRL–8317–01–OCSPP).
26. EPA. Public Webinar on
Trichloroethylene (TCE); Proposed
Rulemaking under TSCA Section 6(a).
November 14, 2023.
27. EPA. Stakeholder Meeting List for
Proposed and Final Rulemaking for
Trichloroethylene under TSCA Section
6(a).
28. EPA. Second Existing Chemical Exposure
Limit (ECEL) (Developmental Toxicity)
for Occupational Use of
Trichloroethylene. March 31, 2022.
29. NABTU AFL–CIO, and USW Comments
on the Proposed Rulemaking for
Trichloroethylene; Regulation Under the
Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA).
Document ID No. EPA–HQ–OPPT–2020–
0642–0286. December 15, 2023.
30. Earthjustice et al. Comments on the
Proposed Rulemaking for
Trichloroethylene; Regulation Under the
Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA).
Document ID No. EPA–HQ–OPPT–2020–
0642–0321. December 15, 2023.
31. Environmental Protection Network.
Comments on the Proposed Rulemaking
for Trichloroethylene; Regulation Under
the Toxic Substances Control Act
(TSCA). Document ID No. EPA–HQ–
OPPT–2020–0642–0266. December 12,
2023.
32. The Boeing Company. Comments on the
Proposed Rulemaking for
Trichloroethylene; Regulation Under the
Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA).
Document ID No. EPA–HQ–OPPT–2020–
0642–0292. December 15, 2023.
33. Savannah River Nuclear Solutions LLC.
Comments on the Proposed Rulemaking
for Trichloroethylene; Regulation Under
the Toxic Substances Control Act
(TSCA). Document ID No. EPA–HQ–
OPPT–2020–0642–0261. December 12,
2023.
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34. Microporous LLC. Comments on the
Proposed Rulemaking for
Trichloroethylene; Regulation Under the
Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA).
Document ID No. EPA–HQ–OPPT–2020–
0642–0300. December 15, 2023.
35. Stoel Rives LLP on behalf of ENTEK.
Comments on the Proposed Rulemaking
for Trichloroethylene; Regulation Under
the Toxic Substances Control Act
(TSCA). Document ID No. EPA–HQ–
OPPT–2020–0642–0323. December 15,
2023.
36. Viant Collegeville LLC. Comments on the
Proposed Rulemaking for
Trichloroethylene; Regulation Under the
Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA).
Document ID No. EPA–HQ–OPPT–2020–
0642–0303. December 15, 2023.
37. Keller and Heckman LLP on behalf of
multiple pesticide registrants. Comments
on the Proposed Rulemaking for
Trichloroethylene; Regulation Under the
Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA).
Document ID No. EPA–HQ–OPPT–2020–
0642–0308. December 15, 2023.
38. AIHA. Comments on the Proposed
Rulemaking for Trichloroethylene;
Regulation Under the Toxic Substances
Control Act (TSCA). Document ID No.
EPA–HQ–OPPT–2020–0642–0244.
December 5, 2023.
39. American Chemistry Council. Comments
on the Proposed Rulemaking for
Trichloroethylene; Regulation Under the
Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA).
Document ID No. EPA–HQ–OPPT–2020–
0642–0320. December 15, 2023.
40. Keller and Heckman LLP on behalf of
PPG. Comments on the Proposed
Rulemaking for Trichloroethylene;
Regulation Under the Toxic Substances
Control Act (TSCA). Document ID No.
EPA–HQ–OPPT–2020–0642–0315.
December 15, 2023.
41. SAFECHEM Europe GmbH. Comments on
the Proposed Rulemaking for
Trichloroethylene; Regulation Under the
Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA).
Document ID No. EPA–HQ–OPPT–2020–
0642–0272. December 13, 2024.
42. Vinyl Institute. Comments on the
Proposed Rulemaking for
Trichloroethylene; Regulation Under the
Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA).
Document ID No. EPA–HQ–OPPT–2020–
0642–0318. December 15, 2023.
43. American Chemistry Council’s TCE
Panel. Comments on the Proposed
Rulemaking for Trichloroethylene;
Regulation Under the Toxic Substances
Control Act (TSCA). Document ID No.
EPA–HQ–OPPT–2020–0642–0310.
December 15, 2023.
44. Environmental Defense Fund. Comments
on the Proposed Rulemaking for
Trichloroethylene; Regulation Under the
Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA).
Document ID No. EPA–HQ–OPPT–2020–
0642–0312. December 15, 2023.
45. New York State Office of the Attorney
General et al. Comments on the Proposed
Rulemaking for Trichloroethylene;
Regulation Under the Toxic Substances
Control Act (TSCA). Document ID No.
EPA–HQ–OPPT–2020–0642–0311.
December 15, 2023.
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46. ENTEK. Comments on the Proposed
Rulemaking for Trichloroethylene;
Regulation Under the Toxic Substances
Control Act (TSCA). Document ID No.
EPA–HQ–OPPT–2020–0642–0230.
November 3, 2023.
47. New York Suffolk County Department of
Health Services. Comments on the
Proposed Rulemaking for
Trichloroethylene; Regulation Under the
Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA).
Document ID No. EPA–HQ–OPPT–2020–
0642–0275. December 14, 2023.
48. OSHA. Hazardous Waste Operations and
Emergency Response (HAZWOPER).
https://www.osha.gov/emergencypreparedness/hazardous-wasteoperations/standards.
49. OSHA. Permissible Exposure Limits—
Annotated Tables. https://
www.osha.gov/annotated-pels.
50. Skiet. Comments on the Proposed
Rulemaking for Methylene Chloride;
Regulation Under the Toxic Substances
Control Act (TSCA). Document ID No.
EPA–HQ–OPPT–2020–0465–0226. June
30, 2023.
51. Household and Commercial Products
Association. Comments on the Proposed
Rulemaking for Trichloroethylene;
Regulation Under the Toxic Substances
Control Act (TSCA). Document ID No.
EPA–HQ–OPPT–2020–0642–0306.
December 15, 2023.
52. EPA. Guidance To Protect POTW
Workers From Toxic And Reactive Gases
And Vapors. June 1992.
53. The Adhesive and Sealant Council Inc.
Comments on the Proposed Rulemaking
for Trichloroethylene; Regulation Under
the Toxic Substances Control Act
(TSCA). Document ID No. EPA–HQ–
OPPT–2020–0642–0277. December 14,
2023.
54. GS Yuasa Energy Solutions and Yuasa
Battery Inc. Comments on the Proposed
Rulemaking for Trichloroethylene;
Regulation Under the Toxic Substances
Control Act (TSCA). Document ID No.
EPA–HQ–OPPT–2020–0642–0260.
December 12, 2023.
55. Illinois Department of Transportation.
Comments on the Proposed Rulemaking
for Trichloroethylene; Regulation Under
the Toxic Substances Control Act
(TSCA). Document ID No. EPA–HQ–
OPPT–2020–0642–0271. December 13,
2023.
56. Chemical Users Coalition. Comments on
the Proposed Rulemaking for
Trichloroethylene; Regulation Under the
Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA).
Document ID No. EPA–HQ–OPPT–2020–
0642–0279. December 14, 2023.
57. The State Asphalt Pavement Associations
Inc. and The National Asphalt Pavement
Association. Comments on the Proposed
Rulemaking for Trichloroethylene;
Regulation Under the Toxic Substances
Control Act (TSCA). Document ID No.
EPA–HQ–OPPT–2020–0642–0282.
December 14, 2023.
58. ASTM International. Comments on the
Proposed Rulemaking for
Trichloroethylene; Regulation Under the
Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA).
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Document ID No. EPA–HQ–OPPT–2020–
0642–0291. December 15, 2023.
59. Ohio Environmental Protection Agency.
Comments on the Proposed Rulemaking
for Methylene Chloride; Regulation
Under the Toxic Substances Control Act
(TSCA). Document ID No. EPA–HQ–
OPPT–2020–0465–0261. July 3, 2023.
60. Skon. Comments on the Proposed
Rulemaking for Methylene Chloride;
Regulation Under the Toxic Substances
Control Act (TSCA). Document ID No.
EPA–HQ–OPPT–2020–0465–0223. June
30, 2023.
61. Polypore. Comments on the Proposed
Rulemaking for Methylene Chloride;
Regulation Under the Toxic Substances
Control Act (TSCA). Document ID No.
EPA–HQ–OPPT–2020–0465–0251. July
3, 2023.
62. W-Scope. Comments on the Proposed
Rulemaking for Methylene Chloride;
Regulation Under the Toxic Substances
Control Act (TSCA). Document ID No.
EPA–HQ–OPPT–2020–0465–0275. July
4, 2023.
63. EPA. Methylene Chloride; Regulation
Under the Toxic Substances Control Act
(TSCA); Response to Public Comments.
64. EPA. Assistant Administrator Meeting
with ENTEK on a TSCA Section 6(g)
Exemption Request in Risk Management
for Trichloroethylene (TCE). February
15, 2022.
65. EPA. Meeting with Microporous on Risk
Management under TSCA Section 6 for
Trichloroethylene. February 20, 2024.
66. PPG. TSCA Section 6(g) Exemption
Request for use of TCE in the production
of TESLIN® substrate. June 29, 2022.
67. Integer. Comments on the Proposed
Rulemaking for Trichloroethylene;
Regulation Under the Toxic Substances
Control Act (TSCA). Document ID No.
EPA–HQ–OPPT–2020–0642–0305.
December 15, 2023.
68. State Industrial Products. Comments on
the Proposed Rulemaking for
Trichloroethylene; Regulation Under the
Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA).
Document ID No. EPA–HQ–OPPT–2020–
0642–0238. November 22, 2023.
69. CRC Industries Inc. Comments on the
Proposed Rulemaking for
Perchloroethylene; Regulation Under the
Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA).
Document ID No. EPA–HQ–OPPT–2020–
0720–0267. August 15, 2023.
70. National Fire Protection Association
(NFPA). NFPA 70E Standard for
Electrical Safety in the Workplace.
https://www.nfpa.org/codes-andstandards/nfpa-70e-standarddevelopment/70e.
71. American Association of State Highway
and Transportation Officials. Comments
on the Proposed Rulemaking for
Trichloroethylene; Regulation Under the
Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA).
Document ID No. EPA–HQ–OPPT–2020–
0642–0270. December 13, 2024.
72. Illinois Asphalt Pavement Association.
Comments on the Proposed Rulemaking
for Trichloroethylene; Regulation Under
the Toxic Substances Control Act
(TSCA). Document ID No. EPA–HQ–
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OPPT–2020–0642–0269. December 13,
2023.
73. InstroTek Inc. Comments on the Proposed
Rulemaking for Trichloroethylene;
Regulation Under the Toxic Substances
Control Act (TSCA). Document ID No.
EPA–HQ–OPPT–2020–0642–0278.
December 14, 2023.
74. InfraTest USA Inc et al. Comments on the
Proposed Rulemaking for
Trichloroethylene; Regulation Under the
Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA).
Document ID No. EPA–HQ–OPPT–2020–
0642–0294. December 15, 2023.
75. The Utah Asphalt Pavement Association.
Comments on the Proposed Rulemaking
for Trichloroethylene; Regulation Under
the Toxic Substances Control Act
(TSCA). Document ID No. EPA–HQ–
OPPT–2020–0642–0295. December 15,
2023.
76. Texas Department of Transportation.
Comments on the Proposed Rulemaking
for Trichloroethylene; Regulation Under
the Toxic Substances Control Act
(TSCA). Document ID No. EPA–HQ–
OPPT–2020–0642–0660. December 7,
2023.
77. Indiana Department of Transportation.
Comments on the Proposed Rulemaking
for Trichloroethylene; Regulation Under
the Toxic Substances Control Act
(TSCA). Document ID No. EPA–HQ–
OPPT–2020–0642–0661. December 8,
2023.
78. US Chamber of Commerce. Comments on
the Proposed Rulemaking for
Trichloroethylene; Regulation Under the
Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA).
Document ID No. EPA–HQ–OPPT–2020–
0642–0290. December 15, 2023.
79. Alliance for Chemical Distribution.
Comments on the Proposed Rulemaking
for Trichloroethylene; Regulation Under
the Toxic Substances Control Act
(TSCA). Document ID No. EPA–HQ–
OPPT–2020–0642–0285. December 15,
2023.
80. American Fuel & Petrochemical
Manufacturers. Comments on the
Proposed Rulemaking for
Trichloroethylene; Regulation Under the
Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA).
Document ID No. EPA–HQ–OPPT–2020–
0642–0319. December 15, 2023.
81. Halogenated Solvents Industry Alliance
Inc. Comments on the Proposed
Rulemaking for Trichloroethylene;
Regulation Under the Toxic Substances
Control Act (TSCA). Document ID No.
EPA–HQ–OPPT–2020–0642–0296.
December 15, 2023.
82. Synesqo. PVDF: Critical uses and
Relationship to TSCA Section 6 HighPriority Chemicals; Briefing for OIRA.
August 13, 2024.
83. NASA. Solid Rocket Motor Nozzles
Mission Critical Requirement for
Trichloroethylene. February 1, 2023.
84. OSHA. Multi-Employer Citation Policy.
December 10, 1999. https://
www.osha.gov/enforcement/directives/
cpl-02–00–124.
85. OSHA. Chemical Hazards and Toxic
Substances. https://www.osha.gov/
chemical-hazards.
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86. OSHA. OSHA Technical Manual (OTM)
Section II: Chapter 1. Personal Sampling
for Air Contaminants. Last updated on
September 14, 2023. https://
www.osha.gov/otm/section-2healthhazards/chapter-1.
87. EPA. Passive Samplers for Investigations
of Air Quality: Method Description,
Implementation, and Comparison to
Alternative Sampling Methods.
December 2014.
88. NIOSH. Hierarchy of Controls. Last
Reviewed January 17, 2023. https://
www.cdc.gov/niosh/topics/hierarchy/.
89. OSHA. Personal Protective Equipment.
2023.
90. EPA. Trichloroethylene (TCE); Revision
to Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA)
Risk Determination; Response to Public
Comments. December 2022.
91. EPA. Trichloroethylene: Fenceline
Technical Support—Water Pathway.
March 24, 2023.
92. EPA. Trichloroethylene (TCE): Fenceline
Technical Support—Ambient Air
Pathway. March 3, 2022.
93. EPA. National Emission Standards for
Benzene Final Rule. 54 FR 38044.
September 14, 1989.
94. American Petroleum Institute. Comments
on the Proposed Rulemaking for
Trichloroethylene; Regulation Under the
Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA).
Document ID No. EPA–HQ–OPPT–2020–
0642–0263. December 12, 2023.
95. San Francisco Program on Reproductive
Health and the Environment University
of California. Comments on the Proposed
Rulemaking for Trichloroethylene;
Regulation Under the Toxic Substances
Control Act (TSCA). Document ID No.
EPA–HQ–OPPT–2020–0642–0314.
December 15, 2023.
96. Anonymous. Comments on the Proposed
Rulemaking for Trichloroethylene;
Regulation Under the Toxic Substances
Control Act (TSCA). EPA–HQ–OPPT–
2020–0642–0372. November 9, 2023.
97. EPA. Supporting Statement for an
Information Collection Request (ICR)
Under the Paperwork Reduction Act
(PRA). 2024.
98. EPA. Second Existing Chemical Exposure
Limit (ECEL) (Developmental Toxicity)
for Occupational Use of
Trichloroethylene; Appendix B. March
31, 2022.
VIII. Statutory and Executive Order
Reviews
Additional information about these
statutes and executive orders can be
found at https://www.epa.gov/lawsregulations/laws-and-executive-orders.
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory
Planning and Review and Executive
Order 14094: Modernizing Regulatory
Review
This action is a ‘‘significant regulatory
action’’ as defined in Executive Order
12866 (58 FR 51735, October 4, 1993),
as amended by Executive Order 14094
(88 FR 21879, April 11, 2023).
Accordingly, EPA submitted this action
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to the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) for Executive Order 12866
review. Documentation of any changes
made in response to Executive Order
12866 review is available in the docket.
EPA prepared an analysis of the
potential costs and benefits associated
with this action (Ref. 3), which is
available in the docket and summarized
in Unit I.E.
B. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
The information collection activities
in this final rule have been submitted to
OMB for approval under the PRA, 44
U.S.C. 3501 et seq. The Information
Collection Request (ICR) document that
EPA prepared has been assigned EPA
ICR No. 2775.02 and OMB Control No.
2070–0232 (Ref. 97). The ICR is in the
docket and is briefly summarized here.
The information collection requirements
are not enforceable until OMB approves
them.
There are two primary provisions of
the rule that may increase burden under
the PRA. The first is downstream
notification, which is required to be
carried out by updates to the relevant
SDS and required for manufacturers,
processors, and distributors in
commerce of TCE, who would provide
notice to companies downstream upon
shipment of TCE about the prohibitions.
The information submitted to
downstream companies through the
SDS would provide knowledge and
awareness of the restrictions to these
companies. The second primary
provision of the rule that may increase
burden under the PRA is WCPP-related
information generation, recordkeeping,
and notification requirements
(including development of exposure
control plans; exposure level monitoring
and related recordkeeping; development
of documentation for a PPE program and
related recordkeeping; development of
documentation for a respiratory
protection program and related
recordkeeping; development and
notification to potentially exposed
persons (employees and others in the
workplace) about how they can access
the exposure control plans, exposure
monitoring records, PPE program
implementation documentation, and
respirator program documentation; and
development of documentation
demonstrating eligibility for an
exemption from the prohibitions, and
related recordkeeping).
Respondents/affected entities:
Persons that manufacture (including
import), process, distribute in
commerce, use, or dispose of TCE or
products containing TCE. See also Unit
I.A.
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Respondent’s obligation to respond:
Mandatory (TSCA section 6(a) and 40
CFR part 751).
Estimated number of respondents:
23,070.
Frequency of response: On occasion.
Total estimated burden: 38,625 hours
(per year). Burden is defined at 5 CFR
1320.3(b).
Total estimated cost: $7,953,367 (per
year), includes $5,351,750 annualized
capital or operation and maintenance
costs.
An agency may not conduct or
sponsor, and a person is not required to
respond to, a collection of information
unless it displays a currently valid OMB
control number. The OMB control
numbers for EPA regulations in 40 CFR
are listed in 40 CFR part 9. When OMB
approves this ICR, the OMB control
number will be included on the
approved collection instruments and
added to 40 CFR part 9 to display the
valid OMB control number assigned to
the approved information collection
activities contained in this final rule.
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C. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
Pursuant to sections 603 and 609(b) of
the RFA, 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq., EPA
prepared an IRFA for the 2023 TCE
proposed rule (Ref. 20) and convened a
SBAR Panel to obtain advice and
recommendations from SERs that
potentially would be subject to the
rule’s requirements. Summaries of the
IRFA and Panel recommendations are
presented in the 2023 TCE proposed
rule, and copies of the related
documents are in the docket.
As required by section 604 of the
RFA, EPA prepared a FRFA for this
action (Ref. 21). The FRFA addresses the
issues raised by public comments on the
IRFA for the proposed rule. The
complete FRFA is available in the
docket and is summarized here.
1. Statement of Need and Rule
Objectives
Under TSCA section 6(a) (15 U.S.C.
2605(a)), if EPA determines after a
TSCA section 6(b) risk evaluation that a
chemical substance presents an
unreasonable risk of injury to health or
the environment, without consideration
of costs or other non-risk factors,
including an unreasonable risk to a
PESS identified as relevant to the risk
evaluation, under the conditions of use,
EPA must by rule apply one or more
requirements listed in TSCA section 6(a)
to the extent necessary so that the
chemical substance or mixture no longer
presents such risk. TCE was the subject
of a risk evaluation under TSCA section
6(b)(4)(A) that was issued in November
2020. In addition, in January 2023, EPA
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issued a revised unreasonable risk
determination that TCE as a whole
chemical substance presents an
unreasonable risk of injury to health
under the conditions of use. As a result,
EPA is taking action to the extent
necessary so that TCE no longer
presents such risk.
EPA developed this final rule after
considering EPA’s unreasonable risk
determination for TCE, information
provided in public comments on the
proposed rule, findings from and
comments on the SBAR Panel, other
required consultations, and additional
public outreach. More information on
the 2023 TCE proposed rule, SBAR
Panel, and outreach efforts for this
action, is available in the docket for this
rulemaking.
To address the identified
unreasonable risk, this rule (1) prohibits
the manufacture (including import),
processing, and distribution in
commerce of TCE for all uses (including
all consumer uses), with longer
timeframes for manufacture and
processing related to certain uses and
time-limited TSCA 6(g) exemptions for
certain conditions of use; (2) requires
strict workplace controls, including a
TCE WCPP, which would include
requirements for an inhalation exposure
limit and glove requirements to limit
dermal exposure to TCE, for conditions
of use with long term phase-outs or
time-limited exemptions under TSCA
section 6(g); (3) establishes
recordkeeping and downstream
notification requirements; and (4)
provides certain time-limited
exemptions from requirements for
conditions of use of TCE that are critical
and essential, for which no technically
and economically feasible, safer
alternative is available, or where
compliance with the requirement would
significantly disrupt the national
economy, national security, or critical
infrastructure.
2. Significant Issues Raised by the
Public Comments in Response to the
IRFA and EPA Response
A summary of significant issues
raised by comments about the IRFA
(Ref. 20) and EPA’s response is in the
Response to Comments document (Ref
11), section 10.2.
3. SBA Office of Advocacy Comments
and EPA Response
SBA Office of Advocacy provided
comments on the proposed rule (EPA–
HQ–OPPT–2020–0624). A summary of
these comments and EPA’s response is
in section 3 of the FRFA (Ref. 21).
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4. Estimate of the Number of Small
Entities to Which the Final Rule Applies
This final rule potentially affects
small manufacturers (including
importers), processors, distributors,
retailers, users of TCE or of products
containing TCE, and entities engaging in
disposal. EPA estimates that the rule
would affect approximately 21,599
overall firms, of which 98.5% small
entities have estimated impacts of less
than 1% of revenues. End users with
economically and technologically
feasible alternatives are estimated to
only incur costs associated with rule
familiarization. For a full description of
the estimated number of small entities
affected by this rule, see the FRFA (Ref.
21).
5. Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping,
and Other Compliance Requirements of
the Final Rule
a. Compliance Requirements
EPA is prohibiting all conditions of
use of TCE. As described in the final
rule, EPA is prohibiting all
manufacturing (including import),
processing, and distribution in
commerce of TCE for all uses (including
all consumer uses), as described in Unit
IV.B.2. with longer compliance
timeframes for manufacture and
processing related to certain uses and
TSCA section 6(g) exemptions for
certain conditions of use. EPA is also
requiring strict workplace controls,
including compliance with a TCE
WCPP, which would include
requirements for an interim ECEL, as
well as dermal protection, to limit
exposure to TCE, for conditions of use
with long term phase-outs or timelimited exemptions under TSCA section
6(g), as described in Units IV.B., IV.E.,
and IV.G. After December 17, 2024,
prohibitions on manufacturing,
processing, and distribution in
commerce of TCE for consumer use will
occur in 90 days for manufacturers (i.e.,
on March 17, 2025), 180 days for
processors and distributors (i.e., on June
16, 2025), and 270 days for industrial
and commercial users and disposal (i.e.,
on September 15, 2025), except as
specified in paragraphs (b)(4) through
(25) of section 751.305.
An interim WCPP encompasses
inhalation exposure thresholds,
includes monitoring and recordkeeping
requirements to verify that those
thresholds are not exceeded, and other
components, such as dermal protection,
while EPA determined that prohibition
of all conditions of use is ultimately
necessary to address the unreasonable
risk.
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b. Classes of Small Entities Subject to
the Compliance Requirements
6. Steps Taken To Minimize Economic
Impact to Small Entities
The small entities that would be
potentially directly regulated by this
rule are small businesses that
manufacture (including import),
process, distribute in commerce, use, or
dispose of TCE, including retailers of
TCE for end-consumer uses.
a. SBAR Panel
As required by section 609(b) of the
RFA, EPA conducted outreach to small
entities and convened a SBAR Panel to
obtain advice and recommendations of
representatives of the small entities that
potentially would be subject to the
rule’s requirements. The Panel solicited
input on all aspects of these proposed
regulations. Six potentially impacted
small entities served as small-entity
representatives (SERs) to the Panel,
representing a broad range of small
entities from diverse geographic
locations. The Panel Report was signed
on April 4, 2023 (Ref. 19).
Consistent with the RFA
requirements, the Panel evaluated the
assembled materials and small-entity
comments on issues related to elements
of the regulatory flexibility analysis. It is
important to note that the Panel’s
findings and discussion were based on
the information available at the time the
final report was prepared. For the full
list of Panel recommendations, see
Section 8.A. of the FRFA (Ref. 21).
EPA detailed the SBAR Panel’s
request for comment on these specific
topics in the IRFA and proposed rule
and solicited comment from the public.
During the comment period, the public
provided comment on some of these
areas. Those comments and others
received on the proposed rule and
EPA’s responses are in the Response to
Comments document (Ref. 11).
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c. Professional Skills Needed To
Comply
Entities subject to this rule that
manufacture (including import),
process, or distribute TCE in commerce
will be required to cease such activity.
The entity will be required to modify
their SDS or develop another way to
inform their customers of the
prohibition on manufacture, processing,
and distribution of TCE. They are also
required to maintain ordinary business
records, such as invoices and bills-oflading, that demonstrate compliance
with the prohibitions, restrictions, and
other provisions of this regulation.
These are all routine business tasks that
do not require specialized skills or
training.
Entities that use TCE in any industrial
and commercial capacity will be
required to cease, with some timeframes
for prohibitions longer than others.
Restriction or prohibition of these uses
would likely require the
implementation of an alternative
chemical or the cessation of use of TCE
in a process or equipment that may
require persons with specialized skills,
such as engineers or other technical
experts. Instead of developing an
alternative method themselves,
commercial users of TCE may choose to
contract with another entity to do so.
Entities that are permitted, on a timelimited basis until prohibition, to
continue to manufacture, process,
distribute, or use TCE are required to
implement a WCPP for continued use of
TCE. A transition to a WCPP may
require persons with specialized skills
such as an engineer or health and safety
professional. Instead of implementing
the WCPP, entities that use TCE may
choose to contract with another entity to
do so. Records have to be maintained for
compliance with a WCPP, as applicable.
While this recording activity itself may
not require a special skill, the
information to be measured and
recorded may require persons with
specialized skills such as an industrial
hygienist.
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b. Alternatives Considered
EPA analyzed alternative regulatory
approaches to identify which would be
feasible, reduce burden to small
businesses, and achieve the objective of
the statute (i.e., applying one or more
requirements listed in TSCA section 6(a)
to the extent necessary so that the
chemical substance or mixture no longer
presents an unreasonable risk). As
described in more detail in Unit VI. of
the proposed rule, and Unit II.D. of the
final rule, EPA considered several
factors, in addition to identified
unreasonable risk, when selecting
among possible TSCA section 6(a)
requirements. To the extent practicable,
EPA factored into its decisions: the
effects of TCE on health and the
environment, the magnitude of exposure
to TCE of human beings and the
environment, the benefits of TCE for
various uses, and the reasonably
ascertainable economic consequences of
the rule. As part of this analysis, EPA
considered—in addition to the
prohibitions described in Unit IV.—a
wide variety of control measures to
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address the unreasonable risk from TCE
such as a WCPP, weight fractions, a
certification and limited access
program, and prescriptive controls.
EPA’s analysis of these risk management
approaches is detailed in Unit VI.A.3. of
the proposed rule.
Based on consideration of public
comments received on the proposed
rule, EPA has made some changes from
the proposed rule to the final rule.
These changes include aspects of the
WCPP, longer compliance timeframes
for certain uses, and TSCA section 6(g)
exemptions for certain conditions of
use. EPA is also requiring strict
workplace controls, including
compliance with a TCE WCPP, which
would include requirements for an
interim ECEL, as well as dermal
protection, to limit exposure to TCE, for
conditions of use with long term phaseouts or time-limited exemptions.
Additional changes to the rule based on
consideration of public comments are
detailed in Unit III. of the final rule and
include identification of a regulatory
threshold for TCE. For additional
information and rationale towards
alternative actions, see Unit III.D. of this
final rule and Section 8.B. of the FRFA
(Ref. 21).
In addition, EPA is preparing a Small
Entity Compliance Guide to help small
entities comply with this rule. EPA
expects that this guide will be made
available on the EPA website prior to
the effective date of this final rule.
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
(UMRA)
This action does not contain an
unfunded mandate of $100 million (in
1995 dollars and adjusted annually for
inflation) or more as described in
UMRA, 2 U.S.C. 1531–1538, and does
not significantly or uniquely affect small
governments. The action will affect
entities that use TCE. It is not expected
to affect State, local, or Tribal
governments because the use of TCE by
government entities is minimal. The
costs involved in this action are
estimated not to exceed $183 million in
2023$ ($100 million in 1995$ adjusted
for inflation using the GDP implicit
price deflator) in any one year for State,
local, and Tribal governments, in the
aggregate, or for the private sector.
Accordingly, this action is not subject to
the requirements of sections 202, 203, or
205 of UMRA.
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
EPA has concluded that this action
has federalism implications, as specified
in Executive Order 13132 (64 FR 43255,
August 10, 1999), because regulation
under TSCA section 6(a) may preempt
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state law. EPA provides the following
federalism summary impact statement.
The Agency consulted with state and
local officials early in the process of
developing the proposed action to
permit them to have meaningful and
timely input into its development. This
included a consultation meeting on July
22, 2021, and a background presentation
on September 9, 2020. EPA invited the
following national organizations
representing State and local elected
officials to these meetings: Association
of State Drinking Water Administrators,
National Association of Clean Water
Agencies, Western States Water Council,
National Water Resources Association,
American Water Works Association,
Association of Metropolitan Water
Agencies, Association of Clean Water
Administrators, Environmental Council
of the States, National Association of
Counties, National League of Cities,
County Executives of America, U.S.
Conference of Mayors, and National
Association of Attorneys General. A
summary of the meeting with these
organizations, including the views that
they expressed, is available in the
docket (Ref. 13). EPA provided an
opportunity for these organizations to
provide follow-up comments in writing
but did not receive any such comments.
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 will not have
substantial direct effects on Tribal
governments, on the relationship
between the Federal Government and
the Indian Tribes, or on the distribution
of power and responsibilities between
the Federal Government and Indian
Tribes. TCE is not manufactured,
processed, or distributed in commerce
by Tribes and, therefore, this
rulemaking would not impose
substantial direct compliance costs on
Tribal governments. Thus, Executive
Order 13175 does not apply to this
action.
Notwithstanding the lack of Tribal
implications as specified by Executive
Order 13175, EPA consulted with Tribal
officials during the development of this
action, consistent with the EPA Policy
on Consultation and Coordination with
Indian Tribes, which EPA applies more
broadly than Executive Order 13175.
The Agency held a Tribal consultation
from June 3, 2021, to August 20, 2021,
with meetings on June 16 and July 6,
2021. Tribal officials were given the
opportunity to meaningfully interact
with EPA concerning the current status
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of risk management. During the
consultation, EPA discussed risk
management under TSCA section 6(a),
findings from the 2020 Risk Evaluation
for TCE, types of information to inform
risk management, principles for
transparency during risk management,
and types of information EPA sought
from Tribal officials. EPA briefed Tribal
officials on the Agency’s risk
management considerations and Tribal
officials raised no related issues or
concerns to EPA during or in follow-up
to those meetings (Ref. 14). EPA
received no written comments as part of
this consultation.
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of
Children From Environmental Health
Risks and Safety Risks
Executive Order 13045 (62 FR 19885,
April 23, 1997) directs Federal agencies
to include an evaluation of the health
and safety effects of the planned
regulation on children in Federal health
and safety standards and explain why
the regulation is preferable to
potentially effective and reasonably
feasible alternatives. While the
environmental health or safety risks
addressed by this action present a
disproportionate risk to children due to
TCE’s developmental toxicity, this
action is not subject to Executive Order
13045 because it is not a significant
regulatory action under section 3(f)(1) of
Executive Order 12866. However,
because there is evidence of an
association between TCE and
developmental toxicity, the prohibitions
and restrictions on TCE in this final rule
are expected to strengthen protection of
children’s health. In addition, EPA’s
Policy on Children’s Health applies to
this action. Information on how the
policy was applied is available in Unit
II.D.2.c.
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions
Concerning Regulations That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution or Use
This action is not a ‘‘significant
energy action’’ under 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
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)
Pursuant to the NTTAA section 12(d),
15 U.S.C. 272, the Agency has
determined that this rulemaking
involves environmental monitoring or
measurement, specifically for
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occupational inhalation exposures to
TCE. Consistent with the Agency’s
Performance Based Measurement
System (PBMS), EPA will not require
the use of specific, prescribed analytic
methods. Rather, the Agency will allow
the use of any method that meets the
prescribed performance criteria. The
PBMS approach is intended to be more
flexible and cost-effective for the
regulated community; it is also intended
to encourage innovation in analytical
technology and improved data quality.
EPA is not precluding the use of any
method, whether it constitutes a
voluntary consensus standard or not, as
long as it meets the performance criteria
specified.
For this rulemaking, the key
consideration for the PBMS approach is
the ability to accurately detect and
measure airborne concentrations of TCE
at the interim ECEL and the interim
ECEL action level. Some examples of
methods which meet the criteria are
included in appendix B of the ECEL
memo (Ref. 98). EPA recognizes that
there may be voluntary consensus
standards that meet the criteria (Ref. 98).
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal
Actions To Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and
Low-Income Populations and Executive
Order 14096: Revitalizing Our Nation’s
Commitment to Environmental Justice
for All
EPA believes that the human health
and environmental conditions that exist
prior to this action result in or have the
potential to result in disproportionate
and adverse human health or
environmental effects on communities
with EJ concerns in accordance with
Executive Order 14096 (88 FR 25251,
April 26, 2023) (building on and
supplementing Executive Order 12898
(59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994). As
described more fully in the Economic
Analysis for this rulemaking (Ref. 3),
EPA conducted an analysis to
characterize the baseline conditions
faced by communities and workers
affected by the regulation to identify the
potential for disproportionate impacts
on communities with environmental
justice concerns using information
about the facilities, workforce, and
communities potentially affected by the
regulatory options under current
conditions, before the regulation would
go into effect. The analysis drew on
publicly available data provided by EPA
and the U.S. Census Bureau, including
data from the Toxics Release Inventory
(TRI), Chemical Data Reporting (CDR),
National Emissions Inventory (NEI), the
American Community Survey (ACS),
and the Quarterly Workforce Indicators
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(QWI). The baseline characterization
suggests that workers in affected
industries and regions, as well as
residents of nearby communities, are
more likely to be people of color than
the general population in affected states,
although this varied by use assessed.
Based on reasonably available
information, EPA determined that there
are potential environmental justice
concerns in communities surrounding
facilities subject to this regulation (Ref.
3).
EPA believes that this action is likely
to reduce existing disproportionate and
adverse effects on communities with
environmental justice concerns. While
this regulatory action applies
requirements to the extent necessary so
that TCE no longer presents an
unreasonable risk, EPA is not able to
quantify the distribution of the change
in risk for affected populations. EPA is
also unable to quantify the changes in
risks for affected populations from nonTCE-using technologies or practices that
firms may adopt in response to the
regulation to determine whether any
such changes could pose environmental
justice concerns. Data limitations that
prevent EPA from conducting a more
comprehensive analysis are summarized
in the Economic Analysis (Ref. 3).
EPA additionally identified and
addressed potential EJ concerns by
conducting outreach to advocates of
communities that might be subject to
disproportionate exposure to TCE. On
June 16, 2021, and July 6, 2021, EPA
held public meetings as part of this
consultation (Ref. 18). See also Unit II.D.
These meetings were held pursuant to
Executive Order 12898 and Executive
Order 14008, Tackling the Climate
Crisis at Home and Abroad (86 FR 7619,
February 1, 2021). EPA received three
written comments following the EJ
meetings, in addition to oral comments
provided during the consultations (Refs.
15, 16, 17). In general, commenters
supported strong regulation of TCE to
protect lower-income communities and
workers. Commenters supported strong
outreach to affected communities,
encouraged EPA to follow the hierarchy
of controls, favored prohibitions, and
noted the uncertainty, and, in some
cases, inadequacy, of PPE.
The information supporting this
Executive Order review is contained in
Unit II.D., as well as in the Economic
Analysis (Ref. 3). EPA’s presentations, a
summary of EPA’s presentation and
public comments made, and fact sheets
for the EJ consultations related to this
rulemaking are available at https://
www.epa.gov/assessing-and-managingchemicals-under-tsca/materials-juneand-july-2021-environmental-justice.
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These materials are also available in the
docket for this rulemaking.
K. Congressional Review Act (CRA)
This action is subject to the CRA, 5
U.S.C. 801 et seq., and the EPA will
submit a rule report 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 chapter I is amended
to read 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:
■
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 2605, 15 U.S.C.
2625(l)(4).
■
2. Add subpart D to read as follows:
Subpart D—Trichloroethylene (TCE)
Sec.
751.301 General.
751.303 Definitions.
751.305 Prohibitions of manufacturing,
processing, distribution in commerce,
use and disposal.
751.307 Phase-out of processing
trichloroethylene to manufacture of
HFC–134a.
751.309 Phase-out of trichloroethylene use
in vapor degreasing for booster rocket
nozzles.
751.311 Phase-out of TCE use in the
industrial and commercial use of TCE in
laboratory use in asphalt testing and
recovery.
751.313 Phase-out of disposal of TCE to
industrial pre-treatment, treatment, or
publicly owned treatment works.
751.315 Workplace chemical protection
program.
751.317 Workplace requirements for
energized electrical cleaner.
751.319 Workplace requirements for
wastewater.
751.321 Downstream notification.
751.323 Recordkeeping requirements.
751.325 Exemptions.
Subpart D—Trichloroethylene (TCE)
§ 751.301
General.
(a) Applicability. This subpart sets
certain restrictions on the manufacture
(including import), processing,
distribution in commerce, use, and
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disposal of trichloroethylene (TCE)
(CASRN 79–01–6) to prevent
unreasonable risk of injury to health in
accordance with TSCA section 6(a).
(b) Regulatory threshold. Unless
otherwise specified in this subpart, the
prohibitions and restrictions of this
subpart do not apply to products
containing TCE at thresholds less than
0.1 percent by weight. This threshold
does not apply to wastewater.
(c) Byproducts within site-limited,
physically enclosed systems. Unless
otherwise specified in this subpart, the
prohibitions and restrictions of this
subpart do not apply to TCE processed
as a byproduct when that byproduct
TCE is processed within a site-limited,
physically enclosed system that is part
of the same overall manufacturing
process from which the byproduct TCE
was generated. This exclusion does not
permit TCE to be present in any product
that results from such site-limited,
physically enclosed systems, except as
permitted by paragraph (b) of this
section.
(d) Owner and operator requirements.
Any requirement for an owner or
operator or an owner and operator is a
requirement for any individual that is
either an owner or an operator.
§ 751.303
Definitions.
The definitions in subpart A of this
part apply to this subpart unless
otherwise specified in this section. In
addition, the following definitions
apply:
Distribute in commerce has the same
meaning as in section 3 of the Act,
except that the term does not include
retailers for purposes of § 751.321 and
§ 751.323.
Interim ECEL means a concentration
of airborne TCE of 0.2 parts per million
(ppm) calculated as an eight (8)-hour
time weighted average (TWA) that will
be in place only for the timeframes
indicated for specified conditions of
use, after which prohibitions would take
effect.
Interim ECEL action level means a
concentration of airborne TCE of 0.1
parts per million (ppm) calculated as an
eight (8)-hour time-weighted average
(TWA).
Site-limited has the same meaning as
in 40 CFR 711.3.
§ 751.305 Prohibitions of manufacturing,
processing, distribution in commerce, use
and disposal.
(a) Applicability. The provisions of
this section apply to the following:
(1) Manufacturing (including
importing and manufacturing for
export);
(2) Processing (including processing
for export);
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(3) All industrial and commercial
uses;
(4) All consumer uses;
(5) Distribution in commerce; and
(6) Disposal of TCE to industrial pretreatment, industrial treatment, or
publicly owned treatment works.
(b) Prohibitions. (1) After March 17,
2025, all persons are prohibited from
manufacturing (including importing and
manufacturing for export) TCE, except
as specified for manufacturing in
paragraphs (b)(5) through (25) of this
section.
(2) After June 16, 2025, all persons are
prohibited from processing (including
processing for export) and distributing
in commerce (including making
available) TCE, including any TCEcontaining products, except as specified
for processing or distributing in
commerce in paragraphs (b)(5) through
(25) of this section, and all retailers are
prohibited from distributing in
commerce (including making available)
TCE for any use.
(3) After September 15, 2025, all
persons are prohibited from industrial
and commercial use of TCE, including
any TCE-containing products, except as
specified for industrial or commercial
use in paragraphs (b)(5) through (25) of
this section.
(4) After September 15, 2025, all
persons manufacturing (including
importing), processing, and using TCE
are prohibited from disposal of TCE to
industrial pre-treatment, industrial
treatment, or publicly owned treatment
works except as specified in paragraphs
(b)(14), (23) (24), and (26) of this
section.
(5) After June 16, 2025, all persons are
prohibited from manufacturing
(including importing) TCE for industrial
and commercial use for batch vapor
degreasing in open-top and closed-loop
degreasing equipment, except for the
use specified in paragraphs (b)(11), (15),
(16), (17), (20), and (21) of this section.
(6) After September 15, 2025, all
persons are prohibited from processing
TCE for industrial and commercial use
for batch vapor degreasing in open-top
and closed-loop degreasing equipment,
except for the use specified in
paragraphs (b)(11), (15), (16), (17), (20),
and (21) of this section.
(7) After December 18, 2025, all
persons are prohibited from the
industrial and commercial use of TCE
for batch vapor degreasing in open-top
and closed-loop degreasing equipment,
except for the use specified in
paragraphs (b)(11), (15), (16), (17), (20),
and (21) of this section.
(8) After June 10, 2026, all persons are
prohibited from manufacturing
(including importing) TCE for: (i)
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Processing of TCE as a reactant/
intermediate, except for the use as
specified in paragraph (b)(18) of this
section; and (ii) Processing TCE for the
industrial and commercial use of TCE as
a processing aid for: process solvent
used in battery manufacture; process
solvent used in polymer fiber spinning,
fluoroelastomer manufacture and
Alcantara manufacture; extraction
solvent used in caprolactam
manufacture; precipitant used in betacyclodextrin manufacture, except for
those uses specified in paragraphs
(b)(14), (23) and (24) of this section.
(9) After December 18, 2026, all
persons are prohibited from: (i)
Processing TCE as a reactant/
intermediate, except for the use as
specified in paragraph (b)(18) of this
section; and (ii) Processing for and
industrial and commercial use of TCE as
a processing aid in: process solvent used
in battery manufacture; process solvent
used in polymer fiber spinning,
fluoroelastomer manufacture and
Alcantara manufacture; extraction
solvent used in caprolactam
manufacture; precipitant used in betacyclodextrin manufacture, except for
those uses specified in paragraphs
(b)(14), (23) and (24) of this section.
(10) After December 18, 2027, all
persons are prohibited from industrial
and commercial use of TCE in energized
electrical cleaners and from the
manufacturing (including importing),
processing, and distribution in
commerce of TCE for such a use.
(11) After December 18, 2029, all
persons are prohibited from the
industrial and commercial use of TCE as
a solvent in closed-loop batch vapor
degreasing for rayon fabric scouring for
end use in producing rocket booster
nozzles for Federal agencies and their
contractors, and manufacturing
(including importing), processing, and
distribution in commerce of TCE for
such use. If such persons obtain and
maintain the records required by
§§ 751.309 and 751.323 demonstrating
that a final pre-launch test was
completed using an alternative to TCE
in the production of the rocket booster
nozzles, the industrial and commercial
use of TCE as a solvent in closed-loop
batch vapor degreasing for rayon fabric
scouring for end use in producing rocket
booster nozzles for Federal agencies and
their contractors, and manufacturing
(including importing), processing, and
distribution in commerce of TCE for
such use may continue beyond
December 18, 2029.
(12) After December 18, 2029, all
persons are prohibited from industrial
and commercial use of TCE in adhesives
and sealants for essential aerospace
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applications, and from the
manufacturing (including importing),
processing, and distribution in
commerce of TCE for such uses.
(13) After December 18, 2029, all
persons are prohibited from the
industrial and commercial use of TCE as
a laboratory chemical for asphalt testing
and recovery using manual centrifuge
processes, and manufacturing
(including importing), processing, and
distribution in commerce of TCE for
such use, as further detailed in
§ 751.311.
(14) After December 18, 2029, all
persons are prohibited from the
industrial and commercial use of TCE as
a processing aid for lithium battery
separator manufacturing, and the
manufacturing (including importing),
processing, and distribution in
commerce of TCE for such use as well
as the disposal of TCE from such
industrial or commercial use to
industrial pre-treatment, industrial
treatment, or publicly owned treatment
works.
(15) After December 18, 2029, all
persons are prohibited from the
industrial and commercial use of TCE
for batch vapor degreasing for landbased DoD defense systems by Federal
agencies and their contractors, and from
the manufacturing (including
importing), processing, and distribution
in commerce of TCE for such use.
(16) After December 18, 2031, all
persons are prohibited from the
industrial and commercial use of TCE as
a solvent in closed-loop batch vapor
degreasing necessary for rocket engine
cleaning by Federal Agencies and their
contractors as described in
§ 751.325(b)(1) and the manufacturing
(including importing), processing, and
distribution in commerce of TCE for
such use.
(17) After December 18, 2031, all
persons are prohibited from the
industrial and commercial use of TCE as
a solvent in closed-loop and open-top
batch vapor degreasing for essential
aerospace parts and components and
narrow tubing for medical devices, and
manufacturing (including importing),
processing, and distribution in
commerce of TCE for such use as
described in § 751.325(b)(2).
(18) After June 18, 2033, all persons
are prohibited from the industrial and
commercial use of TCE as an
intermediate for manufacturing
hydrofluorocarbon 134-a, also known as
1,1,1,2-tetrafluroethane (HFC–134a:
CASRN 811–97–2), and manufacturing
(including importing), processing, and
distribution in commerce for such use
as described in § 751.307.
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(19) After December 18, 2034, all
persons are prohibited from the
industrial and commercial use of TCE in
laboratory use for asphalt testing and
recovery, and manufacturing (including
importing), processing, and distribution
in commerce of TCE for such use, as
described in § 751.311.
(20) After December 18, 2034, all
persons are prohibited from the
industrial and commercial use of TCE as
a solvent in closed-loop batch vapor
degreasing for rayon fabric scouring for
end use in producing rocket booster
nozzles for Federal agencies and their
contractors, and manufacturing
(including importing), processing, and
distribution in commerce of TCE for
such use.
(21) After December 18, 2034, for
vessels of the Armed Forces and their
systems, and in the maintenance,
fabrication, and sustainment for and of
such vessels and systems, prohibit the
industrial and commercial use of TCE as
(and manufacturing (including
importing), processing, and distribution
in commerce of TCE for): potting
compounds for naval electronic systems
and equipment; sealing compounds for
high and ultra-high vacuum systems;
bonding compounds for materials
testing and maintenance of underwater
systems and bonding of nonmetallic
materials; and cleaning agents to satisfy
cleaning requirements (which includes
degreasing using wipes, sprays, solvents
and vapor degreasing) for: materials and
components required for military
ordnance testing; temporary resin
repairs in vessel spaces where welding
is not authorized; ensuring
polyurethane adhesion for electronic
systems and equipment repair and
installation of elastomeric materials;
various naval combat systems, radars,
sensors, equipment; fabrication and
prototyping processes to remove coolant
and other residue from machine parts;
machined part fabrications for naval
systems; installation of topside rubber
tile material aboard vessels; and vapor
degreasing required for substrate surface
preparation prior to electroplating
processes.
(22) After December 18, 2034, all
persons are prohibited from
manufacturing (including import),
processing, distribution in commerce, or
use of TCE, including any TCE
containing products, for industrial or
commercial use in an emergency by
NASA or its contractors as described in
§ 751.325(b)(4), and manufacturing
(including importing), processing, and
distribution in commerce of TCE for
such use.
(23) After December 18, 2044, all
persons are prohibited from the
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industrial and commercial use of TCE as
a processing aid for lead-acid battery
separator manufacturing, and the
manufacturing (including importing),
processing, and distribution in
commerce of TCE for such use, as well
as the disposal of TCE from such
industrial or commercial use to
industrial pre-treatment, industrial
treatment, or publicly owned treatment
works.
(24) After December 18, 2039, all
persons are prohibited from the
industrial and commercial use of TCE as
a processing aid for specialty polymeric
microporous sheet materials
manufacturing, and the manufacturing
(including importing), processing, and
distribution in commerce of TCE for
such use, as well as the disposal of TCE
from such industrial or commercial use
to industrial pre-treatment, industrial
treatment, or publicly owned treatment
works.
(25) After December 18, 2074, all
persons are prohibited from industrial
and commercial uses of TCE for the
laboratory uses described in
§ 751.325(b)(7), and from the
manufacturing (including importing),
processing, and distribution in
commerce of TCE for such uses.
(26) After December 18, 2074, all
persons are prohibited from disposal of
TCE to industrial pre-treatment,
industrial treatment, or publicly owned
treatment works for the purposes of
cleanup projects of TCE-contaminated
water and groundwater as described in
§ 751.325(b)(8).
§ 751.307 Phase-out of processing
trichloroethylene to manufacture of HFC–
134a.
(a) Baseline. Before June 16, 2025,
each manufacturer of HFC–134a who
processes TCE as an intermediate must
establish a baseline annual volume of
TCE processed as an intermediate.
(1) The manufacturer must use the
average annual volume of any 12
consecutive months in the 3 years
preceding December 17, 2024 to
calculate the baseline.
(2) The manufacturer must retain
records that demonstrate how the
baseline annual volume was calculated,
in accordance with § 751.323(d)(1).
(b) Phase-out. (1) Beginning June 7,
2027, each manufacturer of HFC–134a
who processes TCE as an intermediate
is not permitted to process TCE as an
intermediate at an annual volume
greater than 75 percent of the baseline.
(2) Beginning June 18, 2029, each
manufacturer of HFC–134a who
processes TCE as an intermediate is not
permitted to process TCE as an
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intermediate at an annual volume
greater than 50 percent of the baseline.
(3) Beginning June 18, 2031, each
manufacturer of HFC–134a who
processes TCE as an intermediate is not
permitted to process TCE as an
intermediate at an annual volume
greater than 25 percent of the baseline
so established.
(4) Beginning June 18, 2033, each
manufacturer of HFC–134a who
processes TCE as an intermediate is
prohibited from processing TCE as an
intermediate.
(c) Workplace chemical protection
program. The owner or operator of the
location where TCE is processed as an
intermediate in accordance with this
section, and manufacturers (including
importers) and processors of TCE for
such use, must comply with § 751.315.
(d) Recordkeeping. The owner or
operator of the location where TCE is
processed as an intermediate in
accordance with this section must
comply with the recordkeeping
requirements in § 751.323.
§ 751.309 Phase-out of trichloroethylene
use in vapor degreasing for rocket booster
nozzles.
(a) In accordance with
§ 751.305(b)(11), until December 18,
2029, TCE may be used as a solvent in
closed-loop batch vapor degreasing for
rayon fabric scouring for end use in
producing rocket booster nozzles for
Federal agencies and their contractors,
and manufactured (including imported),
processed, and distributed in commerce
for such use.
(b) From December 18, 2029, until
December 18, 2034, TCE may only be
used as a solvent in closed-loop batch
vapor degreasing for rayon fabric
scouring for end use in producing rocket
booster nozzles, and manufactured
(including imported), processed, and
distributed in commerce for such use,
by Federal agencies and their
contractors who maintain records
demonstrating that a final pre-launch
test of rocket booster nozzles without
using TCE was completed.
(c) If a suitable alternative to TCE is
identified and validated before the end
of this phase-out period, Federal
agencies and their contractors must
transition to that alternative.
(d) The owner or operator of the
location where TCE is used as a solvent
in closed-loop batch vapor degreasing
for rayon fabric scouring for end use in
producing rocket booster nozzles in
accordance with this section, and
manufacturers (including importers)
and processors of TCE for such use,
must comply with § 751.315.
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(e) The owner or operator of the
location where TCE is used as a solvent
in closed-loop batch vapor degreasing
for rayon fabric scouring for end use in
producing rocket booster nozzles in
accordance with this section must
comply with the recordkeeping
requirements in § 751.323.
§ 751.311 Phase-out of TCE use in the
industrial and commercial use of TCE in
laboratory use for asphalt testing and
recovery.
(a) In accordance with
§ 751.305(b)(18), until December 18,
2034, TCE may be manufactured
(including imported), processed,
distributed in commerce, and used in
industrial and commercial use of TCE in
laboratory use for asphalt testing and
recovery.
(b) From December 18, 2029, until
December 18, 2034, TCE is only
permitted to be manufactured
(including imported), processed,
distributed in commerce, and used in
industrial and commercial use of TCE in
laboratory use for asphalt testing and
recovery for methods that do not
include manual centrifuge processes.
(c) The use of TCE as a laboratory
chemical must be performed on the
premises of a laboratory.
(d) The owner or operator of the
location where such use of TCE as a
laboratory chemical occurs, and
manufacturers (including importers)
and processors of TCE for such use,
must comply with the Workplace
Chemical Protection Program provisions
in § 751.315.
(e) The owner or operator of the
location where such use of TCE as a
laboratory chemical occurs must comply
with the recordkeeping requirements in
§ 751.323.
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§ 751.313 Phase-out of disposal of TCE to
industrial pre-treatment, treatment, or
publicly owned treatment works.
(a) After September 15, 2025, all
persons manufacturing (including
importing), processing, and using TCE
are prohibited from disposal of TCE to
industrial pre-treatment, industrial
treatment, or publicly owned treatment
works except as specified in the other
subsections of this unit.
(b) After December 18, 2029, all
industrial and commercial users of TCE
for lithium battery separator
manufacturing are prohibited from
disposal of TCE to industrial pretreatment, industrial treatment, or
publicly owned treatment works.
(c) After December 18, 2039, all
industrial and commercial users of TCE
for specialty polymeric microporous
sheet materials manufacturing are
prohibited from disposal of TCE to
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industrial pre-treatment, industrial
treatment, or publicly owned treatment
works.
(d) After December 18, 2044, all
industrial and commercial users of TCE
for lead-acid battery separator
manufacturing are prohibited from
disposal of TCE to industrial pretreatment, industrial treatment, or
publicly owned treatment works.
(e) The owner or operator of the
location where disposal of TCE to
industrial pre-treatment, treatment, or to
a publicly owned treatment works
occurs must comply with the Workplace
Chemical Protection Program provisions
in § 751.315.
(f) The owner or operator of the
publicly owned treatment works where
disposal of TCE occurs must comply
with the wastewater workplace
protections in § 751.319.
(g) The owner or operator of the
location where such use of TCE occurs
must comply with the recordkeeping
requirements in § 751.323.
§ 751.315
program.
Workplace chemical protection
(a) Applicability. The provisions of
this section apply to the following
conditions of use of TCE when
permitted to continue beyond December
18, 2025, pursuant to accordance with
§§ 751.305(b)(8) through (25), 751.307,
751.309, and 751.311:
(1) Manufacturing (domestic
manufacture);
(2) Manufacturing (import);
(3) Processing as a reactant/
intermediate;
(4) Processing into formulation,
mixture, or reaction product;
(5) Processing (repackaging);
(6) Processing (recycling);
(7) Industrial and commercial use of
TCE as a processing aid in: process
solvent used in battery manufacture;
process solvent used in polymer fiber
spinning, fluoroelastomer manufacture
and Alcantara manufacture; extraction
solvent used in caprolactam
manufacture; precipitant used in betacyclodextrin manufacture;
(8) Industrial and commercial use of
TCE as an adhesive and sealant for
essential aerospace applications;
(9) Industrial and commercial use of
TCE in other miscellaneous industrial
and commercial uses (laboratory use);
(10) Industrial and commercial use of
TCE as a solvent in closed-loop batch
vapor degreasing for rayon fabric
scouring for end use in rocket booster
nozzle production by Federal agencies
and their contractors;
(11) Industrial and commercial use of
TCE in closed-loop or open-top batch
vapor degreasing for essential aerospace
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parts and components and narrow
tubing used for medical devices;
(12) Industrial and commercial use of
TCE for vessels of the Armed Forces and
their systems, and in the maintenance,
fabrication, and sustainment for and of
such vessels and systems; as potting
compounds for naval electronic systems
and equipment; sealing compounds for
high and ultra-high vacuum systems;
bonding compounds for materials
testing and maintenance of underwater
systems and bonding of nonmetallic
materials; and cleaning agents to satisfy
cleaning requirements (which includes
degreasing using wipes, sprays, solvents
and vapor degreasing) for: materials and
components required for military
ordnance testing; temporary resin
repairs in vessel spaces where welding
is not authorized; ensuring
polyurethane adhesion for electronic
systems and equipment repair and
installation of elastomeric materials;
various naval combat systems, radars,
sensors, equipment; fabrication and
prototyping processes to remove coolant
and other residue from machine parts;
machined part fabrications for naval
systems; installation of topside rubber
tile material aboard vessels; and vapor
degreasing required for substrate surface
preparation prior to electroplating
processes;
(13) Industrial and commercial use of
TCE as a solvent in closed-loop batch
vapor degreasing necessary for rocket
engine cleaning by Federal agencies and
their contractors;
(14) Industrial and commercial use of
TCE in batch vapor degreasing for landbased DoD defense systems by Federal
agencies and their contractors; and
(15) Disposal of TCE to industrial pretreatment, industrial treatment, or
publicly owned treatment works, except
to the extent that the activity is covered
by the workplace protections in
§ 751.319.
(b) Interim existing chemical exposure
limit (interim ECEL)—(1) Applicability.
The provisions of this paragraph (b)
apply to any workplace engaged in the
conditions of use listed in paragraphs
(a)(1) through (15) of this section.
(2) Interim ECEL. Beginning
September 20, 2027 for Federal agencies
and Federal contractors acting for or on
behalf of the Federal government, or by
September 15, 2025 for non-Federal
owners and operators, or beginning 120
days after introduction of TCE into the
workplace if TCE use commences after
June 16, 2025, the owner or operator
must ensure that no person is exposed
to an airborne concentration of TCE in
excess of the interim ECEL, consistent
with the requirements of paragraph (c)
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of this section and, if necessary,
paragraph (e)(1) of this section.
(3) Exposure monitoring—(i) General.
(A) Owners or operators must determine
each potentially exposed person’s
exposure, without regard to respiratory
protection, by either:
(1) Taking a personal breathing zone
air sample of each potentially exposed
person’s exposure; or
(2) Taking personal breathing zone air
samples that are representative of the 8hour TWA of each exposure group.
(B) Personal breathing zone air
samples are representative of the 8-hour
TWA of all potentially exposed persons
in an exposure group if the samples are
of at least one person’s work-shift
exposure who represents the highest
potential TCE exposures in that
exposure group. Personal breathing zone
air samples taken during one work shift
may be used to represent potentially
exposed person exposures on other
work shifts where the owner or operator
can document that the tasks performed
and conditions in the workplace are
similar across shifts.
(C) Exposure samples must be
analyzed using an appropriate analytical
method by a laboratory that complies
with the Good Laboratory Practice
Standards in 40 CFR part 792 or a
laboratory accredited by the American
Industrial Hygiene Association (AIHA)
or another industry-recognized program.
(D) Owners or operators must ensure
that methods used to perform exposure
monitoring produce results that are
accurate, to a confidence level of 95
percent, to within plus or minus 25
percent for airborne concentrations of
TCE.
(E) Owners and operators must remonitor within 15 working days after
receipt of any exposure monitoring
when results indicate non-detect unless
an Environmental Professional as
defined at 40 CFR 312.10 or a Certified
Industrial Hygienist reviews the
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monitoring results and determines remonitoring is not necessary.
(ii) Initial monitoring. By June 21,
2027 for Federal agencies and Federal
contractors acting for or on behalf of the
Federal government, or by June 16, 2025
for non-Federal owners and operators or
within 30 days of introduction of TCE
into the workplace, whichever is later,
each owner or operator covered by this
section must perform initial monitoring
of potentially exposed persons. Where
the owner or operator has monitoring
results from monitoring conducted
within five years prior to February 18,
2025 and the monitoring satisfies all
other requirements of this section, the
owner or operator may rely on such
earlier monitoring results to satisfy the
requirements of this paragraph.
(iii) Periodic monitoring. The owner
or operator must establish an exposure
monitoring program for periodic
monitoring of exposure to TCE in
accordance with Table 1.
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES8
TABLE 1 TO § 751.311(B)(3)(III)—PERIODIC MONITORING REQUIREMENTS
Air concentration condition
Periodic monitoring requirement
If initial exposure monitoring is below the interim ECEL action level
(<0.1 ppm 8-hour TWA).
If the most recent exposure monitoring indicates that airborne exposure
is at or above the interim ECEL action level but at or below the interim ECEL (≥0.1 ppm 8-hour TWA, ≤0.2 ppm 8-hour TWA).
If the most recent exposure monitoring indicates that airborne exposure
is above the interim ECEL (<0.2 ppm 8-hour TWA).
If the two most recent (non-initial) exposure monitoring measurements,
taken at least seven days apart within a six-month period, indicate
that airborne exposure is below the interim ECEL action level (<0.1
ppm 8-hour TWA).
If the owner or operator engages in a condition of use for which compliance with the WCPP is required but does not manufacture, process, use, or dispose of TCE in that condition of use over the entirety
of time since the last required monitoring event.
Periodic exposure monitoring is required at least once every five years.
(iv) Additional monitoring. (A) The
owner or operator must conduct the
exposure monitoring required by
paragraph (b)(3)(ii) of this section
within 30 days after there has been a
change in the production, process,
control equipment, personnel or work
practices that may reasonably be
expected to result in new or additional
exposures above the interim ECEL
action level or when the owner or
operator has any reason to believe that
new or additional exposures above the
interim ECEL action level have
occurred. Prior monitoring data cannot
be used to meet this requirement.
(B) Whenever start-ups or shutdown,
or spills, leaks, ruptures, or other
breakdowns or unexpected releases
occur that may lead to exposure to
potentially exposed persons, the owner
or operator must conduct the exposure
monitoring required by paragraph
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Periodic exposure monitoring is required within 180 days of the most
recent exposure monitoring.
Periodic exposure monitoring is required within 90 days of the most recent exposure monitoring.
Periodic exposure monitoring is required within five years of the most
recent exposure monitoring.
The owner or operator may forgo the next periodic monitoring event.
However, documentation of cessation of use of TCE is required; and
periodic monitoring is required when the owner or operator resumes
the condition of use.
(b)(3)(ii) of this section within 30 days
after the conclusion of the start-up or
shut down and/or the cleanup of the
spill or repair of the leak, rupture, or
other breakdown. Prior monitoring data
cannot be used to meet this
requirement.
(v) Observation of monitoring. (A)
Owners and operators must provide
potentially exposed persons or their
designated representatives an
opportunity to observe any monitoring
of occupational exposure to TCE that is
conducted under this section and
designed to characterize their exposure.
(B) When monitoring observation
requires entry into a regulated area, the
owner or operator must provide the
observers with the required PPE.
(C) Only persons who are authorized
to have access to facilities classified in
the interest of national security must be
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permitted to observe exposure
monitoring conducted in such facilities.
(vi) Notification of monitoring results.
(A) The owner or operator must inform
each person whose exposures are
monitored or who is part of a monitored
exposure group, and their designated
representative, of any monitoring results
within 15 working days of receipt of
those monitoring results.
(B) This notification must include the
following:
(1) Exposure monitoring results;
(2) Identification and explanation of
the interim ECEL and interim ECEL
action level;
(3) Statement of whether the
monitored airborne concentration of
TCE exceeds the interim ECEL action
level or interim ECEL;
(4) If the interim ECEL is exceeded,
descriptions of any exposure controls
implemented by the owner or operator
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to reduce exposure to or below the
interim ECEL;
(5) Explanation of any respiratory
protection provided in accordance with
paragraphs (b)(4) and I of this section;
(6) Quantity of TCE in use at the time
of monitoring;
(7) Location(s) of TCE use at the time
of monitoring;
(8) Manner of TCE use at the time of
monitoring; and
(9) Identified releases of TCE.
(C) Notice must be written, in plain
language, and either provided to each
potentially exposed person individually
in a language that the person
understands, or posted in an
appropriate and accessible location
outside the regulated area with an
English-language version and a nonEnglish language version representing
the language of the largest group of
workers who do not read English.
(4) Regulated areas—(i)
Establishment. By September 20, 2027
for Federal agencies and Federal
contractors acting for or on behalf of the
Federal government, or by September
15, 2025 for non-Federal owners and
operators, or within 90 days after receipt
of any exposure monitoring that
indicates exposures exceeding the
interim ECEL, the owner or operator
must establish and maintain a regulated
area wherever airborne concentrations
of TCE exceed or can reasonably be
expected to exceed the interim ECEL.
(ii) Access. The owner or operator
must limit access to regulated areas to
authorized persons.
(iii) Demarcation. The owner or
operator must demarcate regulated areas
from the rest of the workplace in a
manner that adequately establishes and
alerts persons to the boundaries of the
area and minimizes the number of
authorized persons exposed to TCE
within the regulated area.
(iv) Provision of respirators. (A) The
owner or operator must ensure that each
person who enters a regulated area is
supplied with a respirator selected in
accordance with paragraph I(e) of this
section and must ensure that all persons
within the regulated area are using the
provided respirators whenever TCE
exposures may exceed the interim
ECEL, except as provided in paragraph
(B) of this section.
(B) An owner or operator who has
implemented all feasible controls as
required in paragraph (c)(1)(i) of this
section, and who has established a
regulated area as required by paragraphs
(b)(4)(i) of this section where TCE
exposure can be reliably predicted to
exceed the interim ECEL only on certain
days (for example, because of work or
process schedule) must have persons
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use respirators in that regulated area on
those days.
(v) Prohibited activities. (A) The
owner or operator must ensure that,
within a regulated area, persons do not
engage in non-work activities which
may increase TCE exposure.
(B) The owner or operator must
ensure that while persons are wearing
respirators in the regulated area, they do
not engage in activities which interfere
with respirator performance.
(c) Interim ECEL control procedures
and plan—(1) Methods of compliance.
(i) By December 17, 2027 for Federal
agencies and Federal contractors acting
for or on behalf of the Federal
government, or by December 18, 2025,
for non-Federal owners and operators,
the owner or operator must institute one
or a combination of elimination,
substitution, engineering controls or
administrative controls to reduce
exposure to or below the interim ECEL
except to the extent that the owner or
operator can demonstrate that such
controls are not feasible as an interim
measure, in accordance with the
hierarchy of controls.
(ii) If the feasible controls required
under paragraph (c)(1)(i) of this section
that can be instituted do not reduce
exposures for potentially exposed
persons to or below the interim ECEL,
then the owner or operator must use
such controls to reduce exposure to the
lowest levels achievable by these
controls and must supplement those
controls by the use of respiratory
protection that complies with the
requirements of paragraph (e) of this
section.
(iii) Where an owner or operator
cannot demonstrate exposure to TCE
has been reduced to or below the
interim ECEL through the use of
controls required under paragraphs
(c)(1)(i) and (ii) of this section, and has
not demonstrated that it has
appropriately supplemented feasible
exposure controls with respiratory
protection that complies with the
requirements of paragraph (e) of this
section, this will constitute a failure to
comply with the interim ECEL.
(2) Exposure control plan. By
December 17, 2027 for Federal agencies
and Federal contractors acting for or on
behalf of the Federal government, or by
December 18, 2025, for non-Federal
owners and operators, each owner and
operator must establish and implement
an exposure control plan.
(i) Exposure control plan contents.
The exposure control plan must include
documentation of the following:
(A) Identification of exposure controls
that were considered, including those
that were used or not used to meet the
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requirements of paragraph (c)(1)(i) of
this section, in the following sequence:
elimination, substitution, engineering
controls and administrative controls;
(B) For each exposure control
considered, a rationale for why the
exposure control was selected or not
selected based on feasibility,
effectiveness, and other relevant
considerations;
(C) A description of actions the owner
or operator must take to implement
exposure controls selected, including
proper installation, regular inspections,
maintenance, training, or other actions;
(D) A description of each regulated
area, how they are demarcated, and
persons authorized to enter the
regulated areas;
(E) Description of activities conducted
by the owner or operator to review and
update the exposure control plan to
ensure effectiveness of the exposure
controls, identify any necessary updates
to the exposure controls, and confirm
that all persons are properly
implementing the exposure controls;
(F) An explanation of the procedures
for responding to any change that may
reasonably be expected to introduce
additional sources of exposure to TCE,
or otherwise result in increased
exposure to TCE, including procedures
for implementing corrective actions to
mitigate exposure to TCE.
(ii) Exposure control plan
requirements. (A) The owner or operator
must not implement a schedule of
personnel rotation as a means of
compliance with the interim ECEL.
(B) The owner or operator must
maintain the effectiveness of any
controls instituted under this paragraph
(c).
(C) The exposure control plan must be
reviewed and updated as necessary, but
at least every 5 years, to reflect any
significant changes in the status of the
owner or operator’s approach to
compliance with paragraphs (b) and (c)
of this section.
(iii) Availability of exposure control
plan. (A) Owners or operators must
make the exposure control plan and
associated records, including interim
ECEL exposure monitoring records,
interim ECEL compliance records, and
workplace participation records
available to potentially exposed persons
and their designated representative.
(B) Owners or operators must notify
potentially exposed persons and their
designated representatives of the
availability of the exposure control plan
and associated records within 30 days of
the date that the exposure control plan
is completed and at least annually
thereafter.
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(C) Notice of the availability of the
exposure control plan and associated
records must be provided in plain
language writing to each potentially
exposed person in a language that the
person understands or posted in an
appropriate and accessible location
outside the regulated area with an
English-language version and a nonEnglish language version representing
the language of the largest group of
workers who do not read English.
(D) Upon request by the potentially
exposed person or their designated
representative(s), the owner or operator
must provide the specified records at a
reasonable time, place, and manner. If
the owner or operator is unable to
provide the requested records within 15
working days, the owner or operator
must, within those 15 working days,
inform the potentially exposed person
or designated representative(s)
requesting the record(s) of the reason for
the delay and the earliest date when the
record will be made available.
(d) Workplace information and
training. (1) By September 20, 2027 for
Federal agencies and Federal
contractors acting for or on behalf of the
Federal government, or by September
15, 2025 for non-Federal owners and
operators, the owner or operator must
institute a training program and ensure
that persons potentially exposed to TCE
participate in the program according to
the requirements of this paragraph (d).
(2) The owner or operator must ensure
that each potentially exposed person is
trained prior to or at the time of initial
assignment to a job involving potential
exposure to TCE.
(3) The owner or operator must ensure
that information and training is
presented in a manner that is
understandable to each person required
to be trained.
(4) The following information and
training must be provided to all persons
potentially exposed to TCE:
(i) The requirements of this section, as
well as how to access or obtain a copy
of these requirements in the workplace;
(ii) The quantity, location, manner of
use, release, and storage of TCE and the
specific operations in the workplace
that could result in exposure to TCE,
particularly noting where each regulated
area is located;
(iii) Methods and observations that
may be used to detect the presence or
release of TCE in the workplace (such as
monitoring conducted by the owner or
operator, continuous monitoring
devices, visual appearance, or odor of
TCE when being released);
(iv) The acute and chronic health
hazards of TCE as detailed on relevant
Safety Data Sheets; and
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(v) The principles of safe use and
handling of TCE and measures
potentially exposed persons can take to
protect themselves from TCE, including
specific procedures the owner or
operator has implemented to protect
potentially exposed persons from
exposure to TCE, such as appropriate
work practices, emergency procedures,
and personal protective equipment to be
used.
(5) The owner or operator must retrain each potentially exposed person
annually to ensure that each such
person maintains the requisite
understanding of the principles of safe
use and handling of TCE in the
workplace.
(6) Whenever there are workplace
changes, such as modifications of tasks
or procedures or the institution of new
tasks or procedures, that increase
exposure, and where those exposures
exceed or can reasonably be expected to
exceed the interim ECEL action level,
the owner or operator must update the
training and ensure that each potentially
exposed person is re-trained.
(e) Personal protective equipment
(PPE)—(1) Respiratory protection. (i) By
September 20, 2027 for Federal agencies
and Federal contractors acting for or on
behalf of the Federal government, or by
September 15, 2025 for non-Federal
owners and operators, or within 90 days
after receipt of any exposure monitoring
that indicates exposures exceeding the
interim ECEL, or, if an owner or
operator is required to provide
respiratory protection pursuant to
paragraphs (b)(4)(iv) and (c)(1)(ii) of this
section, the owner or operator must
ensure that each potentially exposed
person is provided with a respirator
according to the requirements of this
section.
(ii) For purposes of this paragraph
(e)(1) of this section, cross-referenced
provisions in 29 CFR 1910.134 applying
to an ‘‘employee’’ apply equally to
potentially exposed persons and crossreferenced provisions applying to an
‘‘employer’’ also apply equally to
owners or operators. Other terms in
cross-referenced provisions in 29 CFR
1910.134 that are defined in 29 CFR
1910.134(b) have the meaning assigned
to them in that paragraph.
(iii) By September 20, 2027 for
Federal agencies and Federal
contractors acting for or on behalf of the
Federal government, or by September
15, 2025 for non-Federal owners and
operators, or within 90 days after receipt
of any exposure monitoring that
indicates exposures exceeding the
interim ECEL, if an owner or operator is
required to provide respiratory
protection pursuant to paragraph
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102629
(b)(4)(iv) or (c)(1)(ii), the owner or
operator must develop and administer a
written respiratory protection program
consistent with the requirements of 29
CFR 1910.134(c)(1), (c)(3) and (c)(4).
(iv) Owners and operators must select
respiratory protection based on a
medical evaluation consistent with the
requirements of 29 CFR 1910.134(e). If
a potentially exposed person cannot use
a negative-pressure respirator that
would otherwise be required, then the
owner or operator must provide that
person with an alternative respirator.
The alternative respirator must have less
breathing resistance than the negativepressure respirator and provide
equivalent or greater protection. If the
person is unable to use an alternative
respirator, then the person must not be
permitted to enter the regulated area.
(v) Owners and operators must select
respiratory protection that properly fits
each affected person and communicate
respirator selections to each affected
person consistent with the requirements
of 29 CFR 1910.134(f).
(vi) Owners and operators must
provide, ensure use of, and maintain (in
a sanitary, reliable, and undamaged
condition) respiratory protection that is
of safe design and construction for the
applicable condition of use consistent
with the requirements of 29 CFR
1910.134(g) through (j).
(vii) Prior to or at the time of initial
assignment to a job involving potential
exposure to TCE, owners and operators
must provide training to all persons
required to use respiratory protection
consistent with 29 CFR 1910.134(k).
(viii) Owners and operators must
retrain all persons required to use PPE
at least annually, or whenever the
owner or operator has reason to believe
that a previously trained person does
not have the required understanding
and skill to properly use PPE, or when
changes in the workplace or in PPE to
be used render the previous training
obsolete.
(ix) Owners or operators must select
and provide to persons appropriate
respirators as indicated by the most
recent monitoring results as follows:
(A) If the measured exposure
concentration is at or below 0.2 ppm
(200 ppb): no respiratory protection is
required.
(B) If the measured exposure
concentration is above 0.2 ppm (200
ppb) and less than or equal to 2 ppm
(2,000 ppb) (10 times interim ECEL):
Any National Institute for Occupational
Safety and Health (NIOSH) Approved
air-purifying half mask respirator
equipped with organic vapor cartridges
or canisters; or any NIOSH Approved
Supplied-Air Respirator (SAR) or
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Airline Respirator operated in demand
mode equipped with a half mask; or any
NIOSH Approved Self-Contained
Breathing Apparatus (SCBA) in a
demand mode equipped with a half
mask [APF 10].
(C) If the measured exposure
concentration is above 2 ppm and less
than or equal to 5 ppm (25 times interim
ECEL): Any NIOSH Approved Powered
Air-Purifying Respirator (PAPR)
equipped with a loose-fitting facepiece
or hood/helmet equipped with organic
vapor cartridges or canisters; or any
NIOSH Approved SAR or Airline
Respirator in a continuous-flow mode
equipped with a loose-fitting facepiece
or helmet/hood [APF 25].
(D) If the measured exposure
concentration is above 5 ppm and less
than or equal to 10 ppm (50 times
interim ECEL): Any NIOSH Approved
air-purifying full facepiece respirator
equipped with organic vapor cartridges
or canisters; any NIOSH Approved
PAPR with a half mask equipped with
organic vapor cartridges or canisters;
any NIOSH Approved SAR or Airline
Respirator in a continuous flow mode
equipped with a half mask; any NIOSH
Approved SAR or Airline Respirator
operated in a pressure-demand or other
positive-pressure mode with a half
mask; or any NIOSH Approved SCBA in
demand-mode equipped with a full
facepiece or helmet/hood [APF 50].
(E) If the measured exposure
concentration is above 10 ppm and less
than or equal to 200 ppm (1,000 times
interim ECEL): Any NIOSH Approved
PAPR equipped with a full facepiece
equipped with organic vapor cartridges
or canisters; any NIOSH Approved SAR
or Airline Respirator in a continuousflow mode equipped with full facepiece;
any NIOSH Approved SAR or Airline
Respirator in pressure-demand or other
positive-pressure mode equipped with a
full facepiece and an auxiliary selfcontained air supply; or any NIOSH
Approved SAR or Airline Respirator in
a continuous-flow mode equipped with
a helmet or hood and that has been
tested to demonstrated performance at a
level of a protection of APF 1,000 or
greater [APF 1000].
(F) If the measured exposure
concentration is greater than 200 ppm
(1,000+ times interim ECEL): Any
NIOSH Approved SCBA equipped with
a full facepiece or hood/helmet and
operated in a pressure demand or other
positive pressure mode; air supply [APF
10,000+].
(G) If the exposure concentration is
unknown: Any NIOSH Approved
combination SAR equipped with a full
facepiece and operated in pressure
demand or other positive pressure mode
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with an auxiliary self-contained air
supply; or any NIOSH Approved SCBA
operated in pressure demand or other
positive pressure mode and equipped
with a full facepiece or hood/helmet
[APF 1000+].
(x) Owners and operators must select
and provide respirators consistent with
the requirements of 29 CFR
1910.134(d)(1)(iv), and with
consideration of workplace and user
factors that affect respirator performance
and reliability.
(xi) Owners and operators who select
air-purifying respirators must either:
(A) Select NIOSH Approved
respirators that have an end-of-servicelife indicator (ESLI) appropriate for
TCE; or
(B) Implement a change schedule for
canisters and cartridges based on
objective information or data that
ensures that canisters and cartridges are
changed before the end of their service
life. The written respiratory protection
program required by paragraph (e)(1)(iii)
of this section must include a
description of the information and data
relied upon, the basis for reliance on the
information and data, and the basis for
the canister and cartridge change
schedule.
(xii) Owners and operators must,
consistent with 29 CFR 1910.134(j),
ensure that all respirator filters,
cartridges, and canisters used in the
workplace are labeled and color coded
per NIOSH requirements and that the
label is not removed and remains
legible.
(xiii) Owners and operators must
ensure that respirators are used in
compliance with the terms of the
respirator’s NIOSH approval.
(xiv) Owners and operators must
conduct regular evaluations of the
workplace, including consultations with
potentially exposed persons using
respiratory protection, consistent with
the requirements of 29 CFR 1910.134(l),
to ensure that the provisions of the
written respiratory protection program
required under paragraph (e)(1)(iii) of
this section are being effectively
implemented.
(xv) The respiratory protection
requirements in this paragraph
represent the minimum respiratory
protection requirements, such that any
respirator affording a higher degree of
protection than the required respirator
may be used.
(2) Dermal protection. (i) By
September 20, 2027 for Federal agencies
and Federal contractors acting for or on
behalf of the Federal government, or by
September 15, 2025 for non-Federal
owners and operators, owners and
operators must supply and require the
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donning of gloves by potentially
exposed persons that are chemically
resistant to TCE where dermal exposure
to TCE can be expected to occur, after
application of the requirements in
paragraph (c) of this section, in
accordance with the hierarchy of
controls.
(ii) Owners and operators must
provide gloves that are of safe design
and construction for the work to be
performed and that properly fit each
person who is required to use gloves.
(iii) Owners and operators must
communicate glove selections to each
affected person and ensure that each
person who is required to wear gloves
uses and maintains them in a sanitary,
reliable, and undamaged condition.
(iv) Owners and operators must
provide activity-specific dermal PPE
training in accordance with 29 CFR
1910.132(f) to all persons required to
use gloves prior to or at the time of
initial assignment to a job involving
potential dermal exposure to TCE. For
the purposes of this paragraph (e)(4)(iv),
provisions in 29 CFR 1910.132(f)
applying to an ‘‘employee’’ also apply
equally to potentially exposed persons,
and provisions applying to an
‘‘employer’’ also apply equally to
owners or operators.
(v) Owners and operators must retrain
each person required to use gloves
annually or whenever the owner or
operator has reason to believe that a
previously trained person does not have
the required understanding and skill to
properly use the gloves, or when
changes in the workplace or in PPE to
be used render the previous training
obsolete.
§ 751.317 Workplace requirements for
energized electrical cleaner.
(a) Applicability. The provisions of
this section apply to the industrial and
commercial use of TCE in energized
electrical cleaner.
(b) Energized electrical cleaner
requirements—(1) Personal Protective
Equipment (PPE). (i) The provisions of
this paragraph (b) apply after September
15, 2025.
(ii) Owners or operators must ensure
that all potentially exposed persons
using TCE, including any TCEcontaining products, are provided with
dermal PPE and training on proper use
of PPE as outlined in § 751.315(e)(2).
(iii) Owners or operators must ensure
that all persons using TCE, including
any TCE containing products, are
provided with respiratory PPE and
training on proper use of PPE in
accordance with § 751.315(e)(1), except
that instead of selecting appropriate
respirators based on monitoring results
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pursuant to paragraph (e)(1)(ix), owners
or operators must select from and
provide the following types of
respirators: any NIOSH Approved airpurifying full facepiece respirator
equipped with organic vapor cartridges
or canisters; any NIOSH Approved
Powered Air-Purifying Respirator
(PAPR) with a half mask equipped with
organic vapor cartridges or canisters;
any NIOSH Approved Supplied-Air
Respirator (SAR) or Airline Respirator
in a continuous flow mode equipped
with a half mask; any NIOSH Approved
Supplied-Air Respirator (SAR) or
Airline Respirator operated in a
pressure-demand or other positivepressure mode with a half mask; any
NIOSH Approved SCBA in demandmode equipped with a full facepiece or
helmet/hood [APF 50]; or any respirator
affording a higher degree of protection.
(2) Alternative to PPE Requirements.
(i) As an alternative to the requirements
in paragraph (b)(1) of this section, the
owner or operator may choose to follow
the Workplace Chemical Protection
Program (WCPP) provisions in
§ 751.315.
(ii) Owners or operators who choose
to follow the WCPP as an alternative to
the requirements in paragraph (b)(1) of
this section must:
(A) Document and maintain a
statement that they are electing to
comply with the WCPP.
(B) Comply with the WCPP provisions
in § 751.315 and document compliance
in accordance with § 751.323(b).
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§ 751.319 Workplace requirements for
wastewater.
(a) Applicability. The provisions of
this section apply to the following
disposal sub-conditions of use for their
respective phaseouts, in accordance
with § 751.305 (b) (14), (23), (24), and
(26):
(1) Cleanup of sites with TCE water
contamination; and,
(2) Publicly owned treatment works.
(b) Cleanup sites. Beginning
September 15, 2025 the owner or
operator of the location where
potentially exposed persons are
involved in the disposal of TCE to
industrial pre-treatment, industrial
treatment, or publicly owned treatment
works for the purposes of facilitating
cleanup projects of TCE-contaminated
water and groundwater must ensure that
potentially exposed persons involved
with the activity of removing the TCEcontaminated water and groundwater
from the location where it was located
and treating the removed TCEcontaminated water and groundwater on
site are protected to the interim ECEL
level of 0.2 ppm and protected from
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dermal contact with TCE-containing
wastewater in accordance with the
following requirements. For the
purposes of this paragraph (b) of this
section, cross-referenced provisions in
29 CFR 1910.120 applying to an
‘‘employee’’ apply equally to potentially
exposed persons and cross-referenced
provisions applying to an ‘‘employer’’
also apply equally to owners or
operators.
(1) Written site-specific safety and
health plan. Owners and operators must
have a site-specific safety and health
plan that addresses the health hazards
presented by TCE to potentially exposed
persons involved in the disposal of TCEcontaining wastewater and that contains
elements consistent with 29 CFR
1910.120(b)(4)(ii)(A), (B), (C), (E) and
(F).
(2) Training. Owners and operators
must provide training consistent with
§ 751.315(d) to potentially exposed
persons prior to or at the time of initial
assignment to a cleanup site job that
involves the disposal of TCE-containing
wastewater.
(3) Engineering controls, work
practices and PPE. Engineering controls,
work practices, and, if necessary, PPE
must be implemented and provided in
compliance with 40 CFR 751.315(c)(1)
and (e).
(4) Exposure monitoring. (i) By
September 15, 2025 or upon initial entry
to a cleanup site, whichever is later,
owners and operators must perform
representative air monitoring consistent
with 29 CFR 1910.120(h)(2) to identify
any exposures to airborne TCE above
the interim ECEL.
(ii) Owners and operators must
perform periodic air monitoring
consistent with 29 CFR 1910.120(h)(3)
when there is any indication that
exposures may have exceeded the
interim ECEL since prior monitoring.
(iii) Owners and operators must
monitor the exposures of those persons
likely to have the highest exposures to
airborne TCE above the interim ECEL by
using personal air sampling frequently
enough to characterize their exposures
consistent with 29 CFR 1910.120(h)(4).
(iv) Owners and operators must
perform exposure monitoring at least
once every five years.
(c) Publicly owned treatment works.
By September 15, 2025 owners or
operators of publicly owned treatment
works, where there is a reasonable
possibility of the presence of TCE, must
comply with one of the following:
(1) Water screening level. (i) Screen
industrial wastewater discharge
received at publicly owned treatment
works by sampling and analyzing for a
water concentration of TCE.
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(ii) If the TCE concentration in
wastewater exceeds 0.00284 mg/L of
TCE, owners or operators must comply
with the Workplace Chemical Protection
Program provisions in § 751.315, except
for the initial monitoring requirements
in paragraph § 751.315(b)(3)(ii).
(2) Alternative to water screening
level. (i) As an alternative to the
requirements in paragraph (1) of this
section, the owner or operator may
choose to follow the Workplace
Chemical Protection Program (WCPP)
provisions in § 751.315.
(ii) Owners or operators who choose
to follow the WCPP as an alternative to
the requirements in paragraph (1) of this
section must comply with the WCPP
provisions in § 751.315 and document
compliance in accordance with
§ 751.323(b).
§ 751.321
Downstream notification.
(a) Beginning on February 18, 2025,
each person who manufactures
(including imports) TCE for any use
must, prior to or concurrent with the
shipment, notify companies to whom
TCE is shipped, in writing, of the
restrictions described in this subpart in
accordance with paragraph (c) of this
section.
(b) Beginning on June 16, 2025, each
person who processes or distributes in
commerce TCE or any TCE-containing
products for any use must, prior to or
concurrent with the shipment, notify
companies to whom TCE is shipped, in
writing, of the restrictions described in
this subpart in accordance with
paragraph (c) of this section.
(c) The notification required under
paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section
must occur by inserting the following
text in section 1(c) and 15 of the Safety
Data Sheet (SDS) provided with the TCE
or with any TCE-containing product:
After June 16, 2025, this chemical/product
is and can only be domestically
manufactured, imported, processed, or
distributed in commerce for the following
purposes until the following prohibitions
take effect: (1) Processing as an intermediate
a) for the manufacture of HFC–134a until
June 18, 2033, and b) for all other processing
as a reactant/intermediate until December 18,
2026; (2) Industrial and commercial use as a
solvent for open-top batch vapor degreasing
until December 18, 2025; (3) Industrial and
commercial use as a solvent for closed-loop
batch vapor degreasing until December 18,
2025, except for industrial and commercial
use in batch vapor degreasing for land-based
DoD defense systems by Federal agencies and
their contractors until December 18, 2029,
and except for industrial and commercial use
as a solvent for closed-loop batch vapor
degreasing necessary for rocket engine
cleaning by Federal agencies and their
contractors until December 18, 2031, and
except for industrial and commercial use of
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TCE in closed-loop and open-top batch vapor
degreasing for essential aerospace parts and
components and narrow tubing used in
medical devices until December 18, 2031,
and except for industrial and commercial use
as a solvent for closed-loop batch vapor
degreasing for rayon fabric scouring for end
use in rocket booster nozzle production by
Federal agencies and their contractors until
December 18, 2034; (4) Industrial and
commercial use in processing aid (a) for
lithium battery separator manufacturing until
December 18, 2029, and (b) for lead-acid
battery separator manufacturing until
December 18, 2044, and (c) for specialty
polymeric microporous sheet material
manufacturing until December 18, 2039, and
(d) in process solvent used in battery
manufacture; in process solvent used in
polymer fiber spinning, fluoroelastomer
manufacture and Alcantara manufacture; in
extraction solvent used in caprolactam
manufacture; and in precipitant used in betacyclodextrin manufacture until December 18,
2026; (5) Industrial and commercial uses for
vessels of the Armed Forces and their
systems, and in the maintenance, fabrication,
and sustainment for and of such vessels and
systems until December 18, 2034; and (6)
Industrial and commercial use for laboratory
use (a) for essential laboratory activities until
December 18, 2074 and (b) for asphalt testing
and recovery using manual centrifuge
processes until December 18, 2029 and for
asphalt testing and recovery until December
18, 2034.
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES8
§ 751.323
Recordkeeping requirements.
(a) General records. After February 18,
2025, all persons who manufacture,
process, distribute in commerce, or
engage in industrial or commercial use
of TCE or TCE-containing products must
maintain ordinary business records,
such as invoices and bills-of-lading
related to compliance with the
prohibitions, restrictions, and other
provisions of this subpart.
(b) Workplace chemical protection
program compliance. (1) Interim ECEL
exposure monitoring. For each
monitoring event, owners or operators
subject to the interim ECEL described in
§ 751.315(b) must document the
following:
(i) Dates, duration, and results of each
sample taken;
(ii) The quantity, location(s), and
manner of TCE in use at the time of each
monitoring event;
(iii) All measurements that may be
necessary to determine the conditions
that may affect the monitoring results;
(iv) Name, workplace address, work
shift, job classification, work area, and
type of respiratory protection (if any) by
each monitored person;
(v) Identification of all potentially
exposed persons that a monitored
person is intended to represent if using
a representative sample, consistent with
§ 751.315(b)(3)(i)(A) and (B);
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(vi) Sampling and analytical methods
used as described in
§ 751.315(b)(3)(i)(D);
(vii) Compliance with the Good
Laboratory Practice Standards in
accordance with 40 CFR part 792, or use
of a laboratory accredited by the AIHA
or another industry-recognized program
as required by § 751.315(b)(3)(i)(C);
(viii) Information regarding air
monitoring equipment, including: type,
maintenance, calibrations, performance
tests, limits of detection, and any
malfunctions;
(ix) Re-monitoring determinations
conducted by an Environmental
Professional as defined at 40 CFR 312.10
or a Certified Industrial Hygienist, if
results indicated non-detect; and
(x) Notification of exposure
monitoring results in accordance with
§ 751.315(b)(3)(vi).
(2) Interim ECEL compliance. Owners
or operators subject to the interim ECEL
described in § 751.315(b) must retain
records of:
(i) Exposure control plan as described
in § 751.315(c)(2).
(ii) Implementation of the exposure
control plan described in
§ 751.315(c)(2), including:
(A) Any regular inspections,
evaluations, and updating of the
exposure controls to maintain
effectiveness;
(B) Confirmation that all persons are
implementing the exposure controls;
and
(C) Each occurrence and duration of
any start-up, shutdown, or malfunction
of the facility that causes an exceedance
of the interim ECEL and any subsequent
corrective actions taken by the owner or
operator during the start-up, shutdown,
or malfunctions to mitigate exposures to
TCE.
(iii) Respiratory protection used by
each potentially exposed person and
PPE program implementation as
described in § 751.315(e), including:
(A) The name, workplace address,
work shift, job classification, and work
area of each potentially exposed person,
and the type of respiratory protection
provided to each potentially exposed
person;
(B) The basis for the specific PPE
selection in accordance with
§ 751.315(e); and
(C) Fit testing and training in
accordance with § 751.315(e).
(iv) Information and training provided
as required in § 751.315(d).
(3) Workplace participation. Owners
or operators must document the notice
to and ability of any potentially exposed
person who may reasonably be affected
by TCE inhalation exposure and their
designated representative to readily
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access the exposure control plans,
facility exposure monitoring records,
PPE program implementation records,
or any other information relevant to TCE
exposure in the workplace.
(c) Records related to exemptions. To
maintain eligibility for an exemption
described in § 751.325, owners or
operators must maintain records related
to, and demonstrating compliance with,
the specific conditions of the
exemption.
(d) Records related to phase-outs. (1)
Beginning February 18, 2025, each
manufacturer of HFC–134a who uses
TCE as an intermediate under § 751.307
must maintain records of the annual
quantity of TCE purchased and
processed until the termination of all
processing of TCE as an intermediate
and, beginning June 16, 2025, must
maintain records that demonstrate how
the baseline annual volume was
calculated, in accordance with
§ 751.307(a)(1).
(2) Beginning September 15, 2025,
each person using TCE under § 751.309
for industrial and commercial use as a
solvent for closed-loop batch vapor
degreasing for rayon fabric scouring for
end use in rocket booster nozzle
production by Federal agencies and
their contractors must maintain records
demonstrating that the end use is in
rocket booster nozzle production for
Federal agencies and their contractors.
(3) Beginning September 15, 2025,
each person using TCE under § 751.311
for industrial and commercial use in
laboratory use for asphalt testing and
recovery must maintain records
demonstrating compliance with the use
of TCE as specified in § 751.311.
(4) After December 18, 2029, each
person using TCE under § 751.311 for
industrial and commercial use in
laboratory use for asphalt testing and
recovery must maintain records
demonstrating compliance with the
provision in § 751.311 that the use of
TCE in laboratory use for asphalt testing
and recovery be in methods that do not
include manual centrifuge processes.
(5) After December 18, 2029, each
person using TCE under § 751.309 for
industrial and commercial use as a
solvent for closed-loop batch vapor
degreasing, specifically for rayon fabric
scouring, must maintain records that
demonstrate that a final pre-launch test
of rocket booster nozzles without using
TCE was completed.
(e) Records related to workplace
requirements for energized electrical
cleaner. (1) Owners and operators
subject to the energized electrical
cleaner requirements described in
§ 751.317 must retain records of:
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(i) Statement regarding whether the
owner or operator is complying with the
prescriptive PPE requirements described
in § 751.317(b)(1) or with the WCPP
described in § 751.317(b)(2).
(ii) Dermal and respiratory protection
used by each potentially exposed person
and program implementation as
described in § 751.317(b)(1) or WCPP
records described in § 751.323(b).
(2) Distributors of TCE, including TCE
containing products, for use in
energized electrical cleaning must retain
sale records, including:
(i) Name of purchaser;
(ii) Date of sale; and
(iii) Quantity of TCE or TCE
containing products sold.
(f) Records related to wastewater
workplace protection requirements. (1)
Owners and operators subject to the
wastewater workplace protection
requirements for cleanup sites described
in § 751.319 must retain records related
to and demonstrating compliance with
the provisions of § 751.319 and 29 CFR
1910.120 that are applicable to the
particular site and records related to and
demonstrating compliance with the
interim ECEL.
(2) Publicly owned treatment works
must retain records related to and
demonstrating compliance with the
wastewater screening and other
requirements described in § 751.319,
and if applicable must retain records for
the WCPP as described in § 751.323(b).
(g) Minimum record retention
periods. The records required under this
section must be retained for at least 5
years from the date that such records
were generated, except for the records
required under paragraph (d)(1), which
must be retained for at least 5 years after
the use of TCE covered by the records
has ceased.
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§ 751.325
Exemptions.
(a) In general. (1) The time-limited
exemptions described in this section are
established in accordance with 15
U.S.C. 2605(g).
(2) In order to be eligible for the
exemptions described in this section,
regulated parties must comply with all
conditions established for such
exemptions in this section.
(b) Exemptions—(1) Closed-loop
batch vapor degreasing necessary for
rocket engine cleaning by Federal
agencies and their contractors until
December 18, 2031. The following are
specific conditions of the exemption for
industrial and commercial use of TCE as
a solvent for closed-loop vapor
degreasing necessary for rocket engine
cleaning by Federal agencies and their
contractors described in
§ 751.305(b)(15):
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(i) The use of TCE in industrial and
commercial as a solvent for closed-loop
vapor degreasing is limited to the
closed-loop batch vapor degreasing
necessary for rocket engine cleaning by
Federal agencies and their contractors.
(ii) The owner or operator of the
location where such use occurs, and
manufacturers (including importers)
and processors of TCE for such use,
must comply with the Workplace
Chemical Protection Program provisions
in § 751.315.
(iii) The owner or operator of the
location where such use of TCE occurs,
and manufacturers (including
importers) and processors of TCE for
such use, must comply with the
recordkeeping requirements in
§ 751.323.
(2) Closed-loop and Open-top batch
vapor degreasing for essential aerospace
parts and components and narrow
tubing for medical devices until
December 18, 2031. The following are
specific conditions of the exemption for
vapor degreasing described in
§ 751.305(b)(16):
(i) The use of TCE for closed-loop and
open-top batch vapor degreasing is
limited to the cleaning of:
(A) Essential aerospace parts and
components where cleaning alternatives
present technical feasibility or
performance challenges to meet
specifications from Federal agencies or
other long-standing design
specifications included in existing
contracts; and
(B) Narrow tubing for medical
devices.
(ii) The owner or operator of the
location where such use of TCE occurs,
and manufacturers (including
importers) and processors of TCE for
such use, must comply with the
Workplace Chemical Protection Program
provisions in § 751.315.
(iii) The owner or operator of the
location where such use of TCE occurs
must comply with the recordkeeping
requirements in § 751.323.
(3) Certain industrial and commercial
uses of TCE for vessels of the Armed
Forces and their systems, and in the
maintenance, fabrication, and
sustainment for and of such vessels and
systems until December 18, 2034. The
following are specific conditions of the
exemption for industrial and
commercial uses of TCE for vessels of
the Armed Forces and their systems,
and in the maintenance, fabrication, and
sustainment for and of such vessels and
systems described in § 751.305(b)(20):
(i) The industrial and commercial use
of TCE must be limited for vessels of the
Armed Forces and their systems, and in
the maintenance, fabrication, and
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sustainment for and of such vessels and
systems: as potting compounds for naval
electronic systems and equipment;
sealing compounds for high and ultrahigh vacuum systems; bonding
compounds for materials testing and
maintenance of underwater systems and
bonding of nonmetallic materials; and
cleaning agents to satisfy cleaning
requirements (which includes
degreasing using wipes, sprays, solvents
and vapor degreasing) for: materials and
components required for military
ordnance testing; temporary resin
repairs in vessel spaces where welding
is not authorized; ensuring
polyurethane adhesion for electronic
systems and equipment repair and
installation of elastomeric materials;
various naval combat systems, radars,
sensors, equipment; fabrication and
prototyping processes to remove coolant
and other residue from machine parts;
machined part fabrications for naval
systems; installation of topside rubber
tile material aboard vessels; and vapor
degreasing required for substrate surface
preparation prior to electroplating
processes.
(ii) The owner or operator of the
location where such use occurs, and
manufacturers (including importers)
and processors of TCE for such use,
must comply with the Workplace
Chemical Protection Program provisions
in § 751.315.
(iii) The owner or operator of the
location where such use of TCE occurs
must comply with the recordkeeping
requirements in § 751.323.
(4) Use of TCE or TCE-containing
products in an emergency by the
National Aeronautics and Space
Administration and its contractors
operating within the scope of their
contracted work until December 18,
2034—(i) Applicability. This exemption
shall apply to the following specific
conditions of use:
(A) Industrial and commercial use as
solvent for open-top or closed-loop
batch vapor degreasing.
(B) Industrial and commercial use as
solvent for cold cleaning.
(C) Industrial and commercial use as
a solvent for aerosol spray degreaser/
cleaner and mold release.
(D) Industrial and commercial use as
a lubricant and grease in tap and die
fluid.
(E) Industrial and commercial use as
a lubricant and grease in penetrating
lubricant.
(F) Industrial and commercial use as
an adhesive and sealant in solventbased adhesives. and sealants.
(G) Industrial and commercial as a
functional fluid in heat exchange fluid.
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(H) Industrial and commercial use in
corrosion inhibitors and anti-scaling
agents.
(I) Industrial and commercial use of
TCE as a processing aid.
(J) Manufacturing (including
importing) and processing of TCE for
the industrial and commercial uses
listed in paragraphs (b)(4)(i)(A) through
(I) of this section.
(ii) Emergency use. (A) In general. An
emergency is a serious and sudden
situation requiring immediate action,
within 15 days or less, necessary to
protect:
(1) Safety of NASA’s or their
contractors’ personnel;
(2) NASA’s missions;
(3) Human health, safety, or property,
including that of adjacent communities;
or
(4) The environment.
(B) Duration. Each emergency is a
separate situation; if use of TCE exceeds
15 days, then justification must be
documented.
(iii) Eligibility. To be eligible for the
exemption, the NASA and its
contractors must:
(A) Select TCE because there are no
technically and economically feasible
safer alternatives available during the
emergency.
(B) Perform the emergency use of TCE
at locations controlled by NASA or its
contractors.
(C) Comply with the following
conditions:
(1) Notification. Within 15 working
days of the emergency use by NASA and
its contractors, NASA must provide
notice to the EPA Assistant
Administrators of both the Office of
Enforcement and Compliance Assurance
and the Office of Chemical Safety and
Pollution Prevention that includes the
following:
(i) Identification of the conditions of
use detailed in paragraph (b)(4)(i) of this
section that the emergency use fell
under;
(ii) An explanation for why the
emergency use met the definition of
emergency in paragraph (b)(4)(i)(B) of
this section; and
(iii) An explanation of why TCE was
selected, including why there were no
technically and economically feasible
safer alternatives available in the
particular emergency.
(2) Exposure control. The owner or
operator must comply with the
Workplace Chemical Protection Program
provisions in § 751.315, to the extent
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technically feasible in light of the
particular emergency.
(3) Recordkeeping. The owner or
operator of the location where the use
takes place must comply with the
recordkeeping requirements in
§ 751.323.
(5) Lead-acid battery separator
manufacturing until December 18, 2044.
The following are specific conditions of
the exemption for use as a processing
aid in the manufacturing of lead-acid
battery separators described in
§ 751.305(b)(22):
(i) The use of TCE as a processing aid
for battery separator manufacturing
must be limited to lead acid battery
separator manufacturing.
(ii) This specific industrial and
commercial use of TCE as a processing
aid can only be used at industrial
facilities in which TCE is in use for the
manufacture of lead acid battery
separators prior to February 18, 2025.
(iii) The owner or operator of the
location where such use occurs, and
manufacturers (including importers)
and processors of TCE for such use,
must comply with the Workplace
Chemical Protection Program provisions
in § 751.315.
(iv) The owner or operator of the
location where such use of TCE occurs
must comply with the recordkeeping
requirements in § 751.323.
(6) Industrial and commercial use of
TCE as a processing aid for specialty
polymeric microporous sheet materials
manufacturing until December 18, 2039.
The following are specific conditions of
the exemption for industrial and
commercial use as a processing aid at
§ 751.305(b)(23):
(i) The use of TCE as a processing aid
must be limited to specialty polymeric
microporous sheet materials
manufacturing.
(ii) This specific industrial and
commercial use of TCE as a processing
aid can only be used at industrial
facilities in which TCE is in use for the
manufacture of specialty polymeric
microporous sheet materials prior to
February 18, 2025.
(iii) The owner or operator of the
location where such use occurs, and
manufacturers (including importers)
and processors of TCE for such use,
must comply with the Workplace
Chemical Protection Program provisions
in § 751.315.
(iv) The owner or operator of the
location where such use of TCE occurs
must comply with the recordkeeping
requirements in § 751.323.
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(7) Laboratory use for essential
laboratory activities until December 18,
2074. The following are specific
conditions of the exemption for
laboratory use at § 751.305(b)(24):
(i) The industrial and commercial use
of TCE as a laboratory chemical must
only be for essential laboratory
activities. Essential laboratory activities
are:
(A) Laboratory activities associated
with cleanup and exposure monitoring
activities, including chemical analysis,
chemical synthesis, extracting or
purifying other chemicals, dissolving
other substances, research and
development for the advancement of
cleanup activities, and as an analytical
standard for monitoring related to TCE
contamination or exposure monitoring.
(B) Laboratory activities conducted by
Federal agencies and their contractors,
other than those described in paragraph
(b)(7)(i)(A) of this section, and similar
laboratory activities, provided the use is
essential to the agency’s mission.
(ii) The use of TCE as a laboratory
chemical for testing asphalt is regulated
under § 751.311, and is not considered
an essential laboratory activity.
(iii) The use of TCE as a laboratory
chemical must be performed on the
premises of a laboratory.
(iv) The owner or operator of the
location where such use of TCE occurs,
and manufacturers (including
importers) and processors of TCE for
such use, must comply with the
Workplace Chemical Protection Program
provisions in § 751.315.
(v) The owner or operator of the
location where such use of TCE occurs
must comply with the recordkeeping
requirements in § 751.323.
(8) Disposal of TCE to industrial pretreatment, industrial treatment, or
publicly owned treatment works for the
purposes of cleanup projects of TCEcontaminated water and groundwater
until December 18, 2074. The following
are specific conditions of the exemption
for disposal at § 751.305(b)(25):
(i) The disposal of TCE to industrial
pre-treatment, industrial treatment, or
publicly owned treatment works must
only be for the purposes of cleanup
projects of TCE-contaminated water and
groundwater, and is limited to sites
undergoing cleanup under CERCLA,
RCRA, or other Federal, state, and local
government laws, regulations, or
requirements.
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(ii) The owner or operator of the
cleanup site location where TCE
industrial treatment or pretreatment
occurs must comply with the
wastewater worker protection
requirements in § 751.319.
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(iii) The owner or operator of publicly
owned treatment works that receive TCE
wastewater must comply with the
worker protection requirements in
§ 751.319.
(iv) The owner or operator of the
location where such disposal of TCE
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occurs must comply with the
recordkeeping requirements in
§ 751.323.
[FR Doc. 2024–29274 Filed 12–16–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 242 (Tuesday, December 17, 2024)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 102568-102635]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2024-29274]
[[Page 102567]]
Vol. 89
Tuesday,
No. 242
December 17, 2024
Part VIII
Environmental Protection Agency
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40 CFR Part 751
Trichloroethylene (TCE); Regulation Under the Toxic Substances Control
Act (TSCA); Final Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 89 , No. 242 / Tuesday, December 17, 2024 /
Rules and Regulations
[[Page 102568]]
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ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Part 751
[EPA-HQ-OPPT-2020-0642; FRL-8317-02-OCSPP]
RIN 2070-AK83
Trichloroethylene (TCE); Regulation Under the Toxic Substances
Control Act (TSCA)
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule.
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SUMMARY: The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA or Agency) is
finalizing a rule to address the unreasonable risk of injury to health
presented by trichloroethylene (TCE) under its conditions of use. TSCA
requires that EPA address by rule any unreasonable risk of injury to
health or the environment identified in a TSCA risk evaluation and
apply requirements to the extent necessary so that the chemical no
longer presents unreasonable risk. EPA's final rule will, among other
things, prevent serious illness associated with uncontrolled exposures
to the chemical by preventing consumer access to the chemical,
restricting the industrial and commercial use of the chemical while
also allowing for a reasonable transition period with interim worker
protections in place where an industrial and commercial use of the
chemical is being prohibited, and provide time-limited exemptions for
critical or essential uses of TCE for which no technically and
economically feasible safer alternatives are available.
DATES: This final rule is effective on January 16, 2025.
ADDRESSES: The docket for this action, identified by docket
identification (ID) number EPA-HQ-OPPT-2020-0642, is available online
at https://www.regulations.gov. Additional information about dockets
generally, along with instructions for visiting the docket in-person,
is available at https://www.epa.gov/dockets.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
For technical information: Gabriela Rossner, 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) 565-2426; email address:
[email protected].
For general information: 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?
1. General Applicability
This action applies to you if you manufacture, process, distribute
in commerce, use, or dispose of TCE or products containing TCE. TSCA
section 3(9) defines the term ``manufacture'' to mean ``to import into
the customs territory of the United States (as defined in general note
2 of the Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States), produce, or
manufacture.'' Therefore, unless expressly stated otherwise, importers
of TCE are subject to any provisions regulating manufacture of TCE (see
also Unit I.A.2.). The following list of North American Industrial
Classification System (NAICS) codes is not intended to be exhaustive,
but rather provides a guide to help readers determine whether this
document applies to them. Potentially affected entities include:
Crude Petroleum Extraction (NAICS code 211120);
Fossil Fuel Electric Power Generation (NAICS code 221112);
Other Electric Power Generation (NAICS code 221118);
Broadwoven Fabric Mills (NAICS code 313210);
Narrow Fabric Mills and Schiffli Machine Embroidery (NAICS
code 313220);
Nonwoven Fabric Mills (NAICS code 313230);
Textile and Fabric Finishing Mills (NAICS code 313310);
Fabric Coating Mills (NAICS code 313320);
Wood Window and Door Manufacturing (NAICS code 321911);
Prefabricated Wood Building Manufacturing (NAICS code
321992);
Paper Bag and Coated and Treated Paper Manufacturing
(NAICS code 322220);
Petroleum Refineries (NAICS code 324110);
All Other Petroleum and Coal Products Manufacturing (NAICS
code 324199);
Petrochemical Manufacturing (NAICS code 325110);
Other Basic Inorganic Chemical Manufacturing (NAICS code
325180);
Ethyl Alcohol Manufacturing (NAICS code 325193);
All Other Basic Organic Chemical Manufacturing (NAICS code
325199);
Plastics Material and Resin Manufacturing (NAICS code
325211);
Medicinal and Botanical Manufacturing (NAICS code 325411);
Pharmaceutical Preparation Manufacturing (NAICS code
325412);
Paint and Coating Manufacturing (NAICS code 325510);
Adhesive Manufacturing (NAICS code 325520);
Polish and Other Sanitation Good Manufacturing (NAICS code
325612);
Photographic Film, Paper, Plate and Chemical Manufacturing
(NAICS code 325992);
All Other Miscellaneous Chemical Product and Preparation
Manufacturing (NAICS code 325998);
Polystyrene Foam Product Manufacturing (NAICS code
326140);
Urethane and Other Foam Product (except Polystyrene)
Manufacturing (NAICS code 326150);
Tire Manufacturing (except Retreading) (NAICS code
326211);
Tire Retreading (NAICS code 326212);
Rubber and Plastics Hoses and Belting Manufacturing (NAICS
code 326220);
Rubber Product Manufacturing for Mechanical Use (NAICS
code 326291);
All Other Rubber Product Manufacturing (NAICS code
326299);
Pottery, Ceramics, and Plumbing Fixture Manufacturing
(NAICS code 327110);
Gypsum Product Manufacturing (NAICS code 327420);
Iron and Steel Mills and Ferroalloy Manufacturing (NAICS
code 331110);
Iron and Steel Pipe and Tube Manufacturing from Purchased
Steel (NAICS code 331210);
Rolled Steel Shape Manufacturing (NAICS code 331221);
Steel Wire Drawing (NAICS code 331222);
Nonferrous Metal (except Aluminum) Smelting and Refining
(NAICS code 331410);
Copper Rolling, Drawing, Extruding, and Alloying (NAICS
code 331420);
Nonferrous Metal (except Copper and Aluminum) Rolling,
Drawing and Extruding (NAICS code 331491);
Secondary Smelting, Refining, and Alloying of Nonferrous
Metal (except Copper and Aluminum) (NAICS code 331492);
Nonferrous Metal Die-Casting Foundries (NAICS code
331523);
Iron and Steel Forging (NAICS code 332111);
Nonferrous Forging (NAICS code 332112);
Custom Roll Forming (NAICS code 332114);
Powder Metallurgy Part Manufacturing (NAICS code 332117);
Metal Crown, Closure, and Other Metal Stamping (except
Automotive) (NAICS code 332119);
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Metal Kitchen Cookware, Utensil, Cutlery, and Flatware
(except Precious) Manufacturing (NAICS code 332215);
Saw Blade and Handtool Manufacturing (NAICS code 332216);
Metal Window and Door Manufacturing (NAICS code 332321);
Sheet Metal Work Manufacturing (NAICS code 332322);
Ornamental and Architectural Metal Work Manufacturing
(NAICS code 332323);
Power Boiler and Heat Exchanger Manufacturing (NAICS code
332410);
Metal Tank (Heavy Gauge) Manufacturing (NAICS code
332420);
Metal Can Manufacturing (NAICS code 332431);
Other Metal Container Manufacturing (NAICS code 332439);
Hardware Manufacturing (NAICS code 332510);
Spring Manufacturing (NAICS code 332613);
Other Fabricated Wire Product Manufacturing (NAICS code
332618);
Machine Shops (NAICS code 332710);
Precision Turned Product Manufacturing (NAICS code
332721);
Bolt, Nut, Screw, Rivet and Washer Manufacturing (NAICS
code 332722);
Metal Heat Treating (NAICS code 332811);
Metal Coating, Engraving (except Jewelry and Silverware),
and Allied Services to Manufacturers (NAICS code 332812);
Electroplating, Plating, Polishing, Anodizing and Coloring
(NAICS code 332813);
Industrial Valve Manufacturing (NAICS code 332911);
Fluid Power Valve and Hose Fitting Manufacturing (NAICS
code 332912);
Plumbing Fixture Fitting and Trim Manufacturing (NAICS
code 332913);
Other Metal Valve and Pipe Fitting Manufacturing (NAICS
code 332919);
Ball and Roller Bearing Manufacturing (NAICS code 332991);
Small Arms Ammunition Manufacturing (NAICS code 332992);
Ammunition (except Small Arms) Manufacturing (NAICS code
332993);
Small Arms, Ordnance, and Ordnance Accessories
Manufacturing (NAICS code 332994);
Fabricated Pipe and Pipe Fitting Manufacturing (NAICS code
332996);
All Other Miscellaneous Fabricated Metal Product
Manufacturing (NAICS code 332999);
Farm Machinery and Equipment Manufacturing (NAICS code
333111);
Lawn and Garden Tractor and Home Lawn and Garden Equipment
Manufacturing (NAICS code 333112);
Construction Machinery Manufacturing (NAICS code 333120);
Mining Machinery and Equipment Manufacturing (NAICS code
333131);
Oil and Gas Field Machinery and Equipment Manufacturing
(NAICS code 333132);
Food Product Machinery Manufacturing (NAICS code 333241);
Semiconductor Machinery Manufacturing (NAICS code 333242);
Sawmill, Woodworking, and Paper Machinery Manufacturing
(NAICS code 333243);
Printing Machinery and Equipment Manufacturing (NAICS code
333244);
Other Industrial Machinery Manufacturing (NAICS code
333249);
Optical Instrument and Lens Manufacturing (NAICS code
333314);
Photographic and Photocopying Equipment Manufacturing
(NAICS code 333316);
Other Commercial and Service Industry Machinery
Manufacturing (NAICS code 333318);
Industrial and Commercial Fan and Blower and Air
Purification Equipment Manufacturing (NAICS code 333413);
Heating Equipment (except Warm Air Furnaces) Manufacturing
(NAICS code 333414);
Air-Conditioning and Warm Air Heating Equipment and
Commercial and Industrial Refrigeration Equipment Manufacturing (NAICS
code 333415);
Industrial Mold Manufacturing (NAICS code 333511);
Special Die and Tool, Die Set, Jig and Fixture
Manufacturing (NAICS code 333514);
Cutting Tool and Machine Tool Accessory Manufacturing
(NAICS code 333515);
Machine Tool Manufacturing (NAICS code 333517);
Rolling Mill and Other Metalworking Machinery
Manufacturing (NAICS code 333519);
Turbine and Turbine Generator Set Unit Manufacturing
(NAICS code 333611);
Speed Changer, Industrial High-Speed Drive and Gear
Manufacturing (NAICS code 333612);
Mechanical Power Transmission Equipment Manufacturing
(NAICS code 333613);
Other Engine Equipment Manufacturing (NAICS code 333618);
Air and Gas Compressor Manufacturing (NAICS code 333912);
Measuring, Dispensing, and Other Pumping Equipment
Manufacturing (NAICS code 333914);
Elevator and Moving Stairway Manufacturing (NAICS code
333921);
Conveyor and Conveying Equipment Manufacturing (NAICS code
333922);
Overhead Traveling Crane, Hoist and Monorail System
Manufacturing (NAICS code 333923);
Industrial Truck, Tractor, Trailer and Stacker Machinery
Manufacturing (NAICS code 333924);
Power-Driven Hand Tool Manufacturing (NAICS code 333991);
Welding and Soldering Equipment Manufacturing (NAICS code
333992);
Packaging Machinery Manufacturing (NAICS code 333993);
Industrial Process Furnace and Oven Manufacturing (NAICS
code 333994);
Fluid Power Cylinder and Actuator Manufacturing (NAICS
code 333995);
Fluid Power Pump and Motor Manufacturing (NAICS code
333996);
Scale and Balance Manufacturing (NAICS code 333997);
All Other Miscellaneous General Purpose Machinery
Manufacturing (NAICS code 333999);
Audio and Video Equipment Manufacturing (NAICS code
334310);
Capacitor, Resistor, Coil, Transformer, and Other Inductor
Manufacturing (NAICS code 334416);
Electronic Connector Manufacturing (NAICS code 334417);
Printed Circuit Assembly (Electronic Assembly)
Manufacturing (NAICS code 334418);
Other Electronic Component Manufacturing (NAICS code
334419);
Search, Detection, Navigation, Guidance, Aeronautical, and
Nautical System and Instrument Manufacturing (NAICS code 334511);
Automatic Environmental Control Manufacturing for
Residential, Commercial and Appliance Use (NAICS code 334512);
Instruments and Related Products Manufacturing for
Measuring, Displaying, and Controlling Industrial Process Variables
(NAICS code 334513);
Instrument Manufacturing for Measuring and Testing
Electricity and Electrical Signals (NAICS code 334515);
Electric Lamp Bulb and Part Manufacturing (NAICS code
335110);
Residential Electric Lighting Fixture Manufacturing (NAICS
code 335121);
Commercial, Industrial and Institutional Electric Lighting
Fixture Manufacturing (NAICS code 335122);
Other Lighting Equipment Manufacturing (NAICS code
335129);
Major Household Appliance Manufacturing (NAICS code
335220);
Power, Distribution and Specialty Transformer
Manufacturing (NAICS code 335311);
Motor and Generator Manufacturing (NAICS code 335312);
Switchgear and Switchboard Apparatus Manufacturing (NAICS
code 335313);
[[Page 102570]]
Relay and Industrial Control Manufacturing (NAICS code
335314);
Storage Battery Manufacturing (NAICS code 335911);
Fiber Optic Cable Manufacturing (NAICS code 335921);
Current-Carrying Wiring Device Manufacturing (NAICS code
335931);
Carbon and Graphite Product Manufacturing (NAICS code
335991);
Automobile Manufacturing (NAICS code 336111);
Light Truck and Utility Vehicle Manufacturing (NAICS code
336112);
Heavy Duty Truck Manufacturing (NAICS code 336120);
Motor Vehicle Body Manufacturing (NAICS code 336211);
Truck Trailer Manufacturing (NAICS code 336212);
Motor Home Manufacturing (NAICS code 336213);
Travel Trailer and Camper Manufacturing (NAICS code
336214);
Motor Vehicle Gasoline Engine and Engine Parts
Manufacturing (NAICS code 336310);
Motor Vehicle Electrical and Electronic Equipment
Manufacturing (NAICS code 336320);
Motor Vehicle Steering and Suspension Components (except
Spring) Manufacturing (NAICS code 336330);
Motor Vehicle Brake System Manufacturing (NAICS code
336340);
Motor Vehicle Transmission and Power Train Parts
Manufacturing (NAICS code 336350);
Motor Vehicle Seating and Interior Trim Manufacturing
(NAICS code 336360);
Motor Vehicle Metal Stamping (NAICS code 336370);
Other Motor Vehicle Parts Manufacturing (NAICS code
336390);
Aircraft Manufacturing (NAICS code 336411);
Aircraft Engine and Engine Parts Manufacturing (NAICS code
336412);
Other Aircraft Part and Auxiliary Equipment Manufacturing
(NAICS code 336413);
Guided Missile and Space Vehicle Manufacturing (NAICS code
336414);
Guided Missile and Space Vehicle Propulsion Unit and
Propulsion Unit Parts Manufacturing (NAICS code 336415);
Other Guided Missile and Space Vehicle Parts and Auxiliary
Equipment Manufacturing (NAICS code 336419);
Railroad Rolling Stock Manufacturing (NAICS code 336510);
Ship Building and Repairing (NAICS code 336611);
Boat Building (NAICS code 336612);
Motorcycle, Bicycle and Parts Manufacturing (NAICS code
336991);
Military Armored Vehicle, Tank and Tank Component
Manufacturing (NAICS code 336992);
All Other Transportation Equipment Manufacturing (NAICS
code 336999);
Wood Kitchen Cabinet and Counter Top Manufacturing (NAICS
code 337110);
Upholstered Household Furniture Manufacturing (NAICS code
337121);
Nonupholstered Wood Household Furniture Manufacturing
(NAICS code 337122);
Metal Household Furniture Manufacturing (NAICS code
337124);
Institutional Furniture Manufacturing (NAICS code 337127);
Wood Office Furniture Manufacturing (NAICS code 337211);
Surgical Appliance and Supplies Manufacturing (NAICS code
339113);
Dental Equipment and Supplies Manufacturing (NAICS code
339114);
Jewelry and Silverware Manufacturing (NAICS code 339910);
Sporting and Athletic Goods Manufacturing (NAICS code
339920);
Gasket, Packing, and Sealing Device Manufacturing (NAICS
code 339991);
Fastener, Button, Needle and Pin Manufacturing (NAICS code
339993);
All Other Miscellaneous Manufacturing (NAICS code 339999);
Metal Service Centers and Other Metal Merchant Wholesalers
(NAICS code 423510);
Industrial Supplies Merchant Wholesalers (NAICS code
423510);
Other Chemical and Allied Products Merchant Wholesalers
(NAICS code 424690);
Paint, Varnish, and Supplies Merchant Wholesalers (NAICS
code 424950);
New Car Dealers (NAICS code 441110);
Used Car Dealers (NAICS code 441120);
Sporting Goods Stores (NAICS code 451110);
Scheduled Passenger Air Transportation (NAICS code
481111);
Other Support Activities for Air Transportation (NAICS
code 481111);
Other Warehousing and Storage (NAICS code 493190);
Motion Picture and Video Production (NAICS code 512110);
Other Financial Vehicles (NAICS code 525990);
Research and Development in the Physical, Engineering, and
Life Sciences (except Nanotechnology and Biotechnology) (NAICS code
541715);
Research and Development in the Social Sciences and
Humanities (NAICS code 541720);
Offices of Other Holding Companies (NAICS code 551112);
Carpet and Upholstery Cleaning Services (NAICS code
561740);
Hazardous Waste Treatment and Disposal (NAICS code
562211);
Solid Waste Landfill (NAICS code 562212);
Materials Recovery Facilities (NAICS code 562920);
Junior Colleges (NAICS code 611210);
Colleges, Universities and Professional Schools (NAICS
code 611310);
General Automotive Repair (NAICS code 811111);
Automotive Exhaust System Repair (NAICS code 811112);
Automotive Transmission Repair (NAICS code 811113);
Other Automotive Mechanical and Electrical Repair and
Maintenance (NAICS code 811118);
Automotive Body, Paint and Interior Repair and Maintenance
(NAICS code 811121);
Automotive Glass Replacement Shops (NAICS code 811122);
Automotive Oil Change and Lubrication Shops (NAICS code
811191);
All Other Automotive Repair and Maintenance (NAICS code
811198);
Consumer Electronics Repair and Maintenance (NAICS code
811211);
Computer and Office Machine Repair and Maintenance (NAICS
code 811212);
Communication Equipment Repair and Maintenance (NAICS code
811213);
Other Electronic and Precision Equipment Repair and
Maintenance (NAICS code 811219);
Commercial and Industrial Machinery and Equipment (except
Automotive and Electronic) Repair and Maintenance (NAICS code 811310);
Home and Garden Equipment Repair and Maintenance (NAICS
code 811411);
Other Personal and Household Goods Repair and Maintenance
(NAICS code 811490);
Coin-Operated Laundries and Drycleaners (NAICS code
812310);
Drycleaning and Laundry Services (except Coin-Operated)
(NAICS code 812320); and
Industrial Launderers (NAICS code 812332).
2. Applicability to Importers and Exporters
This action may also affect certain entities subject to import
certification and export notification requirements under TSCA (https://www.epa.gov/tsca-import-export-requirements). Persons who import any
chemical substance in bulk form, as part of a mixture, or as
[[Page 102571]]
part of an article (if required by rule) are subject to TSCA section 13
(15 U.S.C. 2612) import certification requirements and the
corresponding regulations at 19 CFR 12.118 through 12.127 (see also 19
CFR 127.28(i)). Those persons must certify that the shipment of the
chemical substance complies with all applicable rules and orders under
TSCA (see 19 CFR 12.121). The EPA policy in support of import
certification appears at 40 CFR part 707, subpart B.
In addition, any persons who export or intend to export a chemical
substance that is the subject of this final rule are subject to the
export notification provisions of TSCA section 12(b) (15 U.S.C.
2611(b)) and must comply with the export notification requirements in
40 CFR part 707, subpart D. Any person who exports or intends to export
TCE must comply with the export notification requirements in 40 CFR
part 707, subpart D.
If you have any questions regarding the applicability of this
action to a particular entity, consult the technical information
contact listed under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT.
B. What is the Agency's authority for taking this action?
Under TSCA section 6(a) (15 U.S.C. 2605(a)), if the Agency
determines through a TSCA section 6(b) risk evaluation that a chemical
substance presents an unreasonable risk of injury to health or the
environment, EPA must by rule apply one or more requirements listed in
TSCA section 6(a) to the extent necessary so that the chemical
substance or mixture no longer presents such risk.
C. What action is the Agency taking?
Pursuant to TSCA section 6(b), EPA determined in 2023 that TCE
presents an unreasonable risk of injury to health, without
consideration of costs or other non-risk factors, including an
unreasonable risk to potentially exposed or susceptible subpopulations
(PESS) identified by EPA as relevant to the 2020 Risk Evaluation for
TCE under the conditions of use (Refs. 1, 2). A description of the
conditions of use that contribute to EPA's determination that TCE
presents an unreasonable risk is in III.B.1. of the proposed rule (88
FR 74712, October 31, 2023 (FRL-8317-01-OCSPP), with a summary in Unit
II.C.4 of this final rule. Accordingly, to address the unreasonable
risk, EPA is issuing this final rule to:
(i) Prohibit the manufacture (including import), processing, and
distribution in commerce of TCE for all uses (including all consumer
uses (see Unit IV.B.2.)), as described in Unit IV.B., with longer
compliance timeframes for manufacture, processing, and distribution in
commerce related to certain industrial and commercial uses;
(ii) Prohibit the industrial and commercial use of TCE, as
described in Unit IV.B.1., with longer compliance timeframes for
certain uses;
(iii) Prohibit the manufacture (including import) and processing of
TCE as an intermediate for the manufacturing of hydrofluorocarbon 134a
(HFC-134a), following an 8.5-year phase-out, as described in Unit
IV.B.3.;
(iv) Prohibit the industrial and commercial use of TCE as a solvent
for closed-loop batch vapor degreasing for rayon fabric scouring for
end use in rocket booster nozzle production by Federal agencies and
their contractors, following a 10-year phase-out, outlined in Unit
IV.B.4.;
(v) Prohibit the manufacture (including import), processing,
distribution in commerce, and use of TCE as a laboratory chemical for
asphalt testing and recovery, following a 10-year phase-out, outlined
in Unit IV.B.5.;
(vi) Prohibit the manufacture (including import), processing,
distribution in commerce, and industrial and commercial use of TCE as a
solvent in batch vapor degreasing for essential aerospace parts and
components and narrow tubing used in medical devices, following a 7-
year TSCA section 6(g) exemption, outlined in Unit IV.G.1.;
(vii) Prohibit the manufacture (including import), processing,
distribution in commerce, and industrial and commercial use of TCE as a
solvent in closed loop vapor degreasing necessary for rocket engine
cleaning by Federal agencies and their contractors, following a 7-year
TSCA section 6(g) exemption, outlined in Unit IV.G.2.;
(viii) For vessels of the Armed Forces and their systems, and in
the maintenance, fabrication, and sustainment for and of such vessels
and systems, prohibit the industrial and commercial use of TCE as:
potting compounds for naval electronic systems and equipment; sealing
compounds for high and ultra-high vacuum systems; bonding compounds for
materials testing and maintenance of underwater systems and bonding of
nonmetallic materials; and cleaning agents to satisfy cleaning
requirements (which includes degreasing using wipes, sprays, solvents
and vapor degreasing) for: materials and components required for
military ordnance testing; temporary resin repairs in vessel spaces
where welding is not authorized; ensuring polyurethane adhesion for
electronic systems and equipment repair and installation of elastomeric
materials; various naval combat systems, radars, sensors, equipment;
fabrication and prototyping processes to remove coolant and other
residue from machine parts; machined part fabrications for naval
systems; installation of topside rubber tile material aboard vessels;
and vapor degreasing required for substrate surface preparation prior
to electroplating processes, following a 10-year TSCA section 6(g)
exemption, outlined in Unit IV.G.3.;
(ix) Prohibit the emergency industrial and commercial use of TCE in
furtherance of the NASA mission for specific conditions which are
critical or essential and for which no technically and economically
feasible safer alternative is available, following a 10-year TSCA
section 6(g) exemption, outlined in Unit IV.G.4.;
(x) Prohibit the manufacture (including import), processing,
distribution in commerce, disposal, and use of TCE as a processing aid
for manufacturing battery separators for lead acid batteries, following
a 20-year TSCA section 6(g) exemption, as described in Unit IV.G.5.;
(xi) Prohibit the manufacture (including import), processing,
distribution in commerce, disposal, and use of TCE as a processing aid
for manufacturing specialty polymeric microporous sheet materials
following a 15-year TSCA section 6(g) exemption, as described in Unit
IV.G.6.;
(xii) Prohibit the manufacture (including import), processing,
distribution in commerce, and use of TCE as a laboratory chemical for
essential laboratory activities and some research and development
activities, following a 50-year TSCA section 6(g) exemption, as
described in Unit IV.G.7.;
(xiii) Require strict workplace controls to limit exposure to TCE,
including compliance with a TCE workplace chemical protection program
(WCPP), which would include requirements for an interim existing
chemical exposure limit (ECEL) revised from the proposed rule, as well
as dermal protection, for conditions of use with long term phase-outs
or time-limited exemptions under TSCA section 6(g), as described in
Unit IV.C., or prescriptive workplace controls, as described in Unit
IV.D.;
(xiv) Prohibit the disposal of TCE to industrial pre-treatment,
industrial treatment, or publicly owned treatment works, through a
phaseout allowing for longer timeframes for disposal necessary for
certain industrial and commercial uses as described in Unit IV.B.6.,
along with a 50-year TSCA section 6(g)
[[Page 102572]]
exemption for disposal for cleanup projects before prohibition, as
described in Unit IV.G.8., and interim requirements for wastewater
worker protection, as described in Unit IV.E.; and
(xv) Establish recordkeeping and downstream notification
requirements, as described in Unit IV.F.
EPA notes that all TSCA conditions of use of TCE are subject to
this final rule. ``Conditions of use'' is defined in TSCA section 3(4)
to mean the circumstances, as determined by EPA, under which a chemical
substance is intended, known, or reasonably foreseen to be
manufactured, processed, distributed in commerce, used, or disposed of.
D. Why is the Agency taking this action?
Under TSCA section 6(a), ``[i]f the Administrator determines in
accordance with subsection (b)(4)(A) that the manufacture, processing,
distribution in commerce, use or disposal of a chemical substance or
mixture, or that any combination of such activities, presents an
unreasonable risk of injury to health or the environment, the
Administrator shall by rule . . . apply one or more of the [section
6(a)] requirements to such substance or mixture to the extent necessary
so that the chemical substance no longer presents such risk.'' TCE was
the subject of a risk evaluation under TSCA section 6(b)(4)(A) that was
issued in November 2020 (Ref. 1). In addition, EPA issued a revised
unreasonable risk determination for TCE in January 2023 (Ref. 2),
determining that TCE, as a whole chemical substance, presents an
unreasonable risk of injury to health under the conditions of use. On
October 31, 2023, EPA issued a proposed rule (88 FR 74712) (FRL-8317-
01-OCSPP) under TSCA section 6(a) to regulate TCE so that it no longer
presents unreasonable risk (hereinafter ``2023 TCE proposed rule'').
The Agency received public comment on the proposed rule, and with this
action, EPA is finalizing the 2023 TCE proposed rule with modifications
so that TCE no longer presents an unreasonable risk. The conditions of
use that contribute to the unreasonable risk from TCE are described in
Unit III.B.1. of the 2023 TCE proposed rule.
EPA emphasizes that while some of the adverse effects from TCE
exposure are experienced following acute single exposures, other risks
are incurred following long-term repeated exposures. Risks of non-
cancer effects, specifically fetal cardiac defects and autoimmunity,
are the most sensitive adverse effects following exposure. In addition,
risks of other significant adverse outcomes associated with TCE
exposure include: non-cancer effects (liver toxicity, kidney toxicity,
neurotoxicity, immunosuppression, reproductive toxicity, and
developmental toxicity), as well as cancer (liver, kidney, and non-
Hodgkin's lymphoma). This final rule will eliminate the unreasonable
risk to human health from TCE, as identified in the 2020 Risk
Evaluation for TCE (Ref. 1) and the 2023 Revised Unreasonable Risk
Determination for TCE (Ref. 2).
While EPA's rule will result in a ban of TCE, the timeframes for
the phase-outs differ across conditions of use and are described in
fuller detail in Unit IV.B. One phase-out is for uses that may impact
the Agency's efforts to address climate-damaging HFCs (and the
associated adverse impacts on human health and the environment) under
the American Innovation and Manufacturing Act of 2020 (AIM Act) (42
U.S.C. 7675). EPA is implementing a longer phase-out in tandem with
strict workplace controls for the manufacturing (including import) and
processing of TCE as an intermediate in the generation of HFC-134a, one
of the regulated substances subject to a phasedown under the AIM Act.
More information on HFC-134a is in Unit V.A.1. of the 2023 TCE proposed
rule.
Additionally, the Agency recognizes that alternatives to TCE may
not be readily available for some important conditions of use. As an
example, EPA is finalizing a longer phase-out timeframe for industrial
and commercial use of TCE as a solvent for closed-loop batch vapor
degreasing for rayon fabric scouring for end use in rocket booster
nozzle production by Federal agencies and their contractors. Currently,
substitutes and alternative processes do not meet the technical
specifications required to clean the rayon fabric in order to safely
produce rockets. Similarly, EPA is finalizing a longer phase-out for
the industrial and commercial use of TCE in laboratory use for asphalt
testing and recovery, based on information provided by state
departments of transportation and regulated entities regarding the
timeframes needed for revising state certifications that currently
include this use of TCE for, among other activities, enabling the
recycling of asphalt.
Additionally, EPA recognizes that some conditions of use may be
important for national security applications or for other critical
needs. For these reasons, this final rule includes a 15-year exemption
under TSCA section 6(g) for industrial and commercial use of TCE as a
processing aid for battery separator manufacturing in the production of
lead-acid battery separators, as well as for the manufacturing,
processing, and distribution in commerce of TCE for this use. EPA
recognizes that battery separators are essential components of
batteries that power vehicles and systems in the U.S. supply chain for
multiple critical infrastructure sectors within the national economy.
Further, there are a number of critical uses required for DoD vessels.
EPA is finalizing a 10-year exemption under TSCA section 6(g) for DoD
vessel requirements for potting, bonding and sealing compounds, and
bonding and cleaning requirements for naval combat systems, radars,
sensors, equipment, and fabrication and prototyping processes.
Additionally, EPA is finalizing a 50-year exemption under TSCA section
6(g) for the industrial and commercial use of TCE for critical
laboratory activities; for example, laboratory activities associated
with ongoing environmental cleanup projects that fall under the
Superfund program or other similar EPA authorities, in which it is
necessary to use TCE as a laboratory chemical for the analysis of
contaminated soil, air, and water samples.
EPA proposed and is finalizing a requirement to comply with a WCPP,
which includes monitoring, adherence to industrial hygiene best
practices, and requirements to meet an interim ECEL as a condition for
most of the conditions of use for which a phase-out or time-limited
exemption was provided. For the remaining conditions of use for which a
phase-out or time-limited exemption was provided, EPA is requiring
prescriptive worker controls. For many of the conditions of use for
which EPA is finalizing longer phase-outs or time-limited exemptions
under the WCPP, data were submitted to support many commenters'
position that a higher interim ECEL than the limit proposed is
necessary for successful implementation of worker protections before
those conditions of use are prohibited. These comments were submitted
to inform the risk evaluation, Small Business Advocacy Review (SBAR)
Panel process, the comment period following publication of the 2023 TCE
proposed rule, or during stakeholder outreach, and are available in the
corresponding public dockets (EPA-HQ-OPPT-2020-0642; EPA-HQ-OPPT-2019-
0500; EPA-HQ-OPPT-2016-0737, respectively).
E. What are the estimated incremental impacts of this action?
EPA has prepared an Economic Analysis of the potential incremental
impacts associated with this rulemaking that can be found in the
rulemaking
[[Page 102573]]
docket (Ref. 3). As described in more detail in the Economic Analysis
(Ref. 3), EPA was unable to quantify all incremental costs of this
rule. The quantifiable cost of the rule is estimated to be $64.1
million annualized over 20 years at a 2% discount rate, $71.3 million
annualized at 3%, and $102.4 million annualized at a 7% discount rate.
These costs take into consideration costs of compliance with
implementation of an interim WCPP for certain conditions of use, based
on an interim ECEL of 0.2 ppm (1.07 mg/m\3\) for inhalation exposures
as an 8-hour time-weighted average (TWA), costs for transitioning to
alternatives, where possible, and reformulation costs of numerous
products. Estimated costs for the interim WCPP include costs for
monitoring and applicable personal protective equipment (PPE). There
are a number of notable unquantified costs. These are described in this
Unit and more fully in section 7.12 of the Economic Analysis.
Alternative products with similar cost and efficacy are available
for most of the products that are formulated with TCE. However, for
some applications, there may be additional unquantified costs
associated with the alternatives including costs to develop
alternatives where they are not currently available. For instance, in
some cases, some effort might be required by firms using TCE products
to identify suitable alternatives, test them for their desired
applications, learn how to use them safely and effectively, and
implement new processes for using the alternative products. There may
also be some safety-critical applications, such as energized electrical
equipment cleaners and adhesives and sealants specifically for
aerospace applications, where alternatives would need to undergo
extensive safety reviews and testing before they could replace the TCE
products. The information to estimate how often these costs might be
incurred or what the specific costs would be per-user or per-firm when
they are incurred is not available. Therefore, EPA is unable to
consider these costs quantitatively.
There also may be some unquantified costs associated with the
implementation of a WCPP. EPA used available air monitoring data as
well as modelled data to estimate a distribution of exposure
concentrations, but since these data were not collected in the same way
monitoring data under a WCPP would be collected, these estimated
distributions are uncertain and therefore, the costs of compliance with
the WCPP are uncertain. The WCPP costs also assume that when the
exposure levels exceed the interim ECEL, compliance is achieved by
implementing a respirator PPE program. However, and consistent with the
hierarchy of controls, the final rule requires implementation of
feasible engineering and administrative controls before using PPE to
reduce exposure to or below the interim ECEL. These costs would be
specific to individual firms, and EPA does not have sufficient
information to estimate these costs.
The costs of alternative identification, testing, and potential
process changes could not be estimated for battery separator
manufacturers, synthetic paper processors, and fluoroelastomer
producers. It is expected that these facilities would need to adopt
process and/or physical plant changes in order to comply with the rule.
EPA does not have sufficient information to estimate the costs of the
prohibition to these sectors.
EPA expects the processing of TCE as an intermediate for the
manufacture of HFC-134a to decline over time, in light of the AIM Act
requirements (Ref. 4). At some point, the domestic manufacture of HFC-
134a may be discontinued. While the timing for this discontinuation is
uncertain, it is unclear whether this rule will hasten the closure of
plants that use TCE to produce HFC-134a. There could be some unknown
cost impacts associated with hastening the closure of these two plants.
EPA is finalizing a 10-year phase-out for the industrial and
commercial use of TCE as a solvent for closed-loop batch vapor
degreasing for rayon fabric scouring for end use in rocket booster
nozzle production by Federal agencies and their contractors,
conditioned on Federal agencies performing within 5 years a final pre-
launch test of rocket booster nozzles that have been produced without
using TCE. EPA does not have information to estimate the cost of such a
test. The prohibition of TCE used in vapor degreasing for narrow tubing
for aerospace and medical devices is expected to require testing and
certification of alternative solvents and/or processes to meet strict
safety and performance requirements. These costs will be specific to a
facility's design, selected alternative, and end use of the product.
EPA does not have information to estimate the costs associated with
meeting these safety and performance requirements.
The disposal of TCE from cleanup projects to industrial pre-
treatment, industrial treatment, or publicly owned treatment works is
prohibited after the TSCA section 6(g) exemption ends, 50 years after
the rule is finalized. If cleanup is not finished by the end of this
time period and the TSCA section 6(g) exemption has not been extended,
cleanup sites will need to identify and implement alternative disposal
or treatment methods and will likely also need to renegotiate Resource
Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA) permits or Comprehensive
Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA)
agreements to include those changes. These approaches could be more
costly to implement and/or increase the duration of cleanups allowing
any potential environmental or human health impacts to continue for a
longer period of time. The information to estimate how often these
costs might be incurred or what the specific costs would be per site
when they are incurred is not available.
During the timeframe of the exemptions, this rule requires owners
and operators of cleanup sites with TCE exposures to potentially
exposed persons (e.g., workers or others in the workplace, such as
persons directly handling the chemical or in the area where the
chemical is being used) as well as publicly owned treatment works
(POTWs) receiving TCE wastes from cleanup sites, battery separator
manufacturers, and specialty polymeric microporous sheet material
manufacturers to comply with the Occupational Safety and Health
Administration's (OSHA's) Hazardous Waste Operations and Emergency
Response (HAZWOPER) requirements modified to incorporate the interim
ECEL (for cleanup sites) and WCPP requirements modified to include a
water screening method (for POTWs). EPA does not have sufficient
information to estimate the number of sites and workers that may need
to meet the requirements to protect potentially exposed persons and
could not estimate the costs for those protections. In addition, the
economic analysis does not estimate costs regarding disposal of TCE or
TCE-containing products after the effective date prohibiting the
industrial and commercial use and disposal of TCE to industrial pre-
treatment, industrial treatment, or publicly owned treatment works. The
final rule includes a staggered compliance timeline throughout the
supply chain to allow for much of the TCE to be used before disposal is
necessary. However, some unused product may need to be disposed of as
hazardous waste. Since there is no reliable way of estimating the
volume of this waste, the additional disposal costs are not quantified
in this economic
[[Page 102574]]
analysis. Finally, EPA could not estimate any potential business
closures or off-shoring of businesses that might result from the rule.
Vapor degreasing is one use of TCE where switching to a suitable
alternative may be challenging and where closing or off-shoring may be
a compliance strategy. EPA estimates that 366 facilities still use TCE
in vapor degreasers, a majority of which are small businesses. There is
no standard generally accepted approach for estimating the cost impacts
of a firm closure. Despite information EPA has sought from stakeholders
and commenters, including through a SBAR Panel, it is not clear whether
or how many firms might choose closure as a compliance strategy, nor
what the costs might be.
Following the mandate of TSCA to address unreasonable risk to
health as well as in alignment with the goals of President Biden's
Cancer Moonshot, the rule will protect people from cancer and other
significant adverse health effects of TCE by prohibiting the
manufacture (including import), processing, and distribution in
commerce of TCE for all uses while allowing for a longer reasonable
transition period or time-limited exemptions for certain uses (Ref. 5).
The actions in this final rule are expected to achieve health benefits
for the American public, some of which can be monetized and others
that, while tangible and significant, cannot be monetized due to data
and methodology limitations. The monetized benefits of this rule are
approximately $22.9 million to $ 23.2 million annualized over 20 years
at a 2% discount rate, $18.2 million to $18.3 million annualized over
20 years at 3%, and $8.7 million to $ 8.9 million annualized over 20
years at a 7% discount rate. These monetized benefits only include
potential reductions in risk of liver, kidney, and non-Hodgkin's
lymphoma cancers associated with reducing chronic TCE exposure.
There are a number of non-cancer endpoints associated with exposure
to TCE, including liver toxicity, kidney toxicity, reproductive
effects, neurotoxicity, immunotoxicity effects and fetal cardiac
defects (Ref. 1). There is human evidence for hepatitis accompanying
immune-related generalized skin diseases, jaundice, hepatomegaly,
hepatosplenomegaly, and liver failure in TCE-exposed workers and
changes in the proximal tubules of the kidney following exposure to
TCE, and occupational studies have shown increased levels of kidney
damage (proximal tubules) and end-stage renal disease in TCE-exposed
workers. Evidence exists to associate TCE with reproductive effects.
Most human studies support an association between TCE exposure and
alterations in sperm density and quality, as well as changes in sexual
drive or function and serum endocrine levels. Fewer epidemiological
studies exist linking decreased incidence of fecundability (time-to
pregnancy) and menstrual cycle disturbances in women with TCE
exposures. Human studies have consistently reported vestibular system
related symptoms such as headaches, dizziness, and nausea following TCE
exposure. Several newer epidemiological studies have found an
association between TCE exposure and neurodegenerative disorders such
as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and Parkinson's disease (Ref. 1). EPA
does not have sufficient information to estimate the monetized benefits
of the rule with respect to these noncancer effects, and therefore
monetized benefits are likely underestimated.
EPA does estimate that there 67,869 workers and occupational non-
users (ONUs, or people who do not directly handle the chemical, but are
in close proximity) exposed to TCE and of those, approximately 1,162
pregnant workers and ONUs annually that may potentially benefit from a
reduced risk of fetal cardiac defects resulting from reduced TCE
exposure. Although EPA has not developed a complete estimate of the
monetized benefits associated with avoiding fetal cardiac defects, as
described in the Economic Analysis (Ref. 3), Arth, Tinker et al. (Ref.
6) estimated a mean annual cost of $41,166 (2013$) (median $14,552) for
each fetal cardiac defects-associated hospitalization. For critical
fetal cardiac defects, mean and median costs were estimated at $79,011
and $29,886 (2013$), respectively, for each incidence. In addition to
hospitalization costs, individuals with fetal cardiac defects will
likely incur healthcare costs associated with physician visits and
outpatient care. They are also more likely to require specialized
healthcare such as medications, physical or speech therapy, or
treatment for developmental or behavioral problems (Ref. 7). Additional
social costs may include caregiver burden and mental health services
(Ref. 8), as well as non-market costs such as pain and suffering and
fetal cardiac defect-related mortality. Because these costs are not
accounted for, monetized benefits are likely underestimated. The
severity of specific types of fetal cardiac defects and associated
costs will vary depending on the type of heart defect.
Additionally, to the extent that the rule reduces the amount of TCE
in drinking water systems and thereby exposures to populations using
those drinking water sources, there could be potential health-related
benefits related to improved drinking water quality that EPA was unable
to quantify.
II. Background
A. Overview of TCE
As described in more detail in the 2023 TCE proposed rule, TCE is
an immunotoxicant and developmental toxicant and is carcinogenic to
humans by all routes of exposure. This final rule is specifically
intended to address the unreasonable risk of injury to health that EPA
has identified in the 2020 Risk Evaluation for TCE (Ref. 1) and 2023
Revised Unreasonable Risk Determination (Ref. 2), as described in Unit
II.D. of the 2023 TCE proposed rule. TCE is a volatile organic compound
(VOC) used in industry as well as in commercial and consumer products.
The total aggregate annual production volume ranged from 100 to 250
million pounds between 2016 and 2019 according to the most recent
(2020) Chemical Data Reporting (CDR) data (Ref. 9). The majority of TCE
is processed as an intermediate during the manufacture of refrigerants,
specifically HFC-134a, which accounts for about 83.6% of TCE's annual
production volume (Ref. 1). TCE is also used as a solvent, frequently
in cleaning and degreasing (including spot cleaning, vapor degreasing,
cold cleaning, and aerosol degreasing), which accounts for another
14.7% of TCE production volume. Other uses account for approximately
1.7% of TCE production volume. TCE is used as a solvent in a variety of
commercial and consumer applications including in lubricants, adhesives
and sealants, paints and coatings, and other miscellaneous products.
B. Regulatory Actions Pertaining to TCE
Because of its significant adverse health effects, TCE is subject
to numerous State, Federal, and international regulations restricting
and regulating its use. A summary of EPA regulations pertaining to TCE,
as well as other Federal, State, and international regulations, is in
the docket (Ref. 10).
As described in more detail in the 2023 TCE proposed rule and in
the Response to Public Comments document (Ref. 11), EPA considered the
adequacy of the current regulation of TCE by OSHA for protection of
workers. EPA notes that the standards for chemical hazards that OSHA
promulgates under the Occupational Safety and Health (OSH) Act share a
[[Page 102575]]
broadly similar purpose with the worker protection-related standards
that EPA promulgates under TSCA section 6(a). The control measures OSHA
and EPA require to satisfy the objectives of their respective statutes
may also, in many circumstances, overlap or coincide. However, there
are important differences between EPA's and OSHA's regulatory
approaches and jurisdiction, and EPA considers these differences when
deciding whether and how to account for OSHA requirements when
evaluating and addressing potential unreasonable risk to workers so
that compliance requirements are clearly explained to the regulated
community. TSCA risk evaluations are subject to statutory science
standards, an explicit requirement to consider risks to potentially
exposed or susceptible subpopulations, and a prohibition on considering
costs and other non-risk factors when determining whether a chemical
presents an unreasonable risk that warrants regulatory actions--all
requirements that do not apply to development of OSHA regulations. As
such, EPA may find unreasonable risk for purposes of TSCA
notwithstanding OSHA requirements. In addition, health standards issued
under section 6(b)(5) of the OSH Act must reduce significant risk only
to the extent that it is technologically and economically feasible.
OSHA's legal requirement to demonstrate that its section 6(b)(5)
standards are technologically and economically feasible at the time
they are promulgated often precludes OSHA from imposing exposure
control requirements sufficient to ensure that the chemical substance
no longer presents a significant risk to workers. While it is possible
in some cases that the OSHA standards for some chemicals reviewed under
TSCA will eliminate unreasonable risk, based on EPA's experience thus
far in conducting occupational risk assessments under TSCA, EPA
believes that OSHA chemical standards would in general be unlikely to
address unreasonable risk to workers within the meaning of TSCA, since
TSCA section 6(b) unreasonable risk determinations may account for
unreasonable risk to more sensitive endpoints and working populations
than OSHA's risk evaluations typically contemplate and EPA is obligated
to apply TSCA section 6(a) risk management requirements to the extent
necessary so that the unreasonable risk is no longer presented. Because
the requirements and application of TSCA and OSHA regulatory analyses
differ, it is necessary for EPA to conduct risk evaluations and, where
it finds unreasonable risk to workers, develop risk management
requirements for chemical substances that OSHA also regulates, and it
is expected that EPA's findings and requirements may sometimes diverge
from OSHA's. Additional considerations of OSHA standards in the revised
unreasonable risk determination are discussed further in the 2023
Revised Unreasonable Risk Determination for TCE (88 FR 1222, January 9,
2023 (FRL-9945-02-OCSPP)).
C. Summary of EPA's Risk Evaluation Activities on TCE
In July 2017, EPA published the scope of the TCE risk evaluation
(82 FR 31592, July 7, 2017 (FRL-9963-57)), and, after receiving public
comments, published the problem formulation in June 2018 (83 FR 26998,
June 11, 2018 (FRL-9978-40)). In February 2020, EPA published a draft
risk evaluation (85 FR 11079, February 26, 2020 (FRL-10005-52)), and,
after public comment and peer review by the Science Advisory Committee
on Chemicals (SACC), EPA issued the 2020 Risk Evaluation for TCE in
November 2020 in accordance with TSCA section 6(b) (85 FR 75010,
November 24, 2020 (FRL-10016-91)). EPA subsequently issued a draft
revised TSCA risk determination for TCE (87 FR 40520, July 7, 2022
(FRL-9945-01-OCSPP)), and, after public notice and comment, published a
Revised Risk Determination for TCE in January 2023 (88 FR 1222, January
9, 2023 (FRL-9945-02-OCSPP)). The 2020 Risk Evaluation for TCE and
supplemental materials are in Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OPPT-2019-0500, and
the January 2023 Revised Unreasonable Risk Determination for TCE and
additional materials supporting the risk evaluation process are in
Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OPPT-2016-0737. Both dockets can be accessed
online through https://www.regulations.gov.
1. 2020 Risk Evaluation for TCE
In the 2020 Risk Evaluation for TCE, EPA evaluated risks associated
with 54 conditions of use within the following categories: manufacture
(including import), processing, distribution in commerce, industrial
and commercial use, consumer use, and disposal (Ref. 1). Descriptions
of these conditions of use are in Unit III.B.1. of the 2023 TCE
proposed rule. The 2020 Risk Evaluation for TCE identified significant
adverse health effects associated with short- and long-term exposure to
TCE. A further discussion of the hazards of TCE is presented in Unit
III.B.2. of the 2023 TCE proposed rule.
2. 2023 Revised Unreasonable Risk Determination for TCE
As described in more detail in EPA's 2023 TCE proposed rule, EPA
revised the original unreasonable risk determination based on the 2020
Risk Evaluation for TCE and issued a final revised unreasonable risk
determination in January 2023 (Ref. 2). EPA revised the risk
determination for the 2020 Risk Evaluation for TCE pursuant to TSCA
section 6(b) and consistent with Executive Order 13990 (``Protecting
Public Health and the Environment and Restoring Science to Tackle the
Climate Crisis'') and other Administration priorities. The revisions
consisted of making the risk determination based on the whole chemical
substance instead of making risk determinations for each individual
condition of use, which resulted in the revised risk determination
superseding the prior ``no unreasonable risk'' determinations for
specific conditions of use (Ref. 2), the withdrawal of the associated
TSCA section 6(i)(1) ``no unreasonable risk'' order, and clarification
that the risk determination does not reflect an assumption that all
workers are always provided and appropriately wear PPE (Ref. 2).
EPA determined that TCE presents an unreasonable risk of injury to
health and did not identify risks of injury to the environment that
contribute to the unreasonable risk determination for TCE. The TCE
conditions of use that contribute to EPA's determination that the
chemical substance poses unreasonable risk to health are listed in the
unreasonable risk determination (Ref. 2) and the 2023 TCE proposed
rule, with descriptions to aid chemical manufacturers, processors, and
users in determining how their particular use or activity would be
addressed under the final regulatory action.
3. Description of Unreasonable Risk
EPA has determined that TCE presents an unreasonable risk of injury
to human health under the conditions of use based on acute and chronic
non-cancer risks and cancer risks (Ref. 2). As described in the TSCA
section 6(b) 2020 Risk Evaluation for TCE, EPA identified non-cancer
adverse effects from acute and chronic inhalation and dermal exposures
to TCE, and for cancer from chronic inhalation and dermal exposures to
TCE (Ref. 1). In the TCE risk characterization, the endpoints
identified by EPA as the basis for the unreasonable risk determination
in the Risk Conclusions were immunosuppression effects for acute
inhalation and dermal exposures, and
[[Page 102576]]
autoimmunity effects for chronic inhalation and dermal exposures (Ref.
1). Additional risks associated with other non-cancer adverse effects
(e.g., developmental toxicity, immunosuppression, liver toxicity,
kidney toxicity, neurotoxicity, autoimmunity, and reproductive
toxicity) were identified for acute and chronic inhalation and dermal
exposures. EPA also concluded, based on EPA's Guidelines for Carcinogen
Risk Assessment (Ref. 12), that TCE is carcinogenic by all routes of
exposure, and identified cancer risk (liver, kidney, and non-Hodgkin
lymphoma) from chronic inhalation and dermal exposures (Ref. 2). Unit
VII. of the 2023 TCE proposed rule summarizes the health effects and
the magnitude of the exposures.
To make the unreasonable risk determination for TCE, EPA evaluated
exposures to PESS including workers, ONUs, consumer users, and
bystanders to consumer use by using reasonably available monitoring and
modeling data for inhalation and dermal exposures (Ref. 1). EPA
conducted a screening-level analysis to assess potential risks from the
air and water pathways to fenceline communities. A discussion of EPA's
analysis and the expected effects of this rulemaking on fenceline
communities is in Unit VII.A. of the 2023 TCE proposed rule.
For the 2020 Risk Evaluation for TCE, and as discussed in Unit
II.D.1. and Unit III.A.3. of the 2023 TCE proposed rule, EPA considered
PESS. EPA identified the following groups as PESS: workers and ONUs,
including men and women of reproductive age, adolescents, and
biologically susceptible subpopulations; and consumer users and
bystanders (of any age group, including infants, toddlers, children,
and elderly), including biologically susceptible subpopulations.
Additionally, older pregnant women are identified as especially
susceptible to cardiac defects in their developing fetus based on
epidemiological data (Ref. 1). All PESS are included in the
quantitative and qualitative analyses described in the 2020 Risk
Evaluation for TCE and were considered in the determination of
unreasonable risk for TCE (Refs. 1, 2).
4. Conditions of Use Subject to This Regulatory Action
As noted in Unit I.C. of this final rule, the term ``conditions of
use'' is defined in TSCA section 3(4). Condition of use descriptions
are provided in Unit III.B.1. of the 2023 TCE proposed rule and were
obtained from EPA sources such as CDR use codes, the 2020 Risk
Evaluation for TCE and related documents, as well as the Organisation
for Economic Co-operation and Development harmonized use codes, and
stakeholder engagements. EPA did not receive public comments
identifying inaccuracies or necessitating changes to those
descriptions; however, EPA received some comments requesting
clarification for particular uses, which can be found in the Response
to Comments document (Ref. 11). Additionally, to assist with
implementation and compliance with the final rule, in Units IV.C.1.,
IV.D.1., and IV.E.1. of this final rule, EPA has provided a description
of the conditions of use that are subject to the WCPP or other
workplace controls during phaseout or time-limited exemption before
prohibition.
For the purposes of this final rule, ``occupational conditions of
use'' refers to the TSCA conditions of use other than consumer use as
described in Units III.B.1.a., b., c., and e. of the 2023 TCE proposed
rule. Although EPA identified both industrial and commercial uses in
the 2020 Risk Evaluation for TCE (Ref. 1) for purposes of
distinguishing scenarios, the Agency clarified then and clarifies now
that EPA interprets the authority Congress gave to the Agency to
``regulat[e] any manner or method of commercial use'' under TSCA
section 6(a)(5) to reach both industrial and commercial uses.
Additionally, as described in the 2023 TCE proposed rule and in the
2020 Risk Evaluation for TCE (Ref. 1), EPA identified and assessed all
known, intended, and reasonably foreseen industrial, commercial, and
consumer uses of TCE. EPA determined that all industrial, commercial,
and consumer uses of TCE evaluated in the 2020 Risk Evaluation for TCE
contribute to the unreasonable risk of injury to health. As such, for
purposes of this risk management rule, ``consumer use'' refers to all
known, intended, or reasonably foreseen TCE consumer uses. Likewise,
for the purpose of this risk management rule, ``industrial and
commercial use'' refers to all known, intended, or reasonably foreseen
TCE industrial and commercial uses.
EPA further notes that this rule does not apply to any substance
excluded from the definition of ``chemical substance'' under TSCA
section 3(2)(B)(i) through (vi). Those exclusions include, but are not
limited to, any pesticide (as defined by the Federal Insecticide,
Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act) when manufactured, processed, or
distributed in commerce for use as a pesticide; and any food, food
additive, drug, cosmetic, or device, as defined in section 201 of the
Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, when manufactured, processed, or
distributed in commerce for use as a food, food additive, drug,
cosmetic or device.
D. EPA's 2023 Proposed Rule for TCE
1. Description of TSCA Section 6(a) Requirements
Under TSCA section 6(a), if the Administrator determines through a
TSCA section 6(b) risk evaluation that a chemical substance presents an
unreasonable risk of injury to health or the environment, without
consideration of costs or other non-risk factors, including an
unreasonable risk to a PESS identified as relevant to the Agency's risk
evaluation, under the conditions of use, EPA must by rule apply one or
more of the section 6(a) requirements to the extent necessary so that
the chemical substance no longer presents such risk.
The TSCA section 6(a) requirements can include one or more of the
following actions alone or in combination:
Prohibit or otherwise restrict the manufacturing
(including import), processing, or distribution in commerce of the
substance or mixture, or limit the amount of such substance or mixture
which may be manufactured, processed, or distributed in commerce
(section 6(a)(1)).
Prohibit or otherwise restrict the manufacturing,
processing, or distribution in commerce of the substance or mixture for
a particular use or above a specific concentration for a particular use
(section 6(a)(2)).
Limit the amount of the substance or mixture which may be
manufactured, processed, or distributed in commerce for a particular
use or above a specific concentration for a particular use specified
(section 6(a)(2)).
Require clear and adequate minimum warning and
instructions with respect to the substance or mixture's use,
distribution in commerce, or disposal, or any combination of those
activities, to be marked on or accompanying the substance or mixture
(section 6(a)(3)).
Require manufacturers and processors of the substance or
mixture to make and retain certain records or conduct certain
monitoring or testing (section 6(a)(4)).
Prohibit or otherwise regulate any manner or method of
commercial use of the substance or mixture (section 6(a)(5)).
Prohibit or otherwise regulate any manner or method of
disposal of the substance or mixture, or any article containing such
substance or mixture,
[[Page 102577]]
by its manufacturer or processor or by any person who uses or disposes
of it for commercial purposes (section 6(a)(6)).
Direct manufacturers or processors of the substance or
mixture to give notice of the unreasonable risk determination to
distributors, certain other persons, and the public, and to replace or
repurchase the substance or mixture (section 6(a)(7)).
In the 2023 TCE proposed rule, EPA analyzed how the TSCA section
6(a) requirements could be applied to address the unreasonable risk
from TCE so that it no longer presents such risk. This unit summarizes
the TSCA section 6 considerations for issuing regulations under TSCA
section 6(a), and Unit IV. outlines how EPA applied these
considerations while managing the unreasonable risk from TCE.
As required, EPA developed a proposed regulatory action and one
primary alternative regulatory action, which are described in Units
V.A. and V.B. of the 2023 TCE the proposed rule, respectively. To
identify and select a regulatory action, EPA considered the two routes
of exposure driving the unreasonable risk, inhalation and dermal, and
the exposed populations. For occupational conditions of use, EPA
considered how it could directly regulate manufacturing (including
import), processing, distribution in commerce, industrial and
commercial use, or disposal to address the unreasonable risk. EPA also
considered how it could exercise its authority under TSCA to regulate
the manufacturing (including import), processing, and/or distribution
in commerce of TCE at different levels in the supply chain to eliminate
exposures or restrict the availability of TCE and TCE-containing
products for consumer use in order to address the unreasonable risk.
As required by TSCA section 6(c)(2), EPA considered several
factors, in addition to identified unreasonable risk, when selecting
among possible TSCA section 6(a) regulatory requirements for the
proposed rule. EPA's considerations regarding TSCA section 6(c)(2) for
TCE are discussed in full in Unit VII. of the 2023 TCE proposed rule,
including the statement of effects with respect to the section
6(c)(2)(A) considerations.
As described in more detail in the 2023 TCE proposed rule, EPA also
considered regulatory authorities under statutes administered by other
agencies such as the Occupational Safety and Health (OSH) Act, the
Consumer Product Safety Act (CPSA), and the Federal Hazardous
Substances Act (FHSA), as well as other EPA-administered statutes, to
examine (1) Whether there are opportunities to address unreasonable
risk under other statutes, such that a referral may be warranted under
TSCA section 9(a) or 9(b); or (2) Whether TSCA section 6(a) regulation
could include alignment of requirements and definitions in and under
existing statutes and regulations to minimize confusion to the
regulated entities and the general public.
Additionally, as described in more detail in EPA's 2023 TCE
proposed rule in Unit VI.B, EPA considered the availability of
alternatives when finalizing a prohibition or a substantial restriction
(TSCA section 6(c)(2)(C)), and in setting final compliance dates in
accordance with the requirements in TSCA section 6(d)(1).
To the extent information was reasonably available, EPA considered
pollution prevention strategies and the hierarchy of controls adopted
by OSHA and the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health
(NIOSH) when developing its proposed rule, with the goal of identifying
risk management control methods that would be permanent, feasible, and
effective. EPA also considered how to address the unreasonable risk
while providing flexibility to the regulated community where
appropriate and took into account the information presented in the 2020
Risk Evaluation for TCE (Ref. 1), input from stakeholders, insight
received during consultations, and anticipated compliance strategies
from regulated entities.
Taken together, these considerations led EPA to the proposed
regulatory action and primary alternative action described in this
Unit. Additional details related to how the requirements in this Unit
were incorporated into development of the proposed rule and primary
alternative action are in Unit VI. of the 2023 TCE proposed rule.
2. Consultations and Other Engagement
a. Consultations
EPA conducted consultations and outreach as part of development of
the 2023 TCE proposed rule. The Agency held a federalism consultation
from July 22, 2021, until October 22, 2021, as part of the rulemaking
process and pursuant to Executive Order 13132 (Ref. 13).
EPA also consulted with tribal officials during the development of
the 2023 TCE proposed rule. The Agency held a tribal consultation from
May 17, 2021, to August 20, 2021, with meetings on June 15 and July 8,
2021 (Ref. 14). EPA received no written comments as part of this
consultation.
EPA's environmental justice (EJ) consultation occurred from June 3,
2021, through August 20, 2021. On June 16 and July 6, 2021, EPA held
public meetings as part of this consultation. These meetings were held
pursuant to Executive Orders 12898 and 14008. EPA received three
written comments following the EJ meetings, in addition to oral
comments provided during the consultations (Refs. 15, 16, 17, 18). A
brief summary of the comments is in Unit III.A.1 of the 2023 TCE
proposed rule.
As required by section 609(b) of the Regulatory Flexibility Act
(RFA), EPA convened a SBAR Panel to obtain advice and recommendations
from Small Entity Representatives (SERs) that potentially would be
subject to the rule's requirements. EPA met with SERs before and during
Panel proceedings, on October 28, 2022, and January 31, 2023. Panel
recommendations were presented in the SBAR Panel report (Ref. 19) and
were addressed in Unit XI.C. of the 2023 TCE proposed rule and in the
Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (IRFA) (Ref. 20). EPA has also
prepared a Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (FRFA) (Ref. 21).
More information about these consultations is presented in Units
III.A.1., XI.C., XI.E., XI.F., and XI.J. of the 2023 TCE proposed rule.
b. Other Stakeholder Consultations
For development of the proposed rule, in addition to the formal
consultations described in Unit XI. of the 2023 TCE proposed rule, EPA
provided an overview of the TSCA risk management process and the risk
evaluation findings for TCE on December 15, 2020 (Ref. 22). EPA also
presented on the TSCA risk management process and the findings in the
2020 Risk Evaluation for TCE at a Small Business Administration (SBA)
Office of Advocacy Environmental Roundtable on December 18, 2020 (Ref.
19). Attendees of these meetings were given an opportunity to voice
their concerns regarding the risk evaluation and risk management.
Furthermore, during development of the proposed rule, EPA engaged
in discussions with representatives from different industries, non-
governmental organizations, technical experts, organized labor, and
users of TCE. A list of external meetings held during the development
of the 2023 TCE proposed rule is in the docket (Ref. 23); meeting
materials and summaries are also in the docket. See Unit III.A.2. of
the 2023 TCE proposed rule for a summary of the topics discussed during
the meetings.
c. Children's Environmental Health
The Agency's 2021 Policy on Children's Health (Ref. 24) requires
EPA
[[Page 102578]]
to protect children from environmental exposures by consistently and
explicitly considering early life exposures (from conception, infancy,
and early childhood and through adolescence until 21 years of age) and
lifelong health in all human health decisions through identifying and
integrating children's health data and information when conducting risk
assessments. TSCA section 6(b)(4)(A) also requires EPA to conduct risk
evaluations ``to determine whether a chemical substance presents an
unreasonable risk of injury to health or the environment . . .
including an unreasonable risk to a PESS identified as relevant to the
risk evaluation by the Administrator, under the conditions of use.'' In
addition, TSCA section 6(a) requires EPA to apply one or more risk
management requirements so that TCE no longer presents an unreasonable
risk (which includes unreasonable risk to any relevant PESS).
Information about the health and risk assessments supporting this
action and how the Policy was applied is presented in Unit II.C.,
II.D., and IV.A. of the 2023 TCE proposed rule, as well as in the 2020
Risk Evaluation for TCE, and the Economic Analysis for this rule (Refs.
25, 1, 3).
3. Proposed Regulatory Action
EPA's 2023 TCE proposed rule under TSCA section 6(a) to address the
unreasonable risk presented by TCE under its conditions of use included
the following:
(i) Prohibition of the manufacture (including import), processing,
and distribution in commerce of TCE for all uses (including all
consumer uses), with longer compliance timeframes for manufacture and
processing related to certain uses;
(ii) Prohibition of the industrial and commercial use of TCE, with
longer compliance timeframes for certain uses;
(iii) Prohibition of the manufacture (including import) and
processing of TCE as an intermediate for the manufacturing of HFC-134a,
following an 8.5-year phase-out;
(iv) Prohibition of the industrial and commercial use of TCE as a
solvent for closed-loop batch vapor degreasing for rayon fabric
scouring for end use in rocket booster nozzle production by Federal
agencies and their contractors, following a 10-year phase-out;
(v) For vessels of the Armed Forces and their systems, and in the
maintenance, fabrication, and sustainment for and of such vessels and
systems, prohibition of the industrial and commercial use of TCE as:
potting compounds for naval electronic systems and equipment; sealing
compounds for high and ultra-high vacuum systems; bonding compounds for
materials testing and maintenance of underwater systems and bonding of
nonmetallic materials; and cleaning agents to satisfy cleaning
requirements (which includes degreasing using wipes, sprays, solvents
and vapor degreasing) for: materials and components required for
military ordinance testing; temporary resin repairs in vessel spaces
where welding is not authorized; ensuring polyurethane adhesion for
electronic systems and equipment repair and installation of elastomeric
materials; various naval combat systems, radars, sensors, equipment;
fabrication and prototyping processes to remove coolant and other
residue from machine parts; machined part fabrications for naval
systems; installation of topside rubber tile material aboard vessels;
and vapor degreasing required for substrate surface preparation prior
to electroplating processes, following a 10-year TSCA section 6(g)
exemption;
(vi) Prohibition of the manufacture (including import), processing,
distribution in commerce, and use of TCE as a processing aid for
battery separator manufacturing, following a 10-year TSCA section 6(g)
exemption;
(vii) Prohibition of the manufacture (including import),
processing, distribution in commerce, and use of TCE as a laboratory
chemical for essential laboratory activities and some research and
development activities, following a 50-year TSCA section 6(g)
exemption;
(viii) Prohibition of the manufacture (including import),
processing, distribution in commerce, and industrial and commercial use
of TCE as a solvent in closed loop vapor degreasing necessary for
human-rated rocket engine cleaning by NASA and its contractors,
following a 7-year TSCA section 6(g) exemption;
(ix) Prohibition of the emergency industrial and commercial use of
TCE in furtherance of the NASA mission for specific conditions which
are critical or essential and for which no technically and economically
feasible safer alternative is available, following a 10-year TSCA
section 6(g) exemption;
(x) Requirements for strict workplace controls, including
compliance with a TCE WCPP, which would include requirements for an
inhalation exposure limit and dermal protection to limit exposure to
TCE, for conditions of use with long term phase-outs or time-limited
exemptions under TSCA section 6(g);
(xi) Prohibition of, due to worker risks, the disposal of TCE to
industrial pre-treatment, industrial treatment, or publicly owned
treatment works, with a 50-year TSCA section 6(g) exemption for cleanup
projects; and
(xii) Requirements for recordkeeping and downstream notification.
EPA notes that all TSCA conditions of use of TCE were subject to
the 2023 TCE proposed rule and are subject to this final rule.
The proposed rule included timeframes for implementation. The
prohibitions EPA proposed would take effect in phases, beginning at the
top of the supply chain, and coming into full effect, for most
conditions of use, after 90 days for manufacturers, in 180 days for
processors, and in 270 days for most industrial and commercial users,
with different timeframes related to specific conditions of use.
Specifically, for processing TCE as a reactant/intermediate, EPA
proposed that the compliance dates for the proposed prohibitions would
come into effect in 1.5 years for manufacturers and 2 years for
processors EPA proposed additional exceptions from the prohibition for
the manufacturing and processing associated with certain processing and
industrial and commercial uses, including phase-outs (see Units
V.A.1.b., d., and e., of the 2023 TCE proposed rule or time-limited
exemptions under TSCA section 6(g) (see Unit V.A.3.b. of the 2023 TCE
proposed rule). Likewise, for the WCPP that would be required for
several conditions of use before prohibitions went into effect, EPA
proposed timeframes for phases of compliance, beginning with monitoring
at 180 days and full implementation after 1 year, as described in Unit
V.A.1. of the 2023 TCE proposed rule.
As required under TSCA section 6(c)(2)(A)(iv)(II) through (III),
EPA presented its consideration of an alternative regulatory action in
the Unit V.B. of the 2023 TCE proposed rule. Similar to the proposed
regulatory action, the alternative regulatory action combined
prohibitions with requirements for a WCPP for certain conditions of use
before they would be prohibited, to address the unreasonable risk from
TCE under its conditions of use. The primary alternative regulatory
action described in the proposed rule differed from the proposed
regulatory action by providing longer timeframes for prohibitions, and
by describing an ECEL based on a different health endpoint (i.e.,
immunotoxicity), as part of the WCPP that would be required for the
conditions of use of TCE that would be permitted to continue for longer
than one year after publication of the final rule until the prohibition
compliance dates. The ECEL for the WCPP under the
[[Page 102579]]
proposed rule's primary alternative regulatory action was based on the
endpoint used for EPA's unreasonable risk determination for TCE under
TSCA (i.e., immunotoxicity (Ref. 2)). In contrast, the ECEL for the
WCPP under the proposed regulatory action was based on the most
sensitive health endpoint (developmental toxicity). The rationale for
these differences is discussed in Unit V.A, of this rule and Unit
VI.A.1.a. of the 2023 TCE proposed rule.
For a comprehensive overview of the alternative regulatory action,
refer to Unit V.B. of the 2023 TCE proposed rule, with the rationale
for the primary alternative regulatory action provided in Unit VI.B. of
the 2023 TCE proposed rule.
4. Public Comments Received
EPA requested comment on all aspects of the 2023 TCE proposed rule.
During the public comment period, EPA held a webinar on November 14,
2023, providing an overview of the proposed rule and TSCA section 6;
during the webinar, members of the public had the opportunity to share
their perspectives (Ref. 26). The comment period closed on December 15,
2023. EPA received almost 30,000 public comments, with a vast majority
received from individuals participating in mass mailer campaigns
organized by non-governmental organizations. The public comments also
include approximately 200 unique comments from industry stakeholders,
trade associations, environmental groups, unions, non-governmental
health advocacy organizations, academics, State and local governments,
and members of the regulated community. A summary of the comments, as
well as EPA's responses, is in the docket for this rulemaking (Ref.
11). Additionally, Unit III. contains summaries of public comments that
informed EPA's regulatory approach in this final rule.
After the close of the public comment period for the proposed rule,
EPA held meetings with stakeholders to receive clarifying information
on their comments, including affected industry and interested groups,
related to the use of TCE. Topics of these meetings included exposure
controls, process descriptions, monitoring data, and specific
conditions of use. EPA received data as part of and following these
stakeholder meetings and has made the information available to the
public in the rulemaking docket (EPA-HQ-OPPT-2020-0642) (Ref. 27).
After review of the public comments received from the 2023 TCE
proposed rule, EPA revised certain preliminary considerations that
impacted the length of time-limited exemptions from prohibition under
TSCA section 6(g) and key provisions of the WCPP (including
identification of a new, interim ECEL), among other changes. Similarly,
based on public comments received, EPA modified for this final rule
several proposed compliance timeframes, with details provided in Unit
III. of this final rule.
III. Changes From the Proposed Rule
This unit summarizes the main changes from the 2023 TCE proposed
rule to the final rule, based on the consideration of the public
comments.
A. Changes to the WCPP
As part of the conditions for exemptions under TSCA section 6(g) or
phase-outs for several conditions of use before prohibition, EPA
proposed to require owners or operators to comply with a WCPP to reduce
exposures and risks to potentially exposed persons. Numerous commenters
expressed concern regarding the requirements of the WCPP. While EPA is
finalizing as proposed many aspects of the WCPP, the final rule
includes several significant changes, based on consideration of public
comments. The details of and rationale for these changes are described
in this Unit and EPA notes that in the event that sensitive information
relating to national security or critical infrastructure is submitted
to EPA, the Agency will protect such information in accordance with
applicable authorities.
1. Interim Occupational Exposure Limit
EPA proposed requirements to comply with the TCE WCPP for all
conditions of use that would continue for one year or more before
prohibition, as an interim measure to reduce exposures to TCE in the
workplace. As part of the TCE WCPP, EPA proposed that each owner or
operator of a workplace subject to the TCE WCPP ensure that no person
is exposed to airborne concentrations above the occupational exposure
limit to the extent possible. EPA proposed an existing chemical
exposure limit, or ECEL, of 0.0011 ppm as an 8-hour TWA. In proposing
to set this risk-based exposure limit, EPA described in Unit IV.A. of
the 2023 TCE proposed rule how the ECEL is based on developmental
toxicity, the most sensitive acute and chronic non-cancer health
endpoint, specifically calculated based on the occupational acute, non-
cancer human equivalent concentration for fetal cardiac defects (Ref.
28).
EPA also described in Unit V.A.2. of the 2023 TCE proposed rule how
a WCPP provides regulated entities with some flexibility in the manner
in which they implement modifications, within certain parameters, or
otherwise aim to prevent exceedances of inhalation exposure limits at
their facilities. EPA proposed or finalized a WCPP for several
conditions of use for other chemicals regulated under TSCA section 6,
such as methylene chloride (89 FR 39254, May 8, 2024 (FRL-8155-01-
OCSPP)), perchloroethylene (PCE) (88 FR 39652, June 16, 2023 (FRL-8329-
02-OCSPP)), and carbon tetrachloride (88 FR 49180, July 28, 2023) (FRL-
8206-01-OCSPP)). The proposed TCE WCPP differed from those other
proposals in two key ways. First, EPA intended for the TCE WCPP to be
in place only as an interim measure before prohibitions take effect
(rather than continuing in perpetuity, as was the case in the other
proposed rules cited previously). Second, for the reasons described in
Unit VI. of the 2023 TCE proposed rule, the proposed rule, including
the challenges of reliably reducing exposure below the ECEL and being
able to monitor at the appropriate action level, EPA's proposed
requirement for the TCE WCPP was that owners or operators ensure that
no person is exposed to TCE in excess of the ECEL of 0.0011 ppm as an
8-hr TWA to the extent possible rather than (as has been proposed in
other rules under TSCA section 6) a requirement that exposures do not
exceed the ECEL. Due to these challenges in reducing exposure, as well
as the severity of the hazard from TCE, EPA emphasizes that, even with
the proposed ECELs, EPA cannot ensure that TCE does not present
unreasonable risk to workers and, therefore, it is not a substitute for
a ban as a long-term risk management solution. Thus, prohibition of all
conditions of use ultimately is necessary to address the unreasonable
risk.
In the 2023 TCE proposed rule, EPA requested comment on the
proposed ECEL (including the feasibility of the limit, the associated
action level of 0.00055 ppm as an 8-hr TWA, monitoring methods, and
whether a phased approach is desirable). EPA also requested comment on
the ECEL described in the alternative regulatory action (0.004 ppm as
an 8-hr TWA, based on the immunotoxicity endpoint).
Numerous commenters expressed concern that EPA proposed that
compliance with the WCPP would be measured by reaching and documenting
the lowest exposure level that could be achieved, instead of a
requirement to meet an exposure limit (Refs. 29, 30,
[[Page 102580]]
and 31). Additional commenters stated it would not be technically
feasible to meet the proposed ECEL (Refs. 32, 33), despite what they
described as robust implementation of engineering and administrative
controls (Refs. 34, 35). These and other commenters described how they
are not aware of any additional feasible engineering or administrative
controls that would enable them to avoid, under the TCE WCPP, having
employees wear supplied-air respirators at all times (Refs. 34, 35, 36,
37). Commenters expressed several concerns with requiring employees to
wear supplied-air respirators at all times (Refs. 34, 35). Industry
commenters requested a higher interim occupational exposure limit that
would not require an unworkably burdensome level of PPE; commenters
provided numerous suggestions for alternate ECEL values such as 0.36
ppm, 5 ppm, or 6 ppm, each expressed as 8-hr TWAs (Refs. 38, 39, 40,
41). Commenters offered these alternate occupational exposure limits
based on either their current monitoring or on regulatory values set in
other countries, to reduce reliance on extensive respiratory PPE.
Commenters noted that setting an ECEL at the level proposed level or at
the alternative regulatory action ECEL would require potentially
exposed persons across all industries to use high levels of respiratory
protection that EPA acknowledges can represent an occupational hazard
on its own. EPA recognizes the challenges of respiratory PPE. As
detailed in the proposed rule in Unit VI.A.1.b., and in OSHA's 1998
final rule to update its respiratory protection standard, which cited
communication problems, vision problems, worker fatigue, and reduced
work efficiency among such challenges. (63 FR 1152, January 8, 1998).
As OSHA explained, ``improperly selected respirators may afford no
protection at all (for example, use of a dust mask against airborne
vapors), may be so uncomfortable as to be intolerable to the wearer, or
may hinder vision, communication, hearing, or movement and thus pose a
risk to the wearer's safety or health.'' (63 FR 1189 through 1190).
In addition to describing anticipated challenges in meeting the
proposed or the alternative regulatory action ECEL, commenters also
described the challenges they would expect in attempting to monitor
indoor air TCE concentrations at or below the ECEL and ECEL action
level of 0.00055 ppm or the alternative ECEL and alternative ECEL
action level of 0.0002 ppm. Specifically, several commenters emphasized
that laboratories would need to transition from typical methods that
use sorbent tubes and sample media solvent desorption (OSHA Method
1001) to a more sensitive method that may involve a completely
different approach, such as a relevant EPA Compendium Method, and that
these may still not be sufficient due to a level of detection of
volatile organic compounds above 0.5 parts per billion by volume
(ppbv), which is above the proposed ECEL action level (Refs. 38, 39,
42). The commenters also discussed the EPA TO-17 Method, which uses a
sorbent tube/thermal desorption/gas chromatographic-based monitoring
method for VOCs, but emphasized the use of thermal desorption is not
common across the industry (Refs. 38, 39). EPA agrees that while
available monitoring and analytical methods for TCE are possible in the
low parts-per-billion range, typical occupational sampling methods such
as OSHA method 1001 (i.e., personal breathing zone monitoring) used in
industrial hygiene generally allow detection in the 10 to 100 ppb range
(or 0.010 ppm to 0.100 ppm) (Ref. 38). Widespread adoption of
monitoring and sampling methods that could meet a TCE ECEL in the low
parts-per-billion range would be difficult, expensive, and take at
least several years. Public commenters specifically requested the
option to be able to use methods common in occupational sampling, both
for familiarity and from a commercial lab capacity perspective, and
pointed out the proposed ECEL would not provide that ability (Ref. 38).
Additionally, setting a regulatory occupational exposure limit at
0.0011 ppm would be incompatible with the NIOSH-recommended best
practice of monitoring to a fraction (specifically 10%) of the
occupational exposure limit in order to quantify results, because
0.0011ppm is significantly lower than the detection limits of available
monitoring and analytical methods for TCE.
One commenter, a union, stated that setting an ECEL at a level that
cannot be measured would render the rule unenforceable and would
therefore be meaningless for employees continuing to work with TCE
during the phase-out period (Ref. 29). Another commenter, an industry
trade organization, asserted that lowering exposures ``to the extent
possible'' is unenforceable (Ref. 43). Based on the significant
feasibility challenges described by commenters; the need for a robust,
implementable, and enforceable WCPP for conditions of use that would
continue for more than a year before prohibition; EPA's strong interest
in rapidly putting into place the TCE WCPP and resulting exposure
reductions; and the forthcoming future prohibitions that will take
effect on these conditions of use, EPA is finalizing an interim ECEL of
0.2 ppm as an 8-hr TWA with an associated interim ECEL action level of
0.1 ppm as an 8-hr TWA. This occupational exposure level is achievable
to meet, can be reliably and consistently monitored, and will provide
an interim level of protection for conditions of use with longer
timeframes until prohibition.
Several commenters supported the risk-based exposure limit that was
proposed, and stated that, in their view, it is supported by sound
scientific evidence (Refs. 31, 44, 29, 45). The proposed ECEL is based
on data presented in the risk evaluation, which is the best available
science. EPA emphasizes that modifying the final TCE WCPP to include an
interim ECEL does not diminish the scientific rationale for the risk-
based exposure limit that EPA proposed. EPA's justification for
identification of the ECEL that would address unreasonable risk as
0.0011 ppm as an 8-hr TWA is described in detail in the notice of
proposed rulemaking and highlighted section 5 of the Response to
Comments document (Ref. 11). EPA also emphasizes that this interim ECEL
is specific to TSCA and incorporates different considerations than
limits or levels set for TCE exposures in other contexts or inhalation
exposures that are regulated under other authorities, such as RCRA.
EPA's action to finalize an interim ECEL for TCE under TSCA is based on
feasibility considerations during ongoing occupational use of TCE
beyond one year. Specifically, the interim ECEL takes into account
significant challenges potentially exposed persons would experience
from extensive respiratory PPE use in an occupational setting.
EPA is finalizing an interim ECEL of 0.2 ppm as an 8-hr TWA. This
interim ECEL takes into account considerations raised by the
commenters, such as feasibility of implementation in several critical
or essential industries, Specifically, EPA expects that the various
industries subject to the interim ECEL can meet the interim ECEL with
exposure controls that are feasible for owners and operators to
implement for potentially exposed persons over a full shift, using
engineering controls and, in some instances, respiratory PPE. While
certain supplied air respirators could be used to reduce exposures
below the proposed exposure limit, these respirators are burdensome and
EPA is
[[Page 102581]]
not confident that they could be effectively and consistently
implemented on an ongoing basis in a way that fully addresses the
unreasonable risk. EPA views extremely high levels of PPE (e.g.,
assigned protection factor (APF) 10,000) as unable to consistently and
over a long timeframe address occupational risk. As noted earlier,
setting an ECEL at the level proposed would require potentially exposed
persons across all industries to use high levels of respiratory
protection, such as APF 10,000 supplied air respirators, that EPA
acknowledges could represent an occupational hazard on its own due to
communication problems, vision problems, worker fatigue, and reduced
work efficiency. The interim ECEL allows for more robust use of the
hierarchy of controls.
The interim ECEL was also developed with consideration for risk
reduction and health protectiveness. EPA estimates that the 0.2 ppm
interim ECEL would reduce estimated baseline chronic workplace exposure
by 97% (Ref. 28). The reduction in the baseline excess cancer risk is
estimated to be proportional to the reduction in exposure. Acute health
effects would also be reduced to the extent that they are proportional
to exposure reduction. For example, based on EPA's TSCA TCE risk
evaluation, the 0.2 ppm interim ECEL is protective of the acute
immunotoxicity endpoint.
Lastly, the interim ECEL allows for occupational monitoring
methodologies based on validated active, passive, and direct-read
instrumentation. There are several available active sampling methods
(e.g., OSHA 1001, OSHA 5000) that are fully validated methods that
readily allow for compliance with the interim ECEL value of 0.2 ppm for
all affected industries. As described elsewhere in this preamble, this
rule is also finalizing an interim ECEL action level that serves as a
trigger for certain compliance activities (e.g., periodic monitoring).
Therefore, it is important for regulated entities to be able to
reliably and accurately measure both the interim action level and the
interim ECEL value. The interim ECEL also enables use of the NIOSH 1003
(active sampling) method as well as field portable instruments that use
the NIOSH 3701 method for occupational monitoring. While real-time
monitoring with a digital measure device is not required for rule
compliance, EPA understands the practical benefits of field portable
and/or real-time occupational exposure monitoring. In the near term,
the interim ECEL and the associated interim action level aids with
implementation of the WCPP from the perspective of monitoring
methodology and availability. Setting the interim ECEL at a value of
0.2 ppm allows for the immediate implementation of the WCPP, as
monitoring methods are currently available and widely recognized and
used. A lower value interim ECEL would pose technical challenges (i.e.,
achievable with only a subset of monitoring methods) and be less
feasible.
EPA emphasizes that the regulatory limit adopted in this final rule
(0.2 ppm as an 8-hr TWA) will be a significant reduction from the
current regulatory occupational exposure limit (i.e., 500 times lower
than the current OSHA PEL of 100 ppm as an 8-hr TWA) as well as more
than 50 times lower than the voluntary standard frequently cited by
commenters (10 ppm as an 8-hr TWA). EPA expects that regulated entities
may need to make significant, but feasible, changes from current
practice by adopting the WCPP to reduce inhalation exposures
sufficiently and provide risk reduction to potentially exposed persons.
EPA also recognizes that the interim ECEL of 0.2 ppm as an 8-hr TWA
does not fully address the unreasonable risk from TCE, hence, the term
``interim.'' Potentially exposed persons may continue to be at risk for
the developmental and immunotoxicity effects that provide the basis for
EPA's ultimate prohibition. Given the risk profile for TCE, EPA is
addressing the unreasonable risk through prohibition, and acknowledging
the critical or essential nature of several conditions of use affected
by providing reasonable timeframes and time-limited exemptions for a
TCE prohibition. A WCPP including the interim ECEL will be required as
an interim measure for each of the conditions of use listed in Unit
IV.C.
The requirement to meet an interim ECEL for the conditions of use
for which EPA is finalizing exemptions under TSCA section 6(g) is
supported by TSCA section 6(g)(4), which states that ``the
Administrator may impose conditions that are necessary to protect
health and environment while achieving the purposes of the exemption.''
EPA has determined the interim ECEL of 0.2 ppm is a condition that, as
explained in this Unit, allows for implementation and monitoring
feasibility, thus achieving the purposes of the exemption, while
providing health protectiveness for potentially exposed persons during
the duration of the TSCA section 6(g) exemptions. As a condition of the
exemption, it protects health by reducing exposure and thus risk
significantly: as stated previously, the interim ECEL will reduce
estimated baseline chronic workplace exposure by 97%.
For the conditions of use that continue for more than one year
subject to the interim ECEL but for which there is no TSCA section 6(g)
exemption, EPA also finds that the interim ECEL of 0.2 ppm and interim
action level of 0.1 ppm are necessary to reduce the risk during the
TSCA section 6(d) timeframe for those conditions of use. Throughout the
proposed rule and this final rule, EPA has emphasized the high risk
posed by TCE. Due to this risk, the proposed health protective air
exposure concentration (proposed ECEL) was so low that facilities would
encounter significant difficulty mitigating occupational exposures to
this level. Based on information in the 2020 Risk Evaluation (Ref. 1)
and on the extensive public comments, facilities would need to augment
their existing controls with unreasonably extensive use of burdensome
PPE. EPA determined reliance on extreme respiratory protection measures
is unlikely to mitigate the occupational risk of TCE, a view
corroborated by commenters. In particular, commenters noted that air
supplied respirators would present health and safety concerns for
workers due to their weight, bulk, impairment of hearing and vision,
and interference with use of other safety equipment (Refs. 34, 46, 29).
Respiratory protection is considered a last resort because respirators
cannot be worn by all persons, are not suitable for all situations, and
due to worker discomfort and fatigue, cannot be worn for long periods
of time. In addition, as discussed in this Unit, compliance with the
WCPP would be challenging; while specialized monitoring and analytical
methods are available for TCE in the low parts-per-billion range,
typical methods allow for detection in the 10 to 100 ppb (0.01 to 0.1
ppm) range. As a result, EPA determined that any measures short of
prohibition are insufficient to address the unreasonable risk from TCE.
2. Worker Protection Measures for Workers Disposing of TCE in
Wastewater to Industrial Pre-Treatment, Industrial Treatment, or
Publicly Owned Treatment Works
EPA proposed requirements to comply with the TCE WCPP for all
conditions of use that would continue for one year or more before
prohibition, as an interim measure to reduce exposures to TCE in the
workplace. As discussed in Unit III.A.1, numerous commenters stated it
would not be technically feasible to monitor to or
[[Page 102582]]
meet the proposed ECEL. Commenters emphasized that for wastewater
disposal, unlike a typical workplace where a WCPP could apply, work at
a cleanup site happens so intermittently that a regular monitoring
program would be extremely difficult to develop, requiring owners and
operators to implement sampling every time they were in the field.
Additionally, the WCPP requires additional monitoring to occur after a
change in workplace conditions as a commenter pointed out, which could
create a requirement for constant monitoring because cleanup sites are
dynamic systems (Ref. 43). In particular regarding the feasibility of
compliance with the WCPP, commenters associated with wastewater
disposal described that even with the maximum available engineering
controls, workers would have to rely on PPE of APF 10,000 to meet the
proposed ECEL at cleanup sites (Ref. 47).
As stated in Unit III.A.1, EPA recognizes the challenges of high
levels of respiratory protection which include, as described by OSHA,
communication problems, vision problems, worker fatigue, and reduced
work efficiency. Commenters involved in wastewater cleanup operations
were among those who submitted public comments in favor of an interim
exposure level that could be reliably measured using current analytical
methods (Ref. 33). Additionally, these commenters emphasized that
existing RCRA permits require HAZWOPER training for all employees who
are exposed or potentially exposed to hazardous substances at cleanup
sites. The HAZWOPER standard is a set of established policies,
practices, and procedures found in 29 CFR 1910.120. This standard is
designed to protect workers who may be exposed to hazardous substances
resulting from uncontrolled releases such as natural disasters,
equipment malfunctions, or other emergencies (Ref. 48). Operations that
fall within the scope of the HAZWOPER standard include cleanup
operations required by a government body and corrective actions
involving hazardous waste and sites covered by RCRA. Commenters also
provided information to EPA on the variety of remediation methods used
for TCE contaminated water and groundwater, noting a difference between
ex situ treatment systems that remove TCE-contaminated groundwater from
the ground, and in situ treatment systems that remediate the
groundwater in its place (Ref. 35). A commenter requested that the
HAZWOPER standard, currently implemented at thousands of clean-up
sites, should continue to be used instead of EPA's proposed WCPP (Ref.
45). Cleanup sites are dynamic systems that often involve multiple
chemical contaminants, and EPA agrees with commenters that the
structure and procedures under the HAZWOPER standard are best suited
for the unique worker protection scenarios at cleanup sites. However,
OSHA's PEL for TCE is 100 ppm as an 8-hour time-weighted average. See
29 CFR 1910.1000, Table Z-2. As discussed in the proposed rule, the
OSHA PEL has not been changed since the 1970s (Ref. 49).
For the purposes of the TSCA section 6(g) exemption from
prohibition for 50 years for disposal of TCE to industrial pre-
treatment, industrial treatment, or publicly owned treatment works for
the purposes of facilitating cleanup projects of TCE-contaminated water
and groundwater, based on public comments and coordination across
Federal programs, EPA has determined it is appropriate that owners and
operators of cleanup sites where potentially exposed persons are
involved in the disposal of TCE-contaminated water or groundwater for
the purposes of cleanup projects of TCE-contaminated water and
groundwater, including industrial pre-treatment and industrial
treatment activities, must ensure that potentially exposed persons
involved with the activity of removing the contaminated water or
groundwater from the location where it was found and treating the
removed contaminated water or groundwater on site continue to comply
with HAZWOPER requirements but with exposures for potentially exposed
persons limited to the interim ECEL for TCE (0.2 ppm as an 8-hr TWA,
for reasons discussed in Unit III.A.1.). Specifically, EPA has
determined that at cleanup sites, the TCE interim ECEL would apply to
any potentially exposed person involved in the disposal of TCE-
contaminated water or groundwater to industrial treatment, industrial
pre-treatment, or POTWs. A potentially exposed person most likely
includes a person who is involved with the activity of removing TCE-
contaminated water or groundwater from the location where it was found
and the on-site treatment of the TCE-contaminated water or groundwater.
EPA generally considers workers in and around those locations to be
potentially exposed persons as that term is defined is 40 CFR 751.5.
For example, EPA's requirements would apply to protect workers
conducting remediation through pump and treat systems or workers
sampling groundwater in conjunction with extraction or treatment (e.g.,
remediation or cleanup) activities. EPA considers treatment activities
that are performed at the cleanup site on TCE-contaminated wastewater
that has been removed from the subsurface, surface water impoundments,
or aquifers, and that are recognized as industrial treatment,
industrial pretreatment, or discharge to a POTW to be covered under the
provisions described in this unit. To further clarify, the workplace
protections for this exemption are not intended to cover potentially
exposed persons who may be exposed to TCE from other contaminated
media. Additionally, the workplace protections for this exemption are
not intended to cover potentially exposed persons who are sampling
groundwater to monitor the presence of a plume, but specifically only
those sampling wastewater at the site of extraction and active
treatment activities. EPA also notes that while the cross-referenced
OSHA regulations do not require the establishment of regulated areas,
the OSHA regulations do suggest excluding non-essential persons during
certain operations as a feasible work practice control.
For cleanup sites involved in the disposal of TCE-contaminated
water or groundwater to industrial treatment, industrial pre-treatment,
or POTWs, rather than implementing the monitoring, notification, and
exposure control plan requirements of the WCPP, in light of the special
circumstances of these sites, and the likely presence of multiple
contaminants, EPA is requiring compliance with the current requirements
in 29 CFR 1910.120 (HAZWOPER) except that for those provisions in 29
CFR 1910.120 that reference a PEL, owners and operators will instead
comply with the TSCA interim ECEL. EPA's requirement for cleanup sites
to meet specific existing OSHA health and safety requirements in 29 CFR
1910.120 combined with EPA's interim ECEL differs from the requirements
for the WCPP that will be in effect in other workplaces. EPA emphasizes
that this standard is only for cleanup sites involved in the disposal
of TCE contaminated groundwater and wastewater from cleanup sites under
the applicable condition of use and that no other remedial actions at
cleanup sites will be covered or affected. More specifically, EPA notes
that this rule only includes within its scope remediation methods that
would be considered industrial wastewater pretreatment, industrial
wastewater treatment or discharge to a POTW. As such, a remediation
method would need to be considered one of these three types of disposal
to fall within this condition
[[Page 102583]]
of use under TSCA, and if not would not be subject to the prohibition
or other requirements of the rule.
Similarly, some commenters asked EPA to clarify what responsibility
the receiver of waste, specifically POTWs, would have regarding
compliance with the WCPP and highlighted the challenges of the WCPP in
the context of POTWs, some of which may be outdoors and thus unable to
demarcate a regulated area in a straightforward way (Refs. 35, 45). EPA
emphasizes that disposal of TCE-containing wastewater to and from POTWs
is within the disposal condition of use. As exposures to TCE are likely
to continue in POTWs for the duration of the exemption for TCE disposal
under TSCA section 6(g) for industrial pre-treatment, industrial
treatment, or POTWs for the purposes of cleanup projects of TCE-
contaminated water and groundwater, and as EPA is interested in
reducing to the extent possible exposures to TCE during the time period
of this exemption, EPA proposed the WCPP as an appropriate measure.
However, under the proposal, the ECEL was so low that, as one commenter
stated, ``receivers of groundwater from cleanup sites would be forced
to assume that TCE is present, since it is not currently possible to
measure down to the ECEL'' (Ref. 45).
Even with a new interim ECEL, based on the public comments and
information reasonably available to the agency, EPA recognizes that
POTWs have more experience in water monitoring. As an example,
commenters described that TCE is measured in wastewater at POTWs as
water concentrations, not ambient air levels. Commenters described
regular water monitoring schedules of the concentration of TCE in
wastewater at the POTWs to which they disposed (Refs. 36, 50, and 51).
For this reason, in the final rule, POTW's must comply with either
solely the WCPP, or a water monitoring structure already more familiar
and implementable for POTWs as the initial screening before the WCPP in
the interim until prohibition.
To ease monitoring implementation, EPA has determined that POTWs
that can reasonably expect TCE to be present, because of existing
industrial users discharging into the POTW, will be able to determine
the need to comply with the WCPP by conducting an initial screening of
their wastewater. This approach follows EPA's 1992 ``Guidance to
Protect POTW Workers from Toxic and Reactive Gases and Vapors'' (Ref.
52) which sets wastewater screening levels for toxic chemicals using
Henry's Law constants to translate toxicity-based air exposure
concentrations to wastewater concentrations. This monitoring approach
also is consistent with water screenings described by several public
commenters (Refs. 36, 50, 51). The methodology assumes that wastewater
and air are in equilibrium, e.g., that the system is closed and water
agitation is negligible; that temperature is defined and constant; and
that other constituents in the wastewater do not affect a chemical's
volatilization to air.
The water screening requirement that EPA is finalizing follows the
methodology in the 1992 guidance, using the Henry's Law constant for
TCE (378 (mg/m\3\)/(mg/L) at 25 [deg]C) to calculate a screening level
for TCE in wastewater, 0.00284 mg/L, that corresponds to the interim
ECEL (0.2 ppm). This screening level is a level specific to TSCA, to
regulate unreasonable risk to workers performing wastewater disposal
that are exposed to TCE. This differs from maximum contaminant levels
(MCLs) which regulate public water systems under a different federal
statute and do not address exposures to TCE through wastewater. While
the screening level is lower than the current enforceable MCL for TCE
(0.005 mg/L), the values are within a factor of 2. EPA believes that
the conservative assumptions used to derive 0.00284 mg/L are
appropriate here because this is a screening approach, and the TCE
occupational exposure profile of wastewater workers may be variable.
If the concentration of TCE in wastewater received by a POTW is
less than or equal to the screening level, the POTW can assume that the
concentration of TCE in air that results from TCE volatilization from
wastewater is equal to or less than the interim ECEL. If a POTW's water
screening detects TCE in wastewater at a concentration greater than
0.00284 mg/L of TCE, then the WCPP is required. More information is in
Unit IV.E.
3. Exposure Monitoring Requirements
As part of the WCPP, EPA proposed to require that owners or
operators meet certain documentation requirements for each instance of
monitoring of TCE, including compliance with the Good Laboratory
Practice (GLP) Standards in accordance with 40 CFR part 792.
Numerous commenters expressed concern regarding the requirement
that the WCPP include compliance with the GLP Standards at 40 CFR part
792. Commenters stated that it is atypical to use this standard for air
sampling of TCE for industrial hygiene purposes (Refs. 39, 38).
According to the commenters, it is common practice within the
industrial hygiene community to have analyses performed by American
Industrial Hygiene Association (AIHA) accredited labs (Refs. 38, 39). A
commenter further reasoned that because labs in the United States are
certified by International Organization for Standards (ISO) and the
International Electrochemical Commission (IEC) standard 17025 (Testing
and Calibration Laboratories), a standard that differs from the
proposed GLP, they recommended that provisions of monitoring results
and recordkeeping in the final rule be allowed from any accredited
laboratory, without regard to a specific type (Refs. 38, 39).
EPA agrees with the commenters that the WCPP for TCE is
incompletely served by solely relying on the GLP standard as proposed.
EPA has considered laboratory capacity concerns raised by some
commenters (i.e., that potential increases in demand for professional
safety services and sampling laboratories may strain the broader
availability of laboratory service and result in sampling limitations
(Refs. 38, 39), and agrees that sufficient infrastructure must be in
place to ensure that the regulated community can successfully implement
the WCPP while TCE use is ongoing. For the final rule, EPA is requiring
that exposure samples be analyzed using an appropriate analytical
method by a laboratory that complies with the GLP Standards in 40 CFR
part 792 or that otherwise maintains a relevant third-party laboratory
accreditation (e.g., under the AIHA Laboratory Accreditation Programs,
LLC Policy Module 2A/B/E of Revision 17.3) or other analogous industry-
recognized programs. The laboratory must also retain related records.
Another commenter noted that EPA's proposal did not make clear that
``personal breathing zone'' air samples to monitor occupational
exposures are to be taken without regard to respirator use. More
specifically, the commenter pointed to the importance of EPA being
explicit that occupational monitoring only occurs in the absence of
respiratory protection (Ref. 29). EPA agrees with the commenter that
exposure monitoring should be conducted to reflect ambient occupational
conditions (i.e., without respiratory protection) to best inform
engineering control options and respiratory protection considerations
for potentially exposed persons. Therefore, the final rule now
explicitly states that occupational air sampling is required to measure
ambient concentrations for TCE without taking respiratory protection
into account when air sampling is performed. This will ensure the
highest degree of protection to potentially
[[Page 102584]]
exposed persons by requiring measurement of ambient air concentrations
of TCE, thus empowering owners or operators to appropriately consider
the hierarchy of controls.
Additionally, as part of the WCPP, EPA proposed to require owners
and operators to re-monitor within 15 working days after receipt of any
exposure monitoring if results indicated non-detect or air monitoring
equipment malfunction, unless an Environmental Professional, as defined
at 40 CFR 312.10, or a Certified Industrial Hygienist reviews the
monitoring results and determines re-monitoring is not necessary. EPA
received several comments disagreeing with the proposed requirement to
review non-detect air monitoring samples. The commenters stated that
the requirement is inconsistent with OSHA rules, is an unnecessary step
that adds no value to reduce risk to workers, and could be costly,
especially for smaller companies (Refs. 53, 54, 55, 47, 56, 57, 58).
One commenter suggested that EPA incorporate a six-sample rolling
average as the statistical evaluation would incorporate ongoing
validation of exposure levels for a particular task and thus remove any
need for resampling based on a non-detect result.
EPA disagrees with commenters that expressed the opinion that re-
evaluating non-detect results adds no value and is inappropriate. A
sampling result that is non-detectable does not necessarily imply
negligible occupational exposure to the chemical. A non-detect result
is indicative that the chemical was not detected by the particular
sampling and analytical procedures used at the time of sampling.
Multiple factors can contribute to a non-detect result. For example,
the chemical may simply not be present in appreciable quantities. An
alternative possibility is that the chemical is present at a level
below the limit of detection for the particular sampling and analytical
method used. Depending on the chemical and ambient conditions,
interference from another chemical during occupational sampling
sometimes results in an incorrect reporting of non-detectable levels.
This interference may or may not be known by the owner or operator at
the time of sampling, or by the laboratory at the time of analysis. It
is also possible that the owner's or operator's sampling technique or
the laboratory's analytical procedure was not particularly effective,
or that the chosen sampling and analytical method was not very
efficient or precise for the particular chemical of interest.
Therefore, re-evaluating non-detectable sampling results is often
appropriate and desirable. In each of the examples described in this
paragraph, a nondetectable sampling result, along with supporting
documentation about the sampling and analytical method used to get that
result, is a meaningful part of the potentially exposed person's
exposure record required under the WCPP. Monitoring results from
malfunctioning air monitoring equipment are not valid monitoring and
require resampling consistent with Sec. 751.315(b)(3)(i)(A) through
(D).
The provisions proposed for the WCPP did not require re-monitoring
in all cases. Re-monitoring may not be necessary based on a
professional evaluation by an Environmental Professional as defined at
40 CFR 312.10 or a Certified Industrial Hygienist. The final rule
provides flexibility in the event of a non-detect by allowing owners or
operators to either re-monitor or seek a determination from a qualified
professional that re-monitoring is not necessary. From an owner and
operator's perspective, a non-detect sampling result--when effective
sampling and analysis procedures are used--is valuable because it
suggests effective implementation of exposure controls. Potentially
exposed persons may also use these records in discussions with owners
and operators, in collective bargaining situations, or in compliance
assistance inquiries to EPA or other federal agencies. Exposure
monitoring results may also improve overall workplace health and reduce
owner and operator liability through effective detection, treatment,
and prevention of occupational disease or illness. All of these
scenarios are valuable for owners and operators, potentially exposed
persons, and for effective mitigation of occupational exposures. In
consideration of these factors, EPA has removed the air monitoring
equipment malfunction from the monitoring activities that do not
require resampling based on professional evaluation by an Environmental
Professional or Certified Industrial Hygienist. While professional
discretion may be warranted in determining whether re-monitoring is
needed following results that indicate non-detect, EPA has determined
this discretion is not appropriate in the event of air monitoring
equipment malfunction, which warrants re-monitoring. This is due to the
importance of air monitoring in ensuring that the requirements of the
WCPP are met, and the importance of the WCPP in reducing risks from
exposures to TCE in the workplace. Monitoring results from
malfunctioning air monitoring equipment are not valid monitoring.
Additionally, while statistical methods may be useful in
establishing and analyzing an occupational monitoring program, EPA
determined that information presented in support of amending the
evaluation of re-monitoring to rely on six sample rolling average of
exposure measurements in place of the proposal is not persuasive, as
discussed in detail in section 5.5.3 of the Response to Comments
document (Ref. 11). Occupational monitoring (and associated
recordkeeping) is a topic on which EPA may develop guidance as part of
final rule implementation efforts.
Therefore, based on consideration of public comment, EPA is
finalizing as proposed with slight modification the requirement to re-
monitor within 15 working days after receipt of any exposure monitoring
if results indicated non-detect, unless an Environmental Professional,
as defined at 40 CFR 312.10, or a Certified Industrial Hygienist
reviews the monitoring results and determines re-monitoring is not
necessary. EPA has modified the re-monitoring recordkeeping requirement
to clarify what would suffice as justification for when re-monitoring
is not necessary, and has therefore updated the recordkeeping
requirements associated with the WCPP exposure records required under
40 CFR 751.319(b)(1). EPA has also removed air monitoring equipment
malfunction from the monitoring activities that do not require
resampling if determined unnecessary by an Environmental Professional
or Certified Industrial Hygienist.
EPA proposed to require under the WCPP that each owner or operator
conduct additional exposure monitoring whenever a change in the
production, process, control equipment, personnel, or work practices
may reasonably be expected to result in new or additional exposures at
or above the ECEL action level, or when the owner or operator has any
reason to believe that new or additional exposures at or above the ECEL
action level occurred. In the event of start-up, shutdown, spills,
leaks, ruptures, or other breakdowns that may lead to employee
exposure, EPA proposed to require that each owner or operator conduct
additional initial exposure monitoring to potentially exposed persons
(using personal breathing zone sampling) after the cleanup of the spill
or repair of the leak, rupture, or other breakdown. EPA is finalizing
that requirement, with a compliance timeframe requiring that this type
of additional exposure monitoring must be conducted within
[[Page 102585]]
30 days (see Unit IV.C.4.d.), which is a change from the proposed rule,
in which a timeframe was not specified.
4. Designated Representatives
As part of the WCPP, EPA proposed to require that owners and
operators (i.e., any person who owns, leases, operates, controls, or
supervises a workplace covered by the rule) provide potentially exposed
persons or their designated representatives regular access to the
exposure control plans, exposure monitoring records, and PPE program
implementation and documentation. Additionally, EPA proposed to require
that owners or operators document the notice to and ability of any
potentially exposed person who may reasonably be affected by TCE
exposure to readily access the exposure control plans, facility
exposure monitoring records, PPE program implementation, or any other
information relevant to TCE inhalation exposure in the workplace.
EPA solicited and received public comments on the role of
designated representatives in the WCPP. One commenter, a group of labor
unions, urged EPA to incorporate requirements similar to OSHA's access
standard at 29 CFR 1910.1020 (entitled, ``Access to employee exposure
and medical records'') to ensure that exposure information is promptly
and fully shared with both potentially exposed persons and their
designated representatives (Ref. 29). The commenter also suggested that
EPA include a requirement that employers provide employees and their
designated representatives an opportunity to observe monitoring events.
The commenter observed that workers and their designated
representatives have a critical role to play in ensuring effective
control of toxic substances and further noted that, often, unions are
the organizations with expertise in understanding occupational exposure
information.
EPA recognizes the importance of having the ability for potentially
exposed persons and their designated representative(s), such as labor
union representatives, to observe exposure monitoring and have prompt
access to exposure records. EPA additionally recognizes that, in some
instances, individual workers may be hesitant to ask owners or
operators for information relating to their chemical exposure or may be
less familiar with discipline-specific industrial hygiene practices.
EPA determined that it is appropriate in this final rule to revise, to
some extent, the requirements regarding designated representatives
included in the proposed rule, consistent with existing OSHA precedent
in certain 29 CFR part 1910, subpart Z regulations, to allow designated
representatives the ability to observe occupational exposure monitoring
and have access to exposure monitoring records. The WCPP provisions of
the final rule include a requirement that owners and operators provide
potentially exposed persons or their designated representatives an
opportunity to observe any exposure monitoring that is designed to
characterize their exposures and is conducted under the WCPP. With
respect to facilities classified in the interest of national security,
only persons authorized to have access to such facilities must be
allowed to observe exposure monitoring.
The final rule also requires that designated representatives have
access to relevant exposure records, similar to provisions in certain
OSHA regulations under 29 CFR part 1910, subpart Z, such as 29 CFR
1910.1020. EPA is requiring owners and operators to notify potentially
exposed persons and their designated representatives of the
availability of the exposure control plan and associated records of
exposure monitoring and PPE program implementation within 30 days of
the date that the exposure control plan is completed and at least
annually thereafter.
EPA's definition of ``designated representative'' in 40 CFR 751.5
was established in the recently promulgated final rule under TSCA
section 6(a) that addresses the unreasonable risk presented by PCE (RIN
2070-AK84). This term means any individual or organization to whom a
potentially exposed person gives explicit, written authorization to
exercise a right of access. A recognized or certified collective
bargaining agent must be treated automatically as a designated
representative without regard to written authorization, analogous to
OSHA requirements set forth in 29 CFR 1910.1200. Additionally, with
respect to Federal Government employees, EPA, like OSHA at 29 CFR
1960.2(e), will interpret these designated representative requirements
consistent with the Federal Service Labor Management Relations Statute
(5 U.S.C. 71), or collective bargaining or other labor-management
arrangements that cover the affected employees.
Should a request be initiated for such records by the potentially
exposed person or their designated representative(s), the owner or
operator will be required to provide the specified records at a
reasonable time, place, and manner, analogous to OSHA requirements set
forth at 29 CFR 1910.1020(e)(1)(i). If the owner or operator is unable
to provide the requested records within 15 working days, the owner or
operator must, within those 15 days, inform the potentially exposed
person or designated representative(s) requesting the record of the
reason for the delay and the earliest date when the record can be made
available. Additionally, in the event that a designated representative
is observing exposure monitoring, the owner or operator must ensure
that designated representatives are provided with PPE appropriate for
the observation of monitoring. Finally, this rule requires owners or
operators to provide notice to potentially exposed persons and their
designated representatives of exposure monitoring results and of the
availability of the exposure control plan and associated records. For
purposes of this requirement, the owner or operator is only required to
provide notice to those designated representatives that the owner or
operator is aware of, such as representatives designated in writing or
a recognized collective bargaining agent for the owner or operator's
own employees.
5. Changes to WCPP Timeframes for Federal Agencies
EPA understands that certain departments and agencies of the
Federal government, as well as Federal contractors acting for or on
behalf of the Federal government, need additional time to comply with
these timeframes. For example, complying with these timeframes could
impact the ability of NASA or the Department of Defense to continue to
engage in vapor degreasing necessary for rockets key to national
security and critical infrastructure. While, for example, 29 CFR part
1960 sets forth procedures and guidelines for ensuring that Federal
workers are protected in comparable ways to their non-Federal
counterparts, EPA believes that compliance with this final rule will
require increased and different preparations on the part of Federal
agencies. For example, Federal agencies must follow procurement
requirements, which will likely result in increased compliance
timelines. In addition, these requirements will require support in the
Federal budget, which, for some agencies, is a multi-year process.
Therefore, EPA is providing additional time for agencies of the Federal
government and their contractors, when acting for or on behalf of the
Federal government, to comply with the WCPP, including 915 days for
initial monitoring, 1,005 days to ensure that no
[[Page 102586]]
person is exposed to an airborne concentration of TCE that exceeds the
interim ECEL, and 1,095 days to implement an exposure control plan.
B. Modifications to the TSCA Section 6(g) Exemptions
1. Industrial and Commercial Use of TCE as a Processing Aid in Battery
Separator Manufacturing
EPA proposed a 10-year exemption from prohibition under TSCA
section 6(g)(1)(B) for the industrial and commercial use of TCE as a
processing aid in battery separator manufacturing, for lead acid and
lithium batteries. EPA is finalizing with modifications a time-limited
exemption from prohibition for this specific condition of use of TCE.
These modifications, based on information provided in public comments,
include: (1) narrowing the exemption to apply only to use of TCE as a
processing aid in manufacturing separators for lead acid batteries; (2)
extending the time period of the exemption for lead acid batteries from
ten to 20 years; and (3) allowing the disposal of wastewater containing
TCE following lead acid and lithium battery separator manufacture under
a separate TSCA section 6(d) phase-out for disposal of TCE to
industrial pre-treatment, industrial treatment, or POTWs (see Unit
III.C.4.). Separate from the modified 6(g) exemption, EPA is finalizing
a 5-year phase-out under TSCA section 6(d) for use of TCE in
manufacturing separators for lithium batteries.
As described in the proposed rule, based on information provided by
commenters and other information reasonably available to the agency,
EPA understands that separators are fundamental components in batteries
that provide the necessary separation between the internal anode and
cathode components that make batteries work, and that restrictions on
the production of battery separators could critically impact the United
States battery manufacturing supply chain and impede the expansion of
domestic battery production capacity. EPA understands that battery
separator manufacturing processes are highly engineered, and that the
separators are specialty products designed precisely to meet stringent
technical specifications that are essential in powering vehicles and
systems in the United States' supply chain for multiple critical
infrastructure sectors.
Based on information provided in public comments regarding
specifications around the final battery separator product, such as the
required thickness of the separator itself and the feasibility of
substitute chemicals for TCE, EPA determined that battery separators
for lead acid and lithium batteries should be treated separately. Thus,
EPA is distinguishing between the industrial and commercial use of TCE
as a processing aid in battery separator manufacture for each type of
battery (lead acid or lithium (also referred to in comments as lithium-
ion batteries)) and providing different exemption or phase-out
timeframes for each type of battery separator manufacturing. More
details are in this Unit.
a. Lithium Battery Separator Manufacturing
EPA is finalizing a prohibition on the manufacture (including
import), processing, distribution in commerce, and industrial and
commercial use of TCE as a processing aid for lithium battery separator
manufacturing, which will come into effect 5 years after the
publication date of this rule. In response to EPA's proposal to
establish a 10-year TSCA section 6(g) exemption for the use of TCE in
battery separatory manufacturing, EPA received substantiative public
comments that described feasible alternatives to TCE in the manufacture
of lithium battery separators, as well as information on why the two
types of battery separator manufacturing should be treated as distinct.
One company uses TCE in the manufacture of lithium battery
separators (Ref. 46). In their public comment, the company described
how they could transition out of TCE within 5 years and retracted its
request for an exemption under TSCA section 6(g) for lithium battery
separators (Ref. 46). EPA is unaware of any other domestic manufacturer
that uses TCE to produce lithium battery separators. In public comments
on a separate rulemaking for methylene chloride under TSCA section 6,
at least five commenters described their plans to construct
manufacturing plants for lithium-ion battery separators, specifically
for electric vehicles, that would use methylene chloride as a
processing aid (Refs. 59, 60, 61, 62, 63, 64), rather than TCE. (The
final rule under TSCA section 6(a) to address the unreasonable risk for
the use of methylene chloride as a processing aid to continue with the
implementation of a WCPP (40 CFR 751.109) (89 FR 39254, May 8, 2024
(FRL-8155-01-OCSPP)).
TSCA section 6(d) requires the Agency to establish compliance
deadlines that are as soon as practicable. TSCA section 6(g) requires
that any exemptions be adequately justified. For the final rule, the
exemption under TSCA section 6(g) applies only to lead acid battery
separator manufacturing, and the Agency is prohibiting manufacture,
processing, and commercial use of TCE for the manufacture of lithium
battery separators after the five years specified under TSCA section
6(d). During the time before prohibition, manufacturers and processors
of TCE for use in the manufacture of lithium battery separators and the
users of TCE in the manufacture of lithium battery separators are
required to comply with the WCPP, as described in Units III.A., and
IV.C.
b. Lead Acid Battery Separator Manufacturing
EPA is finalizing a 20-year TSCA section 6(g) exemption from
prohibition for the manufacture (including import), processing,
distribution in commerce, and industrial and commercial use of TCE as a
processing aid for lead acid battery separator manufacturing. While EPA
proposed a 10-year section 6(g) exemption for the use of TCE in battery
separator manufacturing, in the primary alternative regulatory action
in the proposed rule EPA presented a 15-year exemption from the
prohibition on TCE for the industrial and commercial use of TCE as a
processing aid for battery separator manufacturing. EPA received
substantiative information in follow up meetings based on public
comments that 20 years would be the minimum timeframe needed to
transition to an alternative for manufacturing separators for lead-acid
batteries (Refs. 34, 39, 64, 65). While EPA received comments that more
than 20 years may be needed, for the reasons described in this Unit,
EPA is finalizing the exemption for use of TCE in manufacture of lead
acid battery separators at 20 years.
EPA emphasizes that alternatives to TCE in lithium battery
separator manufacturing are not expected to be feasible substitutes for
TCE in lead-acid battery manufacturing due to differences in the
processes for each separator type. This is primarily due to the
difference in thickness of the battery separators: lithium battery
separators are typically only 9 to 10 microns thick, while lead-acid
battery separators range from 6 to 50 times thicker than lithium
battery separators. Given the chemistry of the alternative solvent
reacting with the mineral oil and metal sheets that constitute the
process of manufacturing a battery separator, it would therefore
require between 225 to 625 times longer to physically extract lead acid
separators compared to lithium separators using an alternative solvent.
TCE is about 50% to 80% (depending
[[Page 102587]]
on temperature) more effective at extracting process oil during the
battery separator manufacturing process than the alternative product
used in the manufacturer's new lithium separator process (Ref. 64).
Overall, while alternatives to TCE are suitable for lithium battery
separator manufacturing and may be feasibly substituted in domestic
manufacturing within five years, these alternatives are not feasible
for lead acid battery separator manufacturing.
Numerous commenters submitted information on the use of TCE as a
processing aid in lead-acid battery manufacturing. Industry commenters
and trade associations involved in battery manufacture agreed that EPA
correctly categorized battery separator manufacturing as critical and
essential. In public comments, battery separator manufacturers
described the need for the exemption to be extended to 25 years, citing
the lack of a currently identified alternative and once identified, the
time necessary for testing and recertification for any alternatives to
TCE. As described by commenters, the steps for such a process include:
identifying and/or developing an alternative chemical as a processing
aid, sample trials, battery testing, second level battery testing,
changing battery separator production lines, and testing and production
approval processes from battery end users (e.g., automobile
manufacturers). This step-wise process is consistent with EPA's
understanding of developing and implementing alternatives for other
chemicals and uses. In follow-up conversations with battery separator
manufactures, EPA gained further clarity that timeframes could be
expedited somewhat, and on an expedited timeline would take 20 years
(Ref. 64). Because TSCA section 6(g) requires that any exemptions be
adequately-justified, in consideration of public input, and that the
period of the exemption is reasonable, EPA is lengthening the proposed
TSCA section 6(g) exemption from the prohibition for manufacture
(including import), processing, distribution in commerce, and use of
TCE in manufacturing separators for lead acid batteries from 10 years
to 20 years (i.e., to December 18, 2044.). EPA encourages manufacturers
of battery separators to identify early in their substitution efforts
if any further time would be needed.
2. Industrial and Commercial Use of TCE as a Processing Aid for
Specialty Polymeric Microporous Sheet Materials
EPA is finalizing a 15-year TSCA section 6(g) exemption from
prohibition for the manufacture (including import), processing,
distribution in commerce, and industrial and commercial use of TCE as a
processing aid for specialty polymeric microporous sheet materials.
While EPA proposed to prohibit industrial and commercial use of TCE as
a processing aid for specialty polymeric microporous sheet materials,
EPA's primary alternative regulatory action described a 15-year TSCA
section 6(g)(1)(A) exemption from prohibition for this use. EPA
received substantiative information in public comments to support
finalizing this exemption, as well as support for 15 years as the
appropriate timeframe for this exemption (Ref. 40).
As noted in the initial exemption request and in the public
comments submitted to EPA, specialty polymeric microporous sheet
materials are fundamental components in the production of critical or
essential products such as drivers' licenses, passports, and chemical
drum labels (Refs. 66, 40). EPA agrees that TCE is a critical and
essential component in the manufacturing process for these products.
EPA also agrees that certain applications of these specialty polymeric
microporous sheet materials are critical and essential uses for which
no technically and economically feasible safer alternative is
available. In public comments, the manufacturer of specialty polymeric
microporous sheet materials disagreed with EPA's proposal to restrict
the end uses of the specialty polymeric microporous sheet materials to
critical and essential products, stating that all end products of the
material use the same production line. EPA is finalizing with
modifications a time-limited exemption from prohibition for this
specific condition of use of TCE. These modifications, based on
information provided in public comments, include: (1) modifying the
exemption from the proposal to allow for this exempted use of TCE as a
processing aid to apply broadly to any end product; (2) allowing the
disposal of wastewater containing TCE associated with manufacture of
specialty polymeric microporous sheet materials under a separate TSCA
section 6(d) phase-out for disposal of TCE to industrial pre-treatment,
industrial treatment, or POTWs (see Unit III.C.4.); and (3), in an
effort to minimize worker exposure during the period of the exemption,
EPA is requiring that the industrial and commercial use of TCE as a
processing aid in the manufacture of specialty polymeric microporous
sheet materials can only continue at existing facilities already using
TCE to manufacture specialty polymeric microporous sheet materials. EPA
expects that development of any new facilities for the manufacture of
specialty polymeric microporous sheet materials could innovate new
processes that do not include use of TCE.
3. Industrial and Commercial Use of TCE in Batch Vapor Degreasing for
Essential Aerospace Parts and Components and Narrow Tubing Used in
Medical Devices
EPA is finalizing the proposed primary alternative 7-year TSCA
section 6(g)(1)(B) exemption from prohibition for industrial and
commercial use of TCE in batch vapor degreasing for essential aerospace
parts and components and 7-year TSCA section 6(g)(1)(A) exemption from
prohibition for industrial and commercial use of TCE in batch vapor
degreasing for narrow tubing used in medical devices. EPA received
substantiative information in public comments to support the need for
these exemptions. Based on the information received, EPA determined it
is necessary to finalize these exemptions.
Numerous commenters urged EPA to finalize the alternative
exemptions, citing strict safety and performance standards that TCE is
currently used to meet and a recertification process that would take a
longer timeframe than the 1 year that was proposed (Refs. 36, 43, 32,
56, 67, 43, 32, 56). Given that under this condition of use TCE is used
to clean parts for highly specialized end uses in the aerospace and
medical fields, commenters stressed that a significant length of time
would be needed for safety recertification of an alternative. These
commenters also described how all currently known potentially effective
drop-in substitutes to TCE for this highly specialized use are also
chemicals currently being evaluated or regulated by EPA under TSCA,
and, as such, they do not view these substitutes as viable long-term
alternatives to TCE. In many cases, according to commenters, the
transition to a TCE substitute would require the transformation or
complete replacement of complex equipment. One manufacturer indicated
in their public comments that they had identified an alternative that
could meet the cleanliness required for their end products; however,
using this substitute chemical solvent would also require changing to a
different machine type (i.e., to vacuum vapor degreasers). According to
that commenter, it would take seven years to install vacuum degreasers,
implement the necessary infrastructure upgrades, obtain permits, notify
customers, and validate existing
[[Page 102588]]
contracts (Ref. 36). EPA agrees that the significant amount of
infrastructure and equipment changes needed to transition out of TCE
for this specific vapor degreasing condition of use support finalizing
a longer timeline until prohibition.
Regarding section 6(g) criteria, commenters agreed with EPA's
characterization of TCE as being essential to meet unique cleanliness
demands for narrow tubing used in medical devices as well as for
aerospace parts. A public commenter noted the intensity of these safety
concerns particularly in medical tubing, noting that in implanted
devices ``manufacturing residues may `pose an inflammatory or
autoimmune trigger risk' that can lead to death'' (Ref. 36). For these
reasons, EPA is finalizing a time-limited exemption under TSCA section
6(g)(1)(A) for seven years for the industrial and commercial use of TCE
in batch vapor degreasing for narrow tubing used in medical devices,
and a time-limited exemption under TSCA section 6(g)(1)(B) for seven
years for the industrial and commercial use of TCE in batch vapor
degreasing for essential aerospace parts.
4. Industrial and Commercial Use in Closed-Loop Batch Vapor Degreasing
Necessary for Rocket Engine Cleaning by Federal Agencies and Their
Contractors
EPA proposed a 7-year TSCA section 6(g)(1)(B) exemption from the
prohibition on the industrial and commercial use of TCE as a solvent in
closed-loop vapor degreasing necessary for human-rated rocket engine
cleaning by NASA and its contractors, and the manufacture (including
import), processing, and distribution in commerce of TCE for this use.
EPA is finalizing with modifications the time-limited exemption from
prohibition for this specific condition of use of TCE. EPA received
information that this exemption should include all Federal agencies,
rather than just NASA, due to Federal agencies having similar critical
infrastructure and national security needs of rocket engines. Due to
the commonality of the United States' rocket engine industrial base,
other Federal agencies like NASA use TCE in the same condition of use
to support their rocket engine cleaning. EPA has made this change and
is finalizing a time-limited exemption under TSCA section 6(g)(1)(B)
for industrial and commercial use of TCE as a solvent in closed-loop
batch vapor degreasing necessary for rocket engine cleaning by Federal
agencies and their contractors.
C. Changes to Compliance Dates for Prohibitions Under TSCA Section 6(d)
EPA proposed a compliance timeframe of 1 year for the prohibitions
on industrial and commercial use of TCE and requested public comments
on the appropriateness of this timeline for specific conditions of use.
This unit describes modifications EPA made to proposed timeframes for
prohibitions under TSCA section 6(d) for the two conditions of use for
which EPA is finalizing different timeframes for prohibition. (Changes
to timeframes for proposed TSCA section 6(g) exemptions or
modifications of a section 6(g) exemption to a section 6(d) timeframe
are described in Unit III.B.). Given that the part of the rule
affecting the most significant volume of TCE is unchanged between
proposal and final, the overall impact of these changes is expected to
be minor.
1. Industrial and Commercial Use of TCE in Energized Electrical Cleaner
As described in this Unit, EPA is finalizing a prohibition in three
years for the industrial and commercial use of TCE in energized
electrical cleaner rather than the prohibition within 1 year as
proposed for this condition of use. EPA notes that energized electrical
cleaner is a sub-use of the industrial and commercial use of TCE as
solvent for aerosol spray degreaser/cleaner. During the timeframe
before prohibition, EPA is finalizing requirements to comply with
either specific prescriptive controls or the WCPP for the industrial
and commercial use of TCE in energized electrical cleaner, which is a
sub-use of the industrial and commercial use of TCE as solvent for
aerosol spray degreaser/cleaner, as described in Unit IV.D.1.
In the proposed rule, EPA solicited comment on whether some
activities would need longer compliance timeframes in order to
appropriately transition, and specifically mentioned uses such as
energized electrical cleaning, where TCE may be desired due to its low
flammability. EPA also requested comment on the feasibility and
appropriateness of the WCPP. EPA subsequently received several comments
expressing concern over the proposed prohibition on TCE in energized
electrical cleaner (Refs. 51, 68). In addition to describing the need
for additional time to transition to alternatives to TCE in energized
electrical cleaner, commenters described the work practices and context
that support the potential for exposure reduction to TCE through
workplace controls, including, but not limited to, the WCPP. For
example, one commenter described how energized electrical cleaners are
typically used only by professionals for specialized uses in which
strict workplace controls already exist (Ref. 51). As another example,
in a separate rulemaking under TSCA section 6 for PCE (RIN 2070-AK84),
one commenter described work practices and controls for use of
energized electrical cleaners, stating that facilities that require
cleaning of energized equipment rely on skilled technicians or other
professional users who typically have education and training that may
include two years at lineman school, time as an apprentice, licensing
or certifications, and continuing education (Ref. 69). The commenter
also stated that OSHA General Industry and Construction standards
include requirements specific to electrical work under 29 CFR part
1926, subparts E, K, and V. Commenters differed on whether the WCPP or
other workplace controls would be most suitable. Several commenters
stated that the WCPP would be impractical for use of TCE in energized
electrical cleaner because trained technicians often travel to
different facilities to conduct work, including facilities that may not
otherwise use a chemical for which the WCPP is required, and suggested
that instead of a WCPP, a training and certification program would be
sufficient to address the unreasonable risk (Refs. 51, 68).
Based on the information submitted to EPA as part of the comment
period regarding this condition of use, supported by subsequent
discussions for clarification, and in consideration of existing best
practices and regulations for work in electrical spaces as well as the
need for additional time to certify and transition to substitutes, EPA
is finalizing a prohibition on the use of TCE in energized electrical
cleaner after December 18, 2027. In addition, EPA has determined that
either the WCPP or specific prescriptive controls specified in the
final rule, including dermal PPE and respiratory protection, are
necessary and appropriate for reducing exposures to potentially exposed
persons until the prohibition takes effect.
EPA notes the importance of existing OSHA regulations designed to
protect workers exposed to dangers such as electric shock,
electrocution, fires, and explosions. Specifically, in addition to the
requirements for electrical work under OSHA General Industry and
Construction standards at 29 CFR part 1926, subparts E, K, and V that
one commenter mentioned in their public comment, OSHA regulates
electrical work under Occupational Safety and
[[Page 102589]]
Health standards at 29 CFR part 1910. For example, OSHA requires
safety-related work practices on electrical equipment under the
Electrical Standard at 29 CFR part 1910, subpart S (29 CFR 1910.301 to
1910.399), which was significantly updated in 2007 (72 FR 7136,
February 14, 2007). OSHA also sets forth requirements for the operation
and maintenance of electrical power generation, control,
transformation, transmission, and distribution lines and equipment
under the Electric Power Generation, Transmission, and Distribution
standard at 29 CFR 1910.269, which was significantly updated in 2014
(79 FR 20316, April 11, 2014). Additionally, OSHA regulates electrical
protective equipment under the Electrical Protective Equipment standard
at 29 CFR part 1910, subpart I (29 CFR 1910.137), which was
significantly updated in 2014 (79 FR 20316, April 11, 2014). Other
standards and best practices apply to electrical safety in the
workplace, for example the National Fire Protection Association (NFPA)
70E Standard for Electrical Safety in the Workplace (Ref. 70).
As discussed in the proposed rule, given the risk profile of TCE,
EPA determined that it is necessary to require worker protection
measures such as the WCPP for those conditions of use that will
continue beyond 1 year. In view of the relatively short timeframe for
transitioning to an alternative, combined with the specialized nature
of this use of TCE and the existing OSHA regulations and other best
practices for performing work on energized equipment, EPA recognizes
that the WCPP may not be the best approach to addressing occupational
exposures in the interim. EPA understands that trained technicians
performing this activity often travel to different facilities to
conduct their work, including facilities that may not otherwise use
TCE. EPA also determined that owners and operators who perform this
kind of work should focus their efforts on transitioning to
alternatives, rather than setting up comprehensive exposure control
plans and programs. EPA is therefore providing an alternative to the
WCPP in the form of prescriptive controls, including respiratory and
dermal protection to protect workers in the interim. Considering all of
these factors, as well as the workplace requirements for energized
electrical cleaner in the final regulation of PCE under TSCA section 6
(RIN 2070-AK84) and the burdens associated with higher APF respirators,
EPA has determined that the use of respirators with an APF of 50 or
greater and impermeable gloves will minimize the exposure to the
potentially exposed persons engaged in this use of TCE during the
interim period before the prohibition takes effect, as further
described in Unit IV.D. In addition, requiring PPE similar to that
required by the PCE regulation is expected to ease the transition to
PCE, which is a possible replacement for TCE in these products. The
upstream manufacturing and processing of TCE for the use in energized
electrical cleaner will be subject to the WCPP as described in Unit
IV.C. until the use is prohibited.
EPA emphasizes that other industrial and commercial use of TCE as a
solvent for aerosol spray degreasers/cleaners is prohibited in the
final rule, consistent with the proposal for that condition of use.
2. Industrial and Commercial Use in Adhesives and Sealants for
Aerospace Applications
EPA is finalizing a prohibition in five years for the industrial
and commercial use of TCE in adhesives and sealants for aerospace
applications. EPA proposed a compliance timeframe of 1 year for the
prohibitions on industrial and commercial use, and in public comments
requested feedback on the appropriateness of this timeline for specific
applications. EPA received public comments highlighting that the
industrial and commercial use of TCE in adhesives and sealants
specifically for aerospace applications has safety implications and
involves longer recertification timelines (Ref. 56). EPA's rationale
for the short timeframe until prohibition for this condition of use was
based on the understanding that alternative formulations or products
exist that do not contain TCE. During the public comment period, EPA
received public comments highlighting the safety considerations for
industrial and commercial use of TCE in adhesives and sealants
specifically for aerospace applications and longer recertification
timelines. A public commenter stated that TCE is still critically
necessary in adhesives and sealants; particularly in aircraft pneumatic
deicing boots; in solvent bonding of plastic components, including on
Oxygen Container Assemblies for Passenger Service Unit products used in
aircraft; and as an adhesive or sealant for flight-critical equipment
on new and existing aircraft, both commercial and military (Ref. 56).
Regarding compliance timeframes, this commenter requested that
adhesives and sealants for aerospace be allowed to continue in
perpetuity under a WCPP. EPA has determined that prohibition of this
use is necessary to address the unreasonable risk. EPA did consider the
information raised by this commenter in determining an appropriate
timeframe for the prohibition on use of TCE in adhesives and sealants
for aerospace applications. Specifically, the commenter provided
information that for uses in the aerospace and defense sector, changes
in response to a prohibition on TCE would be a multiyear process that
requires redesign and recertification that a product meets performance
standards such as customers' technical requirements, UL and
Conformit[eacute] Europ[eacute]enne (CE) marking requirements, military
specifications, and specifications from other government agencies such
as the Federal Aviation Administration and NASA (Ref. 56).
EPA recognizes that the recertification process for uses in
aerospace applications is lengthy and agrees that one year is not a
sufficient timeframe. In identifying a reasonable timeframe, EPA
considered public comments on the proposed rulemaking and follow-up
clarifying conversations with commenters, as well as information
submitted during the public comment period on EPA's proposed rule under
TSCA section 6 for methylene chloride (88 FR 28284, May 3, 2023 (FRL-
8155-02-OCSPP)) regarding anticipated timeframes to recertify adhesives
and sealants used in the aerospace field. As such, EPA has determined
that a 5-year timeframe until prohibition for the industrial and
commercial use of TCE in adhesives and sealants for aerospace
applications is appropriate and will be sufficient to allow for a
reasonable transition from TCE. During this time, EPA is requiring
compliance with the WCPP, as detailed in Unit IV.C. The issuance of
this final rule does not preclude these users from presenting
additional information to EPA on their redesign and recertification
progress in the future.
3. Industrial and Commercial Use of TCE in Laboratory Use for Asphalt
Testing and Recovery
EPA is finalizing a phase-out of ten years for the industrial and
commercial use of TCE in laboratory use for asphalt testing and
recovery, with a prohibition on use of TCE in manual centrifuge
processes at 5 years. In the proposed rule, EPA proposed to prohibit
the laboratory use of TCE (which falls within the condition of use
``Industrial and commercial use of TCE in hoof polish; gun scrubber;
pepper spray; and other miscellaneous industrial and commercial uses'')
within 1 year. EPA proposed a TSCA section 6(g)(1)(A) exemption from
prohibition for the
[[Page 102590]]
industrial and commercial use of TCE in laboratory use for essential
laboratory activities that are critical (e.g., occupational sampling
and monitoring, the support of environmental cleanup activities, wax
removal from NASA infrared sensors, and equipment calibration related
to the search for chlorinated hydrocarbons on Mars; for a full list of
critical activities see Unit V.A.3.a.iii. of the 2023 TCE proposed
rule). In the 2023 TCE proposed rule, EPA specifically noted that the
use of TCE in laboratory settings for testing asphalt would not be
included in the TSCA section 6(g) exemption due to information
available to EPA that indicated it was not critical nor essential, and
because alternative testing methods exist, including the Nuclear
Asphalt Content Gauge and the Ignition Method.
During the public comment period, EPA received numerous comments
providing new information on the importance of TCE in asphalt testing
and recovery as a laboratory use, and the challenges of using a
substitute that had appeared theoretically feasible. Many commenters,
including several state departments of transportation, emphasized to
EPA that 23 state specifications require TCE to be used for solvent
extraction for asphalt testing accuracy (Refs. 55, 57, 58, 71, 72, 73,
74, 75, 76, 77). Commenters described how this use of TCE is critical
or essential; specifically, numerous commenters emphasized that in the
current landscape for asphalt testing and recycling, TCE is widely used
at this time because it can be easily recovered and the asphalt test
sample can then be reused rather than discarded. Further, as commenters
described, using TCE in laboratory testing allows departments of
transportation to recycle asphalt paving and shingles into new asphalt
by determining how much asphalt binder is present. The ability to
determine the amount of remaining asphalt binder has resulted in,
according to commenters, asphalt being one of the most recycled
materials. The Nuclear Asphalt Content Gauge that EPA had identified as
an alternative in the proposed rule does not allow for asphalt
recycling, as it destroys the asphalt sample during the test which
makes it impossible to test the asphalt binder as well.
In consideration of public comments, EPA has determined that a
prohibition after 1 year is not reasonable. States are currently
invested heavily in extraction equipment that uses TCE and EPA agrees
with commenters who stated that transitioning from TCE would take years
and incur significant costs as a result of equipment changes.
Commenters expressed an interest in ceasing their use of TCE and
requested between 5 years and 20 years until prohibition of this use of
TCE in order to facilitate a transition away from TCE. In determining a
reasonable timeframe for a phase-out, EPA considered significant
information provided in public comments about the potential
alternatives to TCE in laboratory asphalt testing that would allow for
testing as well as recovery. While alternatives have already been
identified, fully implementing use of those substitutes would require
the complete retrofit of existing laboratory equipment. Additionally,
numerous state departments of transportation standards would need to be
updated, which would take time.
EPA does not view the 50-year timeframe proposed (and finalized)
for the exemption for laboratory use of TCE for essential laboratory
uses as appropriate for use of TCE in asphalt testing and recovery, so
is not finalizing the laboratory asphalt testing and recovery use as
part of the TSCA section 6(g) exemption for essential laboratory
activities. Based on public comments and discussions with the U.S.
Department of Transportation, EPA has determined that 10 years is a
reasonable timeframe until the prohibition on TCE use in laboratory use
for asphalt testing and recovery and is finalizing an extended phase-
out of ten years for the industrial and commercial use of TCE in
laboratory use for asphalt testing and recovery. Associated with this
phase-out, EPA will require the establishment of the TCE WCPP, outlined
in Unit IV.C. within 180 days after publication of the final rule, as
workplace protections during the period of the phase-out. Additionally,
EPA has identified asphalt testing and recovery conducted through
manual centrifuge methods as specific activities that would be
prohibited within five years as part of the phase-out, due to the
higher level of worker exposure from this activity and information
received from commenters about automated alternatives.
In public comments, numerous users of TCE for asphalt testing and
recovery provided information to EPA regarding technological advances
in this sector--namely the transition from manual centrifuge methods of
testing to automated machines (Refs. 71, 72, 57). Many laboratories
have invested in automated extraction machines. These machines are
expensive and currently are calibrated to be chemical-specific, with
TCE-calibrated machines unable to use a different or replacement
solvent, such as PCE (Refs. 71, 72, 55). EPA's identification of a 10-
year timeframe for prohibition is partly based on the time it would
take to replace or retrofit the current laboratory practices with non-
TCE automatic extraction machines.
Based on public comments, EPA understands that the industry favors
automated extraction machines due to the extremely high worker
exposures inherent with manual centrifuge processes. Commenters
describe manual centrifuge processes as resulting in worker exposure to
TCE for the entire task duration, with constant handling of the solvent
by stirring, repouring, straining, and vaporizing it at times (Ref.
71). EPA agrees with commenters on the high risk of asphalt testing and
recovery using TCE in manual methods. As such, as part of the phase-
out, any lab use of TCE for asphalt testing or recovery which uses
manual centrifuge processes is prohibited in 5 years. Between 5 and 10
years, labs must either use TCE in automated machines only, or use
alternative solvents in automated machines or manual centrifuge
processes (such as methylene chloride or PCE, for which EPA has
finalized provisions requiring chemical specific WCPPs). Therefore, EPA
is finalizing an extended phase-out of ten years for the industrial and
commercial use of TCE in laboratory use for asphalt testing and
recovery, with a prohibition on use of TCE in manual centrifuge
processes at 5 years, rather than the prohibition within 1 year as
proposed for all other industrial and commercial uses without extended
phase-outs or exemptions.
4. Disposal of TCE to Industrial Pre-Treatment, Industrial Treatment,
and POTWs
For disposal of TCE to industrial pre-treatment, industrial
treatment, and POTWs, EPA is finalizing a phase-out over 20 years. In
the proposed rule, EPA proposed to prohibit the disposal of TCE to
industrial pre-treatment, industrial treatment, and POTWs in 1 year
after the rule finalization. In the proposal, EPA requested comment on
whether the prohibition timeframes and compliance dates were
appropriate. In public comments, EPA received substantive information
from several industrial and commercial users of TCE as a processing aid
that wastewater disposal should continue on a timeframe to facilitate
those uses.
Commenters manufacturing battery separators provided details on why
the industrial and commercial use of TCE in battery separator
manufacturing necessitates the disposal of wastewater containing TCE
(Refs. 46, 34). As described by commenters, in battery separator
manufacturing, TCE enters the
[[Page 102591]]
wastewater stream following contact between cooling tower blowdown,
processes involving TCE, and water generated from the plant's steam
distillation process, which is a key process step in battery separator
manufacture. Water used in these processes becomes wastewater
containing TCE. These manufacturers perform on-site treatment of this
wastewater through air stripping and carbon absorption. The pre-treated
water is then either recycled and reused in the process or discharged
to a POTW. Wastewater discharges by battery separator manufacturers are
regulated under existing wastewater discharge permits and have limits
for volatile organic compounds such as TCE. EPA agrees with commenters
assertions that TCE wastewater is inherently leftover as part of the
process and agrees that no other form of disposal is acceptable. Given
that the generation of wastewater containing TCE cannot be avoided as
it results from an intrinsic component of battery separator
manufacture, and EPA's determination that use of TCE in battery
separator manufacture is either a critical and essential function for
which there is no technically or economically feasible safer
alternative (in the case of lead acid batteries) or for which five
years before prohibition is as soon as practicable (in the case of
lithium batteries), EPA is modifying the associated timelines for the
prohibition on disposal for these uses, with worker protections, to
continue disposal of wastewater containing TCE that is a necessary part
of this process.
Based on public comments, EPA also finds that disposal of
wastewater is a necessary part of the use of TCE as a processing aid in
the manufacture of specialty polymeric microporous sheet materials.
Like the battery separator manufacturers, comments submitted from the
specialty polymeric microporous sheet materials manufacturer explained
that TCE enters the facility wastewater that is generated in cooling
tower blowdown water and subsequently discharged to a POTW (Ref. 40).
Wastewater discharges are regulated under existing wastewater discharge
permits and have limits for volatile organic compounds such as TCE.
Given the determination of the critical and essential need for the
longer timeframes for this industrial and commercial use, EPA is
modifying the TSCA section 6(d) phaseout for disposal of TCE for this
use to allow disposal of wastewater containing TCE that is a necessary
part of this process.
As such, the disposal of TCE to industrial pre-treatment,
industrial treatment, and POTWs is prohibited with the following phase-
out structure. For the majority of industrial and commercial uses, such
disposal is prohibited at one year. For industrial and commercial users
of TCE as a processing aid in lithium battery separator manufacturing,
such disposal is prohibited at 5 years. For industrial and commercial
users of TCE as a processing aid in specialty polymeric microporous
sheet materials manufacturing, such disposal is prohibited after 15
years. For industrial and commercial users of TCE as a processing aid
in lead-acid battery separator manufacturing, such disposal is
prohibited after 20 years. Industrial and commercial users who are
allowed to continue disposing of TCE to wastewater for more than one
year must follow the WCPP provisions as laid out in Unit IV.C, and
POTWs receiving wastewater must follow the wastewater worker protection
provisions discussed in Unit IV.E.3.
5. Industrial and Commercial Use of TCE for Batch Vapor Degreasing for
Land-Based DoD Defense Systems by Federal Agencies and Their
Contractors
EPA is finalizing a prohibition in five years for the industrial
and commercial use of TCE in batch vapor degreasing for land-based DoD
defense systems by Federal agencies and their contractors. EPA proposed
a compliance timeframe of one year for the prohibitions on industrial
and commercial use of TCE in vapor degreasing. EPA received information
indicating that this use needs to continue for a longer period of time
due to the national security implications of the end products, and the
need for a reasonable transition period for that use that is as soon as
practicable but longer than the one year proposed. TCE vapor degreasing
is necessary due to technical challenges with other substitute
chemicals or alternative methods. The cleanliness standards of certain
parts as required by DOD specifications or other specifications
included in existing contracts within the supply chain currently
require TCE. A reasonable transition period for this technically
challenging use requires substantial investment and time to develop
viable alternatives, because conversion from vapor degreasing to other
methods of cleaning is a capital-intensive investment that would
require several years to plan, permit, construct, and install. TCE has
been used in vapor degreasing to meet required levels of cleanliness of
certain supplied parts by long-standing design specifications that are
incorporated into contracts of a complex supply chain. As such, the
industrial and commercial use of TCE for batch vapor degreasing for
land-based DoD defense systems is prohibited after 5 years, rather than
at 1 year with vapor degreasing for other purposes.
D. Other Changes
1. Regulatory Threshold
In the 2023 TCE proposed rule, EPA requested comment on whether the
Agency should consider a de minimis threshold of TCE in formulations
when finalizing prohibitions, and, if so, what threshold should be
considered. EPA received comments in support of the inclusion of a de
minimis threshold, as well as comments opposing such a threshold. Of
the supportive commenters, many agreed with the EPA request for comment
on using 0.1% by weight as the threshold for the applicability of
prohibitions and restrictions on TCE (Refs. 53, 78, 51), which EPA is
referring to in this final rule as a regulatory threshold. Commenters
provided a variety of reasons in support of a regulatory threshold,
such as the difficulty of proving the absence of a chemical (Refs. 38,
79) and the importance of providing for very small amounts of a
chemical that cannot be reasonably eliminated (Ref. 37). Commenters
observed that TCE is unintentionally manufactured as a byproduct in
small amounts in the manufacture of chlorinated organics and noted that
this cannot be prevented in the production process (Ref. 39). In some
cases, commenters noted that a 0.1% threshold would be consistent with
the requirements under the OSHA Hazard Communication Standard at 29 CFR
1910.1200 (Refs. 78, 51). One of these commenters observed that,
because levels below 0.1% are not required to be reported on Safety
Data Sheets (SDSs) under the OSHA Standard, there is likely to be a
lack of awareness of products that contain TCE below this level.
To aid the regulated community with implementing the prohibitions
on TCE and to account for TCE as a byproduct or impurity in products,
EPA is establishing a regulatory threshold of 0.1% for TCE, indicating
that TCE at concentrations less than 0.1% by weight are not subject to
the prohibitions and restrictions outlined in this rulemaking. EPA
views the regulatory threshold as an appropriate policy approach
necessary to aid in the rule implementation and to clarify which
products are subject to the final rule. As defined in 40 CFR 751.5,
``product'' means ``the chemical substance, a mixture containing the
chemical
[[Page 102592]]
substance, or any object that contains the chemical substance or
mixture containing the chemical substance that is not an article.''
This 0.1% regulatory threshold for TCE is in alignment with
Appendix A of 29 CFR 1910.1200 Health Hazard Criteria developed by
OSHA; OSHA described this threshold in the 2012 modifications to the
hazard communication standard: ``When data on the mixture as a whole
are not available, the mixture is considered to present the same health
hazards as any ingredients present at a concentration of 1% or greater,
or, in the case of carcinogens, concentrations of 0.1% or greater. The
current HCS [hazard communication standard] also recognizes that risk
may remain at concentrations below these cut-offs, and where there is
evidence that that is the case, the mixtures are considered hazardous
under the standard.'' (89 FR 44144, May 20, 2024). Under 29 CFR
1910.1200, a health hazard is defined as ``a chemical which is
classified as posing one of the following hazardous effects: acute
toxicity (any route of exposure); skin corrosion or irritation; serious
eye damage or eye irritation; respiratory or skin sensitization; germ
cell mutagenicity; carcinogenicity; reproductive toxicity; specific
target organ toxicity (single or repeated exposure); or aspiration
hazard.'' The criteria for determining whether a chemical is classified
as a health hazard are detailed in Appendix A to 29 CFR 1910.1200--
Health Hazard Criteria. Appendix A.6.3.1 and A.7.3.1.1 of 29 CFR
1910.1200 indicate that a mixture must be classified as a carcinogen or
a reproductive toxicant, respectively, if it includes greater than or
equal to 0.1% of a substance that, like TCE, is classified as a
carcinogen or a reproductive toxicant. Other EPA programs, such as the
Toxics Release Inventory (TRI) program, have adopted the OSHA threshold
of 0.1% for chemicals which are defined as carcinogens or as a
potential carcinogen under the National Toxicology Program,
International Agency for Research on Cancer, or OSHA (see 40 CFR
372.38(a)).
EPA is finalizing a regulatory threshold of 0.1% so that products
containing TCE at concentrations less than 0.1% by weight are not
subject to the prohibitions and restrictions of this final rule. EPA is
finalizing this threshold for many of the reasons stated by commenters,
such as the difficulty of proving the absence of a chemical (and the
resulting uncertainty in various supply chains), the fact that the
manufacture of chlorinated organics results in the unintentional
manufacture of small amounts of TCE (and other chlorinated compounds)
as a byproduct that becomes an impurity that is not feasible to remove,
and the fact that it would be consistent with the OSHA Hazard
Communication Standard and other programs to which industry has already
calibrated its processes. EPA believes that adopting a regulatory
threshold of 0.1% for TCE, which is a carcinogen and a reproductive
toxicant, will increase regulatory certainty and ease implementation of
the eventual prohibition of this chemical. This regulatory threshold is
well below the concentration used for any products that contributed to
the unreasonable risk. By prohibiting TCE concentrations of 0.1% or
greater in products, EPA prevents any functional uses of TCE, which
generally rely on a higher concentration of the chemical in order to
make use of TCE's chemical properties. The manufacture (including
import), processing, and distribution in commerce of products that
contain TCE at concentrations equal to or above the regulatory
threshold of 0.1% are still subject to the prohibitions and
restrictions of this final rule, regardless of the concentration of TCE
in the end product.
2. Processing of TCE Manufactured as a Byproduct
In the 2023 TCE proposed rule, EPA noted that TCE that is
manufactured as a byproduct (such as during the manufacture of other
chemicals, e.g., 1,2-dichloroethane (1,2-DCA)) is not considered to be
within the condition of use of TCE manufacturing. EPA has not changed
this determination. However, in the 2023 TCE proposed rule, EPA did
consider processing (including reuse) of TCE that was manufactured as a
byproduct to be under the processing as a reactant/intermediate
condition of use of TCE. Specifically, in Unit III.B.1.b.i. of the 2023
TCE proposed rule (``processing as a reactant/intermediate''), EPA
noted that ``this condition of use includes reuse of byproduct or
residual TCE as a reactant.'' EPA received numerous public comments on
how the proposed rule addressed TCE as a byproduct that was then
processed, with several commenters providing detailed information on
how TCE is unintentionally manufactured as a byproduct during complex
chemical processing streams and then processed and re-processed within
those streams alongside other, similar chemicals (Refs. 42, 80, 39, 81,
and 56). For clarity, EPA is using the terms reuse, recycling, and re-
processing within this section as specifically used by commenters to
refer to actions that occur under the larger condition of use of
``processing.'' One commenter pointed out that without excluding from
the prohibitions any subsequent processing of TCE manufactured as a
byproduct, chemical facilities would experience significant disruptions
when trying to isolate and remove the TCE that was unintentionally
manufactured, and that would otherwise be processed and consumed (Ref.
43). This commenter also emphasized the anticipated negative waste and
upstream production impacts from a prohibition on the reuse of TCE
manufactured as a byproduct, and highlighted how TCE is produced in the
1,2-DCA manufacturing process and how it is processed and recycled in
the reactor manufacturing process for PCE and carbon tetrachloride
(CTC). This commenter highlighted that if TCE byproduct processing was
prohibited, this would significantly increase the quantity of hazardous
waste disposed of and increase the use of virgin raw material in
chemical manufacturing (Ref. 43). The commenter also provided a
description of controls in place at chlorinated organic facilities to
mitigate risk associated with TCE byproduct creation and recycling as
well as citations to communications with EPA regarding these processes
(Ref. 43).
As described in more detail in the Response to Comments document
(Ref. 11), EPA agrees with commenters that TCE manufactured as a
byproduct should logically be able to be processed, including recycled,
during or concurrent with the processing of the intended manufactured
chemical substance(s) so long as the TCE is processed in a site-
limited, physically enclosed system within the same reaction process.
EPA also recognizes the significant risks to workplace safety if all
facilities manufacturing TCE as a byproduct had to distill, remove, and
destroy all traces of TCE before further chemical processing could
commence. For this reason, EPA is excluding from this rule the
processing of TCE as a byproduct when that byproduct TCE is processed
within a site-limited, physically enclosed system that is part of the
same overall manufacturing process from which the byproduct substance
was generated. In this rule, EPA is incorporating the definition of
``site-limited'' in 40 CFR 711.3 and also aligning with the description
of site-limited, physically enclosed systems in 40 CFR 711.10(d)(1),
which identifies activities for which reporting on certain byproducts
is not required under the CDR Rule.
In proposing the CDR definition, EPA described enclosed systems for
the purposes of CDR as system of
[[Page 102593]]
equipment directly connected to the production process that is
designed, constructed, and operated in a manner which prevents
emissions, or the release of any chemical substance into the facility
or environment during the production process. (84 FR 17692, April 25,
2019) (FRL-9982-16). Such emissions, including fugitive emissions,
could lead to exposures to workers, the public, or the environment. For
an enclosed system, exposure and release could only occur due to loss
of integrity or failure of the manufacturing process equipment or
control systems. To meet the EPA enclosed system scenario, any
equipment that the byproduct is present in at any point during the
process sequence, such as tanks, reaction vessels, reactors, processing
units (e.g., a drum filter), and/or connecting lines, must: (1) Be of
high structural integrity and contained on all sides, (2) pose no
foreseeable potential for escape of constituents to the facility or
environment during normal use, and (3) be connected directly by
pipeline or similarly enclosed device to a production process. Also,
any transfers or holding steps occurring in this system must be
necessary to the recycle process and must take place within physically
enclosed equipment that meet the enclosed system scenario. For example,
hard piping or completely sealed (i.e., welded) equipment would meet
these criteria if connected directly to other enclosed equipment,
preventing potential releases including fugitive emissions.
EPA is finalizing an exclusion from this rule for TCE manufactured
and then processed as a byproduct in a site-limited, physically
enclosed system that is part of the same overall manufacturing process
from which the byproduct TCE was generated. EPA plans to interpret the
exclusion for processing byproduct TCE in this rule in a similar way as
the exemption for certain byproducts from CDR.
EPA recognizes the concerns that other commenters raised regarding
potential risks from TCE manufactured as a byproduct; several
commenters stated that rather than expand exclusions for TCE
manufactured as a byproduct, EPA should evaluate all aspects of
manufacture of a chemical substance and that byproducts could pose a
risk to fenceline communities (Refs. 44, 30). As described in the
proposed rule, EPA is including the evaluation of TCE manufactured as a
byproduct during the manufacture of 1,2-DCA in the risk evaluation for
1,2-DCA. Additionally, unless it is for the purposes of disposal (see
Unit IV.C.1.d.), TCE that exits the site-limited, physically enclosed
systems in which it was manufactured by removal from the system, by
relocation, or by conclusion of the manufacturing process is subject to
the restrictions, prohibitions, and other provisions of this final
rule. EPA notes that for the manufacturing of two chemicals, PCE and
CTC, which may produce TCE as a byproduct within site-limited,
physically enclosed systems, EPA is requiring a WCPP for PCE or CTC,
which would provide a level of protection from TCE for potentially
exposed persons while addressing the unreasonable risk from PCE or CTC.
EPA received additional information from a chemical manufacturer
(Ref. 82) that manufactures TCE as a byproduct during other processes
and then sends the TCE offsite for RCRA hazardous waste disposal. EPA
notes that in the Risk Evaluation for TCE, EPA explained that it had
tailored the scope of the risk evaluation to exclude the disposal
pathway of TCE, except for limited disposal of TCE-containing
wastewater discussed in Unit IV.B.6. Thus, the disposal of TCE and the
processing and distribution in commerce for such disposal is out of
scope for this rule unless otherwise specified. EPA understands that
some facilities, such as those that produce substances critical to the
battery supply chain, may manufacture TCE as a byproduct and that TCE
is not further processed onsite but rather is disposed of offsite. Such
activity is not covered by this rule.
3. Industrial and Commercial Use of TCE as a Solvent for Closed-Loop
Batch Vapor Degreasing for Rayon Fabric Scouring for Rocket Booster
Nozzle Production for Federal Agencies and Their Contractors
In the 2023 TCE proposed rule, EPA included several longer
timeframes for TCE uses specifically to foster and support Federal
Agencies' missions related to national security and critical
infrastructure. EPA received public comment on one of these conditions
of use and provisions that relate to compliance. The comment relates to
the phase-out of TCE in industrial and commercial use as a solvent for
closed-loop batch vapor degreasing for rayon fabric scouring for rocket
booster nozzle production. EPA proposed that within 5 years of the
publication date of the final rule the Federal agency that is the end
user of the rayon fabric for rocket booster nozzle production (e.g.,
the U.S. Department of Defense (DOD) or NASA) would need to conduct a
final pre-launch test of rocket boosters without using TCE. By 10 years
from the publication date of the final rule, the phase-out would be
complete and industrial and commercial use of TCE as a solvent for
closed-loop batch vapor degreasing would be prohibited. A commenter
brought to EPA's attention that although EPA proposed to require the
testing of an alternative process, the proposed regulation did not
include a requirement to switch to an alternative once a suitable one
was fully validated (Ref. 44). As the commenter noted, such a
requirement is necessary to prompt users to discover and implement
effective and safer alternatives to TCE. EPA agrees, as the intention
of this phase-out and the 5-year testing requirement is to incentivize
TCE users to transition away as fast as practicable. Based on this
public comment, EPA has modified the regulatory text to require use of
the tested alternative if it proves to be an adequate substitute.
4. Definitions
EPA proposed to add definitions for ``Authorized person,''
``ECEL,'' ``Exposure group,'' ``Owner or operator,'' ``Potentially
exposed person,'' ``Regulated area,'' and ``Retailer'' to 40 CFR part
751, subpart A. The final rule under TSCA section 6 to address the
unreasonable risk presented by methylene chloride (89 FR 39254, May 8,
2024 (FRL-8155-01-OCSPP)) added the definitions for ``Authorized
person,'' ``Owner or operator,'' ``Potentially exposed person,''
``Regulated area,'' and ``Retailer'' to subpart A. The final rule under
TSCA section 6 to address the unreasonable risk presented by PCE (RIN
2070-AK84) added the definition for ``Exposure group'' and ``ECEL'' to
subpart A.
In this final rule, EPA is adding a definition for ``interim ECEL''
to subpart D to incorporate the interim ECEL value discussed in Unit
III.A.1. and to make it clear that the interim ECEL is only applicable
during the phaseout and TSCA section 6(g) exemption periods. EPA has
also revised the proposed subpart D definition of ``ECEL action level''
to refer to an ``interim ECEL action level'' and to incorporate the
interim ECEL action level value described in Unit III.A.1.
Lastly, to provide additional clarity, EPA has revised its proposed
descriptions in the preamble of industrial and commercial use of TCE as
solvent for open-top or closed-loop batch vapor degreasing for
essential aerospace parts and for narrow tubing for medical devices.
The revised descriptions appear in Unit IV.B.1.
[[Page 102594]]
IV. Provisions of the Final Rule
EPA intends that each provision of this rulemaking be severable. In
the event of litigation staying, remanding, or invalidating EPA's risk
management approach for one or more conditions of use in this rule, EPA
intends to preserve the risk management approaches in the rule for all
other conditions of use to the fullest extent possible. The Agency
evaluated the risk management options in TSCA section 6(a)(1) through
(7) for each condition of use and generally EPA's regulation of one
condition of use to address its contribution to the unreasonable risk
from TCE functions independently from EPA's regulation of other
conditions of use, which may have different characteristics leading to
EPA's risk management decisions. Further, the Agency crafted this rule
so that different risk management approaches are reflected in different
provisions or elements of the rule that are capable of operating
independently. Accordingly, the Agency has organized the rule so that
if any provision or element of this rule is determined by judicial
review or operation of law to be invalid, that partial invalidation
will not render the remainder of this rule invalid.
There are many permutations of this. For example, as discussed in
Unit IV.B., this final rule prohibits industrial and commercial use of
adhesives and sealants that contain TCE (with subsets of this use with
a delayed compliance date as described in Unit IV.B.2. or an exemption
as described in Unit IV.G.). This final rule also prohibits all
consumer uses of TCE as discussed in Unit IV.B.1. To the extent that a
court were to find that EPA lacked substantial evidence to support its
prohibition of adhesives and sealants or otherwise found legal issues
with EPA's approach to that condition of use, it would have no bearing
on other similarly situated conditions of use, such as those involving
consumer use of TCE, unless the specific issue also applies to the
particular facts associated with consumer use. This is reflected in the
structure of the rule, which describes the specific prohibitions
separately by compliance date. EPA also intends all TSCA section 6(a)
risk management elements in this rule to be severable from each TSCA
section 6(g) exemption. EPA has the authority to promulgate TSCA
section 6(g) exemptions ``as part of a rule promulgated under [TSCA
section 6(a)].'' However, EPA's risk management decisions under TSCA
sections 6(a) and 6(c) are independent from EPA's consideration of
whether it is appropriate, based on the factors in TSCA section 6(g),
to exempt specific conditions of use from the requirements of the TSCA
section 6(a) risk management elements in the rule. In other words, EPA
first decides whether and how to regulate each condition of use, per
TSCA sections 6(a) through (c), and only then determines whether an
exemption under TSCA section 6(g) is appropriate. Accordingly, the
underlying TSCA section 6(a) risk management elements would not be
impacted if a TSCA section 6(g) exemption is determined by judicial
review or operation of law to be invalid. Rather, the exempted
condition of use would become subject to the underlying TSCA section
6(a) risk management element(s).
EPA also notes that there are multiple avenues to ask EPA to
revisit issues in this TSCA section 6(a) rulemaking, both before and
after the mandatory compliance dates are set consistent with TSCA
section 6(d). EPA has the authority under TSCA section 6(g) to consider
whether an exemption is appropriate and, consistent with TSCA section
6(g)(1), may propose such exemptions independently from this
rulemaking. Additionally, any person could petition EPA to request that
EPA issue or amend a rule under TSCA section 6.
A. Applicability
This final rule sets prohibitions and restrictions on the
manufacture (including import), processing, distribution in commerce,
commercial use, and disposal of TCE to prevent unreasonable risk of
injury to health in accordance with TSCA section 6(a), 15 U.S.C.
2605(a). Additionally, pursuant to TSCA section 12(a)(2), this rule
applies to TCE even if being manufactured, processed, or distributed in
commerce solely for export from the United States because EPA has
determined that TCE presents an unreasonable risk to health within the
United States.
As discussed in Unit III.D., EPA's final rule is adopting a
regulatory threshold of 0.1% of TCE (in the 2023 proposed rule, this
was referred to as a de minimis threshold). In other words, the
provisions of this rulemaking only apply when TCE is present in a
product at 0.1% or greater by weight. Additionally, the provisions of
this final rule only apply to chemical substances as defined under TSCA
section 3. Notably, TSCA Section 3(2) excludes from the definition of
chemical substance ``any food, food additive, drug, cosmetic, or device
(as such terms are defined in Section 201 of the Federal Food, Drug,
and Cosmetic Act [21 U.S.C. 321]) when manufactured, processed, or
distributed in commerce for use as a food, food additive, drug,
cosmetic, or device'' and ``any pesticide (as defined in the Federal
Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act [7 U.S.C. 136 et seq.])
when manufactured, processed, or distributed in commerce for use as a
pesticide.'' Additional details regarding TSCA statutory authorities
can be found in section 2 of the Response to Comments document (Ref.
11).
As discussed in Unit III.D. of this final rule, TCE that is
manufactured as a byproduct (such as during the manufacture of other
chemicals) is not considered to be within the condition of use of TCE
manufacturing. Relatedly, EPA is excluding from this rule processing of
byproduct TCE when that byproduct TCE is processed within a site-
limited, physically enclosed system that is part of the same overall
manufacturing process from which the byproduct substance was generated.
Site-limited means a chemical substance is manufactured and processed
only within a site and is not distributed for commercial purposes as a
chemical substance or as part of a mixture or product outside the site.
In this way, EPA is aligning with the definition of ``site-limited'' in
40 CFR 711.3 and site-limited, physically enclosed systems in 40 CFR
711.10(d)(1).
Finally, as discussed in the 2023 TCE proposed rule, while EPA
generally views the disposal condition of use under TSCA broadly, this
rule is intended to address identified risks resulting from disposal of
TCE to industrial pre-treatment, industrial treatment, or a POTW. Thus,
only these limited disposal activities, including remediation methods
that would be considered industrial wastewater pretreatment, industrial
wastewater treatment, or discharge to a POTW, are included within the
disposal condition of use in this rule. A remediation method would need
to be considered one of these three types of disposal to fall within
the condition of use under TSCA, and if not, would not be subject to
the prohibition or other requirements of the rule.
B. Prohibition of Manufacture, Processing, Distribution in Commerce,
Use, and Disposal
In general, EPA is finalizing the prohibitions as proposed with
some modifications, including for compliance timeframes to provide for
reasonable transitions and based on consideration of the public
comments, as described in Unit III. This unit describes the
prohibitions and associated compliance timeframes EPA is finalizing in
this rule. As discussed in Unit IV.A. and in
[[Page 102595]]
the Response to Comments document (Ref. 11), the prohibitions do not
apply to any substance that is excluded from the definition of
``chemical substance'' under TSCA section 3(2)(B)(ii) through (vi)
(Ref. 11).
1. Prohibition of Manufacture, Processing, Distribution, and Industrial
and Commercial Use of TCE
The final rule prohibits manufacture, processing, distribution in
commerce, and all industrial and commercial use of TCE and TCE-
containing products. The final regulation will impose prohibitions in a
staggered timeframe, beginning at the top of the supply chain, as
proposed. EPA is finalizing as proposed the timeframes for prohibition
on manufacturing, processing, distribution in commerce, and industrial
and commercial use of TCE unless otherwise specified. These timeframes
are: a prohibition on manufacturing (including importing) TCE beginning
90 days from publication of this final rule, a prohibition on
processing TCE beginning 180 days from publication of this final rule,
a prohibition on distribution in commerce of TCE or TCE-containing
products beginning 180 days from publication of this final rule, and a
prohibition on industrial or commercial use of TCE and TCE-containing
products beginning 270 days after publication of this final rule.
For several conditions of use, EPA is finalizing prohibitions that
would take effect over a longer timeframe. After consideration of
public comments, EPA is finalizing timeframes longer than proposed for
prohibition of manufacture, processing, distribution, and commercial
use of TCE for four uses: industrial and commercial use of TCE in
energized electrical cleaner; industrial and commercial use of TCE in
adhesives and sealants for aerospace applications; laboratory use of
TCE in asphalt testing and recovery; and disposal of TCE to industrial
pre-treatment, industrial treatment, or POTWs. EPA is finalizing a
prohibition after 5 years, a timeframe shorter than proposed, for the
industrial and commercial use of TCE as a processing aid for lithium
battery separator manufacturing. The details of these and other
timeframes for prohibition are described in this unit, and the
rationale for these changes from the proposed rule is in Unit III.B.1.
and Unit III.C. (EPA notes that for several conditions of use, in
consideration of public comments and to provide for reasonable
transitions, EPA is finalizing phase-outs ahead of immediate
prohibitions (e.g., for the processing of TCE for manufacture of HFC-
134a), which are detailed in Units IV.B.3., 4., 5., and 6., or several
time limited exemptions under TSCA section 6(g) (e.g., for the
industrial and commercial use of TCE for essential laboratory uses),
which are detailed in Unit IV.G.)).
For two batch vapor degreasing conditions of use (open-top and
closed-loop), EPA is finalizing as proposed the compliance dates for
the prohibitions described in this unit. With certain exceptions, the
prohibition on manufacturing and processing for this use comes into
effect in 180 days for manufacturers and in 270 days for processors,
including for processing into a formulation and for recycling. After 1
year, the prohibition on the industrial and commercial uses of TCE in
open-top and closed-loop batch vapor degreasers comes into effect (see
Unit III.B.1.c.i. and ii. of the 2023 TCE proposed rule for
descriptions of these conditions of use and Unit VI.A.1. of the 2023
TCE proposed rule for a rationale for the slightly longer timeframe).
As an exception, the use of TCE for batch vapor degreasing by Federal
agencies and their contractors for land-based DoD defense systems will
be prohibited after 5 years. (For a sub-set of the open-top and closed-
loop batch vapor degreasing conditions of use, EPA is finalizing a
phase-out for industrial and commercial use of TCE as a solvent for
closed-loop batch vapor degreasing for rayon fabric scouring for end
use in rocket booster nozzle production for Federal agencies and their
contractors, as described in Unit IV.B.4. EPA is also finalizing
several exemptions related to vapor degreasing, which are described in
Unit IV.G.).
Additionally, for uses not separately distinguished under longer
phase-out or exemption timeframes, EPA is finalizing as proposed the
compliance dates for the prohibitions on the commercial use of TCE as a
processing aid and the relevant upstream uses. Specifically, aside from
several exceptions, the prohibitions on manufacturing and processing
for this use would come into effect 540 days months after the date of
publication for manufacturers and in 2 years for processors. The
prohibition would come into effect after 2 years for industrial and
commercial use of TCE as a processing aid for several applications (as
specified in the condition of use name and description, this includes
use of TCE as a processing aid in battery separator manufacturing;
process solvent used in polymer fiber spinning, fluoroelastomer
manufacture and Alcantara manufacture; extraction solvent used in
caprolactam manufacture; and precipitant used in beta-cyclodextrin
manufacture) (see Unit III.B.1.c.xvi. of the 2023 TCE proposed rule for
a description of this condition of use and Unit V.A.1. of the 2023 TCE
proposed rule for a rationale for the different timeframe). For a
subset of the industrial and commercial use of TCE as a processing aid,
specifically for the use of TCE as a processing aid in lithium battery
separator manufacture, EPA is finalizing a longer timeframe of 5 years
before prohibition.
EPA is finalizing as proposed the prohibition on manufacturing of
TCE for processing as a reactant/intermediate after 540 days and the
prohibition for processing TCE as a reactant/intermediate after two
years, unless otherwise noted. EPA is finalizing as proposed an
extended phase-out for a subset of this condition of use, specifically
processing TCE as a reactant/intermediate for the manufacture of HFC-
134a, which is detailed in Unit IV.B.3.
As described earlier in this unit, for three conditions of use, EPA
is finalizing prohibition timeframes longer than proposed. EPA is
providing 3 years after publication of the final rule (rather than
within a year, as proposed) for the industrial and commercial use of
TCE in energized electrical cleaner, and the manufacture, processing,
and distribution in commerce for such use. Additionally, for the
industrial and commercial use of TCE in adhesives and sealants for
aerospace applications, and the manufacture, processing, and
distribution in commerce for such use, prohibitions would take effect 5
years after publication of the final rule (rather than within a year,
as proposed). For the industrial and commercial use of TCE in batch
vapor degreasing for land-based DoD defense systems by Federal agencies
and their contractors, and the manufacture, processing, and
distribution in commerce for such use, prohibitions would take effect 5
years after publication of the final rule. These changes are based on
consideration of the public comments, and the rationale is detailed in
Unit III.C. and the Response to Comments document (Ref. 11).
Also in consideration of public comment, EPA is changing the
timeframe for prohibition on the industrial and commercial use of TCE
as a processing aid in manufacturing lithium battery separators. EPA
had proposed that industrial and commercial use of TCE as a processing
aid for all battery separators would, under TSCA section 6(g), be
exempt from prohibition for 10 years. As detailed in Unit III.B.1., EPA
has modified the exemption to apply only to use of TCE for
manufacturing lead-acid
[[Page 102596]]
battery separators, and for the industrial and commercial use of TCE as
a processing aid in lithium battery separator manufacture, and for its
associated upstream uses and disposal, EPA is finalizing a separate
prohibition that will take effect in five years.
To aid with implementation of the compliance dates for the
prohibitions on manufacturing, processing, and industrial and
commercial use of TCE, and ensure that those prohibitions effectively
address the unreasonable risk identified, EPA is also finalizing
prohibitions on distribution in commerce of TCE. Generally, for most
conditions of use EPA is finalizing a compliance date for the
prohibition on distribution in commerce of TCE that will come into
effect 180 days following publication of the final rule. In instances
where EPA is finalizing a prohibition on manufacturing and processing
TCE for a particular industrial and commercial use that is later than
180 days after publication of the final rule, the compliance date for
the prohibition on distribution in commerce will generally be the same
as the compliance date of the prohibition on manufacturing and
processing TCE.
In consideration of the irreversible health effects associated with
TCE exposure and public comment, EPA is finalizing prohibition
timeframes that allow for successful implementation of the prohibitions
in a manner that is as soon as practicable while providing for a
reasonable transition period, consistent with TSCA section 6(d). EPA
has no reasonably available information indicating that the compliance
dates are not practicable for the activities that would be prohibited,
or that additional time is needed for products to clear the channels of
trade.
2. Prohibition of Manufacture, Processing, and Distribution in Commerce
for Consumer Use of TCE
The final rule prohibits the manufacture, processing, and
distribution in commerce of TCE and TCE-containing products for all
consumer use.
EPA emphasizes that the consumer uses evaluated in the 2020 Risk
Evaluation for TCE constitute all known, intended, and reasonably
foreseen consumer uses of TCE. As described in this unit, EPA is
prohibiting all manufacturing (including import) and processing of TCE
to address the unreasonable risk to workers and ONUs driven by those
conditions of use (Ref. 2). EPA determined any extended phase-outs or
6(g) exemptions are unnecessary for prohibitions on manufacture
(including import), processing, or distribution in commerce of TCE for
consumer use. EPA notes that all but one of the 24 consumer uses of TCE
evaluated in the 2020 Risk Evaluation for TCE contributed to the
unreasonable risk determination for TCE (Refs. 1, 2). Additionally, a
prohibition on the manufacture (including import) and processing of TCE
for consumer uses generally supports reducing risk to workers and ONUs
from these upstream uses, as further discussed in Unit V.A. EPA also
considered the risk of irreversible health effects associated with TCE
exposure when finalizing these compliance dates. For these reasons,
including the severity of the hazards of TCE, EPA is prohibiting the
manufacturing (including import), processing, and distribution in
commerce of TCE for all uses, which includes all consumer uses.
The compliance dates for the final prohibitions described in this
unit relevant to consumer uses will come into effect for manufacturers
in 90 days, for processors in 180 days, and for distributors (including
all retailers) within 180 days. EPA has no reasonably available
information indicating these compliance dates are not practicable for
the activities that are prohibited or that additional time is needed
for products to clear the channels of trade.
EPA emphasizes that retailers are prohibited from distributing any
TCE or TCE-containing products after June 16, 2025, including those
TCE-containing products that can continue to be distributed or used
commercially for a longer period of time. EPA is finalizing as proposed
the prohibition on distributing in commerce TCE and all TCE-containing
products to consumers, in order to prevent products intended for
industrial and commercial use that have longer timeframes before
prohibition from being purchased by consumers, and is clarifying that
this prohibition applies to distribution by retailers. A retailer is
any person or business entity that distributes or makes available
products to consumers, including through e-commerce internet sales or
distribution. If a person or business entity distributes or makes
available any product to at least one consumer, then it is considered a
retailer (40 CFR 751.5). For a distributor not to be considered a
retailer, the distributor must distribute or make available products
solely to commercial or industrial end-users or businesses. Prohibiting
manufacturers (including importers), processors, and distributors from
distributing TCE, or any products containing TCE, to retailers prevents
retailers from making these products available to consumers, which
addresses that part of the unreasonable risk from TCE contributed by
consumer use.
In consideration of the irreversible health effects associated with
TCE exposure and public comment, in this final rule EPA is finalizing
prohibition timeframes that allow for successful implementation of the
prohibitions in a manner that is as soon as practicable while providing
for a reasonable transition period, consistent with TSCA section 6(d).
EPA has no reasonably available information indicating these compliance
dates are not practicable for the activities that are prohibited or
that additional time is needed for products to clear the channels of
trade.
3. Phase-Out for Processing TCE as an Intermediate for the Manufacture
of HFC-134a
As described in this unit, EPA is finalizing as proposed a longer
phase-out timeframe for the manufacturing (including import) and
processing of TCE as an intermediate for the manufacture of HFC-134a
(1,1,1,2-tetrafluroethane; CASRN 811-97-2). EPA is finalizing an 8.5-
year phase-out subject to the requirements discussed in this unit. All
other processing of TCE as a reactant/intermediate will be subject to
the prohibitions described in Unit IV.B.2. EPA will require a phase-out
for processing of TCE as an intermediate for the manufacture of HFC-
134a, which EPA will begin at the final rule's publication date and end
8.5 years after the publication of the final rule. Associated with this
phase-out, EPA will require the establishment of the TCE WCPP, outlined
in Unit IV.C. within 180 days after publication of the final rule, as
workplace protections during the period of the phase-out. To set the
volume reductions during the phase-out, EPA will require any facility
processing TCE as an intermediate to manufacture HFC-134a in the United
States to establish a baseline of the annual quantity of TCE processed
by the facility as a feedstock to manufacture HFC-134a. EPA is
requiring that within 180 days after the publication of the final rule
the manufacturer could use the average of any 12 consecutive months in
the 3 years preceding the publication of the final rule to calculate
their baseline, based on records that demonstrate how the baseline
annual volume was calculated. Following the establishment of a baseline
volume, the regulated entity will then be required to implement a 4-
step phase-out process; specifically, the phase-out will be a 25
percent reduction from the baseline volume every 2 years as follows:
(1) 2.5 years after the publication of the final
[[Page 102597]]
rule each manufacturer of HFC-134a who processes TCE as an intermediate
is not permitted to process TCE as an intermediate at an annual volume
greater than 75 percent of the baseline; (2) 4.5 years after the
publication of the final rule each manufacturer of HFC-134a who
processes TCE as an intermediate is not permitted to process TCE as an
intermediate at an annual volume greater than 50 percent of the
baseline; (3) 6.5 years after the publication of the final rule each
manufacturer of HFC-134a who processes TCE as an intermediate is not
permitted to process TCE as an intermediate at an annual volume greater
than 25 percent of the baseline; and (4) 8.5 years after the
publication of the final rule each manufacturer of HFC-134a is
prohibited from processing TCE as an intermediate.
EPA notes that the prohibition for manufacture (including
importing), processing, and distribution in commerce of TCE for this
condition of use will occur after 8.5 years to account for availability
of TCE through the supply chain during the period of the phase-out of
processing of TCE as an intermediate for the manufacture of HFC-134a.
This timeframe will be longer than the prohibitions on manufacturing
and processing TCE described in Unit IV.B.1. of this final rule.
EPA is also finalizing the requirement that regulated entities keep
records of the annual quantity of TCE purchased and processed from the
year 2023 until the termination of all processing of TCE as an
intermediate. These records, along with the records demonstrating how
the baseline annual volume was calculated, must be kept until five
years after the processing of TCE as an intermediate ends.
EPA notes, per TSCA section 6(c)(2)(C), that although the
processing of TCE to produce HFC-134a is prohibited eventually,
processing PCE to produce HFC-134a will continue under a WCPP (RIN
2070-AK84). Although PCE is an alternative intermediate for the
manufacture of HFC-134a, EPA has found that an 8.5-year phaseout for
TCE is necessary because manufacturers who use TCE as an intermediate
are not able to simply retrofit plants to use PCE. Therefore, a more
immediate prohibition of the use of TCE for this condition of use could
abruptly disrupt the domestic supply of HFC-134a and could adversely
affect the gradual transition to new technologies driven by the AIM
Act. However, EPA believes the transition period is reasonable because
over the time period of the phaseout, EPA determined the transition to
imported HFC-134a or HFC-134a manufactured with PCE could be made and,
as such, the refrigerant would remain available while protecting
workers.
4. Phase-Out of Industrial and Commercial Use of TCE as a Solvent for
Closed-Loop Batch Vapor Degreasing for Rayon Fabric Scouring for Rocket
Booster Nozzle Production
EPA is finalizing as proposed a longer phase-out timeframe for
industrial and commercial use of TCE as a solvent for closed-loop batch
vapor degreasing for rayon fabric scouring for end use in rocket
booster nozzle production by Federal agencies and their contractors.
This is the industrial and commercial use of TCE in a closed-loop batch
vapor degreaser to clean, or `scour,' rayon fabric to remove sizing
(i.e., protective filler or glaze on textiles), oils, and other
contaminants from the rayon fabric that is used to line the inside of
rocket booster nozzles; the degreasing is essential in preparing the
rayon fabric before a carbonization process ahead of being used in the
rocket booster nozzles. If contaminants are not removed properly from
the rayon, the result could include nozzle failure (Ref. 44). More
information on this use and the rationale for the phase-out are in Unit
VI.A.1. of the proposed rule. For this sub-set of the vapor degreasing
condition of use, when conducted by Federal agencies and their
contractors, EPA is finalizing a 10-year phase-out subject to the
requirements discussed in this unit. (All other industrial and
commercial use of TCE as a solvent for vapor degreasing, including use
of TCE in closed-loop batch vapor degreasing of other parts or
materials, will be subject to the prohibitions described in Unit
IV.B.2.). For the phase-out, within 5 years of the publication date of
the final rule the Federal agency that is the end user of the rayon
fabric for rocket booster nozzle production (e.g., the DOD or NASA)
will need to conduct a final pre-launch test of rocket boosters without
using TCE; this test is further discussed in Unit VI.A.1.a. of the 2023
TCE proposed rule. By 10 years from the publication date of the final
rule, the phase-out will be complete and industrial and commercial use
of TCE as a solvent for closed-loop batch vapor degreasing, including
for rayon fabric scouring for end use in rocket booster nozzle
production by Federal agencies and their contractors, is prohibited. As
part of this phase-out, EPA is requiring a TCE WCPP, described in Unit
IV.C., within 180 days after publication of the final rule, as
workplace protections during the period of the phase-out until the full
prohibition takes effect. Additionally, this phase-out will include
recordkeeping requirements beginning 270 days after publication of the
final rule related to the rayon fabric scouring for end use in rocket
booster nozzle production. The entity must have records from a Federal
agency indicating that their closed-loop batch vapor degreasing with
TCE is for rayon fabric scouring for end use in rocket booster nozzle
production for a Federal agency or a contractor. Beginning 5 years
after the publication of the final rule, to continue to use TCE for
closed-loop batch vapor degreasing for this specific use, the user must
have records from a Federal agency indicating that a final pre-launch
test for the rayon fabric scouring has been conducted with an
alternative chemical or process. As a condition of this phase-out,
entities will be required to transition from TCE and to switch to use
of the tested alternative if it proves to be a suitable alternative.
5. Phase-Out of Laboratory Use of TCE in Asphalt Testing And Recovery
As discussed in more detail in Unit III.C.3., EPA is finalizing a
longer phase-out timeframe for industrial and commercial use of TCE in
laboratory testing of asphalt. Specifically, EPA is finalizing a phase-
out of 10 years for the industrial and commercial use of TCE in asphalt
testing and recovery, with a prohibition on use of TCE in manual
centrifuge processes at 5 years. As part of this phase-out, EPA is
requiring a TCE WCPP, described in Unit IV.C., within 180 days after
publication of the final rule, as workplace protections during the
period of the phase-out until the full prohibition takes effect.
6. Phase-Out of Disposal of TCE to Industrial Pre-Treatment, Industrial
Treatment, or POTWs
EPA is prohibiting the disposal of TCE to industrial pre-treatment,
industrial treatment, or publicly owned treatment works, i.e.,
wastewater that contains TCE that is collected and/or treated on site
or transported to a third party site, and includes the mixing of TCE
with wastewater and the discharge of TCE-contaminated wastewater
(description of disposal for the purposes of this rulemaking is in
Units IV.C.1.d. and IV.E.1.). TSCA section 6(a) provides EPA the
authority to prohibit or otherwise regulate any manner or method of
disposal of a chemical substance by its manufacturer, processor, or any
other person who uses or disposes of the chemical substance for
commercial purposes. Facilities generating solid waste with TCE
concentrations at or above the RCRA
[[Page 102598]]
regulatory level of 0.5 mg/L using the Toxicity Characteristic Leaching
Procedure (see 40 CFR 261.24) (or solid waste that is otherwise
hazardous under RCRA Subtitle C) will need to manage the waste in
compliance with all applicable RCRA requirements. This includes a ban
on dilution as a substitute for adequate treatment (40 CFR 268.3).
The compliance date for the prohibition described in this unit will
be September 15, 2025 for manufacturers, processors, distributors, and
industrial and commercial users disposing of TCE to industrial pre-
treatment, industrial treatment, or publicly owned treatment works. EPA
has no reasonably available information indicating that for the
majority of users the proposed compliance dates would not be as soon as
practicable and would not provide a reasonable transition period for
converting to an alternative disposal method.
For a small set of uses, EPA has determined that wastewater
disposal is an essential part of the ongoing industrial and commercial
use, as described in Units III.B.1. and III.B.2. EPA is therefore
finalizing extended phase-outs of wastewater disposal for certain
conditions of use that have extended compliance timeframes or an
exemption under TSCA section 6(g). The following conditions of use will
be able to continue to dispose of TCE to industrial pre-treatment,
industrial treatment, and POTWs: the industrial and commercial use of
TCE as a processing aid in lithium battery separator manufacturing will
have 5 years after the publication date of the final rule; the
industrial and commercial use of TCE as a processing aid for specialty
polymeric microporous sheet material manufacturing will have 15 years;
and the industrial and commercial use of TCE as a processing aid in
lead-acid battery separator manufacturing will have 20 years. During
the time these conditions of use are continuing consistent with a TSCA
section 6(d) phase-out or 6(g) exemption, EPA is requiring that the
industrial pre-treatment and/or industrial treatment of wastewater
containing TCE from these conditions of use will also be subject to the
WCPP described in Unit IV.C. This is distinct from conditions for
workplace requirements for the time-limited exemption under TSCA
section 6(g) for disposal of TCE to industrial pre-treatment and/or
industrial treatment, to support ongoing critical processing aid uses
and to facilitate cleanup projects of TCE-contaminated groundwater and
other wastewater generated from the cleanup of historical waste
disposal sites, which are described in Unit IV.E.2. POTWs receiving
TCE-containing wastewater, regardless of source, will be required to
meet the worker protections described in Unit IV.E.3.
C. WCPP for Certain Conditions of Use
1. Applicability
EPA is finalizing a WCPP for those conditions of use that will
continue temporarily for more than 1 year under a phase-out or a TSCA
section 6(g) exemption. The final WCPP differs in certain aspects from
the WCPP as proposed; the rationale for these changes are discussed in
Unit III.A. EPA is finalizing the WCPP for the following conditions of
use of TCE: domestic manufacturing; import; processing as a reactant/
intermediate; processing into formulation, mixture or reaction product;
processing by repackaging; recycling; industrial and commercial use as
a processing aid in process solvent used in battery manufacture;
process solvent used in polymer fabric spinning, fluoroelastomer
manufacture and Alcantara manufacture; extraction solvent used in
caprolactam manufacture; precipitant used in beta-cyclodextrin
manufacture; industrial and commercial use as an adhesive and sealant
for essential aerospace applications; industrial and commercial use of
in batch vapor degreasing for land-based DoD defense systems;
industrial and commercial use in other miscellaneous industrial and
commercial uses (laboratory use) industrial and commercial use as a
solvent in closed-loop batch vapor degreasing for rayon fabric scouring
for end use in rocket booster nozzle production by Federal agencies and
their contractors; industrial and commercial use in closed-loop or
open-top batch vapor degreasing for essential aerospace parts and
narrow tubing used for medical devices; industrial and commercial use
for vessels of the Armed Forces and their systems; industrial and
commercial use of TCE as a solvent in closed-loop vapor degreasing
necessary for rocket engine cleaning by Federal agencies and their
contractors; and disposal to industrial pre-treatment, industrial
treatment, and POTWs. This Unit provides a description of those uses
that will continue for more than 1 year under the WCPP to assist with
compliance. In some instances, the description is of a subset of a
larger condition of use assessed in the 2020 Risk Evaluation for TCE.
a. Manufacturing (Includes Import)
i. Domestic Manufacture
This condition of use refers to the making or producing of a
chemical substance within the United States (including manufacturing
for export), or the extraction of a component chemical substance from a
previously existing chemical substance or a complex combination of
substances. For purposes of this rule, this description does not apply
to TCE production as a byproduct, including during the manufacture of
1,2-dichloroethane, which EPA intends to consider in the risk
evaluation for 1,2-dichloroethane (Ref. 83).
ii. Import
This condition of use refers to the act of causing a chemical
substance or mixture to arrive within the customs territory of the
United States.
b. Processing
i. Processing as a Reactant/Intermediate
This condition of use refers to processing TCE in chemical
reactions for the manufacturing of another chemical substance or
product. Through processing as a reactant or intermediate, TCE serves
as a feedstock in the production of another chemical product via a
chemical reaction in which TCE is completely consumed. For example, TCE
is processed as an intermediate in the production of 1,1,1,2-
tetrafluoroethane, an HFC also known as HFC-134a, which is used as a
refrigerant and in fluorocarbon blends for refrigerants. This condition
of use includes reuse of TCE, including TCE originally generated as a
byproduct or residual TCE, as a reactant.
ii. Processing: Incorporation Into a Formulation, Mixture, or Reaction
Product
This condition of use refers to when TCE is added to a product (or
product mixture) prior to further distribution of the product. Such
products include, but are not limited to, solvents (for cleaning or
degreasing), adhesives and sealant chemicals, and solvents that become
part of a product formulation or mixture (e.g., lubricants and greases,
paints and coatings, other uses).
iii. Processing: Repackaging
This condition of use refers to the preparation of a chemical
substance for distribution in commerce in a different form, state, or
quantity. This includes but is not limited to transferring the chemical
from a bulk container into smaller containers.
[[Page 102599]]
iv. Processing: Recycling
This condition of use refers to the process of managing used
solvents that are collected, either on-site or transported to a third-
party site, for commercial purposes other than disposal. Spent solvents
can be restored via solvent reclamation/recycling. Waste solvents can
be restored to a condition that permits reuse via solvent reclamation/
recycling. The recovery process may involve an initial vapor recovery
or mechanical separation step followed by distillation, purification,
and final packaging.
c. Industrial and Commercial Use
i. Industrial and Commercial Use as a Processing Aid in: Process
Solvent Used in Battery Manufacture; Process Solvent Used in Polymer
Fabric Spinning, Fluoroelastomer Manufacture and Alcantara Manufacture;
Extraction Solvent Used in Caprolactam Manufacture; and Precipitant
Used in Beta-Cyclodextrin Manufacture
This condition of use refers to industrial and commercial use of
TCE to improve the processing characteristics or the operation of
process equipment when added to a process or to a substance or mixture
to be processed. The chemical substance is not intended to remain in or
to become a part of the reaction product nor has function in the
reaction product.
ii. Industrial and Commercial Use as an Adhesive and Sealant for
Essential Aerospace Applications
This condition of use refers to the industrial and commercial use
of TCE in adhesive and sealant products, e.g., in products to promote
bonding between other substances, promote adhesion of surfaces, or
prevent seepage of moisture or air, for essential aerospace
applications. In particular, this includes use of TCE as an adhesive or
sealant in aircraft pneumatic deicing boots; in solvent bonding of
plastic components, including on Oxygen Container Assemblies for
Passenger Service Unit products used in aircraft; and as an adhesive or
sealant for flight-critical equipment on new and existing aircraft,
both commercial and military.
iii. Miscellaneous Industrial and Commercial Uses: Laboratory Use
This condition of use refers to the industrial and commercial use
of TCE in an established laboratory, for example a laboratory program
accredited by the AIHA (e.g., AIHA LAP, LLC Policy Module 2A/B/E of
Revision 17.3), or other analogous industry-recognized program for
chemical analysis (e.g., to test hot mix asphalt binder content, as a
reference standard, etc.), chemical synthesis, extracting and purifying
other chemicals, dissolving other substances, and similar activities.
iv. Industrial and Commercial Use as Solvent for Closed-Loop Batch
Vapor Degreasing for Rayon Fabric Scouring for End Use in Rocket
Booster Nozzle Production
This condition of use refers to the process of heating TCE to its
volatilization point and using its vapor to remove dirt, oils, greases,
and other surface contaminants (such as drawing compounds, cutting
fluids, coolants, solder flux, and lubricants) for rayon fabric
scouring for end use in rocket booster nozzle production by Federal
agencies and their contractors, in closed-loop batch vapor degreasers.
v. Industrial and Commercial Use as Solvent for Closed-Loop or Open-Top
Batch Vapor Degreasing for Essential Aerospace Parts and for Narrow
Tubing for Medical Devices
This condition of use refers to the process of heating TCE to its
volatilization point and using its vapor to remove dirt, oils, greases,
and other surface contaminants (such as drawing compounds, cutting
fluids, coolants, solder flux, and lubricants) from essential aerospace
parts and components where alternatives present technical feasibility
or cleaning performance challenges in meeting Federal agency
specifications or long-standing design specifications and from narrow
tubing intended for use in medical devices (e.g., tubing where a
portion of the outside diameter is 0.625 inches or less), in open-top
batch or closed-loop batch vapor degreasers.
vi. Industrial and Commercial Use for Vessels of the Armed Forces and
Their Systems, and in the Maintenance, Fabrication, and Sustainment for
and of Such Vessels and Systems
This condition of use refers to the industrial and commercial use
of TCE for vessels of the Armed Forces and their systems, and in the
maintenance, fabrication, and sustainment for and of such vessels and
systems: as potting compounds for naval electronic systems and
equipment; sealing compounds for high and ultra-high vacuum systems;
bonding compounds for materials testing and maintenance of underwater
systems and bonding of nonmetallic materials; and cleaning agents to
satisfy cleaning requirements (which includes degreasing using wipes,
sprays, solvents and vapor degreasing) for: materials and components
required for military ordnance testing; temporary resin repairs in
vessel spaces where welding is not authorized; ensuring polyurethane
adhesion for electronic systems and equipment repair and installation
of elastomeric materials; various naval combat systems, radars,
sensors, equipment; fabrication and prototyping processes to remove
coolant and other residue from machine parts; machined part
fabrications for naval systems; installation of topside rubber tile
material aboard vessels; and vapor degreasing required for substrate
surface preparation prior to electroplating processes.
vii. Industrial and Commercial Use as a Solvent for Closed-Loop Batch
Vapor Degreasing Necessary for Rocket Engine Cleaning by Federal
Agencies and Their Contractors
This condition of use refers to the process of heating TCE to its
volatilization point and using its vapor to remove dirt, oils, greases,
and other surface contaminants (such as drawing compounds, cutting
fluids, coolants, solder flux, and lubricants), for rocket engine
cleaning by Federal agencies and their contractors. This involves
cleaning small diameter parts, such as rocket engine nozzle coolant
tubes, and removing the fluids used for manufacturing.
viii. Industrial and Commercial Use of TCE for Batch Vapor Degreasing
for Land-Based DoD Defense Systems by Federal Agencies and Their
Contractors
This condition of use refers to the process of heating TCE to its
volatilization point and using its vapor to remove dirt, oils, greases,
and other surface contaminants (such as drawing compounds, cutting
fluids, coolants, solder flux, and lubricants), for land-based DoD
defense systems cleaning by Federal agencies and their contractors.
d. Disposal
This condition of use generally refers to the process of disposing
of generated waste streams that are either collected on-site or
transported to a third-party site and typically includes both
processing for disposal as well as distribution in commerce for
disposal. For this rule, this includes the mixing of TCE with
wastewater and the discharge of TCE-contaminated wastewater pursuant to
a National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permit, and
specifically includes discharge to industrial pre-treatment, industrial
treatment, or publicly owned treatment works. The evaluation of the
disposal condition of use in the 2020 Risk Evaluation for TCE
[[Page 102600]]
(Ref. 1) was limited to the disposal of TCE-containing wastewater and
did not address disposal activities not involving TCE in wastewater.
Therefore, EPA considers disposal activities not involving TCE in
wastewater to be outside of the scope of this rule. This means that,
for example, a facility that generates TCE as a byproduct, isolates the
TCE from the process for the sole purpose of disposal, and sends it
off-site for disposal to a hazardous waste incinerator permitted under
RCRA is not covered by this final rule.
2. Overview
A WCPP encompasses inhalation exposure thresholds, includes
monitoring and recordkeeping requirements to verify that those
thresholds are not exceeded, and may include other components, such as
dermal protection. Under a WCPP, owners or operators have some
flexibility, within the parameters outlined in this Unit, regarding how
they prevent exceedances of the identified EPA exposure limit
thresholds. In the case of TCE, EPA has determined that meeting the EPA
exposure limit thresholds for certain occupational conditions of use is
necessary to protect health from inhalation risks during phaseouts and
while exempted activities are ongoing.
Implementation of the WCPP would have to begin by June 16, 2025 or
within 30 days of introduction of TCE into the workplace, whichever is
later, at which point entities would have to have completed their
initial monitoring (as described in Unit IV.C.4.b.). Additionally, EPA
requires that each owner or operator ensure that the airborne
concentration of TCE does not exceed the interim ECEL for all
potentially exposed persons no later than September 15, 2025, and the
implementation of any needed exposure controls based on initial
monitoring and development of an exposure control plan no later than
September 15, 2025 (as described in Unit IV.C.6.).
EPA uses the term ``potentially exposed person'' in this Unit and
in the regulatory text to include workers, ONUs, employees, independent
contractors, employers, and all other persons in the work area where
TCE is present and who may be exposed to TCE under the conditions of
use for which a WCPP or specific prescriptive controls would apply. As
defined in 40 CFR 751.5, ``Potentially exposed person means any person
who may be exposed to a chemical substance or mixture in a workplace as
a result of a condition of use of that chemical substance or mixture.''
EPA notes that this definition is intended to apply to occupational
workspaces as part of implementation of the WCPP and other
restrictions. One important reason to define a potentially exposed
person for the purposes of a WCPP as any person who may be exposed in
the workplace is to emphasize the broad scope of exposures which must
be categorized when implementing a WCPP. EPA notes that this definition
is intended to apply only in the context of risk management, and
specifically in the context of a WCPP (e.g., workers directly using the
chemical, workers in the vicinity of the use, students in a laboratory
setting). The term is not intended as a replacement for the term
Potentially Exposed or Susceptible Subpopulation as defined by TSCA
section 3(12). EPA additionally recognizes that other individuals or
communities may be exposed to TCE as consumers, members of fenceline
communities, or members of the general population, which is separate
and apart from those potentially exposed for the purposes of the
regulatory requirements of the WCPP. In those instances, where
regulatory requirements address exposures unrelated to a WCPP, EPA
would use distinct terminology to refer to those other populations. For
conditions of use that will continue for longer than 1 year, such as
those under a phaseout or a TSCA section 6(g) exemption, EPA requires a
comprehensive WCPP, prescriptive controls, or wastewater worker
protections to reduce exposures to TCE for potentially exposed persons,
e.g., persons directly handling the chemical or in the area where the
chemical is being used. Similarly, the 2020 Risk Evaluation for TCE
(Ref. 1) did not distinguish between employers, contractors, or other
legal entities or businesses that manufacture, process, distribute in
commerce, use, or dispose of TCE. For this reason, EPA uses the term
``owner or operator'' to describe the entity responsible for
implementing the WCPP, prescriptive controls, or wastewater worker
protection provisions in any workplace where an applicable condition of
use identified in the following paragraph and subject to the WCPP or
controls is occurring. The term includes any person who owns, leases,
operates, controls, or supervises such a workplace. While owners or
operators remain responsible for ensuring compliance with the WCPP
requirements, prescriptive controls, or wastewater worker protections
in the workplace, they may contract with others to provide training or
implement a respiratory protection program, for example. For the
provisions in this rule, any requirement for an owner or operator or an
owner and operator is a requirement for any individual that is either
an owner or an operator.
EPA emphasizes that this approach is essential for protecting
health from the risks presented by TCE during the term of a phaseout or
exemption, including to individuals who may not be covered by OSHA
requirements, such as volunteers, self-employed persons, and state and
local government workers who are not covered by an OSHA-Approved State
Plan. EPA uses the term ``owner or operator'' in TSCA programs because
the term is used in other EPA programs to describe persons with
responsibilities for implementing statutory and regulatory requirements
at particular locations. See, for example, section 113 of the Clean Air
Act (CAA), 42 U.S.C. 7412, which defines ``owner or operator'' as a
person who owns, leases, operates, controls, or supervises a stationary
source. There is a similar definition in section 306 of the Clean Water
Act (CWA), 33 U.S.C. 1316. EPA understands that the use of this term
may result in multiple entities bearing responsibility for complying
with provisions of this final rule, including the WCPP. However, this
is also the case for workplaces regulated by OSHA, including those
regulated under OSHA's general industry standards at 29 CFR part 1910.
OSHA's 1999 Multi-Employer Citation Policy explains which employers
should be cited for a hazard that violates an OSHA standard (Ref. 84).
The Policy describes four different roles that employers may fill at a
workplace and describes who should be cited for a violation based on
factors such as whether the employer created the hazard, had the
ability to prevent or correct the hazard, and knew or should have known
about the hazard. More than one employer may be cited for the same
hazard. This final rule will have similar results, in that more than
one owner or operator may be responsible for compliance.
The OSHA multi-employer citation policy is an example of a guidance
governing situations where more than one regulated entity is present.
EPA has received several requests for clarification of the
applicability of the term ``owner or operator'' to sites where more
than one entity owns, leases, or controls a workplace where a TCE
condition of use is ongoing and where implementation of the WCPP is
required. EPA understands that there are a wide variety of situations
where these questions could arise, and plans to issue guidance
consistent with TSCA
[[Page 102601]]
authorities that explains how EPA will approach the issue of
responsibility for implementation of, and compliance with, the WCPP
requirements in practice.
EPA's implementation of the interim ECEL as part of a WCPP aligns
with, to the extent possible, certain elements of the existing OSHA
standards for regulating toxic and hazardous substances under 29 CFR
part 1910, subpart Z. However, EPA is finalizing a new, lower
occupational exposure limit for TCE, based on the TSCA 2020 Risk
Evaluation for TCE, public comments, and other information as discussed
in Unit III.A.1., while aligning with existing requirements wherever
possible. For TCE, the WCPP and other workplace controls in this final
rule are necessary to protect against health risks from exposures to
TCE while conditions of use are being phased out or are ongoing during
the term of a TSCA section 6(g) exemption and provide the familiarity
of a pre-existing framework for the regulated community.
This Unit includes a summary of the WCPP, including a description
of the finalized exposure limits including an interim ECEL and an
interim ECEL action level; implementation requirements including
monitoring requirements; a description of potential exposure controls
in accordance with the hierarchy of controls, including engineering
controls, administrative controls, and PPE as it relates to dermal
protection and respirator selection; and additional finalized
requirements for recordkeeping, workplace participation, and
notification. This Unit also describes compliance timeframes revised
from the proposed rule, changes by EPA to certain provisions of the
WCPP based on public comments, and addition of new provisions in the
WCPP based on public comments used to inform this final rule.
3. Interim Existing Chemical Exposure Limit (ECEL), EPA Action Level
As discussed in Unit III.A.1., EPA is finalizing an interim ECEL
under TSCA section 6(a) of 0.2 ppm as an 8-hour TWA based on the health
effects of TCE, the infeasibility of measuring the proposed ECEL of
0.0011 ppm, and other factors. By interim ECEL, EPA means an ECEL that
is in place only for the timeframes indicated for each condition of
use, after which prohibitions would take effect. EPA has determined
that ensuring exposures remain at or below the 8-hour TWA ECEL of 0.2
ppm is necessary to protect health for those conditions of use that
will continue for more than a year.
EPA is also finalizing an interim ECEL action level at half of the
8-hour interim ECEL, or 0.1 ppm as an 8-hour TWA. The interim ECEL
action level is a definitive cut-off point below which certain
compliance activities, such as periodic monitoring, are not required as
described further in this Unit. In this way, EPA's WCPP for TCE aligns
with other familiar chemical-specific frameworks in the OSHA standards
for regulating toxic and hazardous substances under 29 CFR part 1910,
subpart Z that establish an action level. As explained by OSHA, the
decision to set the action level at one-half the PEL was based on its
successful experience using this fraction as the action level in many
standards (e.g., arsenic, ethylene oxide, vinyl chloride and benzene);
for most workplaces, the agency found that variability in employee
exposures is normally such that an action level set at one-half the TWA
PEL is appropriate (Ref. 85).
In summary, this final rule requires owners or operators to ensure
the airborne concentration of TCE within the personal breathing zone of
potentially exposed persons remains at or below 0.2 ppm as an 8-hour
TWA ECEL after September 15, 2025, or beginning 120 days after
introduction of TCE into the workplace if TCE use commences after June
16, 2025. EPA is also finalizing an action level of 0.1 ppm as an 8-
hour TWA. For the purposes of this rulemaking, EPA will interpret
personal breathing zone consistent with how OSHA defines it, as a
hemispheric area forward of the shoulders within a six-to-nine-inch
radius of a worker's nose and mouth and requires that exposure
monitoring air samples be collected from within this space (Ref. 86).
EPA is finalizing the interim ECEL for most of those occupational
conditions of use that will continue for more than a year to ensure
that no person is exposed to inhalation of TCE in excess of these
concentrations resulting from those conditions of use (for a small
number of occupational conditions of use, EPA is finalizing
prescriptive controls or other workplace requirements, as described in
more detail in Units IV.D and E). As discussed in Unit III.A.1., one of
the considerations in finalizing this interim ECEL is the availability
of sampling and analytical methods sufficient to accurately detect TCE
concentrations at the proposed ECEL and ECEL action level. OSHA, NIOSH,
and EPA sampling methods (both active and passive) with sufficient
limits of quantification are available to support WCPP implementation
(Ref. 87).
4. Monitoring Requirements
a. In General
Initial monitoring for TCE is critical for establishing a baseline
of exposure for potentially exposed persons; similarly, periodic
exposure monitoring assures continued compliance over time so that
potentially exposed persons are not exposed to levels above the interim
ECEL. Exposure monitoring could be suspended if certain conditions
described in this Unit are met. Also, in some cases, a change in
workplace conditions with the potential to impact exposure levels would
warrant additional monitoring, which is also described.
EPA is finalizing with modifications from proposal its requirement
that owners or operators determine each potentially exposed person's
exposure by either taking a personal breathing zone air sample of each
potentially exposed person's exposure or by taking personal breathing
zone air samples that are representative of each potentially exposed
person with a similar exposure profile to a chemical substance or
mixture based on the substantial similarity of tasks performed, the
manner in which the tasks are performed, and the materials and
processes with which they work (hereinafter identified as an ``exposure
group''). Personal breathing zone air samples are representative of the
8-hour TWA of all potentially exposed persons in an exposure group if
the samples are of the full shift-exposure of at least one person who
represents the highest potential TCE exposures in that exposure group.
In addition, the initial monitoring will be required when and where the
operating conditions are best representative of each potentially
exposed person's work-shift exposures. Personal breathing zone air
samples taken during one work shift may be used to represent
potentially exposed person exposures on other work shifts where the
owner or operator can document that the tasks performed and conditions
in the workplace are similar across shifts. Additionally, air sampling
is required to measure ambient concentrations for TCE without taking
respiratory protections into account as sampling is being performed.
For purposes of exposure monitoring requirements, owners and operators
are only required to monitor potentially exposed persons that are
expected to be present in the workplace.
EPA is also finalizing requirements that the owner or operator
ensure, for initial and periodic monitoring, that their exposure
monitoring methods are accurate to a confidence level of 95%
[[Page 102602]]
and are within (plus or minus) 25% of airborne concentrations of TCE
above the 8-hour TWA interim ECEL. To ensure compliance for monitoring
activities, EPA is finalizing recordkeeping requirements and will
require that owners or operators document their choice of monitoring
method outlined in this Unit. As described in Unit III.A.3., EPA is
finalizing the requirement that owners or operators meet certain
documentation requirements for each monitoring event of TCE, including
compliance with GLP Standards in accordance with 40 CFR part 792 or use
of a laboratory accredited by the AIHA (e.g., AIHA LAP, LLC Policy
Module 2A/B/E of Revision 17.3), or other analogous industry-recognized
program. Additionally, as described in Unit III.A.3., EPA is finalizing
the requirement that owners or operators must re-monitor within 15
working days after receipt of any exposure monitoring when results
indicate non-detect, unless an Environmental Professional as defined at
40 CFR 312.10 or a Certified Industrial Hygienist reviews the
monitoring results and determines re-monitoring is not necessary.
For each monitoring event of TCE, EPA is requiring that the owner
or operator record relevant information, including but not limited to,
the quantity, location(s), and manner of TCE in use at the time of each
monitoring event; the dates, durations, and results of each sample
taken; and the name, work shift, job classification, work area, and
type of respiratory protection (if any) worn by each monitored person.
EPA further requires documentation of the following whenever monitoring
for the WCPP is required:
(i) All measurements that may be necessary to determine the
conditions (e.g., work site temperatures, humidity, ventilation rates,
monitoring equipment type and calibration dates) that may affect the
monitoring results;
(ii) Identification of all other potentially exposed persons that a
monitored person is intended to represent if using a representative
sample;
(iii) Use of appropriate sampling and analytical methods;
(iv) Compliance with the GLP Standards at 40 CFR part 792 or any
accredited lab including AIHA (e.g., AIHA LAP, LLC Policy Module 2A/B/E
of Revision 17.3), or other analogous industry-recognized program;
(v) Information regarding air monitoring equipment, including type,
maintenance, calibrations, performance tests, limits of detection, and
any malfunctions.
b. Initial Exposure Monitoring
Under the final rule, each owner or operator of a facility engaged
in one or more of the conditions of use listed earlier in Unit IV.C.1.,
except disposal, is required to perform initial exposure monitoring by
June 16, 2025 or within 30 days of introduction of TCE into the
workplace, whichever is later, to determine the extent of exposure of
potentially exposed persons to TCE. Initial monitoring will notify
owners and operators of the magnitude of possible exposures to
potentially exposed persons with respect to their work conditions and
environments. Based on the magnitude of possible exposures in the
initial exposure monitoring, the owner or operator may need to increase
or decrease the frequency of future periodic monitoring, adopt new
exposure controls (such as engineering controls, administrative
controls, and/or a respiratory protection program), or to continue or
discontinue certain compliance activities such as periodic monitoring.
In addition, the initial monitoring will be required when and where the
operating conditions are best representative of each potentially
exposed person's work-shift exposures. If the owner or operator chooses
to use a sample that is representative of potentially exposed persons'
work-shift exposures (rather than monitor every individual), such
sampling should be representative (i.e., taken from the breathing zone
of potentially exposed persons and reflect duration appropriate
exposure) of the most highly exposed persons in the workplace.
Additionally, EPA expects that owners and operators will conduct
initial exposure monitoring representative of all tasks that potential
exposed persons are expected to do. EPA understands that certain tasks
may occur less frequently or may reflect accidental exposures (for
example, due to malfunction).
EPA also recognizes that some entities may already have objective
exposure monitoring data. If the owner or operator has monitoring data
conducted within five years prior to the publication date of the final
rule and the monitoring satisfies all other requirements in Unit IV.,
including the requirement that the data represents the highest TCE
exposures likely to occur under reasonably foreseeable conditions of
use, the owner or operator may rely on such earlier monitoring results
for the initial baseline monitoring sample. Prior monitoring data
cannot be used where there has been a change in work conditions or
practices that is expected to result in new or additional exposures.
As described in more detail later in this unit, the owner or
operator must conduct periodic monitoring at least once every five
years since its last monitoring. This periodic monitoring must be
representative of all the potentially exposed persons in the workplace
and the tasks that they are expected to do.
c. Periodic Exposure Monitoring
EPA is finalizing as proposed the following periodic monitoring for
owners or operators. These finalized requirements are also outlined in
Table 1.
If the samples taken during the initial exposure
monitoring reveal a concentration below the interim ECEL action level
(<0.1 ppm 8-hour TWA), ECEL periodic monitoring is required at least
once every five years, except when additional exposure monitoring (Unit
IV.C.4.d.) measurements require it.
If the most recent exposure monitoring concentration is at
or above the interim ECEL action level (>=0.1 ppm 8-hour TWA) but at or
below the interim ECEL (<=0.2 ppm 8-hour TWA), the owner or operator
must repeat the periodic exposure monitoring within 180 days of the
most recent exposure monitoring.
If the most recent exposure monitoring concentration is
above the interim ECEL (>0.2 ppm 8-hour TWA), the owner or operator
must repeat the periodic exposure monitoring within 90 days of the most
recent exposure monitoring.
If the most recent (non-initial) exposure monitoring
indicates that airborne exposure is below the interim ECEL action
level, the owners or operators must repeat such monitoring within 180
days of the most recent monitoring until two consecutive monitoring
measurements, taken at least seven days apart, are below the interim
ECEL action level (<0.1 ppm 8-hour TWA), at which time the owner or
operator must repeat the periodic exposure monitoring at least once
every five years.
In instances where an owner or operator does not
manufacture, process, use, or dispose of TCE for a condition of use for
which the WCPP is required over the entirety of time since the last
required periodic monitoring event, the owner or operator is permitted
to forgo the next periodic monitoring event. However, documentation of
cessation of use of TCE is required and periodic monitoring must resume
when the owner or operator restart any of the conditions of use listed
in Unit IV.C.1., except disposal.
[[Page 102603]]
Table 1--Periodic Monitoring Requirements
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Air concentration condition Periodic monitoring requirement
------------------------------------------------------------------------
If the initial exposure monitoring Periodic exposure monitoring at
concentration is below the interim least once every 5 years.
ECEL action level.
If the most recent exposure monitoring Periodic exposure monitoring is
concentration is at or above the required every 180 days of the
interim ECEL action level but at or most recent exposure
below the interim ECEL. monitoring.
If the most recent exposure monitoring Periodic exposure monitoring is
concentration is above the interim required every 90 days of the
ECEL. most recent exposure
monitoring.
If the two most recent (non-initial) Periodic exposure monitoring is
exposure monitoring measurements, required within five years of
taken at least seven days apart within the most recent exposure
a 6-month period, indicate that monitoring.
airborne exposure is below the interim
ECEL action level (<0.1 ppm 8-hr TWA).
If the owner or operator engages in a The owner or operator may forgo
condition of use for which WCPP is the next periodic monitoring
required but does not manufacture, event. However, documentation
process, use, or dispose of TCE in of cessation of use of TCE is
that condition of use over the required and periodic
entirety of time since the last monitoring is required when
required monitoring event. the owner or operator resumes
the condition of use.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Note: Additional scenarios in which monitoring may be required are
discussed in Unit IV.C.4.d.
d. Additional Exposure Monitoring
EPA is finalizing that each owner or operator conduct additional
exposure monitoring within 30 days after there has been a change in the
production, process, control equipment, personnel or work practices
that may reasonably be expected to result in new or additional
exposures at or above the interim ECEL action level, or when the owner
or operator has any reason to believe that new or additional exposures
at or above the interim ECEL action level have occurred, for example if
an owner or operator receives information from potentially exposed
person(s) suggesting that such new or additional exposures may have
occurred. Prior monitoring data cannot be used to meet this
requirement. In the event of start-up or shutdown, or spills, leaks,
ruptures or other breakdowns or unexpected releases that may lead to
exposure to potentially exposed persons, EPA is finalizing that each
owner or operator must conduct additional exposure monitoring of
potentially exposed persons (using personal breathing zone sampling)
within 30 days after the conclusion of the start-up or shutdown and/or
the cleanup of the spill or repair of the leak, rupture, or other
breakdown. Prior monitoring data cannot be used to meet this
requirement. An additional exposure monitoring event may result in an
increased frequency of periodic monitoring. For example, if the initial
monitoring results from a workplace are above the interim ECEL action
level, but below the interim ECEL, periodic monitoring is required
every 180 days. If additional monitoring is performed because increased
exposures are suspected, and the results are above the interim ECEL,
subsequent periodic monitoring would have to be performed every 90
days. The required additional exposure monitoring should not delay
implementation of any necessary cleanup or other remedial action to
reduce the exposures to persons in the workplace.
5. Regulated Area
EPA is finalizing its requirement that the owner or operator
demarcate any area where airborne concentrations of TCE exceeds or are
reasonably expected to exceed the interim ECEL by September 15, 2025,
or within 90 days after receipt of any exposure monitoring that
indicates exposures exceeding the interim ECEL. To provide more clarity
regarding how regulated areas must be demarcated, EPA has incorporated
the language analogous to OSHA's regulated area requirements under the
standards for toxic and hazardous substances (29 CFR part 1910, subpart
Z) into this final rule. Owners and operators must demarcate regulated
areas from the rest of the workplace in any manner that adequately
establishes and alerts potentially exposed persons to the boundaries of
the area and minimizes the number of authorized persons exposed to TCE
within the regulated area. This can be accomplished using
administrative controls (e.g., highly visible signifiers) in multiple
languages as appropriate (e.g., whenever potentially exposed persons
who are primarily Spanish-speaking are likely to be present, owners and
operators should post additional highly visible signifiers in Spanish),
placed in conspicuous areas. The owner or operator is required to
restrict access to the regulated area from any potentially exposed
person who lacks proper training or is otherwise unauthorized to enter.
6. Exposure Control Plan
EPA is finalizing its requirement that owners or operators
implementing the WCPP use feasible exposure controls, including one or
a combination of elimination, substitution, engineering controls, and
administrative controls, prior to requiring the use of PPE (i.e.,
respirators or gloves) as a means of controlling exposures below EPA's
interim ECEL and/or prevent direct dermal contact with TCE for all
potentially exposed persons, in accordance with the hierarchy of
controls (Ref. 88). As this rule finalizes phaseout or time-limited
exemption before prohibition, EPA encourages owners and operators to
thoroughly investigate and implement elimination, substitution, and
available engineering controls during the phase-out. If an owner or
operator chooses to replace TCE with a substitute, EPA recommends
careful review of the available hazard and exposure information on the
potential substitutes to avoid a substitute chemical that might later
be found to present an unreasonable risk of injury to health or the
environment or be subject to regulation (sometimes referred to as a
``regrettable substitution''). EPA expects that, for conditions of use
for which EPA is finalizing a WCPP, compliance at most workplaces would
be part of an established industrial hygiene program that aligns with
the hierarchy of controls.
EPA is finalizing the requirement that regulated entities use the
hierarchy of controls, instituting one or a combination of controls to
the extent feasible, and supplement such protections using PPE, where
necessary, including respirators for potentially exposed persons at
risk of inhalation exposure above the interim ECEL. If efforts of
elimination, substitution, engineering controls, and administrative
controls are not sufficient to reduce exposures to or below the interim
ECEL for all potentially exposed persons in the workplace, EPA requires
that the
[[Page 102604]]
owner or operator use feasible controls to reduce TCE concentrations in
the workplace to the lowest levels achievable and supplement these
controls with respiratory protection and PPE as needed to achieve the
interim ECEL before potentially exposed persons enter a regulated area.
During the phase-out period, EPA encourages investment in elimination
and substitution along with the use of readily available engineering
controls. In cases where respiratory PPE is necessary to supplement
feasible controls, EPA requires that the owner or operator provide
potentially exposed persons reasonably likely to be exposed to TCE by
inhalation to concentrations above the interim ECEL with respirators
affording sufficient protection against inhalation risk and appropriate
training on the proper use of such respirators, to ensure that their
exposures do not exceed the interim ECEL, as described in this Unit.
Furthermore, EPA also requires that the owner or operator document
their efforts in using elimination, substitution, engineering controls,
and administrative controls to reduce exposure to or below the interim
ECEL in an exposure control plan.
EPA is finalizing its requirement that, no later than December 18,
2025, the owner or operator include and document in the exposure
control plan or through any existing documentation of the facility's
safety and health program developed as part of meeting OSHA
requirements or other safety and health standards, the following:
Identification in the exposure control plan of available
exposure controls and rationale for using or not using available
exposure controls in the following sequence (i.e., elimination and
substitution, then engineering controls and administrative controls) to
reduce exposures in the workplace to either at or below the interim
ECEL or to the lowest level achievable, and the exposure controls
selected based on feasibility, effectiveness, and other relevant
considerations;
For each exposure control considered, exposure controls
selected based on feasibility, effectiveness, and other relevant
considerations;
A description of actions the owner or operator must take
to implement exposure controls selected, including proper installation,
regular inspections, maintenance, training, or other steps taken;
A description of each regulated area, how they are
demarcated, and persons authorized to enter the regulated areas;
A description of activities conducted by the owner or
operator to review and update the exposure control plan to ensure
effectiveness of the exposure controls, identify any necessary updates
to the exposure controls, and confirm that all persons are properly
implementing the exposure controls; and
An explanation of the procedures for responding to any
change that may reasonably be expected to introduce additional sources
of exposure to TCE, or otherwise result in increased exposure to TCE,
including procedures for implementing corrective actions to mitigate
exposure to TCE.
Under this final rule, owners or operators are prohibited from
using rotating work schedules to comply with the interim ECEL 8-hour
TWA, in alignment with certain elements of existing OSHA's standards
for toxic and hazardous substances under 29 CFR part 1910, subpart Z.
Owners or operators must maintain the effectiveness of any engineering
controls, administrative controls, or work practices instituted as part
of the exposure control plan. They must also review and update the
exposure control plan as necessary, but at least every five years, to
reflect any significant changes in the status of the owner or
operator's approach to compliance with the exposure control
requirements. EPA intends that the exposure control plan identify the
available exposure controls and, for the exposure controls not
selected, document the efforts identifying why these are not feasible,
not effective, or otherwise not implemented. For entities for which
significant amounts of time are needed to verify suitability of
alternatives or procure funds or authorization for additional
engineering controls, for example, EPA expects that as those controls
become available the exposure control plan would be updated
accordingly. EPA requires that the exposure control plan be revisited
under certain conditions and encourages updates as more sophisticated
controls are available.
This final rule requires owners or operators to make the exposure
control plan and associated records, including interim ECEL exposure
monitoring records, interim ECEL compliance records, and workplace
participation records, available to potentially exposed persons and
their designated representatives. Owners or operators must notify
potentially exposed persons and their designated representatives of the
availability of the exposure control plan and associated records within
30 days of the date that the exposure control plan is completed and at
least annually thereafter. The notice of the availability of the plan
and associated records must be provided in plain language writing to
each potentially exposed person in a language that the person
understands or posted in an appropriate and accessible location outside
the regulated area with an English-language version and a non-English
version representing the language of the largest group of workers who
do not read English. This final rule also requires the owner or
operator to provide the exposure control plan and associated records at
a reasonable time, place, and manner to a potentially exposed person or
their designated representative upon request. As explained in Unit
III.A.4., if the owner or operator is unable to provide the specified
records within 15 working days, the owner or operator must inform the
potentially exposed person or designated representative requesting the
record within 15 working days that reason for the delay and the
earliest date when the record can be made available.
7. Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)
Where elimination, substitution, engineering, and administrative
controls are not feasible or sufficiently protective to reduce the air
concentration to or below the interim ECEL, EPA is finalizing as
proposed, with slight modifications to improve clarity or for greater
consistency with OSHA's regulations, to require owners and operators to
provide PPE, including respiratory protection and dermal protection
selected in accordance with the guidelines described in Units IV.C.7.a.
and b. and to implement a PPE program described in this Unit. This Unit
includes a description of the PPE Program, including required PPE as it
relates to respiratory protection, required PPE as it relates to dermal
protection, and other requirements such as additional training for
respirators and recordkeeping to support implementation of a PPE
program. Compliance with these requirements must occur no later than
September 15, 2025, or, for requirements related to respiratory
protection, within 90 days after the receipt of any exposure monitoring
that indicates exposures exceeding the interim ECEL.
a. Respiratory Protection
Where elimination, substitution, engineering, and administrative
controls are not feasible or sufficiently protective to reduce the air
concentration to or below the interim ECEL, or if inhalation exposure
above the interim ECEL is still reasonably likely, EPA is finalizing,
with slight modification from the proposed rule, minimum respiratory
PPE requirements based on an owner or
[[Page 102605]]
operator's most recent measured air concentration for one or more
potentially exposed persons and the level of PPE needed to reduce
exposure to or below the interim ECEL. In those circumstances, EPA is
finalizing requirements for a respiratory protection PPE program with
worksite-specific procedures and elements for required respirator use.
Owners or operators must develop and administer a written respiratory
protection program in accordance with OSHA's respiratory protection
standard under 29 CFR 1910.134(c)(1), (c)(3), and (c)(4). EPA is
finalizing requirements that owners and operators provide training to
all persons required to use respiratory protection consistent with 29
CFR 1910.134(k) prior to or at the time of initial assignment to a job
involving potential exposure to TCE. Owners and operators must retrain
all persons required to use PPE at least annually, or whenever the
owner or operator has reason to believe that a previously trained
person does not have the required understanding and skill to properly
use PPE, or when changes in the workplace or in PPE to be used render
the previous training obsolete.
EPA is finalizing requirements that each owner or operator supply a
respirator, selected in accordance with this Unit, to each person who
enters a regulated area after September 15, 2025, or within 90 days
after the receipt of any exposure monitoring that indicates exposures
exceeding the interim ECEL, and thereafter must ensure that all persons
within the regulated area are using the provided respirators whenever
TCE exposures exceed or can reasonably be expected to exceed the
interim ECEL.
EPA is also finalizing requirements that owners or operators who
are required to administer a respiratory protection PPE program must
supply a respirator selected based on a medical evaluation consistent
with the requirements of 29 CFR 1910.134(e). If a potentially exposed
person cannot use a negative-pressure respirator, then the owner or
operator must provide that person with an alternative respirator. The
alternative respirator must have less breathing resistance than the
negative-pressure respirator and provide equivalent or greater
protection. If the person is unable to use an alternative respirator,
then the person must not be permitted to enter the regulated area.
Additionally, EPA is requiring owners and operators to select
respiratory protection that properly fits each affected person and
communicate respirator selections to each affected person in accordance
with the requirements of 29 CFR 1910.134(f). Consistent with
requirements of 29 CFR 1910.134(g) through (j), EPA is requiring owners
and operators to provide, ensure use of, and maintain (in a sanitary,
reliable, and undamaged condition), respiratory protection that is of
safe design and construction.
EPA is finalizing the requirements to establish minimum respiratory
protection requirements, such that any respirator affording a higher
degree of protection than the following requirements may be used. In
instances where respiratory protection is appropriate, NIOSH
Approved[supreg] equipment must be used. NIOSH Approved is a
certification mark of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
(HHS) registered in the United States and several international
jurisdictions. EPA is finalizing the following requirements for
respiratory protection, based on the most recent exposure monitoring
concentrations results measured as an 8-hour TWA that exceed the
interim ECEL (0.2 ppm):
If the measured exposure concentration is at or below 0.2
ppm: no respiratory protection is required.
If the measured exposure concentration is above 0.2 ppm
and less than or equal to 2 ppm (10 times interim ECEL): Any NIOSH
Approved air-purifying half mask respirator equipped with organic vapor
cartridges or canisters; or any NIOSH Approved Supplied-Air Respirator
(SAR) or Airline Respirator operated in demand mode equipped with a
half mask; or any NIOSH Approved Self-Contained Breathing Apparatus
(SCBA) in a demand mode equipped with a half mask [APF 10].
If the measured exposure concentration is above 2 ppm and
less than or equal to 5 ppm (25 times interim ECEL): Any NIOSH Approved
Powered Air-Purifying Respirator (PAPR) equipped with a loose-fitting
facepiece or hood/helmet equipped with organic vapor cartridges or
canisters; or any NIOSH Approved SAR or Airline Respirator in a
continuous-flow mode equipped with a loose-fitting facepiece or helmet/
hood [APF 25].
If the measured exposure concentration is above 5 ppm and
less than or equal to 10 ppm (50 times interim ECEL): Any NIOSH
Approved air-purifying full facepiece respirator equipped with organic
vapor cartridges or canisters; any NIOSH Approved PAPR with a half mask
equipped with organic vapor cartridges or canisters; any NIOSH Approved
SAR or Airline Respirator in a continuous flow mode equipped with a
half mask; any NIOSH Approved SAR or Airline Respirator operated in a
pressure-demand or other positive-pressure mode with a half mask; or
any NIOSH Approved SCBA in demand-mode equipped with a full facepiece
or helmet/hood [APF 50].
If the measured exposure concentration is above 10 ppm and
less than or equal to 200 ppm (1,000 times interim ECEL): Any NIOSH
Approved PAPR equipped with a full facepiece equipped with organic
vapor cartridges or canisters; any NIOSH Approved SAR or Airline
Respirator in a continuous-flow mode equipped with full facepiece; any
NIOSH Approved SAR or Airline Respirator in pressure-demand or other
positive-pressure mode equipped with a full facepiece and an auxiliary
self-contained air supply; or any NIOSH Approved SAR or Airline
Respirator in a continuous-flow mode equipped with a helmet or hood and
has been tested to demonstrate performance at a level of protection of
APF 1,000 or greater. [APF 1,000].
If the measured exposure concentration is greater than 200
ppm (1,000+ times interim ECEL) or the concentration is unknown: Any
NIOSH Approved SAR equipped with a full facepiece and operated in a
pressure demand or other positive pressure mode in combination with an
auxiliary self-contained breathing apparatus operated in a pressure
demand or other positive pressure mode [APF 1000+]; or any NIOSH
Approved SCBA in a pressure-demand or other positive-pressure mode
equipped with a full facepiece or helmet/hood [APF 10,000].
If the exposure concentration is unknown: Any NIOSH
Approved combination supplied air respirator equipped with a full
facepiece and operated in pressure demand or other positive pressure
mode with an auxiliary self-contained air supply; or any NIOSH Approved
SCBA operated in pressure demand or other positive pressure mode and
equipped with a full facepiece or hood/helmet [APF 1000+].
Additionally, EPA is finalizing requirements that owners or
operators select and provide respirators in accordance with the
requirements of 29 CFR 1910.134(d)(1)(iv) and with consideration of
workplace and user factors that affect respirator performance and
reliability. EPA is requiring that the owner or operator must ensure
that all filters, cartridges, and canisters used in the workplace are
labeled and color coded per NIOSH requirements and that the label is
not removed and remains legible. Consistent with 29 CFR
1910.134(d)(3)(iii), EPA is requiring either the use of NIOSH Approved
respirators with an end-of-life service indicator for the contaminant,
in this case TCE, or implementation of a
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change schedule for canisters and cartridges that ensures that they are
changed before the end of their service life. EPA is also requiring
owners and operators to ensure that respirators are used in compliance
with the terms of the respirator's NIOSH approval.
EPA is finalizing requirements that owners and operators must
conduct regular evaluations of the workplace, including consultations
with potentially exposed persons using respiratory protection,
consistent with the requirements of 29 CFR 1910.134(l), to ensure that
the provisions of the written respiratory protection program described
in this Unit are being effectively implemented.
EPA is finalizing that owners and operators document respiratory
protection used and PPE program implementation. EPA is finalizing
requirements that owners and operators document in the exposure control
plan or other documentation of the facility's safety and health program
information relevant to the respiratory program, including records on
the name, workplace address, work shift, job classification, work area,
and type of respirator worn (if any) by each potentially exposed
person, maintenance, and fit-testing, as described in 29 CFR
1910.134(f), and training in accordance with 29 CFR 1910.132(f) and 29
CFR 1910.134(k).
b. Dermal Protection
This final rule requires owners and operators to provide and
require the use of chemically resistant gloves by potentially exposed
persons for tasks where TCE is present and dermal exposure can be
expected to occur under the conditions of use. Compliance with this
requirement must occur no later than September 15, 2025. Owners and
operators should also consider other glove factors, such as
compatibility of multiple chemicals used simultaneously while wearing
TCE-resistant gloves or with glove liners, permeation, degree of
dexterity required to perform a task, and temperature, as identified in
the Hand Protection section of OSHA's Personal Protection Equipment
Guidance (Ref. 89), when selecting appropriate PPE. Owners and
operators can select gloves that have been tested in accordance with
the American Society for Testing Material F739 ``Standard Test Method
for Permeation of Liquids and Gases through Protective Clothing
Materials under Conditions of Continuous Contact.''
Owners and operators must provide dermal PPE that is of safe design
and construction for the work to be performed and that properly fits
each potentially exposed person who is required to use dermal PPE.
Owners and operators must also communicate dermal PPE selections to
each affected person and ensure that each potentially exposed person
who is required by this unit to wear PPE uses and maintains PPE in a
sanitary, reliable, and undamaged condition. Activity-specific training
(e.g., glove selection (type, material), expected duration of glove
effectiveness, actions to take when glove integrity is compromised,
storage requirements, procedure for glove removal and disposal,
chemical hazards) must be provided in accordance with 29 CFR
1910.132(f).
8. Additional Finalized Requirements
a. Workplace Information and Training
EPA is also finalizing its requirements to implement a training
program in alignment with the OSHA Hazard Communication Standard (29
CFR 1910.1200) and chemical-specific standards, such as the OSHA
General Industry Standard for Methylene Chloride (29 CFR 1910.1052). To
ensure that potentially exposed persons in the workplace are informed
of the hazards associated with TCE exposure, EPA is finalizing as
proposed with slight modification to require that owners or operators
of workplaces subject to the WCPP institute a training and information
program by September 15, 2025 for potentially exposed persons and
assure their participation in the program. For purposes of workplace
information and training, owners and operators are only required to
train potentially exposed persons that are expected to be present in
the regulated area or to directly handle TCE or handle equipment or
materials on which TCE may present.
As part of the training requirement, the owner or operator is
required to provide information and comprehensive training in an
understandable manner (i.e., plain language), considering factors such
as the skills required to perform the work activity and the existing
skill level of the staff performing the work, and in multiple languages
as appropriate (e.g., based on languages spoken by potentially exposed
persons) to potentially exposed persons. This training and information
must be provided prior to or at the time of initial assignment to a job
involving potential exposure to TCE. Owners and operators are required
to provide information and training, as referenced in the OSHA Hazard
Communication Standard, to all potentially exposed persons that
includes:
The requirements of the TCE WCPP and how to access or
obtain a copy of the requirements of the WCPP, including but not
limited to the exposure control plan, monitoring requirements, and PPE
program;
The quantity, location, manner of use, release, and
storage of TCE and the specific operations in the workplace that could
result in TCE exposure, particularly noting where each regulated area
is located;
Principles of safe use and handling of TCE in the
workplace, including specific measures the owner or operator has
implemented to reduce inhalation exposure at or below the interim ECEL
or prevent dermal contact with TCE, such as work practices and PPE
used;
The methods and observations that may be used to detect
the presence or release of TCE in the workplace (such as monitoring
conducted by the owner or operator, continuous monitoring devices,
visual appearance, or odor of TCE when being released, etc.); and
The acute and chronic health hazards of TCE as detailed on
relevant SDSs.
In addition to providing training at the time of initial assignment
to a job involving potential exposure to TCE, owners and operators
subject to the TCE WCPP are required to re-train each potentially
exposed person annually to ensure they understand the principles of
safe use and handling of TCE in the workplace. EPA is finalizing its
requirements that owners and update the training as necessary whenever
there are changes in the workplace, such as new tasks or modifications
of tasks, in particular, whenever there are changes in the workplace
that increase exposure to TCE or where potentially exposed persons'
exposure to TCE can reasonably be expected to exceed the action level
or increase the potential for direct dermal contact with TCE. To
support compliance, EPA is finalizing as proposed that each owner or
operator of a workplace subject to the WCPP is required to provide to
the EPA, upon request, all available materials related to workplace
information and training.
b. Workplace Participation
EPA encourages owners and operators to consult with potentially
exposed persons and their designated representatives on the development
and implementation of exposure control plans and PPE/respirator
programs. EPA is finalizing the requirement that owners and operators
provide potentially exposed persons and their designated
representatives regular access to the exposure control plans, exposure
monitoring records, and PPE
[[Page 102607]]
program implementation. To ensure compliance with workplace
participation, EPA is finalizing its requirement that the owner or
operator document the notice to and ability of any potentially exposed
person who may reasonably be affected by TCE exposure to readily access
the exposure control plans, facility exposure monitoring records, PPE
program implementation, or any other information relevant to TCE
exposure in the workplace.
c. Notification of Monitoring Results
EPA is finalizing the requirement that the owner or operator must,
within 15 working days after receipt of the results of any exposure
monitoring, notify each person whose exposures are monitored or who is
part of a monitored exposure group and their designated representatives
in writing, in plain language, either individually to each potentially
exposed person or by posting the information in an appropriate and
accessible location, such as public spaces or common areas, for
potentially exposed persons outside of the regulated area. The notice
is required to identify the exposure monitoring results, the interim
ECEL and interim ECEL action level, statement of whether the monitored
airborne concentration of TCE exceeds the interim ECEL and the interim
ECEL action level, and any corresponding respiratory protection
required. If the interim ECEL is exceeded, the notice must also include
a description of the actions taken by the owner or operator to reduce
inhalation exposures to or below the interim ECEL. The notice must also
include the quantity, location, and manner of TCE use at the time of
monitoring. The notice must also include identified releases of TCE.
The notice must be provided in multiple languages if necessary.
Specifically, notice must be provided in a language that each
potentially exposed person understands, or posted in a non-English
language version representing the language of the largest group of
workers who cannot readily comprehend or read English).
d. Recordkeeping
For owners and operators to demonstrate compliance with the WCPP
provisions, EPA is requiring that owners and operators must retain
compliance records for five years (although this requirement does not
supplant any longer recordkeeping retention time periods such as those
required under 29 CFR 1910.1020, or other applicable regulations). EPA
is requiring the owner or operator to retain records of:
Exposure control plan;
Regulated areas and authorized personnel;
Facility exposure monitoring records;