

[Federal Register: October 4, 2005 (Volume 70, Number 191)]
[Proposed Rules]               
[Page 57822-57847]
From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:fr04oc05-34]                         

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ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY

40 CFR Part 372

[TRI-2005-0073; FRL-7532-8]
RIN 2025-AA14

 
Toxics Release Inventory Burden Reduction Proposed Rule

AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).

ACTION: Proposed rule.

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SUMMARY: Under section 313 of the Emergency Planning and Community 
Right-to-Know Act (EPCRA), the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) 
proposes to revise certain requirements for the Toxics Release 
Inventory (TRI). The purpose of these revisions is to reduce reporting 
burden associated with the TRI reporting requirements while continuing 
to provide valuable information to the public that fulfills the 
purposes of the TRI program. ``Burden'' is the total time, effort, or 
financial resources expended by persons to generate, maintain, retain, 
disclose, or provide information to or for a Federal agency. The Agency 
will continue to provide valuable information to the public pursuant to 
section 313 of EPCRA and section 6607 of the Pollution Prevention Act 
(PPA) regarding toxic chemical releases and other waste management 
activities.
    If adopted, today's proposed action would increase eligibility for 
the Form A Certification Statement for non-Persistent Bioaccumulative 
and Toxic (PBT) chemicals by raising the eligibility threshold to 5000 
pounds for the ``annual reportable amount'' of a toxic chemical. It 
would also, for the first time, allow limited use of Form A for PBT 
chemicals where total releases are zero and the PBT annual reportable 
amount does not exceed 500 pounds. Dioxin and dioxin-like compounds are 
excluded from consideration for expanded Form A eligibility. Today's 
proposal applies to the reporting of individual chemicals and is not 
intended to apply automatically to all reports that a facility may be 
required to file.
    For non-PBTs under the current regulations, the annual reportable 
amount is the combined total quantity released at the facility, treated 
at the facility, recovered at the facility as a result of recycle 
operations, combusted for the purpose of energy recovery at the 
facility, and amounts transferred from the facility to off-site 
locations for the purpose of recycling, energy recovery, treatment, 
and/or disposal. This combined total corresponds to the quantity of the 
toxic chemical in production--related waste, i.e., the sum of Sections 
8.1 through and including Section 8.7 of the Form R. Today's proposal 
would define a PBT annual reportable amount that would also include 
amounts managed and reported under Section 8.8 of the Form R. Greater 
detail on how reporters can qualify for increased Form A eligibility is 
provided later in today's proposal under Section III.

DATES: Comments, identified by the Docket ID No. TRI-2005-0073, must be 
received on or before December 5, 2005.

ADDRESSES: Submit your comments, identified by Docket ID No. TRI-2005-
0073, by one of the following methods:
     Federal eRulemaking Portal: http://www.regulations.gov. 

Follow the on-line instructions for submitting comments.
     Agency Web site: http://www.epa.gov/edocket. EDOCKET, 

EPA's electronic public docket and comment system, is EPA's preferred 
method for receiving comments. Follow the on-line instructions for 
submitting comments.
     E-mail: oei.docket@epa.gov
     Fax: 202-566-0741.
     Mail: Office of Environmental Information (OEI) Docket,

[[Page 57823]]

Environmental Protection Agency, Mail Code: 28221T, 1200 Pennsylvania 
Ave., NW., Washington, DC 20460. Attention Docket ID No. TRI-2005-0073.
     Hand Delivery: EPA Docket Center, (EPA/DC) EPA West, Room 
B102, 1301 Constitution Ave., NW., Washington, DC 20004, telephone: 
202-566-1744, Attention Docket ID No. TRI-2005-0073. Such deliveries 
are only accepted during the Docket's normal hours of operation (8:30 
a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday, excluding legal holidays). 
Special arrangements should be made for deliveries of boxed 
information.
    Instructions: Direct your comments to Docket ID No. TRI-2005-0073. 
EPA's policy is that all comments received will be included in the 
public docket without change and may be made available online at: 
http://www.epa.gov/edocket, including any personal information 

provided, unless the comment includes information claimed to be 
Confidential Business Information (CBI) or other information for which 
disclosure is restricted by statute. Do not submit information that you 
consider to be CBI or otherwise protected through EDOCKET, http://www.regulations.gov
, or e-mail. The EPA EDOCKET and the Federal 

regulations.gov Web sites are ``anonymous access'' systems, which means 
EPA will not know your identity or contact information unless you 
provide it in the body of your comment. If you send an e-mail comment 
directly to EPA without going through EDOCKET or http://www.regulations.gov
, your e-mail address will be automatically captured 

and included as part of the comment that is placed in the public docket 
and made available on the Internet. If you submit an electronic 
comment, EPA recommends that you include your name and other contact 
information in the body of your comment and with any disk or CD-ROM you 
submit. If EPA cannot read your comment due to technical difficulties 
and cannot contact you for clarification, EPA may not be able to 
consider your comment. Electronic files should avoid the use of special 
characters, any form of encryption, and be free of any defects or 
viruses.
    Docket: EPA has established an official public docket for this 
action under Docket ID No. TRI-2005-0073. The public docket contains 
information considered by EPA in developing this proposed rule, 
including the documents listed below, which are electronically or 
physically located in the docket. In addition, interested parties 
should consult documents that are referenced in the documents that EPA 
has placed in the docket, regardless of whether these referenced 
documents are electronically or physically located in the docket. For 
assistance in locating documents that are referenced in documents that 
EPA has placed in the docket, but that are not electronically or 
physically located in the docket, please consult the person listed in 
the following FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section. All documents in 
the docket are listed in the EDOCKET index at: http://www.epa.gov/edocket.
 Although listed in the index, some information is not publicly 

available, i.e., CBI or other information for which disclosure is 
restricted by statute. Certain other material, such as copyrighted 
material, is not placed on the Internet and will be publicly available 
only in hard copy form. Publicly available docket materials are 
available either electronically in EDOCKET, or in hard copy at the OEI 
Docket, EPA/DC, EPA West, Room B102, 1301 Constitution Ave., NW., 
Washington, DC. The Public Reading Room is open from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 
p.m., Monday through Friday, excluding legal holidays. The telephone 
number for the Public Reading Room is 202-566-1744, and the telephone 
number for the OEI Docket is 202-566-1752.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For more specific information or 
technical questions relating to this rule, contact Kevin Donovan, 
Toxics Release Inventory Program Division, Office of Information 
Analysis and Access (2844T), Environmental Protection Agency, 1200 
Pennsylvania Ave., NW., Washington, DC 20460; telephone number: 202-
566-0676; fax number: 202-566-0741; e-mail: donovan.kevin-e@epa.gov. 
The press point of contact for this rule is Suzanne Ackerman, Office of 
Public Affairs, 202-564-4355. For general inquiries relating to the 
Toxics Release Inventory or more information on EPCRA section 313, 
contact the TRI Information Center Hotline, Environmental Protection 
Agency, Mail Code 5101, 1200 Pennsylvania Ave., NW., Washington, DC 
20460; toll free: 1-800-424-9346, in Virginia and Alaska: 703-412-9810, 
or toll free TDD: 1-800-553-7672.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

Index

I. Background and General Information
    A. Acronyms and Abbreviations Used in this Document
    B. Does this Document Apply to Me?
    C. What Should I Consider as I Prepare My Comments for EPA?
    1. Tips for Preparing Your Comments
    2. Submitting Confidential Business Information (CBI)
    D. What Are the Toxics Release Inventory Reporting Requirements 
and Who Do They Affect?
    E. Why Is EPA Proposing to Reduce Burden Associated with TRI 
Reporting Requirements?
    F. What Actions has EPA Taken in the Past to Streamline TRI 
Reporting?
    1. TRI-ME and Reporting Assistance
    2. Form A Certification Statement
    3. Stakeholder Dialogue
    G. Burden Reduction Estimation Methodology Used in Today's 
Proposal
    1. Summary of Basic Methodology
    Table 1--Estimated Hours of Burden for a TRI Form
II. What Is EPA's Statutory Authority for Taking this Action?
III. What Reporting Requirement Changes Are Being Proposed?
    A. Reference Guide for Burden Reduction Options
    Figure 1--Section 8 of Form R
    Table 2--Burden Reduction Terms
    Figure 2--Form R
    Figure 3--Form A
B. Background on the Form A Certification Statement
C. Form A Eligibility--PBT Chemicals: Allows PBT Reporting 
Facilities with No Releases to the Environment To Use Form A 
Provided They Do Not Exceed a 1,000,000 Pound ``Alternate 
Threshold'' and Have 500 Pounds or Less of Total Other Waste 
Management Quantities.
    1. Description of Proposed Change and Considerations
    a. What Is this Approach to Burden Reduction?
    b. Is the Approach Available to All TRI Chemicals?
    c. Why Is this Approach Being Considered for PBT Chemicals?
    i. Lead and Lead Compounds
    ii. PACs and Benzo(g,h,i)perylene
    iii. Mercury and Mercury Compounds
    d. How Often Is this Approach Available to TRI Facilities?
    e. What Are the Reporting Requirements?
    f. Do My Recordkeeping Requirements Change?
    2. Estimates of Potential Impacts
    a. What Are the Potential Impacts for Reducing Burden?
    b. What Are the Potential Impacts to Data Users?
    c. Are There Other Potential Impacts?
    3. Rationale for Expanding Form A Eligibility to PBT Chemicals
D. Expanding Form A Eligibility--Non-PBT Chemicals: Allows Non-PBT 
Reporting Facilities To Use an Alternate Reporting Threshold 
Provided They Do Not Exceed 5000 Pounds of Total Other Waste 
Management Quantities.
    1. Description of Proposed Change
    a. What Is this Approach to Burden Reduction?
    b. Is this Approach Available to All TRI Chemicals?
    c. How Often Is the Approach Available to TRI Facilities?
    d. What Are the Reporting Requirements?
    e. Do My Record Keeping Requirements Change?

[[Page 57824]]

    2. Estimates of Potential Impacts
    a. What Are the Potential Impacts for Reducing Burden?
    b. What Are the Potential Impacts to Data Users?
    Table 3--Potential Incremental Effects of All Newly Eligible 
Reporters Using Form A for non-PBTs
    3. Rationale for Expanding Form A Eligibility for Non-PBT 
Chemicals
IV. Requests for Public Comment
V. What Are the Statutory and Executive Order Reviews Associated 
With This Action?
    A. Executive Order 12866, Regulatory Planning and Review
    1. Methodology
    2. Cost and Burden Savings Results
    Table 4--Potential Annual Cost and Burden Savings of the Phase 
II TRI Burden Reduction Proposal
    3. Impacts to Data
    B. Paperwork Reduction Act
    C. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA), as Amended by the Small 
Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996 (SBREFA), 5 
U.S.C. 601 et seq.
    D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
    E. Executive Order 13132, Federalism
    F. Executive Order 13175, Consultation and Coordination with 
Indian Tribal Governments
    G. Executive Order 13211, Actions Concerning Regulations That 
Significantly Affect Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use
    H. Executive Order 13045, Protection of Children from 
Environmental Health Risks and Safety Risks
    I. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act
    J. Environmental Justice

I. Background and General Information

A. Acronyms and Abbreviations Used in This Document

ARA--Annual Reportable Amount
CAA--Clean Air Act
CBI--Confidential Business Information
CDX--Central Data Exchange
CFR--Code of Federal Regulations
E.O.--Executive Order
EPA--U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
EPCRA--Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act
ICR--Information Collection Request
MACT--Maximum Achievable Control Technology
NA--Not Applicable
NTTAA--National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act of 1995
OEI--Office of Environmental Information (EPA)
OMB--Office of Management and Budget (Executive Office of the 
President)
PAC--Polycyclic Aromatic Compound
PBT--Persistent, Bioaccumulative, and Toxic
PDR--Public Data Release
PPA--Pollution Prevention Act
PPM--Parts per million
PRA--PBT Reportable Amount
RCRA--Resource Conservation and Recovery Act
RFA--Regulatory Flexibility Act
RY--Reporting Year
SBREFA--Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996
SIC--Standard Industrial Classification
TEQ--Toxic Equivalency Quotient
TPRW--Total Production Related Waste (total disposal and other 
releases plus all other production related waste management 
activities)
TRI--Toxics Release Inventory
TRI-ME--Toxics Release Inventory--Made Easy
UMRA--Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
U.S.C.--United States Code

B. Does This Document Apply to Me?

    This document applies to facilities that submit annual reports 
under section 313 of the Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know 
Act (EPCRA) and the Pollution Prevention Act (PPA). It specifically 
applies to those that submit the TRI Form R or Form A Certification 
Statement. (See http://www.epa.gov/tri/report/index.htm#forms for 

detailed information about EPA's TRI reporting forms.) To determine 
whether your facility would be affected by this action, you should 
carefully examine the applicability criteria in part 372, subpart B, of 
Title 40 of the Code of Federal Regulations. If you have questions 
regarding the applicability of this action to a particular entity, 
consult the person listed in the preceding FOR FURTHER INFORMATION 
CONTACT section.
    This document also is relevant to those who utilize EPA's TRI 
information, including State agencies, local governments, communities, 
environmental groups and other non-governmental organizations, as well 
as members of the general public.

C. What Should I Consider as I Prepare My Comments for EPA?

    1. Tips for Preparing Your Comments. When submitting comments, 
remember to:
    a. Identify the rulemaking by docket number and other identifying 
information (subject heading, Federal Register date and page number).
    b. Follow directions--The agency may ask you to respond to specific 
questions or organize comments by referencing a Code of Federal 
Regulations (CFR) part or section number.
    c. Explain why you agree or disagree; suggest options and 
substitute language for your requested changes.
    d. Describe any assumptions and provide any technical information 
and/or data that you used.
    e. If you estimate potential costs or burdens, explain how you 
arrived at your estimate in sufficient detail to allow for it to be 
reproduced.
    f. Provide specific examples to illustrate your concerns, and 
suggest options.
    g. Explain your views as clearly as possible.
    h. Make sure to submit your comments by the comment period deadline 
identified.
    2. Submitting Confidential Business Information (CBI). Do not 
submit information that you consider to be CBI electronically through 
EPA's electronic public docket or by e-mail. Commenters wishing to 
submit proprietary information for consideration must clearly 
distinguish such information from other comments and clearly label it 
as CBI. Send submissions containing such proprietary information 
directly to the following address only, and not to the public docket, 
to ensure that proprietary information is not inadvertently placed in 
the docket: Attention: OEI Document Control Officer, Mail Code: 2822T, 
Environmental Protection Agency, 1200 Pennsylvania Ave., NW., 
Washington, DC 20460. You may claim information that you submit to EPA 
as CBI by marking any part or all of that information as CBI (if you 
submit CBI on disk or CD ROM, mark the outside of the disk or CD ROM as 
CBI and then identify electronically within the disk or CD ROM the 
specific information that is CBI). EPA will disclose information 
claimed as CBI only to the extent allowed by the procedures set forth 
in 40 CFR part 2.
    In addition to one complete version of the comment that includes 
any information claimed as CBI, a copy of the comment that does not 
contain the information claimed as CBI must be submitted for inclusion 
in the public docket and EPA's electronic public docket. If you submit 
the copy that does not contain CBI on disk or CD ROM, mark the outside 
of the disk or CD ROM clearly that it does not contain CBI. Information 
not marked as CBI will be included in the public docket and EPA's 
electronic public docket without prior notice. If you have any 
questions about CBI or the procedures for claiming CBI, please consult 
the person identified in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section.

D. What Are the Toxics Release Inventory Reporting Requirements and Who 
Do They Affect?

    Pursuant to section 313 of the Emergency Planning and Community 
Right-to-Know Act (EPCRA), certain facilities that manufacture, 
process, or otherwise use specified toxic chemicals in amounts above 
reporting threshold levels must submit annually to EPA and to 
designated State officials toxic chemical release forms containing 
information specified by EPA. 42 U.S.C.

[[Page 57825]]

11023. These reports must be filed by July 1 of each year for the 
previous calendar year. In addition, pursuant to section 6607 of the 
Pollution Prevention Act (PPA), facilities reporting under section 313 
of EPCRA must also report pollution prevention and waste management 
data, including recycling information, for such chemicals. 42 U.S.C. 
13106. These reports are compiled and stored in EPA's database known as 
the Toxics Release Inventory (TRI).
    Regulations at 40 CFR part 372, subpart B, require facilities that 
meet all of the following criteria to report:
     The facility has 10 or more full-time employee equivalents 
(i.e., a total of 20,000 hours worked per year or greater; see 40 CFR 
372.3); and
     The facility is included in Standard Industrial 
Classification (SIC) Codes 10 (except 1011, 1081, and 1094), 12 (except 
1241), 20-39, 4911 (limited to facilities that combust coal and/or oil 
for the purpose of generating electricity for distribution in 
commerce), 4931 (limited to facilities that combust coal and/or oil for 
the purpose of generating electricity for distribution in commerce), 
4939 (limited to facilities that combust coal and/or oil for the 
purpose of generating electricity for distribution in commerce), 4953 
(limited to facilities regulated under RCRA Subtitle C, 42 U.S.C. 6921 
et seq.), 5169, 5171, and 7389 (limited to facilities primarily engaged 
in solvents recovery services on a contract or fee basis), or under 
Executive Order 13148, Federal facilities regardless of their SIC code; 
and
     The facility manufactures (defined to include importing), 
processes, or otherwise uses any EPCRA section 313 (TRI) chemical in 
quantities greater than the established thresholds for the specific 
chemical in the course of a calendar year.
    Facilities that meet the criteria must file a Form R report or, in 
some cases, may submit a Form A Certification Statement, for each 
listed toxic chemical for which the criteria are met. As specified in 
EPCRA section 313(a), the report for any calendar year must be 
submitted on or before July 1 of the following year. For example, 
reporting year 2004 data should have been postmarked on or before July 
1, 2005.
    The list of toxic chemicals subject to TRI reporting can be found 
at 40 CFR 372.65. This list is also published every year as Table II in 
the current version of the Toxics Release Inventory Reporting Forms and 
Instructions. The current TRI chemical list contains 581 individually-
listed chemicals and 30 chemical categories.

E. Why Is EPA Proposing To Reduce Burden Associated With TRI Reporting 
Requirements?

    As noted above in the summary, ``burden'' is the total time, 
effort, or financial resources expended by persons to generate, 
maintain, retain, disclose, or provide information to or for a Federal 
agency. 44 U.S.C. 3502(2). That includes the time needed to review 
instructions; develop, acquire, install, and utilize technology and 
systems for the purposes of collecting, validating, and verifying 
information, processing and maintaining information, and disclosing and 
providing information; adjust the existing ways to comply with any 
previously applicable instructions and requirements; train personnel to 
be able to respond to a collection of information; search data sources; 
complete and review the collection of information; and transmit or 
otherwise disclose the information. EPA is proposing this action 
because the Agency believes it will reduce burden and save resources 
for regulated entities, while continuing to provide valuable 
information to the public that fulfills the purposes of the TRI 
program.
    EPA has made considerable progress in reducing burden associated 
with its various information collections through streamlining, 
consolidating, and harmonizing regulations, guidance, and compliance 
assistance, and implementing technology-based processes (i.e., 
electronic reporting using the Toxics Release Inventory--Made Easy 
(TRI-ME) software and EPA's Central Data Exchange (CDX), making use of 
data submitted to the Agency through other EPA programs, and using 
geospatial information to pre-populate data fields). These measures 
have reduced the time, cost, and complexity of existing environmental 
reporting requirements, while enhancing reporting effectiveness and 
efficiency and continuing to provide useful information to the public.
    In July 2005, the Agency promulgated the TRI Reporting Forms 
Modification Rule (70 FR 39931, July 12, 2005), which streamlined the 
current forms by eliminating some fields and simplifying completion of 
others. The purpose of today's action is to propose additional burden 
reduction that will continue to provide valuable information on toxic 
chemical release and other waste management information that is 
necessary to fulfill the purposes of the TRI program.
    Today's proposal provides burden reduction for facilities that 
report small quantities of PBT and non-PBT chemicals, though with 
different eligibility thresholds. Those familiar with the Stakeholder 
Dialogue that EPA conducted between November 2002 and February 2004 
will note that the Agency is pursuing Option 3, Expanding Eligibility 
for the Form A Certification Statement, but modified to include a 
limited option for PBT chemicals. (More detail on the ``Dialogue'' is 
provided below in Section I.F.3). While the Agency has considered a 
much broader range of alternatives, many were determined to provide 
only limited opportunity for burden reduction, or to be inconsistent 
with the purposes of the TRI program. In a separate notice in today's 
Federal Register, EPA is also announcing its notice to Congress of the 
intention to initiate a rule-making that would modify the reporting 
frequency for some or all TRI reports.
    The Agency believes that today's proposal will provide meaningful 
burden reduction while still maintaining the value of the TRI 
information and will hereafter refer to this action as the ``Phase 2'' 
burden reduction rulemaking. In developing this approach, EPA 
considered input provided by stakeholders, and identified a number of 
criteria to guide the development of the approach that is presented 
here today. These criteria include making sure that this proposal 
maintains the integrity of the TRI database by providing meaningful 
data to users that fulfills the purposes of the TRI program; providing 
an overall burden savings in hours needed for reporting, adding to the 
time saved by streamlining the forms and instructions in the Forms 
Modification Rule; providing benefits to both non-PBT and PBT reporting 
facilities as appropriate; ensuring that the approach is relatively 
easy to implement; and creating incentives for pollution prevention.

F. What Actions Has EPA Taken in the Past To Streamline TRI Reporting?

1. TRI-ME and Reporting Assistance
    Throughout the history of the TRI Program, the Agency has 
implemented measures to reduce the TRI reporting burden on the 
regulated community while still ensuring the provision of valuable 
information to the public that fulfills the purposes of the TRI 
program. Through a range of compliance assistance activities, such as 
the Toxic Chemical Release Inventory Reporting Forms and Instructions 
(which is published and mailed every year), industry training 
workshops, chemical-specific and industry-specific guidance documents, 
and the TRI Information Center (a call hotline), the Agency has shown a 
commitment to enhancing the

[[Page 57826]]

quality and consistency of reporting and assisting those facilities 
that must comply with EPCRA section 313.
    EPA has also done extensive work to make reporting easier for the 
TRI reporting community through the development and use of technology 
such as EPA's Toxics Release Inventory--Made Easy software, otherwise 
known as TRI-ME (http://www.epa.gov/tri/report/trime/). TRI-ME is an 

interactive, user-friendly software tool that guides facilities through 
the TRI reporting process. By leading prospective reporting facilities 
through a series of logically-ordered questions, TRI-ME facilitates the 
analysis needed to determine if a facility must complete a Form A or 
Form R report for a particular chemical. For those facilities required 
to report, the software provides guidance for each data element on 
Forms A and R. TRI-ME also has a one-stop guidance feature, the TRI 
Assistance Library, that allows keyword searches on the statutes, 
regulations, and many EPCRA section 313 guidance documents. It also 
offers a ``load feature'' that enables the user to upload almost all of 
the facility's prior year data into the current year's report. Finally, 
TRI-ME checks the data for common errors and then prepares the forms to 
be sent electronically over the Internet via EPA's Central Data 
Exchange (CDX). Reporting forms generated by TRI-ME may also be 
submitted offline via magnetic media or on paper. In the spring of 
2003, EPA distributed approximately 25,000 copies of TRI-ME in 
preparation for the 2002 reporting year deadline of July 1, 2003. 
Approximately 90% of the roughly 84,000 Form R's filed in 2003 were 
prepared using the TRI-ME software.
2. Form A Certification Statement
    In 1994, partially in response to petitions received from the U.S. 
Small Business Administration Office of Advocacy and the American Feed 
Industry Association, an EPA rulemaking established the Form A 
Certification Statement as an alternative to Form R. This burden-
reducing measure was based on an alternate threshold for quantities 
manufactured, processed, or otherwise used by those facilities with 
relatively low annual reportable amounts of TRI chemicals. A facility 
may use an alternate, higher reporting threshold for a toxic chemical 
for which it has an annual reportable amount not exceeding 500 pounds. 
The annual reportable amount (ARA) is the total of the quantity 
released at the facility, the quantity treated at the facility, the 
quantity recovered at the facility as a result of recycling operations, 
the quantity combusted for the purpose of energy recovery at the 
facility, and the quantity transferred off-site for recycling, energy 
recovery, treatment, and/or disposal. This combined total corresponds 
to the quantity of the toxic chemicals in production-related waste 
(i.e., the sum of sections 8.1 through and including section 8.7 on the 
Form R). The reporting threshold for chemicals with an ARA less than or 
equal to 500 pounds is one million pounds manufactured, processed, or 
otherwise used. Facilities that meet the ARA eligibility requirement 
and fall below the one million pound reporting threshold for a 
particular toxic chemical may so certify by using Form A, and thus 
avoid having to submit a detailed Form R.
    When EPA lowered reporting thresholds in the subsequent PBT rule, 
EPA determined that allowing the Form A certification for PBT chemicals 
at that time would be inconsistent with the intent of expanded PBT 
chemical information (64 FR 58732, October 29, 1999) and so disallowed 
the use of Form A for PBT chemicals. EPA cited concerns over releases 
and other waste management of these chemicals at low levels and said 
that, based on the information available to the Agency at that time, 
EPA believed that the level of information from Form A was insufficient 
to do meaningful analyses on PBT chemicals (Id. at 58733). EPA also 
stated ``the Agency believes that it is appropriate to collect and 
analyze several years worth of data at the lowered thresholds before 
EPA considers developing a new alternate threshold and reportable 
quantity appropriate for PBT chemicals'' (Id. at 58732).
3. Stakeholder Dialogue
    In an effort to further explore burden reduction opportunities, EPA 
conducted a TRI Stakeholder Dialogue between November 2002 and February 
2004. A summary is available at http://www.epa.gov/tri/programs/stakeholders/outreach.htm.
 The dialogue process focused on identifying 

improvements to the TRI reporting process and exploring a number of 
burden reduction options associated with TRI reporting. In total, EPA 
received approximately 770 submissions as part of this Stakeholder 
Dialogue. Of those, approximately 730 were substantive public comments, 
and the remaining documents were either duplicates or correspondence 
transmitting public comments to the online docket system. The public 
comments expressed a range of views, with some supporting burden 
reduction and others opposing it. Approximately 63% of the comments 
came from private citizens; another 16% came from environmental groups, 
public interest groups, and public health groups; approximately 15% 
came from industry and trade group representatives; and about 6% came 
from government agencies, including nine States, three Federal 
agencies, and one municipality. You may view and obtain copies of all 
documents submitted to EPA by accessing TRI docket TRI-2003-0001 online 
at http://www.epa.gov/edocket or by visiting the EPA Docket Public 

Reading Room in Washington, DC.
    As a result of the Stakeholder Dialogue and subsequent comments 
from stakeholders, the Agency identified several burden reducing 
options that could be implemented while continuing to provide valuable 
information to data users. These options fall into three broad 
categories: (1) Relatively minor changes or modifications to the 
reporting forms and the TRI-ME software; (2) expanding Form A 
eligibility; and (3) reducing the frequency of reporting for some or 
all reports.
    EPA decided to address the three categories of changes through 
separate rulemakings, the first of which was promulgated in July 2005. 
The promulgated changes eliminated some redundant or seldom-used data 
elements from Forms A and R, and modified others that could be 
shortened, simplified, or otherwise improved to reduce the time and 
costs required to complete and submit annual TRI reports. They also 
improved data consistency and reliability by replacing some elements on 
the forms with information extracted from the EPA's Facility Registry 
System (FRS) which includes QA/QC'd data on most facilities subject to 
environmental reporting requirements across EPA programs.
    Today's rulemaking, the second of the three sets of changes, will 
expand eligibility for Form A reporting for non-PBT chemicals, and 
allow limited Form A reporting in some cases for PBT chemicals with 
zero releases. In a separate notice in today's FR, EPA is announcing 
notice to Congress of its intention to initiate a rulemaking to address 
the third option, modifying the reporting frequency for all or some TRI 
reports. EPCRA Section 313(i)(5) requires one-year advance notification 
to Congress before initiating such a rule making. This notification is 
being delivered today, concurrent with the publication of this notice.

[[Page 57827]]

G. Burden Reduction Estimation Methodology Used in Today's Proposal

1. Summary of Basic Methodology
    The burden methodology used in today's proposal is based on 
currently approved estimates of the time required to complete a Form R 
or Form A and is summarized in the economic analysis contained in the 
docket for this proposal. Basically, allowing respondents to file a 
Form A in lieu of a Form R significantly reduces the calculation and 
form completion burden and also makes a small difference (2 hours) in 
recordkeeping and form submission costs. The beneficiaries of today's 
proposal will almost exclusively be subsequent year reporters (i.e., 
current Form R respondents). The currently approved burden estimates 
for calculations and form completion are shown below in Table 1.

           Table 1.--Estimated Hours of Burden for a TRI Form
------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                            First year      Subsequent
              Type of form                   reporter      year reporter
------------------------------------------------------------------------
PBT Response on Form R..................              69            47.1
Non-PBT Response on Form R..............              37            25.2
Non-PBT Form A Response.................            25.1            17.6
PBT Form A Response*....................            45.6            31.6
Form R Recordkeeping and Submission.....               5               5
Form A Recordkeeping and Submission.....               3              3
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Note: PBT Form A's do not presently exist so burden estimated using
  approved non-PBT Form A approach.

    EPA is also using today's notice to seek comment on a proposed 
methodology for improving the estimation of calculation and form 
completion burden. The approach taken by the Agency in developing the 
new burden estimation methodology was to assemble a team of persons 
with knowledge or experience related to the preparation of TRI reports 
who then applied their best professional judgment to break down the 
reporting requirements into separate item-specific tasks, and then 
estimate the average time required to complete each task. This report 
was internally vetted through Agency TRI program personnel in the 
Regions and at Headquarters. The resulting estimates are assembled and 
described in a July 16, 2004, memorandum entitled TRI Reporting Burden 
Estimates from Hilary Eustace, David Cooper, and Susan Day of Abt 
Associates to Paul Borst, EPA which is contained in the docket for this 
rulemaking.
    The resulting burden estimates derived from that engineering 
analyses for PBT and non-PBT chemicals are substantially lower than the 
current burden estimates in the OMB-approved Information Collection 
Request (ICR) supporting statement for Form R. For example, under the 
current ICR, the subsequent year Form R burden estimates for PBT and 
non-PBT chemicals for form completion and calculation are 47.1 and 25.2 
hours respectively. Form A calculation burden is estimated to be 64% of 
the Form R burden. To this amount, 1.4 hours of form completion time is 
added, resulting in Form A calculation and completion estimates of 31.6 
hours for PBT chemicals and 17.6 hours for non-PBT chemicals.
    Under the Agency's new engineering estimates, Form R estimates for 
PBT and non-PBT chemicals are reduced to 6.7 and 7.6 hours for PBT and 
non-PBT chemicals respectively. Under the new methodology, the average 
burden for Form A for both PBT and non-PBT chemicals is 1.4 hours. If 
these new numbers had been used in the estimation of the burden 
reduction from today's proposal, the estimated burden reduction would 
have been about three-fourths of what is estimated using the currently 
approved numbers.
    The Agency conducted an external peer review of this new analysis 
to assess the reasonableness of the new methodology and specific burden 
estimates. The peer review panel was generally favorable to both the 
general methodology used in the engineering analysis (summing across 
Form R elements to derive total burden) and the specific form 
completion steps described. However, the panel felt that the time 
allocated for many of the tasks should be increased. The panel 
disagreed with the assumption in the Agency's engineering analysis that 
a typical TRI reporting facility was reasonably modern and well-
organized. A majority of the panel thought that EPA overestimated the 
experience and knowledge that a typical TRI reporting facility would 
have in completing its Form R and thus underestimated the time it would 
take to complete the Form.
    The Agency has placed both its engineering estimate and the peer 
review summary in the docket for today's proposed rule. The Agency 
solicits comment on the reasonableness and accuracy of the methodology, 
form completion steps and specific burden estimates as well as on the 
conclusions of the external peer review.

II. What Is EPA's Statutory Authority for Taking This Action?

    This proposed rule is being issued under sections 313(f)(2) and 328 
of EPCRA, 42 U.S.C. 11023(f)(2) and 11048. In general, section 313 of 
EPCRA and section 6607 of the Pollution Prevention Act (PPA) require 
owners and operators of facilities in specified SIC codes that 
manufacture, process, or otherwise use a listed toxic chemical in 
amounts above specified threshold levels to report certain facility-
specific information about such chemicals, including the annual 
releases and other waste management quantities. This information is 
submitted on EPA Form 9350-1 (Form R) or EPA Form 9350-2 (Form A) and 
compiled in an annual Toxics Release Inventory (TRI). Each covered 
facility must file a separate Form R for each listed chemical 
manufactured, processed, or otherwise used in excess of applicable 
reporting thresholds which were initially established in section 
313(f)(1). EPA has also established an alternate threshold for non-PBT 
chemicals with low annual reportable amounts. Facilities making use of 
the alternate reporting threshold must file a Form A certification 
statement listing their toxic chemicals that qualify for the alternate 
threshold. EPA has authority to revise the threshold amounts pursuant 
to section 313(f)(2); however, such revised threshold amounts must 
obtain reporting on a substantial majority of total releases of the 
chemical at all facilities subject to section 313. In addition, 
Congress granted EPA broad rulemaking authority to allow the Agency to 
fully implement the statute.

[[Page 57828]]

EPCRA section 328 authorizes the ``Administrator [to] prescribe such 
regulations as may be necessary to carry out this chapter.'' 42 
U.S.C.11048.
    Today's proposed approach would raise the reporting thresholds for 
a specific class of chemical reports. Congress set statutory default 
reporting thresholds of 25,000 pounds for manufacturing, 25,000 pounds 
for processing, and 10,000 pounds for the otherwise use of a listed 
toxic chemical in EPCRA section 313(f)(1). EPCRA section 313(f)(2), 
however, provides EPA with authority to establish different reporting 
thresholds. EPA may, at the Administrator's discretion, base these 
different thresholds on classes of chemicals or categories of 
facilities. EPCRA specifies that the revised threshold adopted by EPA 
``shall obtain reporting on a substantial majority of total releases of 
the chemical at all facilities subject to the requirements of this 
section.'' 42 U.S.C. 11023(f)(2).
    EPA has raised the reporting thresholds for a class of chemical 
reports once previously. In 1994, EPA finalized a rule that created the 
Form A Certification Statement (59 FR 61488). That rule raised the 
reporting thresholds for manufacturing, processing, and the otherwise 
use of listed toxic chemicals to 1 million pounds for a category of 
facilities whose total annual reportable amount for a particular 
chemical was 500 pounds or less. In that rulemaking, EPA discussed the 
value of information that is collected on the Form A as follows: ``EPA 
believes that the proposed annual certification will provide 
information relating to the location of facilities manufacturing, 
processing, or otherwise using these chemicals, that the chemicals are 
being manufactured, processed, or otherwise used at current reporting 
thresholds, and that chemical releases and transfers for the purpose of 
treatment and/or disposal are [500 pounds or less] per year (i.e., 
within a range of zero to [500] pounds per year).'' (59 FR 38527) EPA 
further indicated that the information collected on the Form A helped 
to ensure that the revised thresholds continued to obtain reporting on 
a substantial majority of releases.
    The burden reduction approach in today's proposal is modeled after 
the approach taken in the 1994 Form A rulemaking. Expanding Form A 
eligibility for Non-PBT chemicals and allowing limited eligibility for 
PBT chemicals raises the reporting threshold for eligible chemicals at 
a specifically defined category of facilities. As explained below, 
eligibility is determined on a chemical-by-chemical basis, rather than 
a facility-wide basis. Under the expanded Form A eligibility, 
facilities qualifying for the raised threshold for a given chemical 
would continue to file an annual certification statement in place of a 
Form R. Through its narrow definition of the category of facilities 
eligible for the raised threshold for certain chemicals and through the 
information collected on the certification statements, EPA is ensuring 
that reporting under the raised thresholds will continue to ``obtain 
reporting on a substantial majority of total releases of the chemical 
at all facilities subject to the requirements of this section.''

III. What Reporting Requirement Changes Are Being Proposed?

    Today's proposal applies to all TRI chemicals except dioxin and 
dioxin-like compounds, which are excluded from consideration. Allowing 
Form A for PBT chemicals affects those chemicals identified by EPA as 
``chemicals of special concern'' under 40 CFR 372.28 (except for dioxin 
and dioxin-like compounds, discussed below). Currently ``chemicals of 
special concern'' include only certain chemicals that have been found 
to be ``persistent, bioaccumulative, and toxic (PBT).'' Therefore, for 
the reader's convenience, we will refer to the chemicals in 40 CFR 
372.28 as ``PBT chemicals'' in today's proposal.
    For PBT chemicals, today's proposal would allow facilities 
reporting on PBT chemicals with no disposal or other releases of a 
chemical to use the Form A Certification Statement provided they do not 
exceed the 1 million pound reporting threshold and have 500 pounds or 
less of total other waste management quantities. The other waste 
management quantities include recycling, energy recovery and treatment 
for destruction. For non-PBT chemicals, facilities would now be able to 
use Form A if their annual reportable amount (ARA), which is the sum of 
Form R Sections 8.1 through Section 8.7 and is also referred to as 
Total Production Related Waste (TPRW), is 5000 pounds or less. This is 
an increase from the current ARA threshold of 500 pounds.
    Increased eligibility for the Form A Certification Statement is 
based on the reporting of individual chemicals, and does not apply to 
facility reporting as a whole. For example, if a facility has 
determined it must report on four chemicals in a given reporting year, 
it must consider each of its chemicals individually to determine its 
eligibility to use Form A. In doing so, facilities must ensure that 
they are using the correct eligibility requirements for each toxic 
chemical, depending upon whether or not the chemical is a PBT. As noted 
above, PBT chemicals, except dioxin and dioxin-like compounds may now 
be eligible to use the Form A Certification Statement. Dioxin and 
dioxin-like compounds have been excluded from this expanded 
eligibility. Because of the high toxicity of some dioxin and dioxin-
like compounds and the wide variation in toxicity between forms of 
dioxin, EPA recently proposed to add toxic equivalency (TEQ) reporting 
for the dioxin and dioxin-like compounds category (70 FR 10919, March 
7, 2005). EPA proposed this revision in response to requests from TRI 
reporters that EPA create a mechanism for facilities to report TEQ data 
to provide important context for the dioxin and dioxin-like compounds 
release data. In addition, EPA believes that the public will benefit 
from the additional context and comparability of data provided by TEQ 
reporting. The Agency has decided to wait until the Dioxin TEQ 
rulemaking is finalized and until the Agency has appropriate data 
before considering whether this class of PBT chemicals should be 
considered for Form A eligibility.

A. Reference Guide for Burden Reduction Options

    In this section, Figure 1 and Table 2 are intended as reference 
guides to help readers understand the proposed eligibility requirements 
for Form A use. By increasing eligibility for Form A, the Agency is 
providing an alternative to Form R for facilities required to report to 
TRI. A basic understanding of the information a Form R respondent would 
be required to submit in Section 8 of Form R is necessary to understand 
the proposed new requirements for Form A eligibility. Figure 1 presents 
the Section 8 portion of Form R to facilitate understanding of the 
proposal. Table 2 summarizes the proposed new eligibility requirements. 
Readers are encouraged to refer to the descriptions here and in Table 2 
of this section for summary information, but should read through the 
subsequent text discussion for more detail about the proposed new 
eligibility requirements.
    One term that is used frequently in this proposal and may need some 
clarification is ``releases.'' EPCRA defines the term ``releases'' to 
include activities such as air and water discharges, and land disposal. 
According to 42 U.S.C. 11049(8), the ``term `release' means any 
spilling, leaking, pumping, pouring, emitting, emptying, discharging, 
injecting, escaping, leaching, dumping, or disposing into the 
environment

[[Page 57829]]

(including the abandonment or discarding of barrels, containers, and 
other closed receptacles) of any toxic chemical.'' Beginning with the 
Public Data Release (PDR) for the 2003 reporting year, in an effort to 
provide additional context to the TRI data and to remind readers that 
the definition of ``releases'' is broad, the Agency refers to total 
``releases'' as total ``disposal or other releases.'' However, within 
the legal context of the TRI program, ``disposal'' is a subset of 
release, not a separate waste management activity from ``release.'' EPA 
carries the term ``disposal or other releases'' over to this 
rulemaking, but also uses the term ``releases'' by itself for brevity 
and because this is the term used in the statute. In both cases, the 
Agency is referring to all types of releases, including disposals.
    In addition, another point of possible confusion is the term 
``chemicals of special concern'' which was used in the October 1999 PBT 
rule to identify chemicals subject to a lower reporting threshold and 
not eligible for Form A. As noted above, currently all of the chemicals 
that are of special concern are PBTs. Therefore, for simplicity, the 
term ``PBT chemical'' is used in lieu of ``chemicals of special 
concern.'' For purposes of this proposal, the Agency will also refer to 
non-PBT chemicals, when referring to the larger group of TRI chemicals 
that are not PBTs (i.e., not chemicals of special concern). Should the 
Agency identify additional chemicals of special concern in the future, 
at that time the Agency will consider whether it is appropriate to 
extend these or other burden reduction options to those chemicals.

                                       Figure 1.--Section 8 of the Form R
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                              Section 8.--Source Reduction and Recycling Activities
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                        Column A prior    Column B current       Column C       Column D second
                                        year  (pounds/     reporting year     following year     following year
                                            year*)         (pounds/year*)     (pounds/year*)     (pounds/year*)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
8.1
-------------
8.1a          Total on-site disposal
               to Class I
               Underground Injection
               Wells, RCRA Subtitle
               C landfills, and
               other landfills.
-------------
8.1b          Total other on-site
               disposal or other
               releases.
-------------
8.1c          Total off-site
               disposal to Class I
               Underground Injection
               Wells, RCRA Subtitle
               C landfills, and
               other landfills.
-------------
8.1d          Total other off-site
               disposal or other
               releases.
-------------
8.2           Quantity used for
               energy recovery
               onsite.
-------------
8.3           Quantity used for
               energy recovery
               offsite.
-------------
8.4           Quantity recycled
               onsite.
-------------
8.5           Quantity recycled
               offsite.
-------------
8.6           Quantity treated
               onsite.
-------------
8.7           Quantity treated
               offsite.
-------------
8.8           Quantity released to the environment as a result of remedial
               actions, catastrophic events, or one-time events not
               associated with production processes (pounds/year)*.
-------------
8.9           Production ratio or
               activity index.
-------------
8.10          Did your facility engage in any source reduction activities for this chemical during the reporting
               year? If not, enter ``NA'' in Section 8.10.1 and answer Section 8.11.
-------------
                 Source Reduction                     Methods to Identify Activity (enter codes).
                     Activities
              [enter code(s)].......
-------------
8.10.1                                a.                 b.                 c.                 .................
-------------
8.10.2                                a.                 b.                 c.                 .................
-------------
8.10.3                                a.                 b.                 c.                 .................
-------------
8.10.4                                a.                 b.                 c.                 .................
-------------
8.11          Is additional information on source reduction, recycling, or   Yes No
               pollution control activities included with this report?       [msqu] [msqu] ..
               (Check one box)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* For Dioxin or Dioxin-like compunds, report in grams/year.


[[Page 57830]]


                    Table 2.--Burden Reduction Terms
------------------------------------------------------------------------
      Expanding Form A eligibility          Applicable Form R sections
------------------------------------------------------------------------
PBT Chemicals *........................  Sections 8.1a through 8.1d must
                                          equal zero and Section 8.8
                                          cannot include positive
                                          quantities of disposal or
                                          other releases.
                                         Section 8.2 + Section 8.3 +
                                          Section 8.4 + Section 8.5 +
                                          Section 8.6 + Section 8.7+
                                          Section 8.8 must = 500 pounds
                                          or less.
Non-PBT Chemicals *....................  Sections 8.1 + Section 8.2 +
                                          Section 8.3 + Section 8.4 +
                                          Section 8.5 + Section 8.6 +
                                          Section 8.7 must = 5000 pounds
                                          or less.
                                          *To be eligible, must also
                                          meet 1 million pound alternate
                                          threshold for manufacture
                                          processing or otherwise use.
------------------------------------------------------------------------

For convenience, the entire Form R and Form A are reprinted below as 
Figures 2 and 3 respectively.
BILLING CODE 6560-50-P

[[Page 57831]]

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[[Page 57832]]


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[[Page 57833]]


[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP04OC05.002


[[Page 57834]]


[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP04OC05.003


[[Page 57835]]


[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP04OC05.004


[[Page 57836]]


[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP04OC05.005


[[Page 57837]]


[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP04OC05.006

BILLING CODE 6560-50-C

[[Page 57838]]

B. Background on the Form A Certification Statement

    Reporting to the TRI is required by section 313 of the Emergency 
Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act. The information contained in 
the Form R constitutes a ``report,'' and the submission of a report to 
the appropriate authorities constitutes ``reporting.'' The Pollution 
Prevention Act (PPA) of 1990 (Pub. L. 101-508) added additional 
reporting requirements for facilities that are required to submit Form 
Rs under section 313 of EPCRA. These data were required beginning with 
reports for calendar year 1991.
    The purposes of the required ``reporting'' include providing the 
public with information on the releases and other waste management of 
EPCRA section 313 chemicals in their communities and providing EPA and 
other regulators with release and other waste management information to 
assist them in determining the need for future regulations. Facilities 
must report the quantities of routine and accidental releases, and 
releases resulting from catastrophic or other one time events of EPCRA 
section 313 chemicals, as well as the maximum amount of the EPCRA 
section 313 chemical on-site during the calendar year and the amount 
contained in wastes managed on-site or transferred off-site.
    The EPA Form A Certification Statement was established in 1994. 
This form is based on an alternate reporting threshold for facilities 
with small quantities of an EPCRA section 313 chemical released or 
otherwise managed as waste. The Form A serves to certify that a 
facility is not subject to form R reporting for a specific toxic 
chemical [Toxic Chemical Release Inventory Reporting Forms and 
Instructions (EPA 260-B-04-001), pages 1-2].
    The primary difference between information contained on Form R and 
the Form A Certification Statement is that the Form R provides details 
of releases and other waste management (e.g., total quantity of 
releases to air, water, and land; on- and off-site recycling, energy 
recovery), while the Form A does not. The Form A Certification 
Statement may be used by reporters in lieu of the Form R for chemicals 
other than those specified as chemicals of special concern (e.g., PBTs) 
if the reporter does not exceed the 1,000,000 pound threshold for 
amount of the chemical manufactured, processed, or otherwise used in 
the reporting year and if the annual reportable amount of a chemical is 
no more than 500 pounds for the year. The annual reportable amount 
(ARA) is the total of all quantities released (on- and off-site, but 
excluding catastrophic events), treated, recovered, recycled, and 
combusted at the facility, plus all amounts transferred from the 
facility off-site for the purpose of recycling, energy recovery, 
treatment, and/or disposal. If the reporter meets the criteria for 
using the Form A, s/he need only report the name of the chemical and 
certain facility identification information. In this case, the Form A 
serves as a range report which tells the public that the total 
production related waste for that chemical is between zero and 500 
pounds. Several chemicals can be reported on each Form A.

C. Form A Eligibility--PBT Chemicals

    Allows PBT Reporting Facilities with No Releases to the Environment 
to use Form A Provided They Do Not Exceed a 1,000,000 Pound ``Alternate 
Threshold'' and Have 500 Pounds or Less of Total Other Waste Management 
Quantities.
1. Description of Proposed Change and Considerations
    Commenters in the November 2003 Stakeholder Dialogue and other 
venues have pointed out that there are a number of facilities that 
submit Form Rs that have zero total disposal or other releases in 
Section 8.1 of Form R. Some of the stakeholders expressed the opinion 
that the Agency should develop a simplified form for these reports. EPA 
notes that many reporters with zero total disposal or other releases in 
Section 8.1 still report positive quantities in sections 8.2 through 
8.8. However, EPA believes that communities and other users of TRI 
information are less concerned about small volumes of on-site waste 
management when a facility is able to achieve zero release of these 
chemicals. EPA has thus determined that it is appropriate to allow Form 
A for such facilities, provided they have zero disposal and other 
releases for a particular PBT chemical.
    The Agency believes that many facilities eligible for this 
regulatory option are already using more desirable waste management 
techniques as evidenced by the fact that they have zero releases. The 
Agency further believes this approach will comply with the goals of the 
PPA by encouraging facilities that are already not releasing any 
chemicals to accomplish further source reduction so that their other 
waste management totals are low enough to use this option (500 pounds 
or less). The Agency balanced this pollution prevention incentive with 
the needs of TRI data users who use this information for tracking and 
reporting trends in recycling, waste treatment, and energy recovery, 
and decided that limited Form A eligibility for PBT chemicals with zero 
releases would be an appropriate approach for providing burden relief 
to this group of reporters, while minimizing the loss of useful data.
a. What Is This Approach to Burden Reduction?
    Form A Eligibility--PBT Chemicals. This approach allows facilities 
that report zero or NA for items a, b, c, and d of Section 8.1 of Form 
R (Zero Total Disposal or Other Releases) for a PBT chemical (except 
dioxin and dioxin-like compounds) and do not have any releases included 
in Section 8.8, but may have other waste management information in 
Sections 8.2 through 8.8 totaling 500 pounds or less, to now use the 
Form A Certification Statement. Section 8.8 of the Form R details the 
non-production related activities occurring at a facility. These could 
be releases or other waste management quantities. For this approach 
``releases'' reported in Section 8.8 must be zero, but facilities may 
have other waste management quantities in Section 8.8, which will be 
totaled with the production related waste management quantities found 
in Sections 8.2-8.7.
    To qualify for this option, facilities must manufacture, process, 
or otherwise use no more than 1 million pounds of a chemical, have zero 
disposal or other releases in Section 8.1 and 8.8, and have 500 pounds 
or less of total other waste management quantities in Sections 8.2 
through 8.8. The Agency will refer to the sum of Sections 8.2 + 8.3 + 
8.4 + 8.5 + 8.6 + 8.7+ 8.8 as the PBT Reportable Amount (PRA). This is 
a similar concept to the Annual Reportable Amount (ARA), which is the 
term referring to the sum of Sections 8.1 through 8.7 used to determine 
eligibility for Form A currently for non-PBT chemicals with the added 
restrictions that there be no releases requiring reporting under 
Sections 8.1 or 8.8 and the inclusion of Section 8.8 in determination 
of the PRA.
    The inclusion of Section 8.8 waste management amounts in the PBT 
reportable amount is different from the approach taken for non-PBT 
chemicals. The Agency examined data from the 2003 reporting year and 
determined that some of the reporters which have zero releases had 
activity reported in Section 8.8 that appears to be associated with 
ongoing CERCLA or RCRA related remediation. The Agency believes local 
communities may be concerned about the progress of these activities and 
may wish to track quantities in Section 8.8 exceeding 500 pounds using 
the Form

[[Page 57839]]

R. Accordingly, EPA is proposing that these amounts be considered in 
determining the PRA. As a practical matter, the inclusion of Section 
8.8 in the PRA only affects a small number of facilities.
    Using a different basis for reportable amount for PBT and non-PBT 
chemicals does pose some risk of confusion among reporters, but PBTs 
already have a number of special provisions that are applicable to 
them. The Agency requests comment on the proposed approach for defining 
the PRA and specifically on whether Section 8.8 management amounts 
should be included in the definition of the PRA. The Agency also 
requests comment on whether the ARA (for non-PBTs) should be modified 
to include Section 8.8 management information which would be an 
alternate way of making the two approaches more consistent. EPA is also 
interested in information on the specific types of activities that are 
reported in Section 8.8.
b. Is the Approach Available to All TRI Chemicals?
    This approach applies to PBT chemicals, except dioxin and dioxin-
like compounds. Non-PBT chemicals are already eligible for the Form A 
Certification Statement provided they meet the current criteria for 
Form A use. (Note that Section III. C of today's proposal will propose 
new criteria for Form A use for non-PBT chemicals.) One example of the 
type of facility this approach could benefit is a producer of ceramic 
materials, such as dishes and cups, where 100% of the TRI chemical (in 
this case the lead in clay) goes into the product.
c. Why Is This Approach Being Considered for PBT Chemicals?
    The Agency is focusing on providing burden relief for smaller 
businesses that have zero disposal or other releases. From the 
Stakeholder Dialogue, some commenters pointed out that there are 
reporters with no releases, but which also send small amounts of TRI 
chemicals into more desirable management techniques like recycling or 
energy recovery. Because the Agency encourages reuse and recycling, it 
decided to explore whether a clearly demarcated group could be defined. 
Expanding Form A eligibility as described in this approach would 
provide burden relief for PBT reporters with no disposal or other 
releases, but which do have small quantities of other waste management 
activities reportable in Sections 8.2 through 8.8. For facilities that 
have zero releases but also report zero for other waste management, the 
burden relief from this approach would be relatively small, but they 
would also be eligible to use Form A. While the Agency believes that 
most facilities that would qualify for this approach will be smaller 
businesses, the universe of facilities could include both large and 
small facilities.
    Allowing the use of Form A for some PBTs is a departure from the 
current practice of excluding PBT reporters from Form A use. The Agency 
discussed its rationale for excluding all PBT chemicals from the 
alternate threshold of 1 million pounds in the PBT Proposed Rule (64 FR 
58716, January 5, 1999). In the PBT Final Rule the Agency stated:

    EPA believes that use of the existing alternate threshold and 
reportable quantity for Form A would be inconsistent with the intent 
of expanded PBT chemical reporting. The general information provided 
on the Form A, on the quantities of the chemical that the facility 
manages as waste is insufficient for conducting meaningful analyses 
on PBT chemicals. (64 FR 58734)

    In the PBT Final Rule, however, the Agency also indicated that it 
would revisit this issue after it had the opportunity to collect and 
analyze several years worth of data at the lowered thresholds (64 FR 
58732, October 29, 1999). In particular, the Agency indicated that it 
might consider developing a new alternate threshold and reportable 
quantity appropriate for PBT chemicals.
    To conduct this analysis of an appropriate criterion for use of 
Form A for PBT chemicals, the Agency reviewed the group of chemicals 
that it expects would qualify. Based on TRI data submitted in previous 
reporting years, the Agency expects the group of PBTs that would 
qualify for this approach to total 2703 forms. Of these, 2085 also 
reported zeros for other waste management quantities, while 618 report 
non-zero amounts for at least one of the sections 8.2 through 8.8 
(Economic Analysis of Toxics Release Inventory Burden Reduction 
Proposed Rule, EPA, August, 2005). For facilities with zero in all 
waste management quantities, EPA believes the loss of data from moving 
to Form A would be minimal. In addition, EPA believes that many such 
facilities may choose to continue using Form R, since the burden of 
completing Form R for such facilities is small, and Form R allows them 
to show the public that they are neither releasing nor managing as 
waste any of the PBT chemical. The latter portion of the eligible 
facilities, those with some other waste management to report, are 
primarily forms for lead and lead compounds (44%), polycyclic aromatic 
compounds (PACs) including benzo(g,h,i)perylene (47%); and mercury and 
mercury compounds (7%). Together, these three chemicals account for 98% 
of the eligible reports with non-zero waste management quantities. A 
discussion of each of these groups and what is known about their waste 
management practices follows:
i. Lead and Lead Compounds
    EPA conducted an extensive analysis of lead reporters in 
conjunction with the 2002 Public Data Release.\1\ Based on this 
analysis, it appears that the types of management and disposal 
activities for which the Agency would be foregoing detailed information 
with this approach would be information on the recycling of small 
amounts of lead. In addition to having zero releases, these facilities 
would not be conducting the activities of energy recovery or treatment 
for destruction, because metals may not be reported in those 
categories.\2\ The most common scenario for small lead producers is 
that they send lead waste off-site to a recycler. Consequently, for 
facilities filing a Form A for lead, TRI data users may presume that 
the facility is recycling 500 pounds of lead or less (e.g., the Form A 
serves as a range report of zreo to 500 pounds for recycling).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \1\ See ``Lead: TRI Lead and Lead Compounds Reporting Years 
2000-2002'' (U.S. EPA) at http://www.epa.gov/tri/tridata/tri02/index.htm
.

    \2\ The Agency's Toxic Chemical Release Inventory Reporting 
Forms and Instructions (EPA 260-B-05-001, January 2005, Appendix B) 
state that it is not appropriate to report energy recovery and 
treatment for destruction for metals with metal compounds categories 
with the exception of barium and barium compounds. When a facility 
reports metals and their associated metal compounds categories it 
only reports the parent metal portion of the compounds. The parent 
metal cannot be destroyed nor can it be burned for energy recovery 
so these metals should not be reported as such.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Another factor reviewed by the Agency in considering a new PRA 
threshold was whether there would be a substantial impact on 
information reported in the annual Public Data Release (PDR). To 
evaluate this issue, an analysis was performed to determine the amount 
of recycling (both on and off-site) for lead reporters anticipated to 
be eligible for the option. This amount equals approximately 67,000 
pounds of recycling. When compared with the total for amount of lead 
recycling for all TRI reporters of nearly 800 million pounds (TRI 
Explorer, RY 2002 data, http://www.epa.gov/triexplorer/), this proves 

to be an extremely small percentage (0.0084 %). Given the totals of the 
lead recycling reported by these Form A eligible lead reporters 
compared to recycling totals for all TRI reporters, the Agency believes 
implementing this

[[Page 57840]]

option will not significantly impact the use of TRI data.
ii. PACs and Benzo(g,h,i)perylene
    Based on a review of potentially eligible facilities (i.e., those 
with less than 500 pounds), the only waste management activities 
conducted on PACs and benzo(g,h,i)perylene are burning in a boiler or 
industrial furnace for energy recovery or treatment for destruction via 
incineration. These activities could be conducted and result in zero 
releases as a consequence of the extremely high destruction 
efficiencies achieved in burning as explained in the next paragraph. 
Thus, similar to the case with lead, the Form A would serve as a range 
report of zero to 500 pounds for the waste management activity of 
combustion (either for energy recovery or destruction).
    Facilities that produce small amounts of PACs (e.g., in waste) may 
burn the waste in a boiler or industrial furnace. Many combustion units 
of this type, i.e., boilers, furnaces, and incinerators, are subject to 
strict controls under either the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act 
(RCRA) or the Clean Air Act (CAA). Further, since the PBT rule, which 
lowered reporting thresholds for PACs, was published, the Agency has 
adopted new CAA Maximum Achievable Control Technology (MACT) Standards 
for hazardous waste combustion facilities that, among other things, 
help to ensure that 99.99% of these chemicals are destroyed during 
either energy recovery or incineration. These standards cover hazardous 
waste incinerators and cement kilns. (See 40 CFR part 63 and part 264.) 
The MACT Standards also control products of incomplete combustion that 
may result. With a PRA limiting the total PACs treated to 500 pounds or 
less, releases at the lowest allowable efficiency could be no more than 
0.01% (or a maximum of .05 pounds) for facilities that must comply with 
these strict standards. The Guidance for Reporting Toxic Chemicals: 
Polycyclic Aromatic Compounds Category (EPA 260-9-01-01, August 2001) 
allows for this level of PACs to be rounded to zero. If, for any 
reason, treatment of PACs does result in a release of even one pound, 
the facility would no longer be eligible. So, while very small amounts 
of releases may occur from facilities combusting 500 pounds or less the 
PAC chemicals are unlikely to be released at levels which would require 
a non-zero response in Section 8.1 and, therefore, the completion of 
Form R.
    The Agency also considered whether there would be a substantial 
impact on information reported in the annual TRI Public Data Release 
(PDR) as a result of the proposed rule. To evaluate this point, an 
analysis was performed to determine the relative amounts of these 
chemicals (PACs and benzo(g,h,i)perylene) reported by facilities that 
would be eligible for Form A. EPA analysis shows that in RY 2002, 
approximately 3,900 pounds of PACs were reported on 578 forms that meet 
the PRA and zero release requirements for Form A eligibility under the 
proposed option (Antisdel, Timothy. ``Data Requests for Phase II.'' E-
mail to Marc Edmonds. May 5, 2005). This quantity constitutes 0.023% of 
the approximately 18,000,000 pounds of PAC's reported as recycled, 
burned for energy recovery or treated for destruction for 2002. There 
were approximately 3,200 pounds of benzo(g,h,i)perylene reported on 695 
Form Rs that meet the Form A eligibility requirements. When compared to 
the approximately 450,000 pounds reported in 2002 by all TRI reporters 
as recycled, burned for energy recovery or treated for destruction, 
this amounts to only 0.7% of the total. Because the amounts of PACs and 
benzo(g,h,i)perylene that would not be reported on Form R under this 
option are such a small percentage of the totals and there are zero 
releases involved for these forms, the Agency believes that this 
approach will not have a significant impact on the use of TRI data.
iii. Mercury and Mercury Compounds
    As noted above, approximately 7% of the forms eligible for this 
option report mercury. For mercury, as with lead, the only permissible 
non-zero quantity in Section 8 of Form R for those facilities that 
qualify is recycling.\3\ One reason a facility would recycle but not 
release mercury is because the recycling of high-category mercury waste 
(greater than 260 ppm) is mandatory under RCRA's Land Disposal 
Restriction program (See 40 CFR 268.40 for D009 and U151). Because 
there are recordkeeping and management requirements associated with 
this program, there is an extremely low risk of mercury release to the 
environment from these activities. Consequently, similar to the case 
for lead, the Agency's primary consideration was whether a new PRA 
limit for mercury would have a substantial impact on information 
reported in the annual PDR. To evaluate this point, an analysis was 
performed to determine the relative amount of mercury reported by 
potentially eligible facilities. EPA analysis shows that in RY 2002, 
3,700 pounds of mercury and mercury compounds were reported on the 186 
forms that meet the eligibility requirements for Form A. When compared 
with the total mercury recycled by all TRI facilities (1,280,000 
pounds), this amounts to only about 0.3% of the total. Because there 
are no releases and the amount of mercury that would not be reported is 
such a small percentage of the total, the Agency believes that this 
approach will not have a significant impact on the use of TRI data.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \3\ Ibid.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    As discussed above, for this approach the Agency is now proposing 
to refer to the Annual Reportable Amount for PBTs as the PBT Reportable 
Amount (PRA). This PRA will still be 500 pounds or less, however, 
unlike the current Form A, the reportable amount for this option will 
include quantities that result from non-production related other waste 
management activities that are reported in Section 8.8 of the Form R, 
and will only be applied once a facility has met the first test that 
they have no releases to the environment. Also, as with non-PBT 
chemicals, the facility must also meet the alternate one million pound 
threshold for manufacturing, processing or otherwise use.
    It is important to note that this new Form A option for PBT 
chemicals requires that there be zero release or disposal of the 
chemical. With this condition satisfied, the Agency believes the 
resulting other waste management quantities are being adequately 
addressed by facilities using recycling and treatment technologies 
through existing statutory and regulatory requirements. This approach 
reinforces these requirements by providing incentives for additional 
source reductions while still providing range reports to TRI data users 
on the amounts of chemicals recycled or otherwise managed as waste 
(without being released to the environment). Using EZ Query in 
Envirofacts (http://www.epa.gov/envirofacts/) or TRI Explorer data users would 

still be able to access individual PBT chemicals and list specific 
TRIFIDs and names of the facilities reporting an individual PBT 
chemical even if the facility submitted a Form A certification 
statement rather than a Form R.
d. How Often Is This Approach Available to TRI Facilities?
    This approach would be available annually to any reporter having a 
chemical which qualifies in a given year.
e. What Are the Reporting Requirements?
    This approach would allow facilities reporting PBTs (except dioxin 
and

[[Page 57841]]

dioxin-like compounds) that have no releases, either in Section 8.1 or 
8.8 of Form R, and which have other waste management information in 
Sections 8.2 through 8.8 totaling 500 pounds or less, to apply a 1 
million pound manufacture, process, or otherwise use threshold to that 
chemical. If the facility is under the threshold it will be able to use 
the Form A Certification Statement.
f. Do My Recordkeeping Requirements Change?
    No. The current recordkeeping requirements remain in effect. A 
facility must keep records for three years (40 CFR 372.10 and 
372.27(b)).
2. Estimates of Potential Impacts
a. What Are the Potential Impacts of Reducing Reporting Burden?
    From the standpoint of burden reduction hours, the Agency's 
analysis indicates that approximately 2,703 PBT forms would qualify for 
Form A use under this proposal, saving approximately 47,000 hours of 
reporting burden (Economic Analysis of Toxics Release Inventory Burden 
Reduction Proposed Rule, EPA, September 2005). As presented in Table 1, 
the currently approved burden estimate assumes completion of a full 
Form R for a PBT chemical requires 52.1 hours (including recordkeeping 
and submission). This is higher than the burden for a non-PBT of 30.2 
hours due to the greater number of records that may need to be reviewed 
and calculations performed. Without today's rulemaking, facilities that 
would otherwise qualify for today's expansion of Form A eligibility to 
PBT chemicals would have to submit a full Form R.
    Even facilities without waste management activities to report 
(i.e., zeros in Sections 8.1 through 8.8) will realize burden savings 
from the finalization of this proposal. These savings would accrue 
because the facility would no longer need to determine the maximum 
amount of the TRI chemical on-site at any one time in Section 4 of Form 
R. Moreover, the Production Ratio, which measures the relative 
percentage of a TRI chemical used in a product relative to the year 
before, would not have to be calculated if a facility submits a Form A. 
Eliminating the need to calculate these and other Form R data elements 
that are not included on the Form A result in an estimated burden 
savings of 17.5 hours per Form A. This is the difference between the 
estimated Form R burden of 52.1 hours and the estimated Form A burden 
of 34.6 hours. Under the revised methodology discussed earlier, the 
estimated burden reduction for PBT reporters would be approximately 
20,000 hours instead of 47,000 hours. Regardless of methodology used, 
actual burden savings are likely to be less, given that not all Form A 
eligible respondents are likely to use Form A. Presently, only 54% of 
forms that appear to be eligible are actually submitted on Form A.
b. What Are the Potential Impacts to Data Users?
    Regarding impacts to data users, the Agency feels that expanding 
Form A eligibility to PBT reporting facilities who have no releases to 
the environment but have some other waste management activities to 
report, will have negligible impacts on the utility of the TRI data and 
the TRI database. Some information in Sections 8.2 through 8.8 for 
facilities within the 500 pound PBT reportable amount will no longer be 
reported in detail. The Agency anticipates this will have a minimal 
impact on the national reports TRI generates annually because it is a 
low quantity of waste and will have a negligible impact on national 
totals. On an individual facility basis, data users will not have 
detailed waste management information for recycling, treatment, and 
energy recovery, but will know that the total of these amounts is 
within the range of zero to 500 pounds. Additionally, for some 
chemicals, information available to EPA and the public allows data 
users to reasonably predict the waste management method(s) most likely 
employed at the facility. Communities will still be able to access Form 
A facility information via Envirofacts or TRI Explorer. The Agency 
reiterates the importance of the information contained in the Form A 
Certification Statement and discussed in the Alternate Threshold for 
Facilities with Low Annual Reportable Amounts Final Rule (59 FR 61488, 
November 30, 1994). In that rule the Agency indicated that Form A 
serves the purposes of EPCRA Section 313 by providing the public with 
the basic information that a facility manufactures, processes, or 
otherwise uses a listed chemical in excess of current thresholds, that 
the annual reportable amount (in this case, the PRA) is 500 pounds or 
less, and that the facility did not exceed the alternate threshold for 
reporting. This information will be made available in the TRI database. 
Company records supporting such determinations must be made available 
to EPA inspectors upon request.
c. Are There Other Potential Impacts?
    The Agency feels this reporting option will provide an incentive to 
TRI facilities to eliminate releases and reduce the need for other 
waste management by allowing certification in lieu of reporting for 
facilities that manage to eliminate all releases and reduce their other 
waste management activities to a level of 500 pounds or less.
3. Rationale for Expanding Form A Eligibility to PBT Chemicals
    EPCRA allows EPA to adjust the reporting thresholds consistent with 
Section 313(f)(2) so long as the adjusted thresholds ``obtain reporting 
on a substantial majority of total releases of the chemical at all 
facilities subject to the requirements of this section.'' Expanding 
eligibility for Form A to PBTs (except dioxin and dioxin-like 
compounds) would define the category of facilities eligible for the 
increased threshold as those facilities that have zero releases and 500 
pounds or less of the PRA for a particular chemical. Eligibility is 
determined on a chemical-by-chemical basis, therefore this approach 
would maintain reporting on a substantial majority of total releases 
because chemicals for which a facility has releases are not eligible 
for the alternate threshold. Only where a facility would have reported 
zero releases for a chemical would the facility be eligible; therefore, 
no data on releases are lost. Additionally, the requirement to submit a 
certification statement would allow certain facility information and 
information on other waste management activities to be made available 
to the public. As EPA explained in the 1994 Form A Rulemaking, the 
certification statement ``relates to a range volume for a given 
chemical'' of zero to 500 pounds, thereby providing the public with 
valuable information (59 FR 61497, November 30, 1994). In addition to 
comment on this proposal, the Agency also requests comment on whether 
any of the chemicals potentially eligible for this option are of 
sufficient concern so as to justify EPA excluding them from eligibility 
for Form A as is being done with dioxins and dioxin like compounds.

D. Expanding Form A Eligibility--Non-PBT Chemicals

    Allows Non-PBT Reporting Facilities to use an Alternate Reporting 
Threshold Provided They Do Not Exceed 5000 Pounds of Total Other Waste 
Management Quantities.

[[Page 57842]]

1. Description of Proposed Change
a. What Is This Approach To Burden Reduction?
    Facilities reporting non-PBT chemicals would now be able to use 
Form A if they meet the 1 million pound alternate reporting threshold 
and have 5000 pounds or less of total ``annual reportable amount,'' 
defined as the combined total quantity released at the facility, 
treated at the facility, recovered at the facility as a result of 
recycle operations, combusted for the purpose of energy recovery at the 
facility, and amounts transferred from the facility to off-site 
locations for the purpose of recycling, energy recovery, treatment, 
and/or disposal. This combined total corresponds to the quantity of the 
toxic chemical in production-related waste, i.e., the sum of Section 
8.1 through and including section 8.7 of the Form R.
b. Is This Approach Available to All TRI Chemicals?
    This approach applies only to non-PBT chemicals.\4\ Non-PBT 
chemicals are already potentially eligible for the Form A Certification 
Statement. In Reporting Year 2003, 12,020 non-PBT chemical submissions 
were made using Form A. An additional 10,000 non-PBT Form Rs appear to 
be eligible for Form A, though some of these may not qualify because 
they may exceed the one million pound reporting threshold. Today's 
proposal would increase the ARA from 500 pounds to 5000 pounds. 
Increasing the ARA would expand eligibility to an estimated 12,201 
additional non-PBT forms.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \4\ For the purposes of this proposal and as described above, 
``non-PBT chemicals'' indicates all listed TRI chemicals that are 
not ``chemicals of special concern,'' which are listed in 40 CFR 
372.28.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

c. How Often Is the Approach Available to TRI Facilities?
    This option would be available annually. A facility reporting a 
non-PBT chemical may use the Form A Certification Statement as long as 
it continues to meet the 1 million pound alternate threshold and have 
5000 pounds or less for the ARA. If a reporting facility exceeds the 
5000 pound ARA in any reporting year, it would be required to submit 
Form R for that year.
d. What Are the Reporting Requirements?
    Today's proposal would allow non-PBT reporting facilities that meet 
the 1 million pound manufacture, process, or otherwise use threshold 
and have 5000 pounds or less of total production related waste (i.e., 
the Annual Reportable Amount equal to the sum of Sections 8.1 + 8.2 + 
8.3 + 8.4 + 8.5 + 8.6 + 8.7) to use the Form A Certification Statement 
in lieu of Form R. Form A can be found in the Toxic Chemical Release 
Inventory Reporting Forms and Instructions (EPA 260-B-04-001).
e. Do My Record Keeping Requirements Change?
    No. The current record keeping requirements remain in effect. A 
facility submitting a Form A must keep records for three years (40 CFR 
sections 372.10 and 372.27(b)).
2. Estimates of Potential Impacts

a. What Are the Potential Impacts for Reducing Burden?

    From the standpoint of burden reduction, the Agency's analysis 
indicates that this rule, if finalized, would extend Form A eligibility 
to around 12,200 non-PBT forms, saving approximately 117,000 hours of 
reporting burden (Economic Analysis of Toxics Release Inventory Burden 
Reduction Proposed Rule, EPA, September 2005). Without the opportunity 
to use Form A, facilities reporting non-PBTs above the current 500 
pound ARA would still complete Form R and would need to determine, the 
maximum amount of the TRI chemical on-site at any one time in Section 4 
of Form R as well as separate release and other waste management data. 
Moreover, the Production Ratio, which measures the relative percentage 
of a TRI chemical used in a product relative to the year before, would 
have to be calculated when a Form R is submitted. The current estimate 
of burden associated with completing a non-PBT Form R is 30.2 hours 
(including recordkeeping and submission). Eliminating the need to 
calculate data elements not on the Form A would save an estimated 9.6 
hours per report. This is the difference between the estimate for a 
non-PBT Form R and the 20.6 hour estimate for a Form A. As noted above, 
under the revised burden methodology on which EPA is today requesting 
comment, potential burden savings would be reduced. For non-PBTs, the 
reduction would be approximately fifteen percent resulting in an 
estimate of approximately 100,000 hours of burden reduction. For PBTs 
and non-PBTs combined, the burden reduction estimated by the new 
methodology for this proposal would be approximately twenty-five 
percent less than the estimate using the current methodology. 
Regardless of the methodology used, it is again important to note that 
actual burden savings may be considerably less if historical rates of 
Form A use continue in the future.
b. What Are the Potential Impacts to Data Users?
    After several years of reporting experience, the Agency believes it 
is appropriate to increase the Annual Reportable Amount (ARA) to expand 
eligibility for the Form A Certification Statement, and is today 
proposing to increase that amount to 5000 pounds. EPA has also analyzed 
and will be taking comment on 1000 and 2000 pound ARA levels. While the 
500 pound ARA the Agency finalized in a 1994 rulemaking (59 FR 61488) 
gained a measure of success in reducing reporting burden, the Agency 
believes that increasing the ARA provides additional burden relief to 
facilities, but still allows the TRI program to report on a substantial 
majority of the releases. It also continues to provide valuable 
information to the public that fulfills the purposes of the TRI 
program.
    Today's proposal would increase the number of potentially non-PBT 
Forms eligible for Form A by approximately 12,000 to a total of 
approximately 34,000. However, as noted above, only about half of 
potentially eligible respondents actually use Form A. Even if all newly 
eligible respondents use Form A, the total number of Form A submissions 
would still be projected to not exceed the number projected under the 
1994 Final Rule that created Form A. Furthermore, even with the 
increase in eligible forms, the percentage of total release pounds that 
would be eligible to be reported on Form A with a 5000 pound ARA still 
remains at less than 1% of total releases reported on Form R 
nationwide. Under this higher threshold, approximately 14 million 
pounds of releases (0.34% of total releases) and 25 million pounds of 
total production-related waste (0.11% of all TRI total production-
related waste) would be newly eligible for Form A reporting.
    Under this approach, data users will know that for any non-PBT 
chemical submitted on a Form A, the totals for both releases (Section 
8.1) and total production related waste (Sum of Sections 8.1 through 
and including Section 8.7) do not exceed 5000 pounds. TRI data users 
are currently able to access Form A facility information regarding the 
facility via Envirofacts and TRI Explorer (http://www.epa.gov/triexplorer/
), so they would know the facility is a potential source. 

Data users

[[Page 57843]]

would also still be able to obtain national information such as number 
of Form As filed each year by individual chemical. Using EZ Query in 
Envirofacts (http:/lwww.epa.gov/envirofacts), data users will be able 

to access individual chemical Form As along with the TRI Facility 
Identification Numbers (TRIFIDs) and names of the facilities submitting 
the Form As.
    Other potential impacts considered by the Agency in the creation of 
Form A in the 1994 rulemaking included estimates seeking to 
characterize the impact on a local level. That rulemaking assessed 
these impacts by attempting to estimate which counties might have all 
of the TRI information reported on Form A. As mentioned previously, the 
impacts projected in that rulemaking were not realized as only about 
half of the potentially eligible respondents actually switched to Form 
A.
    A similar analysis was conducted for this rule, but ZIP codes were 
used in the current analysis because it was believed that they would 
provide a better measure of local impacts. Presently, depending on the 
year examined, there are between 500 and 550 ZIP codes where all TRI 
reporting is on Form A. Under the proposed rule, this number has the 
potential to increase by up to 655 ZIP codes (approximately seven 
percent of all ZIP codes with TRI reporters). However, this number is 
largely driven by the fact that many ZIP codes have only a few Form Rs. 
Of the 655 ZIP codes where all current Form Rs would become eligible 
for Form A, 88% currently have only one Form R and 10% have only two 
such forms.
    In addition, at 5000 pounds, the Agency notes that information on 
approximately 26 additional chemicals could potentially be reported 
exclusively on Form A, though this would only occur if all newly 
eligible reporters use Form A, which is unlikely based on past 
experience. The majority of these chemicals are presently reported on 
only one or two Form Rs. Detailed analyses of the impacts on 
communities (ZIP codes) and individual chemicals is provided in the 
Economic Analysis. Table 3 below summarizes the potential impacts on 
reporting of raising the ARA to 1000, 2000, and 5000 pounds.

                           Table 3.--Potential Incremental* Effects of All Newly Eligible Reporters Using Form A for non-PBTs
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                                   Percent of ZIP                       Percent of total
                                                                Reports          Number of %      codes where all    Percent of total      production
                                                              potentially         chemicals           Form R's           releases        related waste
                      ARA in pounds                        eligible for Form     potentially        potentially        potentially        potentially
                                                                   A           reported only on  converted to Form   reported on Form   reported on Form
                                                                                    Form A              A's                 A                  A
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1000.....................................................              3,184                  7                  2               0.03               0.01
2000.....................................................              6,838                 16                  3               0.11               0.03
5000.....................................................             12,201                 26                  7               0.34              0.11
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Note: All estimates are incremental to current 500 pound ARA threshold.

    A list of the chemicals can be found in the Economic Analysis (See 
Appendix A, TABLE A-2, Chemicals Where 100% Of Total Releases Would 
Potentially No Longer Be Reported on Form R Under the Expanded 
Eligibility For Form A: Non-PBT Chemicals Option).
3. Rationale for Expanding Form A Eligibility for Non-PBT Chemicals
    One suggestion raised by a number of stakeholders for burden 
reduction was to increase the Annual Reportable Amount (ARA) from 500 
to 5000 pounds. The Agency evaluated this suggestion and concluded that 
little information would be affected (i.e., about 0.1% of Total 
Production Related Waste), if we extended the ARA for non-PBTs to 5000 
pounds. Also, as described above in relation to lead, mercury, and 
PACs, a data user may be able to predict based on individual chemicals 
what waste management activity is likely to be used at a facility. The 
range of information provided by a Form A can be supplemented with 
information on typical industry practices and other regulatory 
frameworks that might apply to a specific chemical.
    This Option is consistent with the authority given to EPA by EPCRA 
section 313(f)(2). As described above, EPCRA allows EPA to adjust the 
reporting thresholds so long as the adjusted thresholds ``obtain 
reporting on a substantial majority of total releases of the chemical 
at all facilities subject to the requirements of this section.'' Under 
this option, Form A eligibility would be extended for Non-PBT chemicals 
with Annual Reportable Amounts not exceeding 5000 pounds. Because the 
change will not affect significant amounts of data on releases or other 
waste management activities, this approach obtains the reporting on a 
substantial majority of total releases as required by the statute. 
Additionally, each Form A serves as a range report which informs the 
public that total releases, as well as total production related waste 
(which includes releases) is in the range of zero to 5000 pounds.
    Among the other factors considered by the Agency was existing Form 
A utilization. The Agency observed that only slightly over half of the 
forms (54%) potentially eligible for Form A use take advantage of that 
option. There are a number of potential reasons for this utilization 
rate. First, a number of facilities may be using in excess of the 1 
million pound alternative threshold \5\ (e.g. users of feedstock 
chemicals like nitrapyrin and producers of pesticides or 
pharmaceuticals) and are therefore ineligible for Form A. Other 
facilities may report on Form R out of a desire to showcase their 
pollution prevention efforts. Still other facilities find the Form R to 
be an efficient mechanism for tracking their material balances. A 
facility, having collected all of this information, may also be making 
a Form R submission to demonstrate good environmental stewardship.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \5\ The Agency cannot determine with certainty whether a 
facility has exceeded the one million pound threshold because 
facilities are not required to report totals for manufacture, 
processing, or otherwise use. Based on factors such as typical 
industry practices, the Agency has presumed that certain chemicals 
like the examples given would be likely to push a facility over the 
one million pound alternate threshold.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Regardless of the factors that prompt facilities to use Form R when 
they may be eligible for Form A, the Agency does not believe the rate 
of Form A utilization is likely to be significantly higher at a 5000 
pound threshold than it currently is at the 500 pound ARA threshold. 
EPA consequently projects that, in practice, the total number of 
additional Form A submissions as a result of the higher threshold would 
also be about half of the newly eligible Form Rs. This means that the 
total number of Form As that would be filed would be comparable to what 
was originally projected for Form A at the

[[Page 57844]]

500 pound threshold assuming full utilization by all eligible filers. 
The Agency indicated in the original alternate threshold rulemaking (59 
FR 61495) that it believed the 500 pound threshold would ``limit the 
loss of detailed information currently available, while providing 
industry with a reasonably attainable level [of burden reduction].'' 
The Agency believes this conclusion continues to be valid for the 5,000 
pound ARA threshold. As noted above, Table 3 provides a summary of the 
potential impacts of changes to the ARA threshold from 1000 up to 5000 
pounds. There are 26 additional chemicals for which releases may no 
longer be reported on Form R. Of those chemicals, the majority are 
pesticides. Chemical intermediates represent the second most occurring 
major class behind pesticides. As discussed above, the Form A 
certifications for these chemicals will provide a range by which waste 
management quantities and practices may be estimated. EPA believes 
that, taken together, the Form Rs and Form As that will be filed as a 
result of this rule will continue to provide valuable information to 
the public that fulfills the purposes of the TRI program. The Agency 
requests comment on its proposal to increase the Form A Certification 
Statement Annual Reportable Amount to 5000 pounds as well as on 
alternate ARA thresholds of 1000 and 2000 pounds. The Agency also seeks 
comment on whether changes to the ARA would adversely impact chemical 
specific or local community uses of the information.

IV. Requests for Public Comment

    The Agency recognizes that some chemicals may be of particular 
concern and therefore extending the ARA to 5000, 2000, or 1,000 pounds 
for those chemicals may have a disproportionate impact on TRI data 
users. EPA notes that one known category of concern, PBTs, is not being 
considered under this Form A option, but recognizes that there may be 
other chemicals of particular concern as well. EPA requests comment on 
whether any of the chemicals potentially eligible for this option are 
of a sufficient level of concern so as to justify EPA excluding them 
from eligibility for the Form A at the higher ARA. Based on comments 
received and analyses conducted, we could decide to identify some set 
of chemicals that would not be eligible to use a higher ARA, should one 
be promulgated. EPA also recognizes that some stakeholders may be 
concerned about data no longer on the Form R when facilities instead 
file a Form A and requests comment on possible modifications to the 
Form A to address this concern.
    The following is a list of items discussed in this document on 
which EPA solicits comment. This list is provided for the reader's 
reference. The Agency encourages commenters to review the relevant 
portions of the preamble that pertain to each area in order to provide 
a more complete response.
    (1) The Agency solicits comment on the reasonableness and the 
accuracy of the methodology, engineering steps and time estimates of 
its July 2004 revised estimate of TRI reporting burden, as well as on 
the conclusions of the external peer review.
    (2) The Agency requests comment on its proposal to increase the 
Form A Certification Statement Annual Reportable Amount to 5000 pounds 
as well as on alternate ARA thresholds of 1000 and 2000 pounds. The 
Agency also seeks comment on whether changes to the ARA would adversely 
impact chemical specific or local community uses of the information. 
EPA requests comment on whether any of the chemicals potentially 
eligible for this option are of a sufficient level of concern so as to 
justify EPA excluding them from eligibility for the Form A at the 
higher ARA.
    (3) EPA requests comment on how extending Form A eligibility to PBT 
chemicals (except dioxins and dioxin compounds) will impact the 
reporting of TRI chemicals. EPA also requests comment on whether any of 
the chemicals potentially eligible for this option are of a sufficient 
level of concern so as to justify EPA excluding them from eligibility 
for the Form A.
    (4) The Agency requests comment on the proposed approach for 
defining the PRA and specifically on whether Section 8.8 management 
amounts should be included in the definition of the PRA. The Agency 
also requests comment on whether the ARA (for non-PBTs) should be 
modified to include Section 8.8 management information which would be 
an alternate way of making the two approaches more consistent. EPA is 
also interested in information on the specific types of activities that 
are reported in Section 8.8.
    (5) To estimate the cost savings, incremental costs, economic 
impacts and benefits from this rule to affected regulated entities, EPA 
completed an economic analysis for this rule. Copies of these analyses 
(entitled ``Economic Assessment of the Burden Reduction--Phase II--
Proposed Rule'') have been placed in the TRI docket for public review. 
The Agency solicits comment on the methodology and results from the 
economic analysis as well as any data that the public feels would be 
useful in a revised analysis.

V. What Are the Statutory and Executive Order Reviews Associated With 
This Action?

A. Executive Order 12866, Regulatory Planning and Review

    Under Executive Order 12866 (58 FR 51735), the Agency must 
determine whether this regulatory action is ``significant'' and 
therefore subject to formal review by the Office of Management and 
Budget (OMB) and to the requirements of the Executive Order, which 
include assessing the costs and benefits anticipated as a result of the 
proposed regulatory action. The Order defines ``significant regulatory 
action'' as one that is likely to result in a rule that may: (1) Have 
an annual effect on the economy of $100 million or more or adversely 
affect in a material way the economy, a sector of the economy, 
productivity, competition, jobs, the environment, public health or 
safety, or State, local, or tribal governments or communities; (2) 
create a serious inconsistency or otherwise interfere with an action 
taken or planned by another agency; (3) materially alter the budgetary 
impact of entitlements, grants, user fees, or loan programs or the 
rights and obligations of recipients thereof; or (4) raise novel legal 
or policy issues arising out of legal mandates, the President's 
priorities, or the principles set forth in the Executive Order. 
Pursuant to the terms of Executive Order 12866, it has been determined 
that today's proposed rule is a significant regulatory action. As such, 
this action was submitted to OMB for review. Changes made in response 
to OMB suggestions or recommendations are documented in the docket to 
today's proposal.
    To estimate the cost savings, incremental costs, economic impacts 
and benefits from this rule to affected regulated entities, EPA 
completed an economic analysis for this rule. Copies of these analyses 
(entitled ``Economic Analysis of the Proposed Toxics Release Inventory 
Phase II Burden Reduction Rule'') have been placed in the TRI docket 
for public review. The Agency solicits comment on the methodology and 
results from the analysis as well as any data that the public feels 
would be useful in a revised analysis.
1. Methodology
    To estimate the cost savings, incremental costs, economic impacts, 
and benefits of this rule, the Agency

[[Page 57845]]

estimated both the cost and burden of completing Form R and Form A as 
well as the number of affected entities. The Agency has used 2002 
reporting year for TRI data. For all options under consideration, the 
Agency identified the number of potentially affected respondents 
currently completing Form Rs that may be eligible for burden savings 
under the new Form A eligibility for PBT Chemicals and the expanded 
Form A eligibility for non-PBT chemicals. For each option, the Agency 
compared the baseline burden for completing Form R and compared it with 
the post-regulatory option under consideration. The total burden and 
cost savings associated with each proposed options are the product of 
the unit burden and cost savings per form times the number of forms 
eligible for each option.
2. Cost and Burden Savings Results
    Table 4 summarizes the potential annual cost and burden savings of 
the Phase II TRI Burden Reduction proposal, if all newly eligible 
reports were filed using Form A.

                            Table 4.--Potential Annual Cost and Burden Savings of the Phase II TRI Burden Reduction Proposal
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                             Number of        Burden
                                             Number of      potentially     savings per    Total annual    Cost savings    Total annual     Percent  of
                 Option                    eligible Form     eligible         Form R      burden savings    per Form R     cost savings    total  cost/
                                                R's         facilities        (hours)         (hours)                                         burden
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
New Form A Eligibilty for PBT chemicals.           2,703           2,064            17.5          47,303            $790      $2,136,392             1.2
Increase ARA for Non-PBT chemicals to              3,184           2,396             9.6          30,566             430       1,368,650             0.8
 1000 pounds............................
Increase ARA for Non-PBT chemicals to              6,838           4,220             9.6          65,645             430       2,939,331             1.7
 2000 pounds............................
Increase ARA for Non-PBT chemicals to             12,201           6,461             9.6         117,130             430       5,244,630             3.1
 5000 pounds............................
                                         -----------------
    Total of Proposed Options...........  ..............  ..............  ..............         164,432  ..............       7,381,022             4.3
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

EPA estimates that the total annual burden savings for this proposal is 
164,432 hours. EPA estimates the total annual cost savings for this 
proposal is $7.4 million. Average annual cost savings for facilities 
submitting Form As in lieu of Form Rs is $430 per form for non-PBT 
reports and $790 per form for PBT reports.
3. Impacts to Data
    EPA has evaluated the potential impacts to data reported to the 
public for the proposed options and determined that the risk of 
significant impacts is minimal. For New Form A Eligibility for PBT 
chemicals, the TRI chemical submitted must not have either production-
related or non-production related releases to the environment. The 
balance of management of these TRI chemicals is most likely either 
recycling or non-dissipative management through energy recovery or 
treatment for destruction at quantities totaling 500 pounds or less. 
For Expanded Form A Eligibility for non-PBT chemicals, the Agency has 
evaluated both total release pounds and total production related waste 
pounds that would not be reported using Form R if this option is 
finalized. Relative to the current ARA of 500 pounds, approximately 
fifteen million additional release pounds (0.34 percent of all TRI 
release lbs) and 27 million additional total production related waste 
pounds (0.11 percent of all TRI total production related waste pounds) 
would be eligible for Form A reporting if this option were finalized. 
As noted above, based on historical experience, EPA projects that not 
all eligible reporters will use Form A. For those that do, the Form A 
provides a range report of zero to 5,000 pounds for both releases and 
total production related waste. Further information on how specific 
chemicals are affected can be found in the economic analysis of this 
rulemaking.

B. Paperwork Reduction Act

    EPA calculated the potential reporting and recordkeeping burden 
reduction for this rule to be 202,000 hours and the potential cost 
savings to be $9.2 million per year. As noted above, actual burden 
reduction and cost savings will likely be somewhat less. Burden means 
total time, effort, or financial resources expended by persons to 
generate, maintain, retain, disclose, or provide information to or for 
a Federal agency. That includes the time needed to review instructions; 
develop, acquire, install, and utilize technology and systems for the 
purposes of collecting, validating, and verifying information, 
processing and maintaining information, and disclosing and providing 
information; adjust the existing ways to comply with any previously 
applicable instructions and requirements; train personnel to be able to 
respond to a collection of information; search data sources; complete 
and review the collection of information; and transmit or otherwise 
disclose the information.

C. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA), as Amended by the Small Business 
Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996 (SBREFA), 5 U.S.C. 601 et 
seq.

    Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA), as amended by the Small Business 
Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996 (SBREFA), 5 U.S.C. 601 et. 
seq. The RFA generally requires an agency to prepare a regulatory 
flexibility analysis of any rule subject to notice and comment 
rulemaking requirements under the Administrative Procedure Act or any 
other statute unless the agency certifies that the rule will not have a 
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities. 
Small entities include small businesses, small organizations, and small 
governmental jurisdictions.
    For purposes of assessing the impacts of today's rule on small 
entities, small entity is defined as: (1) A small business that has 
fewer than 1000 or 100 employees per firm depending upon the SIC code 
the firm primarily is classified; (2) a small governmental jurisdiction 
that is a government of a city, county, town, school district or 
special district with a population of less than 50,000;

[[Page 57846]]

and (3) a small organization that is any not-for-profit enterprise 
which is independently owned and operated and is not dominant in its 
field.
    The economic impact analysis conducted for today's proposal 
indicates that these revisions to Form R and Form A would generally 
result in savings to affected entities compared to baseline 
requirements. The rule is not expected to result in a net cost to any 
affected entity. Thus, adverse impacts are not anticipated.
    After considering the economic impacts of today's proposed rule on 
small entities, I certify that this action will not have a significant 
economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.

D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act

    EPA has determined that this rule does not contain a Federal 
mandate that may result in expenditures of $100 million or more for 
State, local, and tribal governments, in the aggregate, or the private 
sector in any one year. This rule is estimated to save compliance costs 
of $9.2 million annually to the private sector. In addition, this rule 
does not create any additional federally enforceable duty for State, 
local and tribal governments. Thus, today's rule is not subject to the 
requirements of sections 202 and 205 of the UMRA.

E. Executive Order 13132, Federalism

    Executive Order 13132, entitled ``Federalism'' (64 FR 43255, August 
10, 1999), requires EPA to develop an accountable process to ensure 
meaningful and timely input by State and local officials in the 
development of regulatory policies that have federalism implications. 
``Policies that have federalism implications'' is defined in the 
Executive Order to include regulations that have ``substantial direct 
effects on the States, on the relationship between the national 
government and the States, or on the distribution of power and 
responsibilities among the various levels of government.'' This 
proposed rule does not have federalism implications. It will not have 
substantial direct effects on the States, on the relationship between 
the national government and the States, or on the distribution of power 
and responsibilities among the various levels of government, as 
specified in Executive Order 13132.

F. Executive Order 13175, Consultation and Coordination With Indian 
Tribal Governments

    Executive Order 13175, entitled ``Consultation and Coordination 
with Indian Tribal Governments'' (65 FR 67249, November 6, 2000), 
requires EPA to develop an accountable process to ensure ``meaningful 
and timely input by tribal officials in the development of regulatory 
policies that have tribal implications.'' ``Policies that have tribal 
implications'' is defined in the Executive Order to include regulations 
that have ``substantial direct effects on one or more Indian tribes, 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''. This proposed rule does not 
have tribal implications. It will not have substantial direct effects 
on tribal governments, on the relationship between the Federal 
government and Indian tribes, or on the distribution of power and 
responsibilities between the Federal government and Indian tribes, as 
specified in Executive Order 13175.

G. Executive Order 13211, Actions Concerning Regulations That 
Significantly Affect Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use

    This rule is not a ``significant energy action'' as defined in 
Executive Order 13211, ``Actions Concerning Regulations That 
Significantly Affect Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use'' (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. Today's 
proposed rule reduces recordkeeping and reporting burden for TRI 
reporters. It will not cause reductions in supply or production of oil, 
fuel, coal, or electricity. Nor will it result in increased energy 
prices, increased cost of energy distribution, or an increased 
dependence on foreign supplies of energy.

H. Executive Order 13045, Protection of Children From Environmental 
Health Risks and Safety Risks

    ``Protection of Children From Environmental Health Risks and Safety 
Risks'' (62 FR 19885, April 23, 1997) applies to any rule that EPA 
determines (1) ``economically significant'' as defined under Executive 
Order 12866, and (2) concerns an environmental health or safety risk 
that EPA has reason to believe may have a disproportionate effect on 
children. If the regulatory action meets both criteria, the Agency must 
evaluate the environmental health or safety effects of the planned rule 
on children and explain why the planned regulation is preferable to 
other potential effective and reasonably feasible alternatives 
considered by the Agency. This proposed rule is not subject to E.O. 
13045 because it is not an economically significant rule as defined by 
E.O. 12866.

I. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act

    Section 12(d) of the National Technology Transfer and Advancement 
Act of 1995 (``NTTAA''), Public Law 104-113, section 12(d) (15 U.S.C. 
272 note) directs EPA to use voluntary consensus standards in its 
regulatory activities unless to do so would be inconsistent with 
applicable law or otherwise impractical. Voluntary consensus standards 
are technical standards (e.g., materials specifications, test methods, 
sampling procedures, and business practices) that are developed or 
adopted by voluntary consensus standards bodies. The NTTAA directs EPA 
to provide Congress, though OMB, explanations when the Agency decides 
not to use available and applicable voluntary consensus standards. This 
rule does not establish technical standards. Therefore, EPA did not 
consider the use of any voluntary consensus standards.

J. Environmental Justice

    Under Executive Order 12898, ``Federal Actions to Address 
Environmental Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income 
Populations,'' EPA has undertaken to incorporate environmental justice 
into its policies and programs. EPA is committed to addressing 
environmental justice concerns, and is assuming a leadership role in 
environmental justice initiatives to enhance environmental quality for 
all residents of the United States. The Agency's goals are to ensure 
that no segment of the population, regardless of race, color, national 
origin, or income, bears disproportionately high and adverse human 
health and environmental effects as a result of EPA's policies, 
programs, and activities.
    The TRI is an environmental information program. While it provides 
important information that may indirectly lead to improved health and 
environmental conditions on the community level, it is not an emission 
control regulation that could directly impact health and environmental 
outcomes in a community. The principal consequence of finalizing 
today's action would be to reduce the level of detail available on some 
toxic chemical releases or management. However, as pointed out in the 
previous discussions, the impacts will be very small in terms of total 
national figures. EPA believes that the data provided under this 
proposed rule will continue to provide valuable information that 
fulfills the purposes of the TRI program.

[[Page 57847]]

Further, only the second of today's approaches would have any effect on 
reporting of chemicals released to the environment. The first approach 
requires that facilities reporting PBTs have no releases in order to be 
eligible for Form A. EPA has no indication that either option will 
disproportionately impact minority or low-income communities.

List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 372

    Environmental protection, Community right-to-know, Reporting and 
recordkeeping requirements, Toxic chemicals.

    Dated: September 21, 2005.
Stephen L. Johnson,
Administrator.

    For the reasons discussed in the preamble, the Environmental 
Protection Agency proposes to amend 40 CFR part 372 as follows:

PART 372--[AMENDED]

    1. The authority citation for part 372 continues to read as 
follows:

    Authority: 42 U.S.C. 11023 and 11048.

Subpart A--[Amended]

    2. Revise Sec.  372.10(d) introductory text to read as follows:


Sec.  372.10  Recordkeeping.

* * * * *
    (d) Each owner or operator who determines that the owner operator 
may apply one of the alternate thresholds as specified under Sec.  
372.27(a) must retain the following records for a period of 3 years 
from the date of the submission of the certification statement as 
required under Sec.  372.27(b):
* * * * *

Subpart B--[Amended]

    3. Section 372.27 is amended as follows:
    i. Revise section heading.
    ii. Revise paragraph (a).
    iii. Revise paragraph (b).
    iv. Revise paragraph (e).


Sec.  372.27  Alternate thresholds and certifications.

    (a) Except as provided in paragraph (e) of this section:
    (1) With respect to the manufacture, process, or otherwise use of a 
toxic chemical, the owner or operator of a facility may apply an 
alternate threshold of 1 million pounds per year to that chemical if 
the owner or operator calculates that the facility would have an annual 
reportable amount of that toxic chemical not exceeding 5000 pounds for 
the combined total quantities released at the facility, disposed within 
the facility, treated at the facility (as represented by amounts 
destroyed or converted by treatment processes), recovered at the 
facility as a result of recycle operations, combusted for the purpose 
of energy recovery at the facility, and amounts transferred from the 
facility to off-site locations for the purpose of recycle, energy 
recovery, treatment, and/or disposal. These volumes correspond to the 
sum of amounts reportable for data elements on EPA Form R (EPA Form 
9350-1; Rev. 12/4/93) as Part II column B or sections 8.1 (quantity 
released), 8.2 (quantity used for energy recovery on-site), 8.3 
(quantity used for energy recovery off-site), 8.4 (quantity recycled 
on-site), 8.5 (quantity recycled off-site), 8.6 (quantity treated on-
site), and 8.7 (quantity treated off-site).
    (2) With respect to the manufacture, process, or otherwise use of a 
toxic chemical, the owner or operator of a facility may apply an 
alternate threshold of 1 million pounds per year to that chemical if 
the owner or operator calculates that the facility would have:
    (i) Zero disposal or other releases (including disposal or other 
releases that resulted from catastrophic events); and
    (ii) A PBT annual reportable amount of that toxic chemical not 
exceeding 500 pounds. The PBT annual reportable amount is the combined 
total of:
    (A) Quantities treated for destruction at the facility;
    (B) Quantities recovered at the facility as a result of recycle 
operations;
    (C) Quantities combusted for the purpose of energy recovery at the 
facility;
    (D) Quantities transferred from the facility to off-site locations 
for the purpose of recycle, energy recovery, treatment, and/or 
disposal; and
    (E) Quantities managed through recycle, energy recovery, or 
treatment for destruction that were the result of remedial actions, 
catastrophic events, or one-time events not associated with production 
processes during the reporting year.
    (b) If an owner or operator of a facility determines that the owner 
or operator may apply one of the alternate reporting thresholds 
specified in paragraph (a) of this section for a specific toxic 
chemical, the owner or operator is not required to submit a report for 
that chemical under Sec.  372.30, but must submit a certification 
statement that contains the information required in Sec.  372.95. The 
owner or operator of the facility must also keep records as specified 
in Sec.  372.10(d).
* * * * *
    (e) The alternative thresholds described in paragraph (a) of this 
section are limited by the following:
    (1) The provisions of paragraph (a)(1) of this section do not apply 
to any chemicals listed in Sec.  372.28.
    (2) Dioxins and dioxin-like compounds are not eligible for the 
alternate thresholds described in paragraph (a) of this section.

Subpart E--[Amended]

    4. Section 372.95 is amended as follows:
    i. Revise section heading.
    ii. Revise paragraph (b) introductory text.
    iii. Revise paragraph (b)(4).


Sec.  372.95  Alternate threshold certifications and instructions.

* * * * *
    (b) Alternate threshold certification statement elements. The 
following information must be reported on an alternate threshold 
certification statement pursuant to Sec.  372.27(b):
* * * * *
    (4) Signature of a senior management official certifying one of the 
following:
    (i) Pursuant to 40 CFR 372.27(a)(1), ``I hereby certify that to the 
best of my knowledge and belief for the toxic chemical listed in this 
statement, the annual reportable amount, as defined in 40 CFR 
372.27(a)(1), did not exceed 5000 pounds for this reporting year and 
that the chemical was manufactured, or processed, or otherwise used in 
an amount not exceeding 1 million pounds during this reporting year;'' 
and/or
    (ii) Pursuant to 40 CFR 372.27(a)(3), ``I hereby certify that to 
the best of my knowledge and belief for the toxic chemical listed in 
this statement, there were zero disposals or other releases to the 
environment (including disposals or other releases that resulted from 
catastrophic events), the ``PBT Annual Reportable Amount,'' as defined 
in 40 CFR 372.27(a)(3) did not exceed 500 pounds for this reporting 
year, and that the chemical was manufactured, or processed, or 
otherwise used in an amount not exceeding 1 million pounds during this 
reporting year.''
* * * * *
[FR Doc. 05-19710 Filed 10-3-05; 8:45 am]

BILLING CODE 6560-50-P
