News for Release: Monday, Dec. 18, 2006
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
EPA Provides Incentives to Reduce Chemical Emissions and
Increase Recycling Nationwide
Contact: Jessica Emond, (202) 546-4355 / emond.jessica@epa.gov
Suzanne Ackerman, (202) 564-4355 / ackerman.suzanne@epa.gov
(Washington, D.C. - Dec. 18, 2006) Today the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency finalized a Toxics Release Inventory (TRI) rule that encourages
reductions in chemical emissions and increases in recycling at facilities
nationwide. EPA also announced today its decision to continue requiring TRI data
reporting on an annual basis.
"EPA is delivering a cleaner, healthier nation by encouraging businesses to make
environmental improvements now and in the future," said Deputy Administrator
Marcus Peacock. "Cleaner businesses are more efficient businesses, which is good
for the environment, good for the economy and good for the American people."
These changes in no way affect the specific chemicals or amounts of chemicals
facilities are authorized to release to the environment. In addition, the final
rule does not exempt any facility from reporting their releases, nor does it
remove any chemicals from the TRI. The rule allows facilities that completely
eliminate releases of persistent, bioaccumulative and toxic chemicals (PBTs),
and recycle and treat no more than 500 pounds of such chemicals, to use a
shorter reporting form. By reducing long-lasting PBTs, EPA and facilities are
delivering a cleaner environment.
For non-PBT chemicals, the rule allows businesses to use the simpler reporting
form if their releases are no more than 2,000 pounds of waste as part of an
overall waste management limit of 5,000 pounds. By imposing the 2,000 pound cap
on releases for non-PBT chemicals, EPA is encouraging businesses to rely on
preferred waste management methods, such as recycling and treatment, rather than
disposal and other releases.
Over the past several years, EPA has worked with its partners to increase the
efficiency, accuracy and timeliness of TRI data. Stakeholders requested that EPA
share TRI data sooner without waiting for further analyses. In response, for the
last three years, EPA has provided the public with the electronic Facility Data
Release (e- FDR) months before the annual Public Data Release (PDR). Last year,
there was a 24 percent increase in electronic reporting forms for 2005 data.
Electronic reporting allows EPA to process the data faster, with built-in
quality checks, to improve accuracy.
TRI is a publicly available EPA database, which contains information on toxic
chemical releases and other waste management activities reported annually by
certain industries and federal facilities.
More information about the final rule:
http://www.epa.gov/tri/tridata/modrule/phase2/forma.htm
About TRI: http://www.epa.gov/tri
R347