Search »

CA—Draft Green Chemistry Regulations Unworkable for Industry and Regulatory Authority, according to Consumer Products Group

WASHINGTON, DC (July 22, 2010) — The Consumer Specialty Products Association (CSPA) said in comments filed with the California Environmental Protection Agency’s Department of Toxic Substances Control (DTSC) that the Draft Regulations for Safer Consumer Product Alternatives go far beyond the principles of green chemistry and create an unworkable scheme for industry at DTSC.

DTSC published the draft regulations June 23 as required under SB 509 and AB 1879 which were enacted in California in 2008.

“While we support the science of green chemistry, the draft regulations are lacking in scientific principles that would truly spur the development of green chemical technology,” said D. Douglas Fratz, CSPA Vice President of Scientific and Technical Affairs “What we see in the draft regulations go well beyond the scientific of green chemistry principles and would establish an unworkable mechanism to target and eliminate chemicals from commerce that is needlessly burdensome for both DTSC and industry.”

The CSPA comments detail a path forward with specific recommendations that are constructive and aimed toward providing a workable regulatory approach. CSPA’s comments cover 35 sections of the draft regulation and range from minor technical suggestions to comments and suggestions on the feasibility of implementing each of the substantive sections. CSPA suggests numerous clarifications to the regulation’s definitions and encourages DTSC to further detail the processes that will be used in numerous parts of the regulation. For example, the process for designating Chemicals Under Consideration includes dozens of potential hazard traits and indices of potential exposure, which could involve tens of thousands of pages of data.  CSPA believes DTSC needs to provide more information regarding the criteria it will use to identify priority products from the list of products under consideration, as well as make multiple revisions to the confidentiality section to help ensure that companies’ confidential business information shared with the department remains confidential.