United States
Environmental Protection
Agency
Office of Solid Waste
and Emergency Response
(5305)
EPA530-F-94-028
November 1994
Office of Solid Waste
SEPA Environmental
Fact Sheet
Background
The Resource Conservation and
Recovery Act (RCRA), as amended
by the Hazardous and Solid Waste
Amendments of 1994 (HSWA),
emphasizes a national policy that
focuses on reducing or eliminating
the generation of hazardous waste,
rather than managing waste after it
is generated. The Pollution
Prevention Act of 1991 further
^
underscored the need for preventing
pollution at its source.
The Draft Hazardous Waste
Minimization and Combustion
Strategy announced by EPA in May
of 1993 called for reducing the
amount of hazardous waste
generated nationality through the
establishment of a strong preference
for source reduction and
environmentally sound recycling
over waste management. And, in
May of 1994, EPA released the Draft
RCRA Waste Minimization National
Plan, which proposed a series of
initiatives to reduce the amount of
hazardous waste destined for
combustion, and proposed a longer-
term effort to minimize the
generation of all RCRA hazardous
wastes. Additionally, an
announcement of the availability of
a draft methodology for setting
source reduction priorities was
published in the Federal Register on
August 12,1994.
Action
Today, EPA is releasing the final
Hazardous Waste Minimization
National Plan. The National Plan
reflects input from an extensive
outreach effort to public interest
and community groups, citizens,
industry, State and Federal
regulators, and technical experts.
Goals of the Hazardous Waste
Minimization Plan
The Plan sets national goals for
reducing constituents in hazardous
waste that are persistent,
bioaccumulative, and toxic by 25%
by the year 2000 and by 50% by the
year 2005. It also calls for ensuring
that these constituents are reduced
-------
at the source whenever possible,
and when not possible, that they are
recycled in an environmentally
sound manner.
While these goals are national, EPA
expects that generators, whose
hazardous wastes contain these
constituents, have flexibility to set
their own individual facility goals
and baseline years and measure
their own progress in a manner that
is tailored to the facility involved.
Implementation of the Plan
The Plan reflects the recognition
that in order to achieve its goals,
EPA must allow States and industry
the flexibility to identify those
actions that will result in the
greatest source reduction and
recycling of the constitutents of
concern. The Plan also recognizes
the need to promote accountability
and the tracking of progress.
The Plan details a set of objectives
that reflect five common, recurring
themes raised by those who
participated in discussions and/or
provided comments on the Draft
Plan. EPA's actions to implement
these objectives include a
combination of voluntary,
regulatory, and institutional
mechanisms. Specific action items
are outlined in the Plan. The Plan
also provides a set of initial national
priorities for metals contained in
hazardous waste that are
combusted as a point of departure
for EPA, the States, and industry to
begin focusing on source reduction
and environmentally sound
recycling.
The Five Objectives in the
National Plan are:
Objective 1: Develop a framework
for setting national priorities;
identify constituents of concern and
develop flexible screening tools for
identifying priorities at individual
facilities.
Objective 2: Promote multimedia
environmental benefits and prevent
cross-media transfers.
Objective 3: Demonstrate a strong
preference for source reduction;
shift attention to the nation's
hazardous waste generators to
reduce hazardous waste generation
at its source.
Objective 4: Clearly define and
track progress; promote
accountability for EPA, states and
industry.
Objective 5: Involve citizens in
waste minimization implementation
decisions.
Contact
For additional information or to
order a copy of the RCRA Hazardous
Waste Minimization National Plan,
contact the RCRA Hotline, Monday-
Friday, 8:30 a.m. to 7:30 p.m. EST.
The national toll-free number is
(800) 424-9346; TDD (800) 553-
7672 (hearing impaired); in
Washington, D.C., the number is
(703)412-9810, TDD (703) 412-3323
------- |