Making HPV Challenge Information
  Accessible
  At present, stakeholders and the public can
  access test plans, data summaries, sponsor
  commitment information, chemical lists, guid-
  ance documents, and a wide range of other
  materials on the HPV Challenge Program website
  at http://www.epa.gov/chemrtk. As part of the
  Agency's ongoing efforts to ensure that the
  website  is useable and accessible, EPA recently
  enhanced the search capability of its "Robust
  Summaries and Test Plans" webpage, which
  allows stakeholders to more efficiently search
  for submissions.

  Providing the Public with Important
  Information
  The public's access to HPV chemical information
  is the cornerstone of this program, and EPA plans
  to launch the HPV Information System (HPVIS),
  which will provide the public with complete and
  easy access to critical information on HPV
  chemicals. HPVIS will be a comprehensive
  website that allows a wide range of users to
  search existing data summary information, test
  plans, and new data as they are developed.  The
  Agency's projected date for launching HPVIS is
  early 2005.

  Reviewing New Information
  EPA will carefully review new information
  submitted and developed under the HPV Chal-
  lenge Program to ensure that any potential risks
  are understood and, when necessary, take
  appropriate action to address those risks.

  Completing the Program and Using
  the Data
  Now approaching its final year, the HPV Chal-
  lenge Program information collection effort is
  providing opportunities for EPA to better screen
  for chemicals that may be of concern. Those
  identified chemicals will need additional infor-
  mation to enable comprehensive assessments.
HPV Status Pamphletl (11 -05-04).p65
Additionally, the HPV Challenge Program has
afforded an opportunity for learning more about
the uses of chemical categories. EPA will
promote the HPV Challenge Program data as a
resource for use by others and will pursue how to
present the data for use by multiple non-technical
audiences.

HPV Challenge Program
Success
Since it was launched, this highly successful
voluntary  program has brought about significant
progress in the collection and availability of HPV
chemical data. Hundreds of companies have
committed to participate in the  program, often
creating partnerships that never existed before;
diverse stakeholders have worked together to
build and  implement a strong, compelling
voluntary  program;  and 2,000 chemicals are
becoming more widely understood by the
Agency, the stakeholders, and, most importantly,
the public, who now will have access to mean-
ingful information concerning HPV chemicals.
                                     I
                                     31
For HPV Challenge Program Information:

Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA) Hotline:
202-554-1404

HPV Challenge Program Website:
http://www.epa.gov/chemrtk/volchall.htm
     Office of Pollution Prevention and Toxics
              Washington, DC
November 2004
743-F-04-001
b
z
                      Hign Production Volume (HPV)
                                    Ckemicals

                     4  Status  and  Future m
                      Directions  of  the  HPV
                         Challenge  Program
                                                                                       11/5/2004, 10:38 AM

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   The HPV Challenge Program

   Why Is It Integral to the Public's
   Right-to-Know Concerning
   Chemicals?
   In 1998, three independent studies confirmed
   there were significant gaps in the basic data
   needed to understand and characterize the
   potential hazards associated with High Produc-
   tion Volume (HPV) chemicals.  The U.S.
   Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Environ-
   mental  Defense (ED), American  Petroleum
   Institute (API), and American Chemistry Council
   (ACC) joined forces to launch the HPV Challenge
   Program, a collaborative partnership whose goal
   was to ensure that the American public had
   access to the type of information that would
   allow it to actively participate in environmental
   decisionmaking at all levels - federal, state, and
   local. This collection of screening-level hazard
   data will provide the public with basic informa-
   tion about the chemicals that are produced in the
   largest  quantities.

   Filling the  Gaps—How Does
   the HPV Challenge Program
   Operate?
   A set of operating principles or guidelines,
   developed by a multi-stakeholder taskforce,
   provides the framework for the development and
   submission of data for the HPV chemicals.
   Specifically, through this program, companies
   voluntarily provide information to fill out basic
   screen ing-1 eve I data that include: physical-
   chemical  property, environmental  fate,
   ecotoxicological, and toxicological data.

   The Agency encouraged the submission of
   existing data in an effort to minimize the need for
   additional testing. Where the "sponsor" deter-
   mined that data needed to be developed, the
   sponsor submitted a test plan to  fill data gaps.
The Agency posted the plan for both EPA and
public comment, providing detailed feedback on
the adequacy of the  plan. Technical guidance
documents were developed on such topics as:
developing chemical categories, assessing the
adequacy of existing data, and minimizing the
use of animals for testing purposes. Once a plan
has been reviewed and commented upon, the
testing phase begins  and completed test results
are submitted to the  Agency and made available
on EPA's website.

Is It Working? What are the
Results?

Extensive  Voluntary Participation
By July 2004, this successful voluntary initiative
had resulted  in commitments from more than 400
companies to sponsor 2,222 chemicals. These
commitments came from individual companies
and companies who  joined together in more than
100 consortia to work cooperatively to make this
information available to the public.

Considerable Use of Existing Data
As a  result of the HPV Challenge Program, a
significant amount of existing and previously
unpublished  health and environmental data is
being made publicly available by the companies
participating in the program.  This is a major
success of the program.  EPA analysis also
indicates that fewer than 10 percent of the gaps
in  publicly available information are being filled
with  new testing.

Extensive Use of Chemical
Categories
One  way to reduce testing is  by using chemical
categories to address data gaps. Currently, 81
percent of the chemicals covered  in test plans are
included in a chemical  category.  Categories
contain a supporting hypothesis of how the
chemicals in the category relate to each other, as
well as a description of how data for one chemi-
cal can be used to predict the toxicological
responses of similar chemicals in the category.

The Future for HPV Chemicals

Capturing Unsponsored Chemicals
To ensure that the public has access to baseline
health and environmental data for all HPV
chemicals, including those "orphan" chemicals
not sponsored in this program, the Agency is
taking steps to gather and make this information
available. These steps include a last chance,
voluntary sponsorship opportunity, as well as
developing additional regulatory actions that
would require testing of the chemicals (also
known as a "test rule").   EPA expects to finalize
a test rule under the Toxic Substances Control
Act in 2005 that will capture a number of these
orphan chemicals.
HPV Status Pamphletl (11 -05-04).p65
                                                                                             11/5/2004, 10:38 AM

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