Fact Sheet on the Proposed Rule: CERCLA 108(b) Financial
Responsibility Requirements for the Chemical
Manufacturing Industry
(February 2020)

After careful analysis, EPA has concluded that the existing regulatory programs and current industry
practices that have been put in place over the last four decades already address the financial risk of the
government having to fund cleanups from operating chemical manufacturing facilities and do not
warrant financial responsibility requirements under CERCLA Section 108(b). Therefore, EPA is proposing
to not issue such requirements for these facilities. This proposed action would not drop existing
environmental requirements and does not affect EPA's authority to take appropriate action under
various other environmental regulations that may apply to individual facilities.

EPA's Analysis of the Data

EPA's analysis of the history of cleanups under Superfund, modern industry practices, applicable federal
and state regulations, and the risk of taxpayer funded cleanups showed that that the degree and
duration of risk to the Superfund posed by the Chemical Manufacturing Industry is already addressed and
does not warrant potentially duplicative, burdensome requirements. Consistent with EPA's interpretation
of the statute, which was unanimously upheld by the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals in litigation challenging
the Agency's hardrock mining final action,1 EPA evaluated the financial risk to the federal Superfund
associated with the production, transportation, treatment, storage, or disposal of hazardous substances
in the industry.

EPA also examined the industry's economic trends and the financial health of the sector and found the
industryto be in a stable financial position and able to pay off short-term obligations. Overall,
financial ratios indicate healthy financial performance in the sector. Moreover, in bankruptcy,
firms generally remain liable for environmental compliance obligations.

Further, the Agency reviewed Superfund cleanup sites associated with the industry (including sites with
owners or operators that had filed for bankruptcy) and found limited impact to the taxpayer from
facilities under the current regulatory framework. EPA's analysis of the data clearly showed that the
existing regulatory programs and modern industry practices reduce the need for federally financed
response actions at facilities in the industry and do not warrant financial responsibility requirements.

Existing Authorities are Unaffected

EPA's proposed action would not drop existing environmental requirements, rather it is a proposal to not
impose new requirements. In the 39 years since the enactment of CERCLA, a comprehensive regulatory
framework has been developed and the Agency's enforcement authorities have expanded.

This proposed rulemaking does not affect EPA's authority to take appropriate action under various other
environmental statutes, such as those under the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act, Toxic

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Substances Control Act, Clean Air Act, Clean Water Act, and the Emergency Planning and Community
Right to Know Act:

Act

Description

Comprehensive
Environmental
Response,
Compensation, and
Liability Act (CERCLA)

• The administration of CERCLA is protective and effective, and EPA's
proposed finding for the chemical manufacturing industry does not affect,
limit, or restrict the Agency's authority to take a response action or
enforcement action under CERCLA at any facility in the industry, or to include
requirements for financial responsibility as part of such response action. A
different set of facts could demonstrate a need for a CERCLA response action
at an individual site.

Resource Conservation
and Recovery Act
(RCRA)

•	RCRA, enacted in 1976, directed EPA to set up a comprehensive cradle-to-
grave regulatory system designed to ensure proper management and disposal
of hazardous waste, prevent releases of hazardous waste, and assure that
past spills are cleaned up by facility owner/operators. The basic regulatory
program was promulgated in 1980, and included financial assurance
requirements for hazardous waste treatment, storage, and disposal facilities
(TSDFs). The 1976 statute also established broad and effective enforcement
tools that have been in place and used to abate conditions that may present
an imminent and substantial endangerment to health or the environment,
such as releases of hazardous wastes.

•	The 1984 Hazardous and Solid Waste Amendments (HSWA) to RCRA
resulted in numerous enhanced regulatory requirements and enforcement
mechanisms, including requirements for facility-wide cleanup of hazardous
waste releases and contamination from both permitted and interim-status
hazardous waste management facilities. The 1984 amendments substantially
expanded corrective action authorities and required facilities to provide
financial assurance for corrective action, adding to pre-existing requirements
for financial assurance for facility closure and post-closure.

•	The RCRA program, enhanced by the 1984 amendments, reduces the
risks that facilities will have to be addressed under CERCLA. Specifically,
the RCRA corrective action program is currently focused on ensuring
owner/operators conduct cleanups at 3,779 priority RCRA TSDFs, working
toward goals of meeting three cleanup milestones at 95% of these
facilities by 2020. By the end of FY19, the three milestones have been
met at 95%, 90% and 72% of facilities. Also under the RCRA regulations,
2,158 TSDFs are protected by comprehensive operating standards for
facility safe waste management.

•

Toxic Substances
Control Act (TSCA)

• There are existing financial responsibility requirements applicable to
commercial PCB waste facilities under TSCA.

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•	TSCA and its amendments established specific programs for the
management of certain chemicals—namely, PCBs, asbestos, radon, lead,
mercury, and formaldehyde.

•	There are programs that regulate the manufacture and sale of chemicals
under TSCA.

Clean Air Act (CAA)

•	Section 112(r) of the CAA Amendments require certain facilities to generate
Risk Management Plans (RMP) to mitigate the effects of a chemical accident
and coordinate with local response personnel.

•	Significant chemical accidents have declined more than 50% since the
original RMP requirements became effective in 1999.

Clean Water Act (CWA)

•	Effluent Limitation Guidelines (ELGs) set standards for industrial
wastewater discharge to surface water on an industry-specific basis,
identifying key processes and materials to regulate within each industry.

•	EPA published industry-specific effluent guidelines for pesticides in 1978,
for inorganic chemicals manufacturing in 1982, and for organic
chemicals, plastics, and synthetic fibers in 1987.

•	CWA established the NPDES permit program, which controls point
source discharges to surface water, and the National Oil and Hazardous
Substances Pollution Contingency Plan (NCP), which sets a blueprint for
responding to oil spills and hazardous substance releases.

Safe Drinking Water
Act (SDWA)

• There are existing financial responsibility requirements applicable to
Underground Injection Control wells.

Emergency Planning
and Community Right-
to-Know Act (EPCRA)

• EPCRA imposes emergency planning, reporting, and notification
requirements for hazardous and toxic chemicals.

State Programs

• Examples of state programs that may be applicable to chemical
manufacturing facilities include:

•	Financial Responsibility for petrochemical manufacturing
facilities,

•	Financial Responsibility for phosphate fertilizer manufacturing
facilities,

•	Financial Responsibility for hazardous waste TSDFs,

•	Financial Responsibility for underground injection of hazardous
wastes,

•	Financial Responsibility for PCB storage or disposal facilities,

•	Corrective action financial responsibility to address hazardous
waste or hazardous constituents,

•	Facility remediation financial responsibility associated with
transfer in ownership or facility closure,

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• Financial Responsibility for storage tanks containing hazardous



substances, and



• State regulations that are stricter than the Federal requirements



that, for example, set stricter discharge or closure standards.

These existing monitoring and operation standards have consistently worked over time to decrease risks
in the industry and continue to apply, including requiring proper closure of units and corrective action for
releases of hazardous materials under CERCLA or RCRA.

History

In August 2014, Sierra Club, Great Basin Resource Watch, Amigos Bravos, Idaho Conservation
League, Earthworks, and Communities for a Better Environment filed a petition for writ of mandamus in
the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals seeking issuance of CERCLA section 108(b) financial responsibility rules.
The petitioners and EPA entered into settlement discussions and reached an agreement, which included,
among other requirements, a schedule calling for EPA to sign the Federal Register notice for a proposed
rule for the hardrock mining industry by December 1, 2016, and for EPA to take final action for that
industry by December 1, 2017.

EPA met these deadlines, publishing a proposed rule and a final action. The final action determined that
financial responsibility requirements were not necessary for the hardrock mining industry. On July 19,
2019, the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the approach EPA undertook in developing its Final Action
to impose no financial responsibility requirements for the hardrock mining industry, which is consistent
with the proposed approach here.

EPA is working to meet the court-ordered deadlines for three additional industries that EPA identified for
rulemaking in a 2010 Advanced Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (75 FR 816, Jan. 6, 2010).

Industry

Sign proposed rule:

Sign final action:

Industry 1 (identified by EPA as Electric Power
Industry)

July 2, 2019

December 2, 2020

Industry 2 (identified by EPA as Petroleum and
Coal Products Manufacturing Industry)

December 4, 2019

December 1, 2021

Industry 3 (identified by EPA as Chemical
Manufacturing Industry)

December 1, 2022

December 4, 2024

On July 2, 2019, EPA proposed to not issue financial responsibility requirements for the electric power
industry. On December 4, 2019 EPA proposed to not issue financial responsibility requirements
for the petroleum and coal product manufacturing industry.

Authority for and Purpose of the Proposal

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EPA is issuingthe proposal under the authority of Sections 101, 104, 108 and 115 of the Comprehensive
Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA) of 1980, as amended, 42 U.S.C 9601,
9604, 9608 and 9615, and Executive Order 12580 (52 FR 2923, January 29, 1987).

Section 108(b) of CERCLA, also known as Superfund, directs EPA to develop regulations that require
classes of facilities to establish and maintain evidence of financial responsibility consistent with the
degree and duration of risk associated with the production, transportation, treatment, storage or disposal
of hazardous substances.

When releases of hazardous substances occur, or when a threat of release of hazardous substances must
be averted, a Superfund response action may be necessary. Since the Superfund tax has expired, EPA's
Superfund appropriation is increasingly funded by general revenues. Therefore, the costs of such
response actions can fall to the taxpayer if parties responsible for the release or potential release of
hazardous substances are unable to assume the costs.

As required by CERCLA Section 108(b), EPA analyzed the need for financial responsibility requirements for
the chemical manufacturing industry. EPA's evaluations showed that the existing regulatory programs and
voluntary practices reduces the need for federally financed response actions at facilities in the chemical
manufacturing industry. Therefore, the Agency concluded that the level of risk of taxpayer-funded
response actions does not warrant imposing financial assurance requirements for the industry. This
reflects EPA's evaluation of the record developed for the proposed rule.

For more information, including on how to submit public comments on this proposal, visit:
https://www.epa.gov/superfund/superfund-financial-responsibility .

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