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November 2009
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Chemical Industry

September 30, 2009

EPA Administrator Jackson Unveils New Administration Framework for Chemical Management Reform in the United States

Filed under: Chemical Industry, Regulation — Laura B. @ 3:14 pm

In a speech today at the Commonwealth Club in San Francisco, U.S. EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson announced core principles that outline the Obama Administration’s goals for legislative reform of this country’s chemical management law, the 1976 Toxic Substances Control Act, TSCA. In parallel with this legislative initiative, Administrator Jackson also announced plans for a major effort to strengthen EPA’s current chemical management program and increase the pace of the agency’s efforts to address chemicals that pose a risk to the public.

In her remarks at the Commonwealth Club, Administrator Jackson said:

“…as more and more chemicals are found in our bodies and the environment, the public is understandably anxious and confused. Many are turning to government for assurance that chemicals have been assessed using the best available science, and that unacceptable risks haven’t been ignored.

Our oversight of the 21st century chemical industry is based on the 1976 Toxic Substances Control Act….over the years, not only has TSCA fallen behind the industry it’s supposed to regulate – it’s been proven an inadequate tool for providing the protection against chemical risks that the public rightfully expects.

Today I’m announcing clear Administration principles to guide Congress in writing a new chemical risk management law that will fix the weaknesses in TSCA.”

A copy of Administrator Jackson’s remarks as prepared for delivery can be found online at epa.gov/newsroom.

With the leadership of Senators Barbara Boxer and Frank Lautenberg and Representatives Henry Waxman and Bobby Rush, legislation strengthening TSCA is expected to be introduced shortly. The Obama Administration’s “Essential Principles for Reform of Chemicals Management Legislation” are intended to aid Congress during the legislative process. The principles, listed below, present the administration’s goals for legislation that will give EPA the mechanisms and authorities to expeditiously target chemicals of concern and promptly assess and regulate new and existing chemicals in commerce:

  • Chemicals should be reviewed against risk-based safety standards based on sound science and protective of human health and the environment
  • Manufacturers should provide EPA with the necessary information to conclude that new and existing chemicals are safe and do not endanger public health or the environment
  • EPA should have clear authority to take risk management actions when chemicals do not meet the safety standard, with flexibility to take into account sensitive subpopulations, costs, social benefits, equity and other relevant considerations.
  • Manufacturers and EPA should assess and act on priority chemicals, both existing and new, in a timely manner
  • Green Chemistry should be encouraged and provisions assuring Transparency and Public Access to Information should be strengthened.
  • EPA should be given a sustained source of funding for implementation

Although legislative reform is necessary for an effective chemicals management program, EPA is committed to strengthening the performance of the current program while Congress considers new legislation. This enhanced plan includes the development of chemical action plans which will outline the agency’s risk management efforts on those chemicals of greatest concern. EPA has identified an initial list of chemicals for possible risk management action and anticipates completing and posting an initial set of four action plans in December. It will complete and post additional chemical action plans in four-month intervals thereafter.

An additional focus will be accelerating efforts to gather the critical information from industry that the agency needs to make chemical risk determinations. This will include filling the current gaps in health and safety data on high production volume chemicals; enhanced, transparent, and more current reporting of use and exposure information; and a number of requirements for increased reporting on nanoscale chemical materials. In addition, EPA is reviewing how nanoscale materials are managed under TSCA. EPA is also reviewing ways to increase the public’s access to information about chemicals.

Prioritizing chemicals for future risk management action is the final component of this effort and EPA intends to formally engage stakeholders and the public in this discussion in the coming months.

The “Essential Principles for Reform of Chemicals Management Legislation” can be found at:
http://www.epa.gov/oppt/existingchemicals/pubs/principles.html.

Detailed information on EPA’s enhanced chemical management program, including information on specific components of this effort, an initial list of chemicals under consideration for Action Plan development, new hazard characterization for 100 chemicals, and risk management actions recently announced on lead and EPA’s plans for banning the use of mercury in certain products, can be found at: http://www.epa.gov/oppt/existingchemicals/index.html.

• • •

September 18, 2009

New Research Investigates Potato Bioplastic and Corn-Based Glue

Filed under: Chemical Industry, Research, Sustainable Design — Laura B. @ 2:53 pm

Read the full story at GreenerDesign.

Separate research initiatives in the U.S. and Canada are turning potato starch into high performance bioplastic packaging and using corn germ to reduce the amount of resin in glue.

• • •

July 28, 2009

Dutch Company Develops Green Alternative to Common Chemical

Filed under: Chemical Industry — Laura B. @ 4:40 pm

Read the full story at GreenBiz.

DSM, a Dutch chemical and materials company, plans to release a greener version of a chemical used in polymers, resins, food and pharmaceuticals later this year.

The company is working in a version of succinic acid that is derived from plant starch instead of oil or gas, according to the Financial Times. DSM accounts for 10-15 percent of global production of succinic acid.

• • •

April 20, 2009

EPA Will Mandate Tests On Pesticide Chemicals

Filed under: Chemical Industry, Regulation — Laura B. @ 10:57 am

Read the full story in the Washington Post.

The Environmental Protection Agency for the first time will require pesticide manufacturers to test 67 chemicals contained in their products to determine whether they disrupt the endocrine system, which regulates animals’ and humans’ growth, metabolism and reproduction, the agency said yesterday.

• • •

February 26, 2009

Lawsuit Seeks to Force Disclosure of Cleaning Product Ingredients

Filed under: Chemical Industry, Green Business, Regulation — Laura B. @ 10:38 am

Read the full post a the NYTs Green Inc. blog.

Chemicals in cleaning products remove the streaks from our windows and make our countertops sparkle. But are they safe?

A new lawsuit brought by Earthjustice, a non-profit public interest law firm based in Oakland, Calif., along with a coalition of public health and environmental advocates, aims to make it easier for consumers to answer that question by forcing manufacturers to adhere to a decades-old New York State regulation that it says requires disclosure of the ingredients in household cleaning products.

• • •

October 22, 2008

POP Committee Reviews More Substances

Filed under: Chemical Industry, Regulation — Laura B. @ 9:10 am

Read the full story in Environmental Protection.

A new range of everyday and industrial chemicals used in carpets and textiles up to aviation devices and medical equipment may soon be controlled or eliminated under an international hazardous substances treaty.

• • •

September 8, 2008

Neutralizing Fluorocarbons

Filed under: Chemical Industry, Climate Change, Environment, Research — Laura B. @ 1:11 pm

Read the full story in Technology Review.

Fluorocarbons–common chemicals in which carbon is bound to fluorine–are potent greenhouse gases, and some form toxic compounds that can accumulate in the environment. But neutralizing fluorocarbons has required a process whose high temperature drives up its cost, limiting its adoption. Researchers at Brandeis University report in Science today that they have found a catalyst that breaks the carbon-fluorine bond at room temperature, promising easier and more effective disposal of pesky pollutants.

• • •

September 4, 2008

EPA Posts New TSCA Import-Export Web Site

Filed under: Chemical Industry, Regulation, Transportation — Laura B. @ 9:24 am

Read the full story in Occupational Health & Safety.

EPA launched a new Web site at www.epa.gov/oppt/import-export/ that provides general information on requirements under the Toxic Substances Control Act for those who import and/or export chemical substances into and out of the United States. Various legal requirements under TSCA and associated implementing regulations can apply to a wide range of chemical substances and can impact importers and exporters.

• • •

September 3, 2008

Best of Both Worlds

Filed under: Chemical Industry, Green Products, Manufacturing — Laura B. @ 8:26 am

Read the full story in Products Finishing.

In the finishing industry, “green” is a term used (or sometimes over-used) to describe the move toward more environmentally friendly and safe coating materials and processes. Increasingly strict federal, state and local environmental and worker safety regulations have required coating formulators to look at modifications to solvent-based coating formulations or find solutions using water-based technology.

According to Randy Funston, president of Excalibur Paint & Coatings Ltd. (Wichita Falls, TX), development of green coating materials has been the main project of the company’s R & D laboratory since its inception nearly a decade ago.

“We set out to develop a protective coating that would meet demands on two global fronts: the needs of the commercial industry and the green coating movement to address air quality and health and safety factors,” Funston says.

To do it, Excalibur assembled a team of three developmental chemists with a combined 120 years’ experience in the paint and coating industry. The result of their efforts is Aqua-Thane, a patent pending, 2K water-borne acrylic polyurethane technology with performance properties said to meet or exceed those of high-performance solvent-borne systems without the associated health and safety hazards.

• • •

August 14, 2008

Designing “green” plasticizers

Filed under: Chemical Industry, Green Chemistry, Plastics, Research, Sustainable Design — Laura B. @ 9:41 am

Read the full story in Environmental Science and Technology.

Researchers are finding alternatives to conventional plasticizers that may alleviate health concerns.

• • •

July 7, 2008

Decades Later, Toxic Sludge Torments Bhopal

Filed under: Chemical Industry, Environmental Health, International — Laura B. @ 1:43 pm

Read the full story in the New York Times.

Hundreds of tons of waste still languish on the grounds of a pesticide factory in India, the site of a notorious disaster.

• • •

June 17, 2008

Europe faces up to costly new chemical regime

Filed under: Chemical Industry, International, Regulation — Laura B. @ 8:52 am

Read the full story in Processing Magazine.

According to the UK Times Online, companies that use or manufacture industrial chemicals could face billions in compliance costs after one of the most complex regulatory regimes ever established in Europe began operating recently.

The culmination of a decade-long attempt to overhaul the European Union’s chemical policy, the newly-created European Chemicals Agency (ECHA), based in Helsinki, has begun the task of scrutinising more than 30,000 chemicals in commercial use across the continent.

• • •

June 2, 2008

EPA Study Confirms Low Mercury Emissions from Chlorine Manufacturing

Filed under: Chemical Industry, Mercury, Regulation — Laura B. @ 2:44 pm

EPA has completed a study to better characterize fugitive mercury emissions from chlorine manufactures that use mercury cell technology. There are currently five such facilities nationwide. Study findings show that mercury emissions average about 0.2 tons per year per facility.

EPA is also proposing to require manufacturers of chlorine using mercury cell technology to take additional steps to prevent mercury emissions. EPA would require plants not already monitoring mercury emissions to do so. Also, a plant would be required to perform ‘work practices’ such as implementing an inspection program for equipment problems, leaking equipment, liquid mercury accumulations and spills.

EPA will accept comments for 60 days after the notice is published in the Federal Register.

For more information on this action: http://www.epa.gov/ttn/oarpg/t3fs.html

• • •

April 30, 2008

New from the GAO

Filed under: Chemical Industry, Publications, Regulation — Laura B. @ 7:29 am

Chemical Assessments: Low Productivity and New Interagency Review Process Limit the Usefulness and Credibility of EPA’s Integrated Risk Information System.  GAO-08-440, March 7.
http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-08-440
Highlights – http://www.gao.gov/highlights/d08440high.pdf

Toxic Chemicals:  EPA’s New Assessment Process Will Increase Challenges EPA Faces in Evaluating and Regulating Chemicals, by John B. Stephenson, director, natural resources and environment, before the Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works.  GAO-08-743T, April 29.
http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-08-743T
Highlights – http://www.gao.gov/highlights/d08743thigh.pdf

• • •

April 4, 2008

Chemical Industry’s Influence at EPA Probed

Filed under: Chemical Industry, Environmental Health, Policy, Regulation — Laura B. @ 1:42 pm

Read the full story from the Washington Post.

A congressional committee is investigating ties between the chemical industry and expert review panels hired by the Environmental Protection Agency to help it determine safe levels for a variety of chemical compounds.

• • •

March 5, 2008

Partial ban for paint strippers containing dichloromethane proposed

Filed under: Chemical Industry, International, Regulation — Laura B. @ 11:47 am

Read the press release.

The European Commission has proposed to restrict the sale and use of paint strippers containing dichloromethane. Such paint removers, are used in industry and are also sold in “Do-It-Yourself” stores accessible to everybody. Dichloromethane vapour is toxic to the central nervous system and the Commission’s proposal follows concerns of some experts that a number of accidents and fatalities which have occurred in recent years in the EU have been linked to use of the substance. The Commission therefore proposes to ban the sale of such paint strippers to the general public and professional users. However, taking account of other expert opinion that this substance may be safely used by professionals if adequate precautions are taken, Member States may permit their purchase and use by licensed professionals who have received appropriate training. For industrial activities, their use will be permitted under strictly controlled conditions. The formal adoption by the European Parliament and the Council is expected by the end of the year.

• • •

March 3, 2008

Outspoken scientist dismissed from panel on chemical safety

Read the full story in the Chicago Tribune.

Deborah Rice, an award-winning toxicologist, was removed from a group of experts researching a widely-used flame retardant after industry lobbyists complained that she was biased.

• • •

February 19, 2008

Argonne breakthrough may revolutionize ethylene production

Filed under: Chemical Industry, Research — Laura B. @ 12:56 pm

Read the press release.

A new environmentally friendly technology created by scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Argonne National Laboratory may revolutionize the production of the world’s most commonly produced organic compound, ethylene.

• • •

Preservation of Coatings with Silver

Filed under: Chemical Industry — Laura B. @ 12:53 pm

Read the full story in Paint & Coatings Industry.

The combination of silver or silver with isothiazoline gives a new and very effective preservative system. By using this combination, the amount of sensitizing isothiazoline can be significantly reduced and, if an excess of benzisothiazoline is used, the well-known photosensitivity of silver compounds is reduced. This combination is a highly effective and safe new preservative system for coatings.

• • •

December 18, 2007

California Air Resources Board survey of architectural coatings report now available

Filed under: Chemical Industry, Manufacturing, Publications — Laura B. @ 3:10 pm

In 2005, the Air Resources Board staff conducted a survey of architectural coatings companies to gather information regarding the products that were sold in California during 2004. A final report of the survey data is now available. Warning: it’s a 264 page PDF.

• • •

Rohm and Haas’s Aquaset(TM) Technology Ranked in Top 10 for European Environmental Award 2007

Filed under: Chemical Industry, Environmental Awards, Manufacturing — Laura B. @ 2:56 pm

Read the press release.

Rohm and Haas’s Aquaset™ technology received a Top 10 Ranking in this year’s EEP 2007 award at the Pollutec Show in Paris. The award is presented by the European Environmental Press (EEP) group in association with EFAEP – the European Federation of Associations of Environmental Professionals – to companies who have demonstrated outstanding commitment to the environment by investing in, and developing innovative eco-sustainable technologies. Of the 72 initial entries submitted from across the whole European region, Rohm and Haas was placed within the Top 10.

• • •

December 6, 2007

Sustainable technology: Green chemistry

Filed under: Chemical Industry, Green Chemistry — Laura B. @ 9:04 am

Read the full story in Nature.

Modern life depends on the petrochemical industry — most drugs, paints and plastics derive from oil. But current processes for making chemical products are not sustainable in terms of resources and environmental impact. Green chemistry aims to tackle this problem, and real progress is being made.

• • •

November 28, 2007

Are your products safe? You can’t tell.

Filed under: Chemical Industry, Environmental Health — Laura B. @ 7:51 am

Read the full story in the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.

Hundreds of studies have shown that these compounds cause a host of problems in lab animals. They include cancers of the breast, brain and testicles; lowered sperm counts, early puberty, miscarriages and other defects of the reproductive system; diabetes; attention deficit disorder, asthma and autism – all of which have spiked in people in recent decades since many of these chemicals saturated the marketplace.

A Journal Sentinel investigation found that the government has failed to regulate these chemicals, despite repeated promises to do so. The regulatory effort has been marked by wasted time, wasted money and influence from chemical manufacturers.

The newspaper reviewed more than 250 scientific studies written over the past 20 years; examined thousands of pages of regulatory documents and industry correspondence; and interviewed more than 100 scientists, physicians, and industry and government officials.

• • •

September 11, 2007

EPA Releases List of High-Volume Chemicals

Filed under: Chemical Industry, Environmental Health, Regulation — Laura B. @ 10:37 am

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has released the first set of Hazard Characterizations on 101 High Production Volume (HPV) chemicals. These characterizations are based on EPA’s scientific review of the screening-level hazard, or toxicity, data that was submitted by the U.S. chemical industry through EPA’s HPV Challenge Program or other information previously collected by the agency. (more…)

• • •

September 7, 2007

2 New ACS Webcasts Open for Registration Now

Filed under: Chemical Industry, Meetings, Research — Laura B. @ 8:32 am

ACS has two new webcast courses available this fall: Essentials of Chemistry and Patent Law Fundamentals.

Upcoming Courses

Visit ACS at www.chemistry.org/elearning.

• • •

House Approves Green Chemistry Bill

Filed under: Chemical Industry, Green Chemistry, Regulation — Laura B. @ 7:42 am

Read the full story in Environmental Protection.

On Sept. 5, the U.S. House of Representatives approved H.R. 2850, the Green Chemistry Research and Development Act. The legislation, introduced by Rep. Phil Gingrey (R-GA), strengthens federal efforts to find safer alternatives to today’s chemical products.

• • •

August 27, 2007

U.S., Canada and Mexico Take Lead to Manage Industrial Chemicals

Filed under: Canada, Chemical Industry, Mexico — Laura B. @ 8:01 am

The United States, Canada and Mexico are strengthening their efforts to ensure the safe manufacture and use of industrial chemicals by developing a regional partnership for assessing and managing potential risks. This regional partnership, announced today in Montebello, Quebec, is the result of discussions between President Bush, Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper and Mexican President Felipe Calderon at the Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America Leaders’ Summit. (more…)

• • •

August 13, 2007

Big polluter to cut mercury

Filed under: Chemical Industry, Great Lakes Region, Manufacturing, Mercury — Laura B. @ 8:53 am

Read the full story in the Chicago Tribune.

Yielding to years of pressure from environmental groups, one of the nation’s largest mercury polluters will stop using the toxic metal and switch to cleaner technology.

But the 200 tons of mercury on hand at the ERCO Worldwide chlorine plant in northern Wisconsin could end up on the world market and drift back to contaminate lakes and rivers.

ERCO, a subsidiary of the Toronto-based Superior Plus Income Fund, announced last week that it will convert its chlor-alkali plant outside Port Edwards, Wis., to a mercury-free manufacturing process in 2009. Only four other plants in the United States still use the liquid metal to create chlorine.

• • •

August 8, 2007

Any Colour, So Long as it’s Green: Ford’s New Paint

Filed under: Automotive industry, Chemical Industry, Manufacturing — Laura B. @ 10:40 am

Read the full post at Treehugger.

What reduces overall CO2 output by 15%? What cuts volatile organic compounds (VOC) by around 10%? What takes 20% less time to use? What saves more than $7 USD per vehicle?

Hopefully the answer to all those questions might turn out to be Ford’s new paint. Currently out on test, adorning 200 E-Series U-Haul rental trucks, to see if it can stand up to heavy duty use, the paint is apparently a new technology. It’s a “high-solids (formulated with polymers), solvent-borne paint applied wet in three applications, with no prime coat.” And it can be applied in a smaller and cleaner paint shop compared with traditional painting facilities, with no need to ‘bake’ the paint.

• • •

July 25, 2007

Dow and Crystalsev Announce Plans to Make Polyethylene from Sugar Cane in Brazil

Filed under: Biofuels, Chemical Industry, Manufacturing — Laura B. @ 1:10 pm

Read the press release.

The Dow Chemical Company, the world’s largest producer of polyethylene, and Crystalsev, one of Brazil’s largest ethanol players have announced plans for a world-scale facility to manufacture polyethylene from sugar cane.

Under the terms of a memorandum of understanding agreed by the two companies, Dow and Crystalsev will form a joint venture in Brazil to design and build the first integrated facility of its scale in the world. It is expected to start production in 2011 and will have a capacity of 350,000 metric tons. The venture will combine Dow’s leading position in polyethylene with Crystalsev’s know-how and experience in ethanol to meet the needs of Dow’s customers in Brazil and what will likely be international interest.

• • •

July 19, 2007

Major Chemical Manufacturer Will Spend $125 Million to Reduce Pollution

Filed under: Chemical Industry, Illinois, Regulation — Laura B. @ 9:36 am

Equistar Chemicals LP, headquartered in Houston, Texas, will spend more than $125 million on pollution controls and cleanup to address a myriad of air, water and hazardous waste violations at seven petrochemical plants in Texas, Illinois, Iowa and Louisiana, the Justice Department and the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced today.

The consent decree, lodged in federal district court in Illinois, requires Equistar to invest in comprehensive control and operational measures expected to significantly reduce air, water and hazardous waste pollution from the seven manufacturing facilities. The states of Iowa, Illinois and Louisiana have all joined the federal government in today’s settlement. (more…)

• • •

July 9, 2007

Polymer Breakdown: Reaction offers possible way to recycle nylon

Filed under: Chemical Industry, Recycling, Research — Laura B. @ 8:22 am

Read the full story in Science News.

Each year, thousands of tons of nylon end up in landfills. But small-scale experiments may offer big hope for efficient recycling of some types of the material.

• • •

June 12, 2007

Scientists Create Flame-resistant, ‘Green’ Plastic

Read the full story in Fire & Emergency Response.

Scientists from the University of Massachusetts Amherst have created a synthetic polymer — a building block of plastics — that wouldn’t need the flame-retardant chemicals that are added to many plastics before they can be used in bus seats, airplanes, textiles and countless household items. Some of these additives have been showing up in dust in homes and offices, fish, fat cells and breast milk, raising concern that they pose a risk to human health and the environment.

Led by UMass Amherst scientists Richard Farris, Bryan Coughlin and Todd Emrick, the research team presented an update on their work to industry representatives and scientists from the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), the National Institute of Standards and Technology and the U.S. Army on May 14. The team described the new polymer in the journal Macromolecules last year.

• • •

May 31, 2007

Rohm & Haas boosts green R&D spending

Filed under: Chemical Industry, Green Business, Manufacturing — Laura B. @ 10:17 am

Read the full story in Processing Magazine.

Specialty materials company Rohm and Haas Co. said it will devote half of its $300 million research and development budget in 2007 to environmentally advanced technologies, its largest percentage yet, according to the Associated Press.

• • •

May 8, 2007

Ashland and Cargill to Form Joint Venture for Bio-based Chemicals

Filed under: Agriculture, Chemical Industry, Sustainable Design — Laura B. @ 2:35 pm

Read the full post at Green Car Congress.

Ashland Inc., a global chemical company, and Cargill have agreed in principle to create a new joint venture devoted solely to the development and production of bio-based chemicals. The parties intend for the new stand-alone entity to become a leading global supplier of chemicals from renewable sources.

• • •

April 17, 2007

Chemical Industry Expands Work with EPA in Solving Environmental Problems

Filed under: Chemical Industry — Laura B. @ 12:37 pm

The American Chemistry Council (ACC), which represents 130 companies accounting for approximately 85 percent of U.S. chemical production by volume, has agreed to work with EPA in the Sector Strategies Program. ACC joins the Synthetic Organic Chemical Manufacturers Association (SOCMA), a participant in the program since 1998. Together, ACC and SOCMA represent the majority of chemical production in the United States.

The chemical industry is an essential contributor to the U.S. economy, with about $555 billion in annual revenues. There are approximately 13,500 chemical manufacturing facilities in the United States, owned by more than 9,000 companies. The sector is one of the nation’s largest exporters, accounting for 10 cents of every U.S. export dollar.

EPA’s Sector Strategies Program fosters collaboration among business, government, and non-government organizations. Through this program, EPA works with diverse parties to improve the environmental performance of major manufacturing and service sectors of the U.S. economy.

Currently, more than 20 national trade associations – representing 13 major sectors of the U.S. economy – participate in the Sector Strategies Program. The program’s sectors are agribusiness; cement manufacturing; chemical manufacturing; colleges and universities; construction; forest products; iron and steel manufacturing; metal casting; metal finishing; oil and gas, paint and coatings; ports; and shipbuilding and ship repair. These sectors represent more than one million sites throughout the country.

Chemical Manufacturing Sector Strategies Program http://www.epa.gov/sectors/chemical/index.html

Sector Strategies Program
http://www.epa.gov/sectors/program.html

• • •

April 4, 2007

States, Feds Divide on Chemical Plant Rules

Filed under: Chemical Industry, Regulation — Laura B. @ 7:53 am

Listen to the full NPR story.

The Bush administration’s new regulations for chemical facilities are meant to tighten security and prevent terrorist attacks. The industry applauds the proposals, but critics say the federal rules will block more effective state plans.

• • •

December 6, 2006

PhD researcher develops inexpensive, sustainable production method

Filed under: Chemical Industry — Laura B. @ 2:47 pm

Read the press release.

Delft University of Technology (Netherlands) PhD candidate Maaike Kroon has developed a sustainable and inexpensive production method for the chemical industry. This method combines reactions and separation processes, does not produce chemical waste and uses much less energy. After just two years of PhD research, she will receive her doctorate degree based on this research subject on December 11.

• • •

December 5, 2006

Researchers Working On Lightweight Garment To Protect Workers From Toxic Chemicals

Filed under: Chemical Industry — Laura B. @ 8:20 am

Read the full story in Occupational Safety & Health.

Researchers are working on a new synthetic rubber material tailored with liquid crystals that might be used to make body suits to protect chemical-industry employees from skin exposure to toxic vapors and aerosols, as well as providing protection for military personnel and civilians in the event of a chemical-weapons attack.

• • •

December 4, 2006

New EPA Assistance Center Helps Importers/Exporters Comply with Environmental Laws

Filed under: Chemical Industry — Laura B. @ 11:20 am

Read the full press release.

Anyone involved in shipping regulated materials across borders can go to a new web-based EPA-sponsored Compliance Assistance Center for help in complying with environmental laws. The border center’s new chemical import-export issues Web site provides information for importing and exporting a variety of chemicals, including toxic substances and hazardous waste. The site also has information on existing international agreements and regulations, and includes a news section to keep buyers, sellers, and transporters aware of the latest developments.

• • •

November 29, 2006

REACH–The New European Chemicals Law

Filed under: Chemical Industry, International — Laura B. @ 9:41 am

Read the full story in ES&T.

A single piece of legislation is set to replace the multitude of laws that currently govern the use of chemicals in Europe.

• • •

November 2, 2006

First U.S. Conference on Characterizing Chemicals in Commerce: Using Data on High Production Volume (HPV) Chemicals

Filed under: Chemical Industry, Meetings — Laura B. @ 10:15 am

December 12 – 14, 2006
Radisson Hotel & Suites, Austin, Texas

Presented by the U.S. EPA Office of Pollution Prevention and Toxics and The Northeast Waste Management Officials’ Association (NEWMOA)

For information on the conference, see http://www.newmoa.org/hpv
For information on the HPV Challenge Program, see http://www.epa.gov/hpv

Draft
Agenda Overview
Characterizing Chemicals in Commerce: Using Data on High Production Volume (HPV) Chemicals
December 12-14, 2006

Plenary Speakers:

  • Carl Edlund, Director, EPA Region 6 Multimedia Planning & Permitting Division
  • David Schanbacher, Texas Commission on Environmental Quality
  • James Gulliford, Asssistant Administrator, EPA Office of Prevention, Pesticides, and Toxic Substances (OPPTS) (invited)
  • Charles Auer, Director, EPA Office of Pollution Prevention & Toxics (OPPT)
  • Richard Deniison, Environmental Defense
  • Steven Russell, American Chemistry Council
  • Fatoumataa Ouane, United Nations Environment Program (UNEP) Chemicals Program (invited)
  • Ken Geiser, Lowelll Center for Sustainable Production

Keynote Address: “Understanding the OECD”
Robert Visser, Deputy-Director Environment Directorate of the Organization for Economic Cooperation & Development (OECD)

General Sessions:

  • What Is the EPA High Production Volume Challenge Program?
  • Future Directions of the HPV Challenge Program
  • What Have We Learned & What Are the Next Steps for Understanding & Using HPV Chemical Data?

Concurrent Sessions Topics (subject to change):

  • Industry & Government Use of HPV Chemical Data
  • Accessing & Connecting HPV Chemical Toxicity & Environmental Data: Results of Research Projects
  • Training on Using the High Production Volume Information System
  • How Can the Media Use HPVIS & Present the Available Data?
  • Perspectives on Hazard, Exposure, and Risk Characterization
  • Using HPVIS: Results of Research Projects
  • States’ HPV Cheemical & Pollution Prevention Approaches & Perspectives
  • HPV Chemicals Categorization & Screening
  • Domestic Perspectives Dialogue on HPV Chemicals & Pollution Prevention Approaches
    HPV Chemical Screening Models
  • Tools for Data Sharing & Prioritizing HPV Chemicals
  • HPV Chemicals Initiative in North America
  • Defining and Designing Green Products Using HPV Data
  • Using HPV Other Data to Support Green Chemistry & Design for the Environment: Efforts of the Green Chemistry in Commerce Council
  • HPV Challenge & Pollution Prevention Connection
  • Using Data on HPV Chemical Releases & Transfers
  • International Program Initiatives on HPV Chemicals
• • •

September 13, 2006

Chemicals Produced From Ethanol Feedstocks Could Give Boirefineries Economic Boost

Filed under: Biofuels, Chemical Industry, Green Chemistry — Laura B. @ 1:56 pm

Read the full article in Environmental Protection magazine.

Biorefineries developed to produce ethanol from cellulose sources such as trees and fast-growing plants could get a tasty economic boost from the sale of “high-value” chemicals — such as vanillin flavoring — that could be generated from the same feedstock. Revenue from these “side stream” chemicals could help make ethanol produced by biorefineries cost competitive with traditional fossil fuels, researchers announced on Sept. 10.

At the 232nd national meeting of the American Chemical Society, a researcher from the Georgia Institute of Technology described green chemical processes that could produce chemicals worth up to $25 per pound from the same feedstock used to produce ethanol.

• • •

September 6, 2006

EU Proposes Platform for ‘Sustainable Chemistry’

Filed under: Chemical Industry, Green Chemistry — Laura B. @ 8:59 am

Read the full story at GreenBiz.com.

The European Union this week unveiled a proposed “action plan” that would boost sustainable chemistry, industrial biotechnology and chemical engineering research, development, and innovation in Europe.

• • •

August 11, 2006

Recycled-Content Latex Paint Environmental Standard Completed

Filed under: Chemical Industry, Green Products, Green Purchasing, Recycling — Laura B. @ 11:22 am

Read the full story in Environmental Protection.

The Product Stewardship Institute (PSI) and Green Seal Inc. announced on Aug. 9 the completion of a national Green Seal environmental standard for recycled-content latex paint. According to the groups, the standard is aimed at assuring consumers that recycled paint, in addition to being environmentally beneficial, can perform as well as virgin paint, both in terms of ease of application and quality and longevity of finish. The standard will be available at http://www.greenseal.org/certification/environmental.cfm and http://www.productstewardship.us/displayPage.php?pageid=75.

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August 9, 2006

Pollution Prevention (P2) Success Stories — TSCA New Chemicals Program P2 Recognition Project

Filed under: Chemical Industry — Laura B. @ 9:19 am

The P2 Recognition Project serves as a means to acknowledge companies for developing innovative chemistry and technologies that further pollution prevention and other environmental goals. EPA’s New Chemicals Program believes that the honoring of such innovations by the Agency (and the publicity associated with it) will serve as a stimulus to further innovation both to the company receiving the letter and to other chemical companies.

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August 4, 2006

Synthetic fragrances perfume lake sediments

Filed under: Chemical Industry, Environmental Health, Great Lakes Region, Research, Water — Laura B. @ 12:26 pm

Read the full story in Environmental Science & Technology.

Production of these persistent compounds has doubled since the 1990s, and scientists are concerned about sublethal effects.

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July 20, 2006

Study Finds Safer Alternatives For Hazardous Chemicals

Read the full article in Occupational Health & Safety.

In a study of five hazardous chemicals, researchers said they identified at least one alternative that was commercially available, was likely to meet the technical requirements of some users, and was likely to have reduced environmental and occupational health and safety impacts.

The state of Massachusetts commissioned the study to carefully consider whether less toxic alternatives were available for lead, formaldehyde, perchloroethylene, hexavalent chromium, and di(2-ethylhexyl)phthalate (DEHP).

The Toxics Use Reduction Institute (TURI) at the University of Massachusetts Lowell conducted an alternatives assessment comparing the five chemicals with approximately 100 alternatives within 16 applications. For example, formaldehyde, a known cause of cancer in humans and used by beauty and barber shops as a sanitizer, was compared to two alternatives — ultraviolet light cabinets and storing implements in a dry, disinfected covered container without formaldehyde.

Read the executive summary and download the full TURI study (409 p.) at http://www.turi.org/content/content/view/full/2739/.

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July 7, 2006

Green Chemists

Filed under: Chemical Industry, Green Chemistry, Schools — Laura B. @ 11:49 am

Read the full article in Science Magazine.

The chemical industry is facing some tough challenges in Europe. European legislation is about to tighten the way chemicals are regulated and make chemical companies responsible for proving the environmental safety of the chemicals they produce. Even before legislation provided a specific impetus for cleaning up their act, chemistry companies and researchers were becoming aware of the need to replace common products, production methods, and feedstocks with substitutes that have less impact on the environment. Sustainable products and processes are being developed that should eventually replace the old ones. An army of “green chemists” is coming on stream that aims to continue the trend. “We need green chemists in at the start, designing processes from first principles,” says Jeff Hardy of the United Kingdom’s Royal Society of Chemistry.

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June 13, 2006

Responsible Care Recognizes U.S. Chemical Industry’s Performance Leaders

Filed under: Chemical Industry, Environmental Awards, Green Business — Laura B. @ 10:48 am

Read the full story at GreenBiz.com.

ARLINGTON, Va., June 13, 2006 – The American Chemistry Council has recognized Milliken Chemical, NOVA Chemicals, and Rohm and Haas for outstanding leadership under the chemistry industry’s environmental, health, safety, and security performance initiative.

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