Tag Archive for: Test Order

EPA Issues Test Order for PFAS 6:2 FTAc

On October 9, 2024, EPA issued a test order under the Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA) for the PFAS chemical 6:2 FTAc (CASRN 17527-29-6).  The order is the fifth issued under EPA’s National PFAS Testing Strategy, which was launched in 2021.

The order employs a tiered testing approach, as required by TSCA.  Studies on 6:2 FTAc’s physical and chemical properties and environmental fate and behavior will inform future testing on oral and inhalation health effects, reproductive and developmental toxicity, and bioaccumulation in fish.  The earliest test is due 255 days after the order took effect October 13, with most initial testing due within one year.

Depending on the results of hydrolysis testing, the companies subject to the order— Innovative Chemical Technologies, Chemours, Daikin America, Inc., Sumitomo Corp. of Americas, and Du Pont de Nemours and Co.—will also be required to conduct in vitro assays to assess skin absorption, genotoxicity, and/or mutagenicity.

According to an EPA press release, summaries of studies indicate 6:2 FTAc can “cause changes in blood cell counts, liver and kidney size, and animal behavior” in rodents.  However, EPA was unable to obtain the underlying data for these summaries and therefore determined that they did not meet the order’s data needs.

EPA also noted that 6:2 FTAc’s chemical structure “suggests that it may cause cancer.”  Like previous PFAS test orders, the agency plans to use the collected data to learn more about the potential human health effects of other structurally similar PFAS.

The order is the first issued since the D.C. Circuit’s July ruling in Vinyl Institute v. EPA, which vacated a test order due to insufficient justification in the public record.  The test order does not reference the case, which was discussed in a previous blog post.

6:2 FTAc is used to manufacture textiles, apparel, leather, and other basic organic chemicals.  Chemical Data Reporting indicates that 1–20 million pounds of 6:2 FTAc are manufactured annually.

Court Vacates EPA Test Order, Citing Incomplete Evidence in Public Record

On August 28, 2024, the D.C. Circuit issued an order in Vinyl Institute v. EPA, a case challenging a Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA) test order issued in March 2022.  The mandate signals that neither party intends to appeal the court’s July 5 ruling, which found EPA’s justification for the test order inadequate.

The test order, which required an avian reproduction study of 1,1,2-Trichloroethane, was vacated and remanded to EPA.  However, the panel noted several places in which additional EPA materials would have satisfied TSCA’s “substantial evidence” standard if they were included in the public record, suggesting that EPA would not necessarily be required to perform additional analyses to justify future test orders as long as the analyses were included in the record.

For example, the court ruled that EPA’s “conclusory statements” in the public record on why vertebrate testing was necessary were inadequate, but also said that other documents showed that EPA considered new approach methodologies (as required by TSCA).  However, the court ruled that these documents—although covered by EPA’s brief—were not part of the administrative record that was available to the public, and that therefore “they are not part of the record subject to our review.”

According to the decision, not all studies referenced in the statement of need accompanying the test order were explained or even identified.  Nor did EPA publicly explain why those studies’ findings could not be used to fill the data gap, the court said.

“EPA should have explained why it could not extrapolate mammalian chronic exposure data to avian chronic exposure in its Statement of Need description of reasonably available information,” Judge Karen LeCraft Henderson wrote.  “Identifying close but ultimately inapplicable studies and explaining, in the record, why it could not extrapolate other potentially relevant findings could constitute substantial evidence.”

However, the court upheld EPA’s decision to issue a test order rather than pursuing a rule or consent agreement, agreeing with EPA that timeliness in acquiring the data was sufficient justification. EPA initiated the risk evaluation for 1,1,2-Trichloroethane in December 2019 but has yet to issue a report on its findings.

Judge Henderson also agreed that EPA was not required to demonstrate that exposure may exist at potentially toxic levels before issuing a test order.  That would “reverse[]…TSCA’s allocation of burdens,” the decision states.

Judge Henderson was joined in full by Judge Florence Pan and in part by Judge Justin Walker.  A previous blog post on the case, written after the December 2023 oral argument, can be found here.

TSCA Test Order Issued for PFAS NMeFOSE

On March 20, 2024, EPA issued a test order for a PFAS known as NMeFOSE (CASRN 24448-09-7).  The order, issued under section 4(a) of the Toxic Substances Control Act, requires 3M Co. and Wacker Chemical Corp. to conduct tiered testing on NMeFOSE.

NMeFOSE was selected for testing as a representative of a group of similar PFAS.  Although existing information on NMeFOSE was deemed insufficient, EPA “identified hazards for acute toxicity and specific target organ toxicity.”  NMeFOSE is expected to break down into a highly toxic PFAS known as PFOS, which also drove concerns.

In a press release, EPA stated that NMeFOSE “has been used widely in products, including clothing and carpet treatments as well as furniture coatings.”  The press release also noted that NMeFOSE can accumulate and that the PFAS has been found in the air and in biosolids.  No Chemical Data Reporting manufacturing information is available for the substance.

The first round of tests, which focus on physical and chemical properties, are due 365 to 390 days after the order’s effective date of March 25, 2024.  Subsequent testing will include assessments of NMeFOSE’s environmental fate, in vivo health effects, and reproductive toxicity, with specific testing requirements contingent on earlier results.

The order is the fourth issued under EPA’s National PFAS Testing Strategy.  The most recent prior order was for HFPO-DAF in August 2023.