Q. Did the Environmental Protection Agency change its rules to allow companies to use asbestos in manufacturing?
A. No. Asbestos is already allowed in numerous products. A proposed EPA rule would prohibit the use of asbestos in certain products unless granted EPA approval.
FULL QUESTION
Is asbestos still legal in the United States?
Is it true that President Trump is going to put asbestos back in manufacturing product?
Have the EPA rules changed allowing more asbestos in manufacturing?
Are the photos of Trump’s picture on pallets of Asbestos from Russia real?
FULL ANSWER
Asbestos is a naturally occurring mineral that became a popular building material in the 20th century because of its insulating and fire-resistant properties along with its superb strength. Exposure to the material, however, can cause lung cancer and mesothelioma, a cancer of the tissue that lines the chest cavity and many vital organs, among other health conditions.
These health concerns have led more than 60 countries to ban all types of asbestos. Contrary to popular belief, however, the United States is not one of them.
Beginning in the late 1970s, the Environmental Protection Agency attempted a near-complete ban. But in 1991, a federal appeals court overturned several aspects of the regulation. Remaining in place were prohibitions on using asbestos in five product categories, as well as a rule that barred companies from using asbestos in any new ways after 1989.
These rules eliminated several popular uses of asbestos, including in certain insulation and fireproofing papers. But it meant asbestos could still be legally used in any other previously existing items, such as automotive brakes or floor tiles.
Over the last several decades, American companies have largely purged the material from their products. In 2002, the last American asbestos manufacturer shuttered its doors. Because asbestos mining no longer happens on U.S. soil, all asbestos is now imported. According to the U.S. Geological Survey, nearly all of the imports are used by the chlor-alkali industry, which fashions raw asbestos into special filters that are used to produce chlorine and sodium hydroxide.
The proposed rule, which is known in EPA lingo as a Significant New Use Rule, or SNUR, has a somewhat confusing name because it does not apply to new uses of asbestos. Instead, the rule applies to pre-1989 uses of asbestos that are currently legal, but which no one happens to be using today. It states that if companies want to start reusing asbestos in certain ways, they will have to seek EPA approval first. The EPA identified 15 product categories of these older-but-previously-developed uses that would be subject to the review process, including adhesives, gaskets and high-grade electrical paper.
The proposed SNUR would not change the earlier ban on using asbestos in novel ways, nor would it make legal any uses that were previously outlawed.
The SNUR came about after modifications in 2016 to the Toxic Substances Control Act — the nation’s primary legislation regulating chemical safety. Under those updates, the EPA is mandated to regularly reevaluate chemicals. Asbestos was chosen as one of the first 10 chemicals to receive new scrutiny.
Critics of the proposed rule, which include current and former EPA employees, as well as a variety of environmental groups, say that because of the way the rule is written, if a company wanted to put asbestos into a product that does not fall into one of the 15 categories the EPA specified, the company would be free to do so without undergoing a review.
In August, the New York Times reported that many scientists and lawyers within the EPA objected to the way the proposed rule was handled. Internal agency emails suggest that the agency originally planned to apply the SNUR restrictions to all potential reuses of asbestos, not just the 15 categories, but that EPA officials changed their approach in April.
The EPA, meanwhile, maintains that the proposed rule strengthens regulatory oversight of asbestos. “In the absence of this proposed rule,” the agency states on its website, “the importing or processing of asbestos (including as part of an article) for the significant new uses proposed in this rule may begin at any time, without prior notice to EPA.”
Richard Denison, a lead senior scientist at the Environmental Defense Fund, a nonprofit advocacy organization, said in a phone interview that the EPA’s statement is accurate, even if his group would have preferred the more open-ended approach.
“Compared to the status quo, the SNUR is an improvement,” he said. “Without the SNUR, any of those prior uses could come back without any notification to EPA. The SNUR at least requires that notification.”
Rena Steinzor, a law professor at the University of Maryland, said in a phone interview that while it’s possible to criticize aspects of the proposed rule, “it is not accurate to say that EPA has opened up the door to new uses of asbestos.”
Whether the proposed rule will lead to more products containing asbestos is not clear. Any throwback uses would have to be cleared by the EPA first, and companies would have to be interested in making them.
The rule is also not yet finalized; the 60-day public comment period concluded on Aug. 10.
As for those photos of President Donald Trump’s face on plastic-wrapped pallets of Russian asbestos, yes, they are real.
As the Washington Post reported, the asbestos company Uralasbest posted the photos to its Facebook page on June 25, along with a caption thanking Trump and then-EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt for what it perceives as support of their industry. On multiple previous occasions, Trump has spoken positively about asbestos. In the image, Trump’s face is part of a seal that includes Russian text that Google translates as either “endorsed” or “approved” by “Donald Trump, 45th President of the United States.”
Brazil used to be the main supplier of asbestos to the United States, but following that country’s asbestos ban in November 2017, Russia has filled the gap. Uralasbest has not commented directly on the proposed rule change, and it’s not clear if the company or any others will benefit if it is finalized.
Update, April 19: The EPA announced on April 17 that it was close to finalizing its proposed asbestos rule. The final regulation remains mostly the same, but as the agency explains in an FAQ document, it decided to require companies to notify the EPA if they want to bring back any legal, non-current use of asbestos — not just products that fall in the previously specified 15 categories.
“In response to public comments, EPA expanded the scope of the final rule to include an additional four categories of products and a ‘catch all’ category,” the document reads. “This ensures that ALL asbestos products that are no longer on the market are covered by this rule.”
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U.S. Geological Survey. “Mineral commodity summaries 2018.” U.S. Geological Survey, 2018, pp. 26-27.
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