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The Age of Greed: What the Chemical Industry Doesn’t Want You to Know

Imagine for a moment that you’rethe chief executive of a company that manufactures chemicals used in plastics that become consumer products, especially plastic picnic ware.  The head of your product development lab reports that she has just gotten some troubling results regarding one of your biggest sellers—a chemical agent that makes it possible for plastic utensils to maintains their decorator colors.  The study shows that this agent causes severe neurological damage in rats.  The Toxic Substances Control Act, commonly referred to as T(O)SCA, requires you to turn all “health and safety” studies over to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).  You tell her to do so, but order that the name of the suspect substance be replaced with a so-called “generic chemical name” that makes it impossible for anyone to understand the implications of the study.  You further instruct that your company name be redacted from the information transmitted to EPA.  The result is a report that neither allows the public to understand the implications of the study nor to monitor how the government and the company curb either its marketing or its use. 

Any college sophomore biology student knows that scientific advances depend on the free and open sharing of information so that experiments can be replicated and hypotheses disproved.  So it was that over the last several days a small group of researchers gathered in Geneva under the auspices of the World Health Organization to wring their hands about whether to make public groundbreaking research on a particularly virulent strain of the lethal bird flu.  The upshot?  The research will be published, despite the risk that it could be used by terrorists.  The group decided that the importance of scientific openness regarding this crucial public health threat outweighed the superficially appealing notion of embracing secrecy that would chill further discoveries.  

On behalf of its many members, including an unknown number who find themselves in distasteful circumstances comparable to my opening hypothetical, the American Chemistry Council (ACC) asserts that the “confidential business information” in an adverse health and safety study must be kept secret in order to safeguard their members’ competitiveness.  The identity of the chemical—and even the name of the company that manufactures it—is a “trade secret” that carries with it a property right, ACC argues.  Dollars outweigh any romantic notion that the public has a need—much less a right—to know.  Of course, information on the bird flu could also prove lucrative to pharmaceutical companies.  Once scientific information is dubbed a trade secret, the profit motive—or, in its gilded form, corporate competitiveness—transcends everything else, especially the public interest in not just knowing but tracking further developments. 

In May 2010, EPA announced that it was going to crack down on “confidential business information” claims regarding chemicals that are the subject of adverse health and safety studies.  It explained:

Part of the Agency’s mission is to promote public understanding of potential risks by providing understandable, accessible, and complete information on potential chemical risks to the broadest audience possible. In support of this mission, EPA posts useful information about chemical substances regulated under TSCA for the public on its website (http://www.epa.gov/oppt/index.htm).  One important source of this information is health and safety studies submitted to the Agency. The TSCA section 14(b) exclusion from confidential protection for information from health and safety studies indicates the importance attributed by Congress to making such information available to the public. Chemical identities in particular constitute basic information that helps the public to place risk information in context. Making public chemical identities in health and safety studies whose confidentiality is precluded by TSCA will support the Agency’s mission.

As usual, the ACC has traveled the well-worn path to the door of the White House Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA), demanding last month that it squash the EPA’s efforts.  Never inclined to make a modest argument when an overwrought one can be crafted, its “white paper” on the subject notes that EPA’s disclosure policy deprives “trade secret chemical identities” of protection as the “most valuable intellectual property” a company possesses.  This result “may have the effect of discouraging innovation and the jobs and greener chemicals that result from innovation, driving jobs outside the U.S.,” reminding us once again that “it’s the jobs, stupid,” no matter how attenuated the claims regarding such outcomes may be.  And in fact, ACC’s lengthy, glutinous paper does not offer any evidence of this assertion, but instead takes the reader on a long and discouraging journey through the legislative history of TSCA, now four decades old.

EPA should stand by its policy of refusing CBI claims on most chemical identities in TSCA health and safety studies. Whether OIRA will stifle EPA remains to be seen.  I hope that as they consider ACC’s shrieks of dismay, however, OIRA staff will keep in mind an outcome that is considerably more likely than the mass migration of American jobs.  Secrecy breeds distrust in virtually every aspect of public affairs.  When the reason for obscuring the source of a tangible danger is money for the few and not the many, this dynamic is intensified.  Of course, few people are paying attention to the particular melodrama I describe here.  But should it come to light, the government, and not just a self-interested industry, will be further diminished.

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Rena Steinzor | February 22, 2012

The Age of Greed: What the Chemical Industry Doesn’t Want You to Know

Imagine for a moment that you’rethe chief executive of a company that manufactures chemicals used in plastics that become consumer products, especially plastic picnic ware.  The head of your product development lab reports that she has just gotten some troubling results regarding one of your biggest sellers—a chemical agent that makes it possible for plastic […]

Robert Verchick | February 22, 2012

Mardi Gras, Check. BP ‘Trial of the Century’ Here We Come.

  Mardi Gras Float, 2011 Well, another magnificent Mardi Gras has ended, and at this point, I’d normally be slouched on the sofa sipping a tomato juice (neat) and sorting beads. But not this year.  That’s because next week, squadrons of lawyers, journalists, petroleum engineers, and fisher folk are scheduled to descend on New Orleans, […]

Kirsten Engel | February 21, 2012

EPA’s Standing Argument: A Sleeping Giant in the Tailoring Rule Litigation?

On Feb. 28 and 29, the D.C. Circuit is scheduled to hear arguments on a suite of industry-led challenges to EPA-issued greenhouse gas rules.  While attention has focused on industry’s challenge to EPA’s finding that greenhouse gases (GHGs) endanger the environment, industry’s challenge to the greenhouse gas permitting “tailoring” rule – a rule limiting the […]

Daniel Farber | February 20, 2012

Placing a Ceiling on Protection for Public Health

Cross-posted from Legal Planet. Governor Romney has endorsed an idea called regulatory budgeting, but it really means capping protection for public health. Romney’s position paper explains the concept as follows: To force agencies to limit the costs they are imposing on society, and to provide the certainty that businesses crave, a system of regulatory caps […]

Matt Shudtz | February 17, 2012

EPA Releases IRIS Assessment of Dioxin Non-Cancer Risks

Today EPA released the first part of its long-awaited reassessment of the human health risks posed by 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin, a chemical considered to be the most toxic of the dioxin compounds and the stuff that made Agent Orange so bad for its victims.  It’s bittersweet news: on the one hand, the decades-long stretch between EPA’s first […]

Rena Steinzor | February 17, 2012

The Economist Recycles Old Right-Wing Ideas to Gut Public Protections

The Economist’s February 18 edition offers a cover package of five articles on “Over-regulated America” (1, 2, 3, 4, 5). Our British friends want you to know there’s a problem here in the States that needs fixing: A study for the Small Business Administration, a government body, found that regulations in general add $10,585 in […]

Sandra Zellmer | February 16, 2012

The Pipeline That Refuses to Die

Last month, President Obama denied TransCanada’s permit application for the Keystone XL pipeline because a congressionally mandated deadline did not allow enough time to evaluate the project once Nebraska completed its analysis for re-routing of the pipeline around the Sand Hills. A January 26-29 poll from Hart Research Associates found that, after hearing arguments for and […]

Joel A. Mintz | February 15, 2012

Will Sackett Sock It To EPA Enforcement?

Two of my CPR Member Scholar colleagues, Nina Mendelson and Holly Doremus have done a first-rate job of previewing and analyzing the oral argument in Sackett v. EPA – a case now awaiting decision by the U.S. Supreme Court. I fully share Professor Doremus’s hope that, even if the case results in a loss for […]

Thomas McGarity | February 14, 2012

One Year Later, OSHA’s Rule to Protect Workers from Deadly Silica Still in White House Review

Today marks the first anniversary of an event that received little media attention, but marked a major milestone in the progression of a regulation that is of great importance to thousands of Americans whose jobs bring them into contact with dust particles containing the common mineral silica.  Exactly a year ago today the Occupational Safety […]