Basic Information
Resources
The Bigger Picture
Chemicals surround us. They are a part of everyday objects from toothbrushes to baby teethers, plastic forks to furniture, kettles to computers – things that comprise much of modern living. But chemicals can also pose potential risks. Manufacturing consumer products creates emissions that can enter the air we breathe and the water we drink. When we throw these products away, they can contaminate our land or, if incinerated, our air. OPPT works to prevent harmful chemicals from entering the marketplace and to ensure that existing chemicals do not harm public health or the environment.
Pesticides are regulated under the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA). Read more about how EPA regulates pesticides.
The Office of Pollution Prevention and Toxics (OPPT) was formed in 1977 with the primary responsibility for administering the Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA). The laws goal is to ensure that chemicals sold and used in the United States do not pose an unreasonable risk to human health and the environment. The law covers production and distribution of commercial and industrial chemicals. Under TSCA, EPA has established reporting, record-keeping, testing, and control-related requirements for new and existing chemicals.
With enactment in 1990 of the Pollution Prevention Act (PPA), the office’s responsibilities expanded. This law established pollution prevention as the national policy for controlling industrial pollution at its source -- in other words, to keep pollutants from getting to the environment. EPA works to reduce pollution before it occurs by supporting innovative changes in the production and use of raw materials.
As emerging technologies, such as biotechnology and nanotechnology, changed the types of materials used in commerce and present in the environment, OPPT’s purview enlarged again. To meet the challenges of its diverse and broadening responsibilities, OPPT has strong scientific and technical capabilities, with expertise in areas such as hazard, exposure and risk assessment, chemical testing, structure-activity relationship analysis, economic and cost benefit analysis, chemical technology and pollution prevention.
The office has developed two roles: One is to serve as a gatekeeper/guardian, using its regulatory authorities granted by Congress to keep potentially risky new chemicals out of the market while assessing and managing the potential risks of existing chemicals. The other -- which is newer and expanding -- is to promote environmental stewardship and sustainability. OPPT does this through collaborative programs with stakeholders and educational initiatives. Working to eliminate sources of pollution, OPPT creates tools and make information available to enable industry and the public to make wise chemical choices. OPPT works in both areas internationally to confront chemical risks that cross national boundaries.
In support of EPA's mission, our office goals include:
- Promoting pollution prevention as the guiding principle for controlling industrial pollution;
- Promoting safer chemicals through a combination of regulatory and voluntary efforts;
- Promoting risk reduction to minimize exposure to existing substances such as lead, asbestos, dioxin, and polychlorinated biphenyls; and
- Promoting public understanding of risks by providing understandable, accessible and complete information on chemical risks to the broadest audience possible.
OPPT wide-ranging programs include:
- New and Existing Chemicals programs;
- Lead, asbestos, and polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) risk management programs;
- High Production Volume (HPV) Challenge Program and Voluntary Children's Chemical Evaluation Program (VCCEP), which aim at providing chemical hazard and risk information to inform chemical use choices;
- Design for the Environment (DfE), Green Chemistry, Green Suppliers Network, and Environmentally Preferable Purchasing (EPP) programs, which are pollution prevention oriented.
For additional information:
- Read about OPPT programs' accomplishments from January 2007 - June 2008.
- An Overview of OPPT Programs (PDF)(49 pp, 149 KB, About PDF) is available with corresponding Overview appendices (PDF) (73 pp, 20 MB, About PDF) to provide background and reference information for US EPA's Office of Pollution Prevention and Toxics (OPPT) programs. These documents provide a brief overview of OPPT's key programs. Please contact the TSCA hotline (202-554-1404) for more information.
- Read about the development of the Toxic Substances Control Act and the Pollution Prevention Act on EPA's history site.