TSCA CDR reporting: five critical steps
1. Figure out whether you’re affected by TSCA reporting requirements
CDR requirements apply to manufacturers and importers of chemical substances listed on the TSCA inventory, who are doing so for commercial purposes. For most substances, the reporting threshold is 25,000lbs manufactured or imported during any calendar year since the last principal reporting year. However, this drops to 2,500lbs for chemicals subject to certain TSCA actions. To determine the applicability of reporting requirements, we suggest consulting the EPA’s Substance Registry Services (SRS) website which allows you to search by chemical identity. For CDR 2024, the four calendar years of interest are 2020 to 2023. The current principal reporting year is 2023 and the previous principal reporting year was 2019.
Companies should check the TSCA inventory carefully as some substances are granted full or partial exemptions. There are also exemptions for small manufacturers or importers of chemicals, providing the substances are not subject to certain TSCA actions. So, most companies with total annual sales less than $12million will not have to file a report. The same is true of companies with total annual sales under $120million where annual import or manufacture is less than 100,000lbs.
2. Establish what data is required for TSCA CDR reporting
If the above step indicates that you do need to file a report, it’s important to determine exactly what must be reported. We advise doing this at the earliest possible stage, as some data will have to be sourced from third parties.
For any chemical substance that was listed on the TSCA inventory as of 1 June 2024, companies need to report on:
- Total annual production (or import) volume for each calendar year of the reporting period, spanning 2020-23
- Detailed information for 2023 (the principal reporting year)
- Manufacturing, process, and use information
- Exposure related information