82_FR_16645 82 FR 16581 - Chlorpyrifos; Order Denying PANNA and NRDC's Petition To Revoke Tolerances

82 FR 16581 - Chlorpyrifos; Order Denying PANNA and NRDC's Petition To Revoke Tolerances

ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY

Federal Register Volume 82, Issue 64 (April 5, 2017)

Page Range16581-16592
FR Document2017-06777

In this Order, EPA denies a petition requesting that EPA revoke all tolerances for the pesticide chlorpyrifos under section 408(d) of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act and cancel all chlorpyrifos registrations under the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide and Rodenticide Act. The petition was filed in September 2007 by the Pesticide Action Network North America (PANNA) and the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC).

Federal Register, Volume 82 Issue 64 (Wednesday, April 5, 2017)
[Federal Register Volume 82, Number 64 (Wednesday, April 5, 2017)]
[Notices]
[Pages 16581-16592]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2017-06777]


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ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY

[EPA-HQ-OPP-2007-1005; FRL-9960-77]


Chlorpyrifos; Order Denying PANNA and NRDC's Petition To Revoke 
Tolerances

AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).

ACTION: Order.

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SUMMARY: In this Order, EPA denies a petition requesting that EPA 
revoke all tolerances for the pesticide chlorpyrifos under section 
408(d) of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act and cancel all 
chlorpyrifos registrations under the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide and 
Rodenticide Act. The petition was filed in September 2007 by the 
Pesticide Action Network North America (PANNA) and the Natural 
Resources Defense Council (NRDC).

DATES: This Order is effective April 5, 2017. Objections and requests 
for hearings must be received on or before June 5, 2017, and must be 
filed in accordance with the instructions provided in 40 CFR part 178 
(see also Unit I. of the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION.)

ADDRESSES: The docket for this action, identified by docket 
identification (ID) number EPA-HQ-OPP-2007-1005, is available at http://www.regulations.gov or at the Office of Pesticide Programs Regulatory 
Public Docket (OPP Docket) in the Environmental Protection Agency 
Docket Center (EPA/DC), West William Jefferson Clinton Bldg., Rm. 3334, 
1301 Constitution Ave. NW., Washington, DC 20460-0001. The Public 
Reading Room is open from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday through 
Friday, excluding legal

[[Page 16582]]

holidays. The telephone number for the Public Reading Room is (202) 
566-1744, and the telephone number for the OPP Docket is (703) 305-
5805. Please review the visitor instructions and additional information 
about the docket available at http://www.epa.gov/dockets.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Pesticide Re-Evaluation Division 
(7508P), Office of Pesticide Programs, Environmental Protection Agency, 
1200 Pennsylvania Ave. NW., Washington, DC 20460-0001; telephone 
number: (703) 347-0206; email address: 
[email protected].

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

I. General Information

A. Does this action apply to me?

    In this document EPA denies a petition by PANNA and the NRDC to 
revoke pesticide tolerances and cancel pesticide registrations. This 
action may also be of interest to agricultural producers, food 
manufacturers, or pesticide manufacturers. Potentially affected 
entities may include, but are not limited to those engaged in the 
following activities:
     Crop production (North American Industrial Classification 
System (NAICS) code 111), e.g., agricultural workers; greenhouse, 
nursery, and floriculture workers; farmers.
     Animal production (NAICS code 112), e.g., cattle ranchers 
and farmers, dairy cattle farmers, livestock farmers.
     Food manufacturing (NAICS code 311), e.g., agricultural 
workers; farmers; greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture workers; 
ranchers; pesticide applicators.
     Pesticide manufacturing (NAICS code 32532), e.g., 
agricultural workers; commercial applicators; farmers, greenhouse, 
nursery, and floriculture workers; residential users.
    This listing is not intended to be exhaustive, but rather to 
provide a guide for readers regarding entities likely to be affected by 
this action. Other types of entities not listed in this unit could also 
be affected. The NAICS codes have been provided to assists you and 
others in determining whether this action might apply to certain 
entities. If you have any questions regarding the applicability of this 
action to a particular entity, consult the person listed under FOR 
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT.

B. How can I get copies of this document and other related information?

    EPA has established a docket for this action under Docket ID No. 
EPA-HQ-OPP-2007-1005. Additional information relevant to this action is 
located in the chlorpyrifos registration review docket under Docket ID 
No, EPA-HQ-OPP-2008-0850 and the chlorpyrifos tolerance rulemaking 
docket under Docket ID No, EPA-HQ-OPP-2015-0653. To access the 
electronic docket, go to http://www.regulations.gov, select ``Advanced 
Search,'' then ``Docket Search.'' Insert the docket ID number where 
indicated and select the ``Submit'' button. Follow the instructions on 
the regulations.gov Web site to view the docket index or access 
available documents. All documents in the docket are listed in the 
docket index available in regulations.gov. Although listed in the 
index, some information is not publicly available, e.g., Confidential 
Business Information (CBI) or other information whose disclosure is 
restricted by statute. Certain other material, such as copyrighted 
material, is not placed on the Internet and will be publicly available 
only in hard copy form. Publicly available docket materials are 
available in the electronic docket or, if only available in hard copy, 
at the OPP Regulatory Public Docket in Rm. S-4400, One Potomac Yard 
(South Bldg.), 2777 S. Crystal Dr., Arlington, VA. The Docket Facility 
is open from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday, excluding legal 
holidays. The Docket Facility telephone number is (703) 305-5805.

C. Can I file an objection or hearing request?

    Under section 408(g) of the Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act 
(FFDCA) (21 U.S.C. 346a(g)), any person may file an objection to any 
aspect of this order and may also request a hearing on those 
objections. You must file your objection or request a hearing on this 
order in accordance with the instructions provided in 40 CFR part 178. 
To ensure proper receipt by EPA, you must identify docket ID number 
EPA-HQ-OPP-2007-1005 in the subject line on the first page of your 
submission. All objections and requests for a hearing must be in 
writing, and must be received by the Hearing Clerk on or before June 5, 
2017, and may be submitted by one of the following methods:
     Mail: U.S. EPA Office of Administrative Law Judges, 
Mailcode 1900R, 1200 Pennsylvania Ave. NW., Washington, DC 20460
     Hand Delivery: U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Office 
of Administrative Law Judges, Ronald Reagan Building, Rm. M1200, 1300 
Pennsylvania Ave. NW., Washington, DC 20004. Deliveries are only 
accepted during the Office's normal hours of operation (8:30 a.m. to 4 
p.m., Monday through Friday, excluding legal holidays). Special 
arrangements should be made for deliveries of boxed information. The 
Office's telephone number is (202) 564-6255.
    In addition to filing an objection or hearing request with the 
Hearing Clerk as described in 40 CFR part 178, please submit a copy of 
the filing that does not contain CBI for inclusion in the public docket 
that is described in I.B.1 above. Information not marked confidential 
pursuant to 40 CFR part 2 may be disclosed publicly by EPA without 
prior notice. Submit this copy, identified by docket ID number EPA-HQ-
OPP-2007-1005, by one of the following methods:
     Federal eRulemaking Portal: http://www.regulations.gov. 
Follow the on-line instructions for submitting comments.
     Mail: U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Office of 
Pesticide Programs (OPP) Public Regulatory Docket (7502P), 1200 
Pennsylvania, Ave. NW., Washington, DC 20460-0001.
     Delivery: OPP Regulatory Public Docket (7502P), 
Environmental Protection Agency, Rm. S-4400, One Potomac Yard (South 
Bldg.), 2777 S. Crystal Dr., Arlington, VA. Deliveries are only 
accepted during the Docket's normal hours of operation (8:30 a.m. to 4 
p.m., Monday through Friday, excluding legal holidays). Special 
arrangements should be made for deliveries of boxed information. The 
Docket Facility telephone number is (703) 305-5805.

D. What should be included in objections?

    The objection stage is the second stage in the petition process 
under FFDCA section 408. This multi-stage process is initiated by a 
petition requesting establishment, modification, or revocation of a 
tolerance. Once EPA makes a decision on a petition, and publishes its 
decision in the Federal Register, the second stage of the petition 
process is triggered. At this point, parties who disagree with EPA's 
decision, whether it is a decision to grant or deny the petition, may 
file objections with EPA to the decision made. The objection stage 
gives parties a chance to seek review of EPA's decision before the 
Agency. This is an opportunity for parties to contest the conclusions 
EPA reached and the determinations underlying those conclusions. As an 
administrative review stage, it is not an opportunity to raise new 
issues or arguments or present facts or information that were available 
earlier. On the other hand, parties must do more than repeat the claims 
in the petition. The objection stage is the opportunity to challenge 
EPA's decision on the petition. An objection fails on its

[[Page 16583]]

face if it does not identify aspects of EPA's decision believed to be 
in error and explain the reason why EPA's decision is incorrect. This 
two-stage process insures that issues are fully aired before the Agency 
and a comprehensive record is compiled, prior to judicial review.

II. Introduction

A. What action is the Agency taking?

    In this document, EPA denies a petition by PANNA and the NRDC. In a 
petition dated September 12, 2007, PANNA and NRDC (the petitioners) 
requested that EPA revoke all tolerances for the pesticide chlorpyrifos 
established under section 408 of the FFDCA. (Ref. 1) The petition also 
sought the cancellation of all chlorpyrifos pesticide product 
registrations under section 6 the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide and 
Rodenticide Act (FIFRA), 7 U.S.C. 136d. The PANNA and NRDC petition 
(the Petition) raised the following claims regarding EPA's 
reregistration and active registrations of chlorpyrifos in support of 
the request for tolerance revocation and product cancellation:
    1. EPA has ignored genetic evidence of vulnerable populations.
    2. EPA has needlessly delayed a decision regarding endocrine 
disrupting effects.
    3. EPA has ignored data regarding cancer risks.
    4. EPA's 2006 cumulative risk assessment (CRA) for the 
organophosphates misrepresented risks and failed to apply FQPA 10X 
safety factor. [For convenience's sake, the legal requirements 
regarding the additional safety margin for infants and children in 
section 408(b)(2)(C) of the FFDCA are referred to throughout this 
response as the ``FQPA 10X safety factor'' or simply the ``FQPA safety 
factor.'' Due to Congress' focus on both pre- and post-natal toxicity, 
EPA has interpreted this additional safety factor as pertaining to 
risks to infants and children that arise due to pre-natal exposure as 
well as to exposure during childhood years.]
    5. EPA has over-relied on registrant data.
    6. EPA has failed to properly address the exporting hazard in 
foreign countries from chlorpyrifos.
    7. EPA has failed to quantitatively incorporate data demonstrating 
long-lasting effects from early life exposure to chlorpyrifos in 
children.
    8. EPA has disregarded data demonstrating that there is no evidence 
of a safe level of exposure during pre-birth and early life stages.
    9. EPA has failed to cite or quantitatively incorporate studies and 
clinical reports suggesting potential adverse effects below 10% 
cholinesterase inhibition.
    10. EPA has failed to incorporate inhalation routes of exposure.
    In this order EPA is denying the Petition in full. EPA provided the 
petitioners with two interim responses on July 16, 2012, and July 15, 
2014, respectively. The July 16, 2012, response denied claim 6 (export 
hazard) completely and that portion of the response was a final agency 
action. The remainder of the July 16, 2012, response and the July 15, 
2014, response expressed EPA's intention to deny six other petition 
claims (1-5 and 10). [In the 2012 response, EPA did, however, inform 
petitioners of its approval of label mitigation (in the form of rate 
reductions and spray drift buffers) to reduce bystander risks, 
including risks from inhalation exposure, which in effect partially 
granted petition claim 10.] EPA made clear in both the 2012 and 2014 
responses that, absent a request from petitioners, EPA's denial of 
those six claims would not be made final until EPA finalized its 
response to the entire Petition. Petitioners made no such request. EPA 
is finalizing its denial of those six claims in this order.
    The remaining claims (7-9) all related to same issue: Whether the 
potential exists for chlorpyrifos to cause neurodevelopmental effects 
in children at exposure levels below EPA's existing regulatory standard 
(10% cholinesterase inhibition). While these claims raised novel, 
highly complex and unresolved scientific issues, EPA decided it would 
nonetheless expedite the registration review of chlorpyrifos under 
FIFRA section 3(g), and attempt to address these issues several years 
in advance of the October 1, 2022 deadline for completing that review. 
Accordingly, EPA also decided as a policy matter that it would address 
the Petition claims raising these matters on a similar timeframe. 
Although EPA had expedited its registration review to address these 
issues, the petitioners were not satisfied with EPA's progress in 
responding to the Petition and they brought legal action in the 9th 
Circuit Court of Appeals to compel EPA to either issue an order denying 
the Petition or to grant the Petition by initiating the tolerance 
revocation process. In August 2015, the 9th Circuit issued a ruling in 
favor of the petitioners and ordered EPA to respond to the Petition by 
either denying the Petition or issuing a proposed or final rule 
revoking chlorpyrifos tolerances. In re Pesticide Action Network of 
North America v. EPA, 798 F.3d (9th Cir. 2015).
    On November 6, 2015, pursuant to the 9th Circuit's order, EPA 
proposed to revoke all chlorpyrifos tolerances based in part on 
uncertainty surrounding the potential for chlorpyrifos to cause 
neurodevelopmental effects--the issue raised in petition claims 7-9. 
Following publication of the proposal, the 9th Circuit announced that 
it would retain jurisdiction over this matter and on August 12, 2016, 
the court further ordered EPA to complete a final petition response by 
March 31, 2017 and made clear that no further extensions would be 
granted. On November 17, 2016, EPA published a notice of data 
availability that released for public comment EPA's revised risk 
assessment that proposed a new regulatory point of departure based on 
the potential for chlorpyrifos to result in adverse neurodevelopmental 
effects.
    Following a review of comments on both the November 2015 proposal 
and the November 2016 notice of data availability, EPA has concluded 
that, despite several years of study, the science addressing 
neurodevelopmental effects remains unresolved and that further 
evaluation of the science during the remaining time for completion of 
registration review is warranted to achieve greater certainty as to 
whether the potential exists for adverse neurodevelopmental effects to 
occur from current human exposures to chlorpyrifos. EPA has therefore 
concluded that it will not complete the human health portion of the 
registration review or any associated tolerance revocation of 
chlorpyrifos without first attempting to come to a clearer scientific 
resolution on those issues. As noted, Congress has provided that EPA 
must complete registration review by October 1, 2022. Because the 9th 
Circuit's August 12, 2016 order has made clear, however, that further 
extensions to the March 31, 2017 deadline for responding to the 
Petition would not be granted, EPA is today also denying all remaining 
petition claims.

B. What is the Agency's authority for taking this action?

    Under section 408(d)(4) of the FFDCA, EPA is authorized to respond 
to a section 408(d) petition to revoke tolerance either by issuing a 
final rule revoking the tolerances, issuing a proposed rule, or issuing 
an order denying the Petition.

[[Page 16584]]

III. Statutory and Regulatory Background

A. FFDCA/FIFRA and Applicable Regulations

    1. In general. EPA establishes maximum residue limits, or 
``tolerances,'' for pesticide residues in food and feed commodities 
under section 408 of the FFDCA. Without such a tolerance or an 
exemption from the requirement of a tolerance, a food containing a 
pesticide residue is ``adulterated'' under section 402 of the FFDCA and 
may not be legally moved in interstate commerce. Section 408 was 
substantially rewritten by the Food Quality Protection Act of 1996 
(FQPA) (Pub. L. 104-170, 110 Stat. 1489 (1996)), which established a 
detailed safety standard for pesticides and integrated EPA's regulation 
of pesticide food residues under the FFDCA with EPA's registration and 
re-evaluation of pesticides under FIFRA. The standard for issuing or 
maintaining a tolerance under section 408(b)(2)(A)(i) of the FFDCA is 
whether it is ``safe.'' ``Safe'' is defined by section 408(b)(2)(A)(ii) 
to mean that ``there is a reasonable certainty that no harm will result 
from aggregate exposure to the pesticide chemical residue, including 
all anticipated dietary exposures and all other exposures for which 
there is reliable information.''
    While the FFDCA authorizes the establishment of legal limits for 
pesticide residues in food, section 3(a) of FIFRA requires the approval 
of pesticides prior to their sale and distribution, and establishes a 
registration regime for regulating the use of pesticides. FIFRA 
regulates pesticide use in conjunction with its registration scheme by 
requiring EPA review and approval of pesticide labels and specifying 
that use of a pesticide inconsistent with its label is a violation of 
federal law. In the FQPA, Congress integrated action under the two 
statutes by requiring that the safety standard under the FFDCA be used 
as a criterion in FIFRA registration actions as to pesticide uses which 
result in dietary risk from residues in or on food, (see FIFRA section 
2(bb)), and directing that EPA coordinate, to the extent practicable, 
revocations of tolerances with pesticide cancellations under FIFRA. 
(See FFDCA section 408(l)(1).) Under section 3(g) of FIFRA, EPA is 
required to re-evaluate pesticides under the FIFRA standard--which 
includes a determination regarding the safety of existing FFDCA 
tolerances--every 15 years under a program known as ``registration 
review.'' The deadline for completing the registration review for 
chlorpyrifos is October 1, 2022.
    2. Procedures for establishing, amending, or revoking tolerances. 
Tolerances are established, amended, or revoked by rulemaking under the 
unique procedural framework set forth in the FFDCA. Generally, a 
tolerance rulemaking is initiated by the party seeking to establish, 
amend, or revoke a tolerance by means of filing a petition with EPA. 
(See FFDCA section 408(d)(1).) EPA publishes in the Federal Register a 
notice of the petition filing and requests public comment. After 
reviewing the petition, and any comments received on it, section 
408(d)(4) provides that EPA may issue a final rule establishing, 
amending, or revoking the tolerance, issue a proposed rule to do the 
same, or deny the petition.
    Once EPA takes final action on the petition by establishing, 
amending, or revoking the tolerance or denying the petition, section 
408(g)(2) allows any party to file objections with EPA and seek an 
evidentiary hearing on those objections. Objections and hearing 
requests must be filed within 60 days. Section 408(g)(2)(B) provides 
that EPA shall ``hold a public evidentiary hearing if and to the extent 
the Administrator determines that such a public hearing is necessary to 
receive factual evidence relevant to material issues of fact raised by 
the objections.'' EPA regulations make clear that hearings will only be 
granted where it is shown that there is ``a genuine and substantial 
issue of fact,'' the requestor has identified evidence `which ``would, 
if established, resolve one or more of such issues in favor of the 
requestor,'' and the issue is ``determinative'' with regard to the 
relief requested. (40 CFR 178.32(b).) Further, a party may not raise 
issues in objections unless they were part of the petition and an 
objecting party must state objections to the EPA decision and not just 
repeat the allegations in its petition. Corn Growers v. EPA, 613 F.2d 
266 (D.C. Cir. 2010), cert. denied, 131 S. Ct. 2931 (2011). EPA's final 
order on the objections is subject to judicial review. (21 U.S.C. 
346a(h)(1).)

IV. Chlorpyrifos Regulatory Background

    Chlorpyrifos (0,0-diethyl-0-3,5,6-trichloro-2-pyridyl 
phosphorothioate) is a broad-spectrum, chlorinated organophosphate (OP) 
insecticide that has been registered for use in the United States since 
1965. By pounds of active ingredient, it is the most widely used 
conventional insecticide in the country. Currently registered use sites 
include a large variety of food crops (including tree fruits and nuts, 
many types of small fruits and vegetables, including vegetable seed 
treatments, grain/oilseed crops, and cotton, for example), and non-food 
use settings (e.g., ornamental and agricultural seed production, non-
residential turf, industrial sites/rights of way, greenhouse and 
nursery production, sod farms, pulpwood production, public health and 
wood protection). For some of these crops, chlorpyrifos is currently 
the only cost-effective choice for control of certain insect pests. In 
2000, the chlorpyrifos registrants reached an agreement with EPA to 
voluntarily cancel all residential use products except those registered 
for ant and roach baits in child-resistant packaging and fire ant mound 
treatments.
    In 2006, EPA completed FIFRA section 4 reregistration and FFDCA 
tolerance reassessment for chlorpyrifos and the OP class of pesticides. 
Having completed reregistration and tolerance reassessment, EPA is 
required to complete the next re-evaluation of chlorpyrifos under the 
FIFRA section 3(g) registration review program by October 1, 2022. 
Given ongoing scientific developments in the study of the OPs 
generally, in March 2009 EPA announced its decision to prioritize the 
FIFRA section 3(g) registration review of chlorpyrifos by opening a 
public docket and releasing a preliminary work plan to complete the 
chlorpyrifos registration review by 2015--7 years in advance of the 
date required by law.
    The registration review of chlorpyrifos and the OPs has presented 
EPA with numerous novel scientific issues that the agency has taken to 
multiple FIFRA Scientific Advisory Panel (SAP) meetings since the 
completion of reregistration. [The SAP is a federal advisory committee 
created by section 25(d) of FIFRA, that serves as EPA's primary source 
of peer review for significant regulatory and policy matters involving 
pesticides.] Many of these complex scientific issues formed the basis 
of the 2007 petition filed by PANNA and NRDC and EPA therefore decided 
to address the Petition on a similar timeframe to EPA's expedited 
registration review schedule.
    Although EPA expedited the chlorpyrifos registration review in an 
attempt to address the novel scientific issues raised by the Petition 
in advance of the statutory deadline, the petitioners were dissatisfied 
with the pace of EPA's response efforts and have sued EPA in federal 
court on three separate occasions to compel a faster response to the 
Petition. As explained in Unit V., EPA had addressed 7 of the 10 claims 
asserted in the Petition by either

[[Page 16585]]

denying the claim, issuing a preliminary denial or approving label 
mitigation to address the claims, but on June 10, 2015, in the PANNA 
decision, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit signaled its 
intent to order EPA to complete its response to the Petition and 
directed EPA to inform the court how--and by when--EPA intended to 
respond. On June 30, 2015, EPA informed the court that it intended to 
propose by April 15, 2016, the revocation of all chlorpyrifos 
tolerances in the absence of pesticide label mitigation that ensures 
that exposures will be safe. On August 10, 2015, the court rejected 
EPA's time line and issued a mandamus order directing EPA to ``issue 
either a proposed or final revocation rule or a full and final response 
to the administrative Petition by October 31, 2015.''
    On October 30, 2015, EPA issued a proposed rule to revoke all 
chlorpyrifos tolerances which it published in the Federal Register on 
November 6, 2015 (80 FR 69080). On December 10, 2015, the Ninth Circuit 
issued a further order requiring EPA to complete any final rule (or 
petition denial) and fully respond to the Petition by December 30, 
2016. On June 30, 2016, EPA sought a 6-month extension to that deadline 
in order to allow EPA to fully consider the most recent views of the 
FIFRA SAP with respect to chlorpyrifos toxicology. The FIFRA SAP report 
was finalized and made available for EPA consideration on July 20, 
2016. (Ref. 2) On August 12, 2016, the court rejected EPA's request for 
a 6-month extension and ordered EPA to complete its final action by 
March 31, 2017 (effectively granting EPA a three-month extension). On 
November 17, 2016, EPA published a notice of data availability (NODA) 
seeking public comment on both EPA's revised risk and water assessments 
and reopening the comment period on the proposal to revoke all 
chlorpyrifos (81 FR 81049). The comment period for the NODA closed on 
January 17, 2017.

V. Ruling on Petition

    This order denies the Petition on the nine remaining grounds for 
which EPA has not issued a final denial that can be the subject of 
objections under section 408(g)(2) of the FFDCA. As noted in Unit II, 
on July 16, 2012, EPA denied as final agency action petitioners' claim 
6 that the registration of chlorpyrifos created an export hazard for 
workers in foreign countries. That response and the response of July 
15, 2014, also included EPA's preliminary denial of petition claims 1-5 
and 10 (except to the extent EPA granted that claim) and EPA's 
responses to those claims are now incorporated into this order as set 
forth below. This unit also includes EPA's basis for denying petition 
claims 7-9. Each specific petition claim is summarized in this Unit V. 
immediately prior to EPA's response to the claim.

1. Genetic Evidence of Vulnerable Populations

    a. Petitioners' claim. Petitioners claim that as part of EPA's 
reregistration decision (which was completed in 2006 with the 
completion of the organophosphate cumulative risk assessment) the 
Agency failed to calculate an appropriate intra-species uncertainty 
factor (i.e., within human variability) for chlorpyrifos in both its 
aggregate and cumulative risk assessments (CRA). They assert that 
certain relevant, robust data, specifically the Furlong et al. (2006) 
study (Ref. 3) that addresses intra-species variability in the behavior 
of the detoxifying enzyme paraoxonase (PON1), indicate that the Agency 
should have applied an intra-species safety factor ``of at least 150X 
in the aggregate and cumulative assessments'' rather than the 10X 
factor EPA applied. Petitioners conclude by noting that applying an 
intra-species factor of 100X or higher would require setting tolerances 
below the level of detection, which therefore should compel EPA to 
revoke all chlorpyrifos tolerances.
    b. Agency Response. Petitioners are correct that the Agency, as 
part of the 2006 OP CRA, evaluated, but did not rely on Furlong et al. 
in setting the intra-species uncertainty factor for that assessment. 
The Agency did not rely on the results of the PON1 data in the OP CRA 
because these data do not take into consideration the complexity of OP 
metabolism, which involves multiple metabolic enzymes, not just PON1. 
In addition, EPA believes the methodology utilized in the Furlong et 
al. study to measure intra-species variability--i.e., combining values 
from multiple species (transgenic mice and human) to determine the 
range of sensitivity within a single species--is not consistent with 
well-established international risk assessment practices. Further, EPA 
believes that petitioners' assertion that the Furlong et al. study 
supports an intra-species uncertainty factor of at least 150X is based 
on an analysis of the data that is inconsistent with EPA policy and 
widely-accepted international guidance on the development of intra-
species uncertainty factors. In addition, the 2008 FIFRA SAP did not 
support the use of the Furlong et al (2006) study alone in deriving an 
intra-species factor. For these reasons, and as further explained 
below, EPA believes it is not appropriate to solely rely on the results 
of the Furlong et al. study, or petitioners' interpretation of those 
results, for purposes of determining the intra-species uncertainty 
factor. To determine that factor, EPA first uses science tools to 
quantitatively characterize human variability in both exposure and 
dosimetry, and then determines the appropriate intra-species 
uncertainty factor to protect sensitive populations. Specifically, for 
chlorpyrifos, EPA uses a physiologically-based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) 
model to account for human variability in the absorption, distribution, 
metabolism and excretion (ADME) of chemicals based on key 
physiological, biochemicals, and physicochemical determinants of these 
ADME processes, including the influence of PON1 variability.
    Addressing human variability and sensitive populations is an 
important aspect of the Agency's risk assessment process. The Agency is 
well aware of the issue of PON1 and has examined the scientific 
evidence on this source of genetic variability. PON1 is one of the key 
detoxification enzymes of chlorpyrifos and is included as part of the 
PBPK model used by EPA in the 2014 human health risk assessment (HHRA) 
and 2016 revised risk assessment. Specifically, PON1 is an A-esterase 
which can metabolize chlorpyrifos-oxon without inactivating the enzyme. 
(Ref. 4) Indeed, as part of the 2008 SAP, EPA performed a literature 
review of PON1 and its possible use in informing the intra-species 
(i.e., within human variability) uncertainty factor. This literature 
review can be found in the draft Appendix E: Data Derived Extrapolation 
Factor Analysis to the draft Science Issue Paper: Chlorpyrifos Hazard 
and Dose Response Characterization. (Ref. 5) In sum, the Agency 
considered available PON1 data from more than 25 studies from diverse 
human populations worldwide.
    The Agency focused on the PON1-192 polymorphism since it has been 
linked to chlorpyrifos-oxon sensitivity in experimental toxicology 
studies and, has been evaluated in epidemiology studies attempting to 
associate PON1 status with health outcomes following OP pesticide 
exposure in adults and children (Holland et al., 2006; Chen et al., 
2003. (Ref. 6). [Note, Holland et al. (2006) and Furlong et al. (2006) 
report findings from the same cohort. The Holland reference provides 
enzymes activities for specific polymorphisms in Table 4; the Furlong 
paper does not report such values and provides

[[Page 16586]]

information primarily in graphical form.] However, EPA believes that 
focusing on PON1 variability in isolation from other metabolic action 
is not an appropriate approach for developing a data-driven uncertainty 
factor. The Agency solicited feedback from the SAP on the utility of 
the PON1 data, by itself, for use in risk assessment; the SAP was 
similarly not supportive of using such data in isolation. Specifically, 
the SAP report states:

    . . . the information on PON1 polymorphisms should not be used 
as the sole factor in a data-derived uncertainty factor for two main 
reasons: (1) it is only one enzyme in a complex pathway, and is 
subsequent to the bioactivation reaction; therefore it can only 
function on the amount of bioactivation product (i.e., chlorpyrifos-
oxon) that is delivered to it by CYP450); and (2) the genotype of 
PON1 alone is insufficient to predict vulnerability because the 
overall level of enzyme activity is ultimately what determines 
detoxification potential from that pathway; thus, it is better to 
use PON1 status because it provides information regarding PON1 
genotype and activity. Some of the data from laboratory animal 
studies in PON knockout animals are using an unrealistic animal 
model and frequently very high dose levels, and do not reflect what 
might happen in humans. (Ref. 7)

    Based on a detailed review of the literature and the comments from 
the SAP, the Agency has determined that such data are not appropriate 
for use alone in deriving an intra-species uncertainty factor for use 
in human health risk assessment. As indicated by the SAP report, 
multiple factors (e.g., other enzymes such as P450s, carboxylesterases, 
butyrylcholinesterase) are likely to impact potential population 
sensitivity, rendering the results of the PON1 data, by themselves, 
insufficiently reliable to support a regulatory conclusion about the 
potential variation of human sensitivity to chlorpyrifos.
    Since the 2008 SAP, several epidemiological studies have been 
published that considered the association between PON status/genotype 
and health outcome. Hofmann et al. (2009) recently reported 
associations between PON1 status and inhibition of 
butyrylcholinesterase (BuChE) in a group of pesticide handlers in 
Washington. The authors note that this study requires replication with 
larger sample size(s) and more blood samples. (Ref. 8) Given the 
limitations of Hofmann et al., the Agency has not drawn any conclusions 
from this study. The Q/R-192 and/or C/T-108 polymorphism at the 
promoter site have been evaluated recently as a factor affecting birth 
or neurobehavioral outcomes following gestational exposure to OPs. 
(Refs. 9, 10, 11) These studies (Eskanazi., et al., 2010 (Ref. 9); 
Harley et al., 2011 (Ref. 10); Engel et al., 2011 (Ref. 11)) were 
evaluated by EPA in preparation for the April 2012 SAP review.
    Petitioners further emphasize that the Furlong et al. study 
supports an intra-species uncertainty factor of over 164X given the 
range of variability seen in that study. The 164X value is derived from 
sensitivity observed in transgenic mice expressing human PON1Q-192 
compared with mice expressing human PON1R-192 combined with the range 
of plasma arylesterase (AREase) from the newborn with the lowest PON1 
level compared with the mother with the highest PON1 level from a group 
of 130 maternal-newborn pairs from the CHAMACOS (Center for the Health 
Assessment of Mothers and Children of Salinas) cohort.
    EPA believes it is fundamentally at odds with international risk 
assessment practices to combine values from both mouse and human data 
to determine the potential range of variability within a single 
species--regardless of whether the test animals express a human PON1 
enzyme. As the 2008 FIFRA SAP explained, PON1 is but a single enzyme 
that should not be considered in isolation to predict the overall level 
of enzyme activity that may affect human sensitivity to a substance. 
Using a 164X intra-species uncertainty factor derived from the Furlong 
et al. study would take this practice one step further by relying upon 
combined PON1 values from different species with differing overall 
metabolic activity to derive the intra-species factor. EPA does not 
believe this approach is an appropriate means of determining the 
potential range of intra-species variability.
    Finally, petitioners' assertion that the Furlong study supports an 
intra-species uncertainty factor of at least 150X is based on an 
analysis of that study that is inconsistent with EPA policy and widely-
accepted international guidance on the development of intra-species 
uncertainty factors. In deriving the intra-species uncertainty factor 
in its risk assessments, EPA is guided by the principles of the 2005 
IPCS (Ref. 12) guidance on chemical specific adjustment factors (CSAFs) 
and the EPA's 2014 Guidance for Applying Quantitative Data to Develop 
Data-Derived Extrapolation Factors for Interspecies and Intraspecies 
Extrapolation. (Ref. 13) These guidances recommend that intra-species 
factors should be extrapolated from a measure of central tendency in 
the population to a measure in the sensitive population (i.e., to 
extrapolate from a typical human to a sensitive human). To base the 
factor on the difference between the single lowest and highest 
measurements in a given study, as petitioners suggest in this instance, 
would likely greatly exaggerate potential intra-species variability. 
That approach effectively assumes that the point of departure in an EPA 
risk assessment will be derived from the least sensitive test subject, 
thereby necessitating the application of an intra-species factor that 
accounts for the full range of sensitivity across a species. Since EPA 
does not develop its PoDs in this fashion; the approach suggested by 
petitioners is not appropriate.
    In summary, the Agency has carefully considered the issue of PON1 
variability and determined that data addressing PON1 in isolation are 
not appropriate for use alone in deriving an intra-species uncertainty 
factor and that the issue is more appropriately handled using a PBPK 
model. Further, the derivation of the 164X value advocated by the 
petitioners is based on combining values from humanized mice with human 
measured values with a range from highest to lowest; the Furlong et al. 
derivation is inappropriate and inconsistent with international risk 
assessment practice. (Ref. 2) The 2008 FIFRA SAP did not support the 
PON1 data used in isolation. Finally, petitioners' statement that the 
Furlong et al. study supports an intra-species uncertainty factor of at 
least 150X likely overstates potential variability. EPA therefore 
denies this aspect of the Petition.

2. Endocrine Disrupting Effects

    a. Petitioners' claim. Petitioners summarize a number of studies 
evaluating the effects of chlorpyrifos on the endocrine system, 
asserting that, taken together, the studies ``suggest that chlorpyrifos 
may be an endocrine disrupting chemical, capable of interfering with 
multiple hormones controlling reproduction and neurodevelopment.'' The 
petitioners then assert that EPA should not have delayed consideration 
of endocrine effects absent finalization of the Endocrine Disruptor 
Screening Program (EDSP) (Ref. 14) and should have quantitatively 
incorporated the studies into the chlorpyrifos IRED.
    b. Agency Response. This portion of the Petition appears largely to 
be a complaint about the completeness of EPA's reregistration decision 
and a request that EPA undertake quantitative incorporation of 
endocrine endpoints into its assessment of chlorpyrifos. The Petition 
does not explain whether and

[[Page 16587]]

how endocrine effects should form the basis of a decision to revoke 
tolerances. The basis for seeking revocation of a tolerance is a 
showing that the pesticide is not ``safe.'' Petitioners have neither 
asserted that EPA should revoke tolerances because effects on the 
endocrine system render the tolerances unsafe, nor have petitioners 
submitted a factual analysis demonstrating that aggregate exposure to 
chlorpyrifos presents an unsafe risk to humans based on effects on the 
endocrine system. Rather, the Petition appears to collect a number of 
studies suggesting that chlorpyrifos may have effects on the endocrine 
system and that EPA should have considered those health impacts at 
reregistration in a quantitative assessment.
    To the extent that petitioners are seeking tolerance revocation on 
these grounds, the Petition fails to provide a sufficient basis for 
revocation because, in addition to the preceding defects, the cited 
data do not provide quantitative data (i.e., endpoints/points of 
departure) that indicate endocrine effects at doses that are more 
sensitive than the points of departure used in the chlorpyrifos risk 
assessment that are based on cholinesterase inhibition. While the cited 
studies provide qualitative information that exposure to chlorpyrifos 
may be associated with effects on the androgen and thyroid hormonal 
pathways, these data alone do not demonstrate that current human 
exposures from existing tolerances are unsafe. The Agency noted similar 
effects during its evaluation of information submitted by People for 
the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) and the Physicians Committee 
for Responsible Medicine (PCRM) during its review of existing 
information as part of EPA's EDSP, as discussed below. Based on the 
review of that data, EPA concluded that the effects seen in those 
studies do not call into question EPA's prior safety determinations 
supporting the existing tolerances; the data do not indicate a risk 
warranting regulatory action, and the petitioners have provided no 
specific information to alter this determination.
    Consequently, the Petition does not support a conclusion that 
existing tolerances are unsafe due to potential endocrine effects. This 
portion of the Petition is therefore denied.
    As petitioners may be aware, since the filing of the petition, EPA 
has completed the evaluation of chlorpyrifos under EPA's EDSP, as 
required under FFDCA section 408(p) that confirms EPA's conclusions. On 
April 15, 2009, a Federal Register notice was published in which 
chlorpyrifos was included in the initial list of chemicals (List 1) to 
receive EDSP Tier 1 test orders. The EDSP program is a two-tiered 
screening and testing program, Tier 1 and Tier 2 tests. Tier 1 includes 
11 assays in the battery; these data are intended to allow EPA to 
determine whether certain substances (including pesticide active and 
other ingredients) have the potential to interact with the endocrine 
system and cause an effect in humans or wildlife similar to an effect 
produced by a ``naturally occurring estrogen, or other such endocrine 
effects as the Administrator may designate.'' The purpose of Tier 2 
tests is to identify and establish a quantitative, dose-response 
relationship for any adverse effects that might result from the 
interactions with the endocrine system.
    On November 5, 2009, EPA issued Tier 1 test orders to the 
registrants of chlorpyrifos, requiring a battery of 11 screening assays 
to identify the potential to interact with the estrogen, androgen, or 
thyroid hormonal systems. (Ref. 15)
    The agency received and reviewed all 11 EDSP Tier 1 screening 
assays for chlorpyrifos. On June 29, 2015, the agency completed the 
EDSP weight of evidence (WoE) conclusions for the Tier 1 screening 
assays for List 1 chemicals, including chlorpyrifos. In addition to the 
Tier 1 data, the WoE evaluations considered other scientifically 
relevant information (OSRI), including general toxicity data and open 
literature studies of sufficient quality. In determining whether 
chlorpyrifos interacts with the estrogen, androgen or thyroid pathways, 
the agency considered the number and type of effects induced, the 
magnitude and pattern of responses observed across studies, taxa, and 
sexes. Additionally, the agency also considered the conditions under 
which effects occurred, in particular whether or not endocrine-related 
responses occurred at dose(s) that also resulted in general systemic or 
overt toxicity. The agency concluded that, based on weight of evidence 
considerations, EDSP Tier 2 testing is not recommended for chlorpyrifos 
since there was no evidence of potential interaction with the estrogen, 
androgen and thyroid pathways. The EDSP Tier 1 WoE assessment and 
associated data evaluation records for chlorpyrifos are available 
online. (Ref. 16) This assessment further supports EPA's denial of this 
portion of the Petition.

3. Cancer Risks

    a. Petitioners' claim. Petitioners claim that the Agency 
``ignored'' a December 2004 National Institutes of Health Agricultural 
Health Study (AHS) by Lee et al. (2004) (Ref. 17) that evaluated the 
association between chlorpyrifos and lung cancer incidence. (Ref. 17) 
The petition summarizes the results of the AHS study, stating that the 
incidence of lung cancer has a statistically significant association 
with chlorpyrifos exposure. The Petition then asserts that these data 
are highly relevant and therefore should have been referenced in the 
final aggregate assessment for chlorpyrifos or the OP CRA. Petitioners 
do not otherwise explain whether and how these data support the 
revocation of tolerances or the cancellation of pesticide 
registrations.
    b. Agency Response. As explained in the previous section, the basis 
for seeking revocation of a tolerance is a showing that the pesticide 
is not ``safe.'' Claiming that EPA failed to reference certain data in 
its risk assessment regarding carcinogenicity does not amount to 
illustrating that the tolerances are unsafe. To show a lack of safety, 
petitioners would have to present some fact-based argument 
demonstrating that aggregate exposure to chlorpyrifos poses an unsafe 
carcinogenic risk. Petitioners have not presented such an analysis. 
Accordingly, EPA is denying the Petition to revoke chlorpyrifos 
tolerances or cancel chlorpyrifos registrations to the extent the 
Petition relies on claims pertaining to carcinogenicity.
    Despite the inadequacy of petitioners' cancer claims, in the course 
of the Agency's review of chlorpyrifos, EPA has examined the Lee et al. 
study cited by petitioners (Ref. 17) among other lines of evidence. EPA 
has concluded that the Lee et al. investigation does not alter the 
Agency's weight of evidence determination concerning chlorpyrifos' 
carcinogenic potential, and therefore does not alter the Agency's 
current cancer classification for chlorpyrifos. Specifically, the 
Agency does not believe this evidence raises sufficient grounds for 
concern regarding chlorpyrifos that EPA should consider initiating 
action based upon this information that might lead to revocation of the 
chlorpyrifos tolerances or cancellation of the chlorpyrifos 
registrations.
    The Agency was aware of the December 2004 study cited by 
petitioners. While Lee et al. observed a possible association between 
chlorpyrifos use and the incidence of lung cancer, the authors also 
stressed that further evaluation was necessary before concluding the 
association was causal in nature. (Ref. 17) Additional evaluation is 
necessary because of

[[Page 16588]]

possible alternative explanations for the Lee et al. study, which 
include unmeasured confounding factors or confounding factors not fully 
accounted for in the analysis, and possible false positive results due 
to the performance of multiple statistical tests.
    EPA has been a collaborating agency with the AHS since 1993, and 
continues to closely monitor the AHS literature. The Agency is working 
closely with the AHS researchers to clearly understand the results of 
their research efforts to ensure the Agency appropriately interprets 
these data as future studies are published. Between 2003 and 2009 there 
have been six nested case-control analyses within the AHS which 
evaluated the use of a number of agricultural pesticides, including 
chlorpyrifos, in association with specific anatomical cancer sites, in 
addition to the previously published cohort study (Ref. 17) cited by 
the petitioners. As noted below, both the Agency and Health Canada have 
comprehensively reviewed these data.
    In accordance with the Agency's 2005 Guideline for Cancer Risk 
Assessment (Ref. 18), chlorpyrifos is classified as ``Not Likely to be 
Carcinogenic to Humans'' based on the lack of evidence of 
carcinogenicity in male or female mice and male or female rats. In 
chronic toxicity/carcinogenicity studies, animals received chlorpyrifos 
in their feed every day of their lives (78 weeks for mice and 104 weeks 
for rats) at doses thousands of times greater than any anticipated 
exposure to humans from authorized uses. There was no evidence of 
cancer in the experimental animal studies. Additionally, available 
evidence from in vivo and in vitro assays did not support a mutagenic 
or genotoxic potential of chlorpyrifos.
    Recently, the Agency conducted its own review of the six nested 
case-control analyses and one cohort study within the AHS concerning 
the carcinogenic potential of chlorpyrifos. (Ref. 19) EPA concluded 
with respect to the AHS lung cancer results that the findings are 
useful for generating hypotheses, but require confirmation in future 
studies. This conclusion is consistent with that of researchers from 
Health Canada. Specifically, Weichenthal et al. (2010) (Ref. 20) 
published a review article in Environmental Health Perspectives on 
pesticide exposure and cancer incidence in the AHS cohort. Their review 
of these same studies concluded that the weight of experimental 
toxicological evidence does not suggest that chlorpyrifos is 
carcinogenic, and that epidemiologic results currently available from 
the AHS are inconsistent, lack replication, and lack a coherent 
biologically plausible carcinogenic mode of action. The authors did 
note positive exposure-response associations for chlorpyrifos and lung 
cancer in two separate evaluations.
    In summary, while there is initial suggestive epidemiological 
evidence of an association between chlorpyrifos and lung cancer to only 
form a hypothesis as to a carcinogenic mode of action, additional 
research (including follow-up AHS research) is needed to test the 
hypothesis. Consequently, at this time it is reasonable to conclude 
chlorpyrifos is not a carcinogen in view of the lack of carcinogenicity 
in the rodent bioassays and the lack of a genotoxic or mutagenic 
potential. The Agency concludes that existing epidemiological data 
(including Lee et al.) do not change the current weight of the evidence 
conclusions. The Agency continues to believe there is not a sufficient 
basis to alter its assessment of chlorpyrifos as not likely to be 
carcinogenic to humans when multiple lines of evidence are considered 
(e.g., epidemiology findings, rodent bioassay, genotoxicity); 
therefore, chlorpyrifos cancer risk would not be a factor in any 
potential Agency risk determination to revoke tolerances for 
chlorpyrifos.

4. CRA Misrepresents Risks, Failed To Apply FQPA10X Safety Factor

    a. Petitioners' claim. Petitioners assert that EPA relied on 
limited data and inaccurate interpretations of data to support its 
decision to remove the FQPA safety factor in the 2006 OP CRA. 
Specifically, the petitioners challenge the Agency's use of data from a 
paper by Zheng et al. (2000) (Ref. 21) claiming that, in contrast to 
the Agency's analysis of the study data, the data does show an obvious 
difference between juvenile and adult responses to chlorpyrifos. 
Petitioners conclude by asserting that the Zheng et al. study supports 
using a 10X safety factor for chlorpyrifos in the CRA.
    b. Agency Response. Petitioners' assertions do not provide a 
sufficient basis for revoking chlorpyrifos tolerances. As explained 
previously, the ground for seeking revocation of a tolerance is a 
showing that the pesticide is not ``safe.'' The petitioners' claim that 
the data EPA relied upon support a different FQPA safety factor for 
chlorpyrifos in the CRA does not amount to a showing that chlorpyrifos 
tolerances are unsafe. To show a lack of safety, petitioners would have 
to present a factual analysis demonstrating that the lack of a 10X 
safety factor in the CRA for chlorpyrifos poses unsafe cumulative 
exposures to the OPs. Petitioners have not made such a showing. For 
this reason, EPA is denying the petitioners' request to revoke 
chlorpyrifos tolerances or cancel chlorpyrifos registrations to the 
extent that request relies on claims pertaining to EPA's failure to 
provide a 10X safety factor in the 2006 CRA based on the results of the 
Zheng et al. study.
    Despite the inadequacy of petitioners' FQPA safety factor claims, 
EPA examined the evidence cited by petitioners for the purpose of 
evaluating whether the evidence raises sufficient grounds for concern 
regarding chlorpyrifos that EPA should consider initiating the actions 
sought by the petitioners.
    In general, when the Agency conducts a cumulative assessment, the 
scope of cumulative risk is limited to the common mechanism endpoint--
which in this case of the 2006 OP CRA, was cholinesterase inhibition, 
the primary toxicity mode of action for the OPs. As such, for the OP 
CRA, experimental toxicology data on AChE inhibition were used for 
developing relative potency estimates, points of departure, and 
informing the FQPA safety factor used in the OP CRA. EPA relied on 
brain AChE data from adult female rats dosed for 21 days or longer for 
estimating relative potency and points of departure. At approximately 
three weeks of oral exposure to OPs, AChE inhibition reaches steady 
state in the adult rat such that continued dosing does not result in 
increased inhibition. This timeframe of toxicity (21-days and longer) 
was selected as there was high confidence in the potency estimates 
derived from the steady state toxicology studies due to the stability 
of the AChE inhibition.
    The Agency's 2006 OP CRA contained EPA's complete FQPA safety 
factor analysis, (Ref. 22) which involved consideration of pre-natal 
and post-natal experimental toxicology studies, in addition to exposure 
information. In the OP CRA, pre-natal exposure AChE studies in rats 
show that the fetus is no more sensitive than the dam to AChE 
inhibition and the fetus is often less sensitive than the dam. Thus, 
evaluating the potential for increased toxicity of juveniles from post-
natal exposure was a key component in determining the magnitude of the 
FQPA safety factors in the OP CRA. Furthermore, because characteristics 
of children are directly accounted for in the cumulative exposure 
assessment, the Agency's methods did not underestimate exposure to OPs.
    In the 2006 OP CRA, each OP was assigned a 10X FQPA safety factor 
unless chemical-specific AChE data on young animals were available to

[[Page 16589]]

generate a data derived safety factor. To best match the relative 
potency factor (RPF)s and PODs based on repeated dosing, the Agency 
used repeated dosing data in juveniles for developing the FQPA safety 
factors. For chlorpyrifos, at the time of the 2006 OP CRA, the only 
such data available were from the Zheng et al. literature study.
    The petitioners are correct that Dr. Carey Pope of Oklahoma State 
University provided the Agency with the raw data from the Zheng et al. 
study. These raw data were used to develop the plot in the 2006 OP CRA 
which was reproduced in the Petition. Petitioners accurately note that 
for other OPs a benchmark dose modeling approach was used and that no 
BMD values were reported for chlorpyrifos. In determining the FQPA 
safety factor, petitioners claim that the Agency misinterpreted the 
brain AChE data from Zheng et al.
    As shown in the plot reproduced on page 15 of the Petition, the 
dose-response data in the Zheng et al. study are variable and lack a 
monotonic shape at the low dose end of the dose response curve. The 
Agency acknowledges that at the high dose, the pups appear to be more 
sensitive. However, at the low dose end of the response curve, relevant 
for human exposures and, thus, the cumulative risk assessment (i.e., at 
or near the 10% inhibition level), little to no difference is observed. 
Therefore, despite the lack of BMD estimates for the Zheng et al. 
study, the Agency is confident in the value used to address the common 
mechanism endpoint (AChE inhibition) addressed in the 2006 CRA. Since 
that time, the Agency attempted BMD modeling of the Zheng et al. data 
as part of the 2011 preliminary chlorpyrifos HHRA (Ref. 23) which 
yielded low confidence results due to the variability in the data.
    Dow AgroSciences submitted a comparative cholinesterase study (CCA) 
for chlorpyrifos. CCA studies are specially designed studies to compare 
the dose-response relationship in juvenile and adult rats. This CCA 
study includes two components: (1) Acute, single dosing in post-natal 
day 11 and young adult rats and (2) 11-days of repeating dosing in rat 
pups from PND11-21 and 11-days of repeated dosing in adult rats. The 
CCA study for chlorpyrifos is considered by EPA to be high quality and 
well-designed. The preliminary risk assessment for chlorpyrifos' 
reports BMD estimates from this CCA study. Specifically, for the 
repeated dosing portion of the study, the BMD10s of 0.80 
(0.69 BMDL10) and 1.0 (0.95 BMDL10) mg/kg/day 
respectively for female pups and adults support the FQPA safety factor 
of 1X for the AChE inhibition endpoint used in the 2006 OP CRA. As 
such, petitioners' claims regarding the CRA and FQPA safety factor is 
denied.

5. Over-Reliance on Registrant Data

    a. Petitioners' claims. Petitioners assert that in reregistering 
chlorpyrifos EPA ``cherry picked'' data, ``ignoring robust, peer-
reviewed data in favor of weak, industry-sponsored data to determine 
that chlorpyrifos could be re-registered and food tolerances be 
retained.'' As such, the Agency's reassessment decision is not 
scientifically defensible.
    b. Agency response. This portion of the Petition does not purport 
to be an independent basis for revoking chlorpyrifos tolerances or 
cancelling chlorpyrifos registrations. Rather, this claim appears to 
underlie petitioners' arguments in other sections of the Petition. 
While petitioners claim that EPA ignored robust, peer-reviewed data in 
favor of weak, industry-sponsored data for the reregistration of 
chlorpyrifos, petitioners do not cite to any studies other than those 
used to support their other claims. In general, petitioners did not 
provide any studies in the Petition that EPA failed to evaluate. Since 
the specific studies cited by petitioners are not associated with this 
claim, but rather their other claims, EPA's response to the specific 
studies are, therefore, addressed in its responses to petitioners' 
other claims. However, EPA explains below why, as a general matter, the 
Agency does not believe it ``over-relied'' on registrant data in 
evaluating the risks of chlorpyrifos in its 2006 reregistration 
decision.
    In spite of petitioners' claim, the Agency does not ignore robust, 
peer-reviewed data in favor of industry-sponsored data. Further, EPA 
has a very public and well-documented set of procedures that it applies 
to the use and significance accorded all data utilized to inform risk 
management decisions. Registrant generated data, in response to FIFRA 
and FFDCA requirements, are conducted and evaluated in accordance with 
a series of internationally harmonized and scientifically peer-reviewed 
study protocols designed to maintain a high standard of scientific 
quality and reproducibility. (Refs. 23 and 24.)
    Additionally, to further inform the Agency's risk assessment, EPA 
is committed to the consideration of other sources of information such 
as data identified in the open, peer-reviewed literature and 
information submitted by the public as part of the regulatory 
evaluation of a pesticide. An important issue, when evaluating any 
study, is its scientific soundness and quality, and thus, the level of 
confidence in the study findings to contribute to the risk assessment.
    The literature was searched, fully considered, and provided 
additional information on, chlorpyrifos mode of action, 
pharmacokinetics, epidemiology, neurobehavioral effects in laboratory 
animals, and age dependent sensitivity to cholinesterase inhibition.
    Therefore, by evaluating registrant data in accordance with 
internationally harmonized and scientifically peer-reviewed study 
protocols, undertaking thorough open literature searches, and 
considering information provided by the public, the Agency is confident 
that its assessment for chlorpyrifos in 2006 was reasonably based upon 
the best available science at the time of the assessment. Previous 
sections of this response to petitioners' claims regarding the Agency's 
inadequate use of various data only further highlights and supports the 
scientifically defensible results of the Agency's assessment. 
Petitioners' claim that the Agency overly relies on registrant data is 
therefore denied.

6. EPA Has Failed To Properly Address the Exporting Hazard in Foreign 
Countries From Chlorpyrifos

    As noted in Unit II., in EPA's July 16, 2012 interim petition 
response EPA issued a final denial of this claim. That denial 
constituted final agency action and EPA is not reopening consideration 
of that claim.

7.-9. EPA Failed To Quantitatively Incorporate Data Demonstrating Long-
Lasting Effects From Early Life Exposure to Chlorpyrifos in Children; 
EPA Disregarded Data Demonstrating That There Is No Evidence of a Safe 
Level of Exposure During Pre-Birth and Early Life Stages; EPA Failed To 
Cite or Quantitatively Incorporate Studies and Clinical Reports 
Suggesting Potential Adverse Effects Below 10% Cholinesterase 
Inhibition

    a. Petitioners' claims. The petitioners assert that human 
epidemiology and rodent developmental neurotoxicity data suggest that 
pre-natal and early life exposure to chlorpyrifos can result in long-
lasting, possibly permanent damage to the nervous system and that these 
effects are likely occurring at exposure levels below 10% 
cholinesterase inhibition, EPA's existing regulatory standard for 
chlorpyrifos and other OPs. They assert that EPA has therefore used the 
wrong endpoint as a basis for regulation and that, taking into account 
the full spectrum of toxicity,

[[Page 16590]]

chlorpyrifos does not meet the FFDCA safety standard or the FIFRA 
standard for registration.
    b. Agency response. EPA has grouped claims 7-9 together because 
they fundamentally all raise the same issue: Whether the potential 
exists for chlorpyrifos to cause neurodevelopmental effects in infants 
and children from exposures (either to mothers during pregnancy or 
directly to infants and children) that are lower than those resulting 
in 10% cholinesterase inhibition--the basis for EPA's long-standing 
point of departure in regulating chlorpyrifos and other OPs. While 
petitioners may perhaps disagree, unlike the claims addressed above, 
these claims were not truly challenges to EPA's 2006 reregistration 
decision for chlorpyrifos, but rather, challenges to EPA's ongoing 
approval of chlorpyrifos under FIFRA and the FFDCA that rely in large 
measure on data published after EPA completed both its 2001 
chlorpyrifos Interim Reregistration Decision and the 2006 OP CRA that 
concluded the reregistration process for chlorpyrifos and all other 
OPs. As matters that largely came to light after the completion of 
reregistration, these petition issues are issues to be addressed as 
part of the registration review of chlorpyrifos--the next round of re-
evaluation under section 3(g) of FIFRA. As petitioners are aware, past 
EPA administrations prioritized the registration review of the OPs in 
no small measure to begin to focus on the question of OP 
neurodevelopmental toxicity, which was, and remains, an issue at the 
cutting edge of science, involving significant uncertainties. EPA has 
three times presented approaches and proposals to the FIFRA SAP for 
evaluating recent epidemiologic data (some of which is cited in the 
Petition) exploring the possible connection between in utero and early 
childhood exposure to chlorpyrifos and adverse neurodevelopmental 
effects. The SAP's reports have rendered numerous recommendations for 
additional study and sometimes conflicting advice for how EPA should 
consider (or not consider) the epidemiology data in conducting EPA's 
registration review human health risk assessment for chlorpyrifos. 
While industry and public interest groups on both sides of this issue 
can debate what the recommendations mean and which recommendations 
should be followed, one thing should be clear to all persons following 
this issue: the science on this question is not resolved and would 
likely benefit from additional inquiry.
    EPA has, however, been unable to persuade the 9th Circuit Court of 
Appeals that further inquiry into this area of unsettled science should 
delay EPA's response to the Petition. Faced with an order requiring EPA 
to respond to the Petition, in October 2015, EPA chose to issue a 
proposed rule to revoke all chlorpyrifos tolerances based in part on 
the uncertain science surrounding neurodevelopmental toxicity suggested 
by certain epidemiology studies. The comments EPA has received on that 
proposal and on EPA's November 17, 2016 NODA suggest that there 
continue to be considerable areas of uncertainty with regard to what 
the epidemiology data show and deep disagreement over how those data 
should be considered in EPA's risk assessment.
    Although not a legal consideration, it is important to recognize 
that for many decades chlorpyrifos has been and remains one of the most 
widely used pesticides in the United States, making any decision to 
retain or remove this pesticide from the market an extremely 
significant policy choice. In light of the significance of this 
decision and in light of the significant uncertainty that exists 
regarding the potential for chlorpyrifos to cause adverse 
neurodevelopmental effects, EPA's preference is to fully explore 
approaches raised by the SAP and commenters on the proposed rule, and 
possibly seek additional authoritative peer review of EPA's risk 
assessment prior to finalizing any regulatory action in the course of 
registration review. As the 9th Circuit has made clear in its August 
12, 2016 order in PANNA v. EPA, EPA must provide a final response to 
the Petition by March 31, 2017, regardless of whether the science 
remains unsettled and irrespective of whatever options may exist for 
more a complete resolution of these issues during the registration 
review process.
    While EPA acknowledges its obligation to respond to the Petition as 
required by the court, the court's order does not and cannot compel EPA 
to complete the registration review of chlorpyrifos in advance of the 
October 1, 2022 deadline provided in section 3(g) of FIFRA, 7 U.S.C. 
136a(g). Although past EPA administrations had chosen to attempt to 
complete that review several years in advance of the statutory deadline 
(and respond to the Petition on the same time frame), it has turned out 
that it is not possible to fully address these issues early in the 
registration review period. As a result, EPA has concluded that it 
should alter its priorities and adjust the schedule for chlorpyrifos so 
that it can complete its review of the science addressing 
neurodevelopmental effects prior to making a final registration review 
decision whether to retain, limit or remove chlorpyrifos from the 
market. Accordingly, EPA is denying these Petition claims and intends 
to complete a full and appropriate review of the neurodevelopmental 
data before either finalizing the proposed rule of October 30, 2015, or 
taking an alternative regulatory path.
    EPA's denial of the Petition on the grounds provided above is 
wholly consistent with governing law. The petition provision in FFDCA 
section 408(d) does not address the timing for responding to this 
petition nor does it limit the extent to which EPA may coordinate its 
petition responses with the registration review provisions of FIFRA 
section 3(g). Further, provided EPA completes registration review by 
October 1, 2022, Congress otherwise gave the EPA Administrator the 
discretion to determine the schedule and timing for completing the 
review of the approximately over 1000 pesticide active ingredients 
currently subject to evaluation under section 3(g). EPA may lawfully 
re-prioritize the registration review schedule developed by earlier 
administrations provided that decision is consistent with law and an 
appropriate exercise of discretion. See Federal Communications 
Commission v. Fox Television Stations, 129 S.Ct. 1800 (2009) 
(Administrative Procedure Act does not require that a policy change be 
justified by reasons more substantial than those required to adopt a 
policy in the first instance). Nothing in FIFRA section 3(g) precludes 
EPA from altering a previously established registration review 
schedule. Given the absence of a clear statutory directive, FIFRA and 
the FFDCA provide EPA with discretion to take into account EPA's 
registration review of a pesticide in determining how and when the 
Agency responds to FFDCA petitions to revoke tolerances. As outlined 
above, given the importance of this matter and the fact that critical 
questions remain regarding the significance of the data addressing 
neurodevelopmental effects, EPA believes there is good reason to extend 
the registration review of chlorpyrifos and therefore to deny the 
Petition. To find otherwise would effectively give petitioners under 
the FFDCA the authority to re-order scheduling decisions regarding the 
FIFRA registration review process that Congress has vested in the 
Administrator.

10. Inhalation Exposure From Volatilization

    a. Petitioners' claim. Petitioners assert that when EPA completed 
its 2006 OP CRA, EPA failed to consider and

[[Page 16591]]

incorporate significant exposures to chlorpyrifos-contaminated air that 
exist for some populations in communities where chlorpyrifos is 
applied. Petitioners assert that these exposures exceeded safe levels 
when considering cholinesterase inhibition as a point of departure and 
that developmental neurotoxicity may occur at even lower exposure 
levels than those resulting in cholinesterase inhibition.
    b. Agency response. To the extent petitioners are asserting that 
human exposure to chlorpyrifos spray drift and volatilized chlorpyrifos 
present neurodevelopmental risks for infants and children, EPA is 
denying this claim for the reasons stated above in our response to 
claims 7-9. As noted, EPA believes that, given the uncertainties 
associated with this identified risk concern, the appropriate course of 
action is for EPA to deny the Petition and work to further resolve this 
area of unsettled science in the time remaining for the completion of 
registration review under section 3(g) of FIFRA.
    With respect to petitioners' claim that exposures to spray drift 
and volatilized chlorpyrifos present a risk from cholinesterase 
inhibition, EPA is denying the Petition for the reasons previously 
identified in EPA's Spray Drift Mitigation Decision of July 16, 2012 
[EPA-HQ-OPP-2008-0850] and EPA's interim response of July 15, 2014 
[EPA-HQ-OPP-2007-1005] addressing chlorpyrifos volatilization. In the 
Spray Drift Mitigation Decision, EPA determined that the chlorpyrifos 
registrants' adoption of label mitigation (in the form of label use 
rate reductions and no spray buffer zones) eliminated risk from 
cholinesterase inhibition as a result of spray drift. As for risks 
presented by volatilized chlorpyrifos that may occur following 
application, EPA's July 15, 2014 interim response to the Petition 
explained that recent vapor phase inhalation studies for both 
chlorpyrifos and chlorpyrifos-oxon made clear that neither vapor phase 
chlorpyrifos nor chlorpyrifos-oxon presents a risk of cholinesterase 
inhibition. Specifically, those studies, as indicated in EPA's 
memorandum, Chlorpyrifos: Reevaluation of the Potential Risks from 
Volatilization in Consideration of Chlorpyrifos Parent and Oxon Vapor 
Inhalation Toxicity Studies (Ref. 25), revealed that levels of 
chlorpyrifos and chlorpyrifos-oxon in vapor form are much lower than 
the levels seen in earlier aerosol studies that are better suited for 
evaluating spray drift. Indeed, no cholinesterase inhibition was 
observed in either volatility study. What is clear from these data is 
that the air cannot hold levels of volatilized chlorpyrifos or its oxon 
that are capable of causing adverse effects from cholinesterase 
inhibition.

VI. Regulatory Assessment Requirements

    As indicated previously, this action announces the Agency's order 
denying a petition filed, in part, under section 408(d) of FFDCA. As 
such, this action is an adjudication and not a rule. The regulatory 
assessment requirements applicable to rulemaking do not, therefore, 
apply to this action.

VII. Submission to Congress and the Comptroller General

    The Congressional Review Act, 5 U.S.C. 801 et seq., does not apply 
because this action is not a rule for purposes of 5 U.S.C. 804(3).

IX. References

    The following is a listing of the documents that are specifically 
referenced in this document. The docket includes these documents and 
other information considered by EPA, including documents that are 
referenced within the documents that are included in the docket, even 
if the referenced document is not physically located in the docket. For 
assistance in locating these other documents, please consult the 
technical person listed under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT.

1. The Petition from NRDC and PANNA and EPA's various responses to 
it are available in docket number EPA-HQ-OPP-2007-1005 available at 
http://www.regulations.gov.
2. FIFRA Scientific Advisory Panel (2016). ``Chlorpyrifos: Analysis 
of Biomonitoring Data''. Available at: https://www.epa.gov/sap/meeting-materials-april-19-21-2016-scientific-advisory-panel.
3. Furlong CE, Holland N, Richter RJ, Bradman A, Ho A, Eskenazi B 
(2006). PON1status of farmworker mothers and children as a predictor 
of organophosphate sensitivity. Pharmacogenet Genomics. 2006 Mar; 
16(3):183-90.
4. Sultatos LG; Murphy SD, (1983). Kinetic Analysis Of The 
Microsomal Biotransformation Of The Phosphorothioate Insecticides 
Chlorpyrifos And Parathion. Fundemental and Applied Toxicology. 
3:16-21.
5. U.S. EPA (2008). Draft Appendix E available at http://www.epa.gov/scipoly/sap/meetings/2008/september/appendixe.pdf. Draft 
Science Issue Paper: Chlorpyrifos Hazard and Dose Response 
Characterization. August 21, 2008. Available at http://www.epa.gov/scipoly/sap/meetings/2008/september/chlorpyrifoscharacter.pdf.
6. Holland, N., Furlong, C., Bastaki, M., Richter, R., Bradman, A., 
Huen, K., Beckman, K., and Eskenazi, B. (2006). Paraoxonase 
polymorphisms, haplotypes, and enzyme activity in Latino mothers and 
newborns. Environ. Health Perspect. 114(7), 985-991; Chen, J., 
Kumar, M., Chan, W., Berkowitz, G., and Wetmur, J. (2003). Increased 
Influence of Genetic Variation on PON1 Activity in Neonates. 
Environmental Health Perspective 111, 11:1403-9.
7. U.S. EPA (2008). Transmittal of Meeting Minutes of the FIFRA 
Scientific Advisory Panel Meeting Held September 16-18, 2008 on the 
Agency's Evaluation of the Toxicity Profile of Chlorpyrifos. 
Available at http://www.epa.gov/scipoly/sap/meetings/2008/september/sap0908report.pdf at 61.
8. Engel, S.M., Wetmur, J., Chen, J., Zhu, C., Boyd Barr, D., 
Canfield, R.L., Wolff, M.S., (2011) Prenatal Exposure to 
Organophosphates, Paraoxonase 1, and Cognitive Development in 
Childhood Environ Health Perspect 119:1182-1188 (2011). doi:10.1289/
ehp.1003183 [Online 21 April 2011].
9. Hofmann, J.N., Keifer, M.C., Furlong, C.E., De Roos, A.J., 
Farin., F.M., Fenske, R.A., van Belle, G., Checkoway, H. (2009) 
Serum Cholinesterase Inhibition in Relation to Paraoxonase-1 (PON1) 
Status among Organophosphate-Exposed Agricultural Pesticide 
Handlers./Environ Health Perspect 117:1402-1408 (2009). doi:10.1289/
ehp.0900682. Available at http://dx.doi.org/ [Online 9 June 2009].
10. Eskenazi, B; Huen, K., Marks, A., Harley, K.G., Bradman, A., 
Boyd Barr, D., Holland, N. (2010) PON1 and Neurodevelopment in 
Children from the CHAMACOS Study Exposed to Organophosphate 
Pesticides in Utero. Environmental Health Perspectives. Vol. 118 
(12): 1775-1781).
11. Harley KG, Huen K, Schall RA, Holland NT, Bradman A, et 
al.,(2011) Association of Organophosphate Pesticide Exposure and 
Paraoxonase with Birth Outcome in Mexican-American Women. PLoS ONE 
6(8): e23923. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0023923.
12. IPCS (International Programme on Chemical Safety) 2005. 
Chemical-Specific Adjustment Factors for Interspecies Differences 
and Human Variability: Guidance Document for Use of Data in Dose/
Concentration-Response Assessment. Harmonization Project Document 
No. 2. World Health Organization, International Programme on 
Chemical Safety, Geneva, Switzerland.
13. U.S. EPA (2014). Guidance for Applying Quantitative Data to 
Develop Data-Derived Extrapolation Factors for Interspecies and 
Intraspecies Extrapolation. Available at https://www.epa.gov/risk/guidance-applying-quantitative-data-develop-data-derived-extrapolation-factors-interspecies-and.
14. For additional information on the Endocrine Disruptor Screening 
program see http://www.epa.gov/endo/.
15. For information related to the status of EDSP test orders/DCIs, 
status of EDSP OSRI: order recipient submissions and

[[Page 16592]]

EPA responses, and other EDSP assay information see http://www.epa.gov/endo/pubs/toresources/index.htm.
16. For available Data Evaluation Records (DERs) for EDSP Tier 1, 
see https://www.epa.gov/endocrine-disruption/endocrine-disruptor-screening-program-tier-1-screening-determinations-and.
17. Hoppin JA, Lubin JH, Rusiecki JA, Sandler DP, Dosemeci M, 
Alavanja MC. (2004) Cancer incidence among pesticide applicators 
exposed to chlorpyrifos in the Agricultural Health Study. J Natl 
Cancer Inst, 96(23), 1781-1789. (hereinafter Lee et al., 2004).
18. U.S. EPA (2005). Guidelines for Carcinogen Risk Assessment. 
Available at http://www.epa.gov/raf/publications/pdfs/CANCER_GUIDELINES_FINAL_3-25-05.PDF.
19. Christenson, C. (2011). D388167, Chlorpyrifos Carcinogenicity: 
Review of Evidence from the U.S. Agricultural Health Study (AHS) 
Epidemiologic Evaluations 2003-2009.
20. Weichenthal S, Moase C, Chan P (2010). A review of pesticide 
exposure and cancer incidence in the agricultural health study 
cohort. Cien Saude Colet. 2012 Jan;17(1):255-70. PubMed PMID: 
22218559.
21. Zheng Q, Olivier K, Won YK, Pope CN. (2000). Comparative 
cholinergic neurotoxicity of oral chlorpyrifos exposures in pre-
weaning and adult rats. Toxicological Sciences, 55(1): 124-132.
22. For additional information on the organophosphate cumulative 
risk assessment, see http://epa.gov/pesticides/cumulative/2006-op/op_cra_main.pdf.
23. U.S. EPA (2011). Chlorpyrifos: Preliminary Human Health Risk 
Assessment for Registration. Available in docket number EPA-HQ-OPP-
2008-0850, http://www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=EPA-HQ-OPP-
2008-0850-0025.
(23) For additional information on EPA's Harmonized Test Guidelines 
and international efforts at harmonization, see http://www.epa.gov/opp00001/science/guidelines.htm.
(24) Available at http://www.regulations.gov in docket EPA-HQ-OPP-
2008-0850.

    Authority:  7 U.S.C. 136 et seq. and 21 U.S.C. 346a.

    Dated: March 29, 2017.
E. Scott Pruitt,
Administrator.
[FR Doc. 2017-06777 Filed 4-4-17; 8:45 am]
 BILLING CODE 6560-50-P



                                                                                Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 64 / Wednesday, April 5, 2017 / Notices                                                 16581

                                                  authorizes the Secretary of Energy to                   battery charging process, user                        may disable power to functions not
                                                  prescribe test procedures that are                      controllable because they are an integral             associated with the battery charging
                                                  reasonably designed to produce results                  part of the Robot itself. Therefore, in               process by isolating a terminal of the
                                                  that measure energy efficiency, energy                  order to ascertain the true energy                    battery pack using isolating tape, as
                                                  use, or estimated operating costs during                consumption characteristics of the                    shown in the Appendices to the petition
                                                  a representative average-use cycle, and                 battery charger during the test, Dyson                for waiver.
                                                  that are not unduly burdensome to                       seeks permission to switch off these                    (3) This order applies only to the
                                                  conduct. (42 U.S.C. 6293(b)(3)) The test                functions by a means that is not                      following basic model: RB01, marketed
                                                  procedure for battery chargers is                       controlled by the user.                               as the Dyson 360-Eye (‘‘Robot’’), battery
                                                  contained in Title 10 of the Code of                       Dyson also requested an interim                    charger.
                                                  Federal Regulations (CFR) part 430,                     waiver from the existing DOE test                       (4) This waiver shall remain in effect
                                                  subpart B, appendix Y, Uniform Test                     procedure, which DOE granted. See 81                  consistent with the provisions of 10 CFR
                                                  Method for Measuring the Energy                         FR at 62489. After reviewing the                      430.27.
                                                  Consumption of Battery Chargers.                        alternate procedure suggested by Dyson,
                                                                                                                                                                  Issued in Washington, DC, on March 27,
                                                     The regulations set forth in 10 CFR                  DOE granted the interim waiver because                2017.
                                                  430.27 contain provisions that allow a                  DOE determined that Dyson’s petition
                                                  person to seek a waiver from the test                   for waiver will likely be granted and                 Steven G. Chalk,
                                                  procedure requirements for a particular                 decided that it was desirable for public              Acting Assistant Secretary, Energy Efficiency
                                                  basic model of a type of covered product                policy reasons to grant Dyson                         and Renewable Energy
                                                  when the petitioner’s basic model for                   immediate relief pending a                            [FR Doc. 2017–06732 Filed 4–4–17; 8:45 am]
                                                  which the petition for waiver was                       determination on the petition for                     BILLING CODE –P
                                                  submitted contains one or more design                   waiver. Dyson’s petition was published
                                                  characteristics that: (1) Prevent testing               in the Federal Register on September 9,
                                                  according to the prescribed test                        2016. 81 FR 62489. DOE received no                    ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
                                                  procedure, or (2) cause the prescribed                  comments regarding Dyson’s petition.                  AGENCY
                                                  test procedures to evaluate the basic                      On May 20, 2016, DOE published a
                                                  model in a manner so unrepresentative                                                                         [EPA–HQ–OPP–2007–1005; FRL–9960–77]
                                                                                                          test procedure final rule that adopted
                                                  of its true energy consumption                          amendments to the battery charger test                Chlorpyrifos; Order Denying PANNA
                                                  characteristics as to provide materially                procedure found in Appendix Y. 81 FR                  and NRDC’s Petition To Revoke
                                                  inaccurate comparative data. 10 CFR                     31827. Subsequently, on December 12,                  Tolerances
                                                  430.27(a)(1).DOE may grant the waiver                   2016, DOE issued a separate final rule
                                                  subject to conditions, including                        to add a discrete test method for                     AGENCY: Environmental Protection
                                                  adherence to alternate test procedures.                 uninterruptible power supplies to the                 Agency (EPA).
                                                  10 CFR 430.27(f)(2).                                    battery charger test procedure. 81 FR                 ACTION: Order.
                                                  II. Dyson’s Petition for Waiver:                        89806. Neither of these final rules
                                                                                                          amended the provisions of the battery                 SUMMARY:    In this Order, EPA denies a
                                                  Assertions and Determinations
                                                                                                          charger test procedure from which                     petition requesting that EPA revoke all
                                                     On April 7, 2016, Dyson filed a                      Dyson sought a waiver. Since the                      tolerances for the pesticide chlorpyrifos
                                                  petition for waiver from the DOE test                   amendments in these final rules did not               under section 408(d) of the Federal
                                                  procedure for battery chargers under 10                 address the issues presented in the                   Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act and
                                                  CFR 430.27 for the battery charger used                 waiver petition, Dyson’s interim waiver               cancel all chlorpyrifos registrations
                                                  in their robotic vacuum cleaner model                   has remained in effect while DOE has                  under the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide
                                                  RB01, marketed as the Dyson 360-Eye                     evaluated the waiver petition. 10 CFR                 and Rodenticide Act. The petition was
                                                  (Robot), which is required to be tested                 430.27(h).                                            filed in September 2007 by the Pesticide
                                                  using the DOE battery charger test                                                                            Action Network North America
                                                  procedure at 10 CFR 430.23(aa) and                      III. Consultations With Other Agencies                (PANNA) and the Natural Resources
                                                  detailed at 10 CFR part 430, subpart B,                    DOE consulted with the Federal Trade               Defense Council (NRDC).
                                                  appendix Y. In its petition, Dyson asks                 Commission (FTC) staff concerning the                 DATES: This Order is effective April 5,
                                                  that the requirement contained in the                   Dyson petition for waiver. The FTC staff              2017. Objections and requests for
                                                  DOE test procedure for battery chargers                 did not have any objections to granting               hearings must be received on or before
                                                  provided in 10 CFR part 430, subpart B,                 a waiver to Dyson.                                    June 5, 2017, and must be filed in
                                                  appendix Y, section 4.4, Limiting Other
                                                                                                          IV. Order                                             accordance with the instructions
                                                  Non-Battery-Charger Functions, be
                                                                                                                                                                provided in 40 CFR part 178 (see also
                                                  waived with regard to testing of the                      After careful consideration of all the              Unit I. of the SUPPLEMENTARY
                                                  Robot battery charger. According to                     material that was submitted by Dyson                  INFORMATION.)
                                                  subsection 4.4.b (and a related provision               and consultation with the FTC staff, in
                                                  at section 5.6.c.1), any function                       accordance with 10 CFR 430.27, it is                  ADDRESSES:   The docket for this action,
                                                  controlled by the user and not                          ordered that:                                         identified by docket identification (ID)
                                                  associated with the battery charging                      (1) The petition for waiver submitted               number EPA–HQ–OPP–2007–1005, is
                                                  process must be switched off or be set                  by the Dyson Inc. (Case No. BC–001) is                available at http://www.regulations.gov
                                                  to the lowest power-consuming mode.                     hereby granted as set forth in the                    or at the Office of Pesticide Programs
                                                     Dyson asserts that in order to provide                                                                     Regulatory Public Docket (OPP Docket)
jstallworth on DSK7TPTVN1PROD with NOTICES




                                                                                                          paragraphs below.
                                                  the user with the advanced setting and                    (2) Dyson must test and rate the                    in the Environmental Protection Agency
                                                  management features of the Robot, the                   Dyson basic models specified in                       Docket Center (EPA/DC), West William
                                                  relevant functionalities and circuitry                  paragraph (3) on the basis of the current             Jefferson Clinton Bldg., Rm. 3334, 1301
                                                  have to be powered at all times.                        test procedure contained in 10 CFR part               Constitution Ave. NW., Washington, DC
                                                  Accordingly, Dyson does not believe it                  430, subpart B, appendix Y, except that               20460–0001. The Public Reading Room
                                                  appropriate to make these functions,                    Dyson, notwithstanding the instructions               is open from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.,
                                                  which are not associated with the                       in Appendix Y sections 3.2.4 and 3.3.6,               Monday through Friday, excluding legal


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                                                  16582                         Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 64 / Wednesday, April 5, 2017 / Notices

                                                  holidays. The telephone number for the                  EPA–HQ–OPP–2008–0850 and the                          holidays). Special arrangements should
                                                  Public Reading Room is (202) 566–1744,                  chlorpyrifos tolerance rulemaking                     be made for deliveries of boxed
                                                  and the telephone number for the OPP                    docket under Docket ID No, EPA–HQ–                    information. The Office’s telephone
                                                  Docket is (703) 305–5805. Please review                 OPP–2015–0653. To access the                          number is (202) 564–6255.
                                                  the visitor instructions and additional                 electronic docket, go to http://                        In addition to filing an objection or
                                                  information about the docket available                  www.regulations.gov, select ‘‘Advanced                hearing request with the Hearing Clerk
                                                  at http://www.epa.gov/dockets.                          Search,’’ then ‘‘Docket Search.’’ Insert              as described in 40 CFR part 178, please
                                                  FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:                        the docket ID number where indicated                  submit a copy of the filing that does not
                                                  Pesticide Re-Evaluation Division                        and select the ‘‘Submit’’ button. Follow              contain CBI for inclusion in the public
                                                  (7508P), Office of Pesticide Programs,                  the instructions on the regulations.gov               docket that is described in I.B.1 above.
                                                  Environmental Protection Agency, 1200                   Web site to view the docket index or                  Information not marked confidential
                                                  Pennsylvania Ave. NW., Washington,                      access available documents. All                       pursuant to 40 CFR part 2 may be
                                                  DC 20460–0001; telephone number:                        documents in the docket are listed in                 disclosed publicly by EPA without prior
                                                  (703) 347–0206; email address:                          the docket index available in                         notice. Submit this copy, identified by
                                                  OPPChlorpyrifosInquiries@epa.gov.                       regulations.gov. Although listed in the               docket ID number EPA–HQ–OPP–2007–
                                                                                                          index, some information is not publicly               1005, by one of the following methods:
                                                  SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
                                                                                                          available, e.g., Confidential Business                  • Federal eRulemaking Portal: http://
                                                  I. General Information                                  Information (CBI) or other information                www.regulations.gov. Follow the on-line
                                                                                                          whose disclosure is restricted by statute.            instructions for submitting comments.
                                                  A. Does this action apply to me?                                                                                • Mail: U.S. Environmental
                                                                                                          Certain other material, such as
                                                     In this document EPA denies a                        copyrighted material, is not placed on                Protection Agency Office of Pesticide
                                                  petition by PANNA and the NRDC to                       the Internet and will be publicly                     Programs (OPP) Public Regulatory
                                                  revoke pesticide tolerances and cancel                  available only in hard copy form.                     Docket (7502P), 1200 Pennsylvania,
                                                  pesticide registrations. This action may                Publicly available docket materials are               Ave. NW., Washington, DC 20460–0001.
                                                  also be of interest to agricultural                     available in the electronic docket or, if               • Delivery: OPP Regulatory Public
                                                  producers, food manufacturers, or                       only available in hard copy, at the OPP               Docket (7502P), Environmental
                                                  pesticide manufacturers. Potentially                    Regulatory Public Docket in Rm. S–                    Protection Agency, Rm. S–4400, One
                                                  affected entities may include, but are                  4400, One Potomac Yard (South Bldg.),                 Potomac Yard (South Bldg.), 2777 S.
                                                  not limited to those engaged in the                     2777 S. Crystal Dr., Arlington, VA. The               Crystal Dr., Arlington, VA. Deliveries
                                                  following activities:                                   Docket Facility is open from 8:30 a.m.                are only accepted during the Docket’s
                                                     • Crop production (North American                    to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday,                      normal hours of operation (8:30 a.m. to
                                                  Industrial Classification System                        excluding legal holidays. The Docket                  4 p.m., Monday through Friday,
                                                  (NAICS) code 111), e.g., agricultural                   Facility telephone number is (703) 305–               excluding legal holidays). Special
                                                  workers; greenhouse, nursery, and                       5805.                                                 arrangements should be made for
                                                  floriculture workers; farmers.                                                                                deliveries of boxed information. The
                                                     • Animal production (NAICS code       C. Can I file an objection or hearing                                Docket Facility telephone number is
                                                  112), e.g., cattle ranchers and farmers, request?                                                             (703) 305–5805.
                                                  dairy cattle farmers, livestock farmers.   Under section 408(g) of the Federal                                D. What should be included in
                                                     • Food manufacturing (NAICS code      Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act (FFDCA)                                  objections?
                                                                                           (21 U.S.C. 346a(g)), any person may file
                                                  311), e.g., agricultural workers; farmers;
                                                  greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture    an objection to any aspect of this order                               The objection stage is the second stage
                                                  workers; ranchers; pesticide applicators.and may also request a hearing on those                              in the petition process under FFDCA
                                                     • Pesticide manufacturing (NAICS      objections. You must file your objection                             section 408. This multi-stage process is
                                                  code 32532), e.g., agricultural workers; or request a hearing on this order in                                initiated by a petition requesting
                                                  commercial applicators; farmers,         accordance with the instructions                                     establishment, modification, or
                                                  greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture    provided in 40 CFR part 178. To ensure                               revocation of a tolerance. Once EPA
                                                  workers; residential users.              proper receipt by EPA, you must                                      makes a decision on a petition, and
                                                     This listing is not intended to be    identify docket ID number EPA–HQ–                                    publishes its decision in the Federal
                                                  exhaustive, but rather to provide a guideOPP–2007–1005 in the subject line on                                 Register, the second stage of the petition
                                                  for readers regarding entities likely to be
                                                                                           the first page of your submission. All                               process is triggered. At this point,
                                                  affected by this action. Other types of  objections and requests for a hearing                                parties who disagree with EPA’s
                                                  entities not listed in this unit could also
                                                                                           must be in writing, and must be                                      decision, whether it is a decision to
                                                  be affected. The NAICS codes have been   received by the Hearing Clerk on or                                  grant or deny the petition, may file
                                                  provided to assists you and others in    before June 5, 2017, and may be                                      objections with EPA to the decision
                                                  determining whether this action might    submitted by one of the following                                    made. The objection stage gives parties
                                                  apply to certain entities. If you have any
                                                                                           methods:                                                             a chance to seek review of EPA’s
                                                  questions regarding the applicability of   • Mail: U.S. EPA Office of                                         decision before the Agency. This is an
                                                                                           Administrative Law Judges, Mailcode
                                                  this action to a particular entity, consult                                                                   opportunity for parties to contest the
                                                  the person listed under FOR FURTHER      1900R, 1200 Pennsylvania Ave. NW.,                                   conclusions EPA reached and the
                                                  INFORMATION CONTACT.                     Washington, DC 20460                                                 determinations underlying those
                                                                                             • Hand Delivery: U.S. Environmental                                conclusions. As an administrative
                                                  B. How can I get copies of this document Protection Agency Office of                                          review stage, it is not an opportunity to
jstallworth on DSK7TPTVN1PROD with NOTICES




                                                  and other related information?           Administrative Law Judges, Ronald                                    raise new issues or arguments or present
                                                    EPA has established a docket for this  Reagan Building, Rm. M1200, 1300                                     facts or information that were available
                                                  action under Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–       Pennsylvania Ave. NW., Washington,                                   earlier. On the other hand, parties must
                                                  OPP–2007–1005. Additional                DC 20004. Deliveries are only accepted                               do more than repeat the claims in the
                                                  information relevant to this action is   during the Office’s normal hours of                                  petition. The objection stage is the
                                                  located in the chlorpyrifos registration operation (8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m., Monday                               opportunity to challenge EPA’s decision
                                                  review docket under Docket ID No,        through Friday, excluding legal                                      on the petition. An objection fails on its


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                                                                                Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 64 / Wednesday, April 5, 2017 / Notices                                           16583

                                                  face if it does not identify aspects of                 clinical reports suggesting potential                    On November 6, 2015, pursuant to the
                                                  EPA’s decision believed to be in error                  adverse effects below 10%                             9th Circuit’s order, EPA proposed to
                                                  and explain the reason why EPA’s                        cholinesterase inhibition.                            revoke all chlorpyrifos tolerances based
                                                  decision is incorrect. This two-stage                      10. EPA has failed to incorporate                  in part on uncertainty surrounding the
                                                  process insures that issues are fully                   inhalation routes of exposure.                        potential for chlorpyrifos to cause
                                                  aired before the Agency and a                              In this order EPA is denying the                   neurodevelopmental effects—the issue
                                                  comprehensive record is compiled,                       Petition in full. EPA provided the                    raised in petition claims 7–9. Following
                                                  prior to judicial review.                               petitioners with two interim responses                publication of the proposal, the 9th
                                                  II. Introduction                                        on July 16, 2012, and July 15, 2014,                  Circuit announced that it would retain
                                                                                                          respectively. The July 16, 2012,                      jurisdiction over this matter and on
                                                  A. What action is the Agency taking?                    response denied claim 6 (export hazard)               August 12, 2016, the court further
                                                     In this document, EPA denies a                       completely and that portion of the                    ordered EPA to complete a final petition
                                                  petition by PANNA and the NRDC. In a                    response was a final agency action. The               response by March 31, 2017 and made
                                                  petition dated September 12, 2007,                      remainder of the July 16, 2012, response              clear that no further extensions would
                                                  PANNA and NRDC (the petitioners)                        and the July 15, 2014, response                       be granted. On November 17, 2016, EPA
                                                  requested that EPA revoke all tolerances                expressed EPA’s intention to deny six
                                                                                                                                                                published a notice of data availability
                                                  for the pesticide chlorpyrifos                          other petition claims (1–5 and 10). [In
                                                                                                                                                                that released for public comment EPA’s
                                                  established under section 408 of the                    the 2012 response, EPA did, however,
                                                                                                                                                                revised risk assessment that proposed a
                                                  FFDCA. (Ref. 1) The petition also sought                inform petitioners of its approval of
                                                  the cancellation of all chlorpyrifos                    label mitigation (in the form of rate                 new regulatory point of departure based
                                                  pesticide product registrations under                   reductions and spray drift buffers) to                on the potential for chlorpyrifos to
                                                  section 6 the Federal Insecticide,                      reduce bystander risks, including risks               result in adverse neurodevelopmental
                                                  Fungicide and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA),                  from inhalation exposure, which in                    effects.
                                                  7 U.S.C. 136d. The PANNA and NRDC                       effect partially granted petition claim                  Following a review of comments on
                                                  petition (the Petition) raised the                      10.] EPA made clear in both the 2012                  both the November 2015 proposal and
                                                  following claims regarding EPA’s                        and 2014 responses that, absent a                     the November 2016 notice of data
                                                  reregistration and active registrations of              request from petitioners, EPA’s denial of             availability, EPA has concluded that,
                                                  chlorpyrifos in support of the request                  those six claims would not be made                    despite several years of study, the
                                                  for tolerance revocation and product                    final until EPA finalized its response to             science addressing neurodevelopmental
                                                  cancellation:                                           the entire Petition. Petitioners made no              effects remains unresolved and that
                                                     1. EPA has ignored genetic evidence                  such request. EPA is finalizing its denial            further evaluation of the science during
                                                  of vulnerable populations.                              of those six claims in this order.
                                                     2. EPA has needlessly delayed a                                                                            the remaining time for completion of
                                                                                                             The remaining claims (7–9) all related             registration review is warranted to
                                                  decision regarding endocrine disrupting                 to same issue: Whether the potential
                                                  effects.                                                                                                      achieve greater certainty as to whether
                                                                                                          exists for chlorpyrifos to cause                      the potential exists for adverse
                                                     3. EPA has ignored data regarding                    neurodevelopmental effects in children
                                                  cancer risks.                                                                                                 neurodevelopmental effects to occur
                                                                                                          at exposure levels below EPA’s existing
                                                     4. EPA’s 2006 cumulative risk                                                                              from current human exposures to
                                                                                                          regulatory standard (10% cholinesterase
                                                  assessment (CRA) for the                                                                                      chlorpyrifos. EPA has therefore
                                                                                                          inhibition). While these claims raised
                                                  organophosphates misrepresented risks                                                                         concluded that it will not complete the
                                                  and failed to apply FQPA 10X safety                     novel, highly complex and unresolved
                                                                                                          scientific issues, EPA decided it would               human health portion of the registration
                                                  factor. [For convenience’s sake, the legal                                                                    review or any associated tolerance
                                                  requirements regarding the additional                   nonetheless expedite the registration
                                                                                                          review of chlorpyrifos under FIFRA                    revocation of chlorpyrifos without first
                                                  safety margin for infants and children in                                                                     attempting to come to a clearer scientific
                                                  section 408(b)(2)(C) of the FFDCA are                   section 3(g), and attempt to address
                                                                                                          these issues several years in advance of              resolution on those issues. As noted,
                                                  referred to throughout this response as                                                                       Congress has provided that EPA must
                                                  the ‘‘FQPA 10X safety factor’’ or simply                the October 1, 2022 deadline for
                                                                                                          completing that review. Accordingly,                  complete registration review by October
                                                  the ‘‘FQPA safety factor.’’ Due to
                                                                                                          EPA also decided as a policy matter that              1, 2022. Because the 9th Circuit’s
                                                  Congress’ focus on both pre- and post-
                                                                                                          it would address the Petition claims                  August 12, 2016 order has made clear,
                                                  natal toxicity, EPA has interpreted this
                                                  additional safety factor as pertaining to               raising these matters on a similar                    however, that further extensions to the
                                                  risks to infants and children that arise                timeframe. Although EPA had expedited                 March 31, 2017 deadline for responding
                                                  due to pre-natal exposure as well as to                 its registration review to address these              to the Petition would not be granted,
                                                  exposure during childhood years.]                       issues, the petitioners were not satisfied            EPA is today also denying all remaining
                                                     5. EPA has over-relied on registrant                 with EPA’s progress in responding to                  petition claims.
                                                  data.                                                   the Petition and they brought legal
                                                                                                          action in the 9th Circuit Court of                    B. What is the Agency’s authority for
                                                     6. EPA has failed to properly address
                                                                                                          Appeals to compel EPA to either issue                 taking this action?
                                                  the exporting hazard in foreign
                                                  countries from chlorpyrifos.                            an order denying the Petition or to grant
                                                                                                                                                                   Under section 408(d)(4) of the
                                                     7. EPA has failed to quantitatively                  the Petition by initiating the tolerance
                                                                                                                                                                FFDCA, EPA is authorized to respond to
                                                  incorporate data demonstrating long-                    revocation process. In August 2015, the
                                                                                                          9th Circuit issued a ruling in favor of               a section 408(d) petition to revoke
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                                                  lasting effects from early life exposure to                                                                   tolerance either by issuing a final rule
                                                  chlorpyrifos in children.                               the petitioners and ordered EPA to
                                                     8. EPA has disregarded data                          respond to the Petition by either                     revoking the tolerances, issuing a
                                                  demonstrating that there is no evidence                 denying the Petition or issuing a                     proposed rule, or issuing an order
                                                  of a safe level of exposure during pre-                 proposed or final rule revoking                       denying the Petition.
                                                  birth and early life stages.                            chlorpyrifos tolerances. In re Pesticide
                                                     9. EPA has failed to cite or                         Action Network of North America v.
                                                  quantitatively incorporate studies and                  EPA, 798 F.3d (9th Cir. 2015).


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                                                  16584                         Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 64 / Wednesday, April 5, 2017 / Notices

                                                  III. Statutory and Regulatory                           completing the registration review for                tree fruits and nuts, many types of small
                                                  Background                                              chlorpyrifos is October 1, 2022.                      fruits and vegetables, including
                                                                                                             2. Procedures for establishing,                    vegetable seed treatments, grain/oilseed
                                                  A. FFDCA/FIFRA and Applicable                           amending, or revoking tolerances.                     crops, and cotton, for example), and
                                                  Regulations                                             Tolerances are established, amended, or               non-food use settings (e.g., ornamental
                                                     1. In general. EPA establishes                       revoked by rulemaking under the                       and agricultural seed production, non-
                                                  maximum residue limits, or                              unique procedural framework set forth                 residential turf, industrial sites/rights of
                                                  ‘‘tolerances,’’ for pesticide residues in               in the FFDCA. Generally, a tolerance                  way, greenhouse and nursery
                                                  food and feed commodities under                         rulemaking is initiated by the party                  production, sod farms, pulpwood
                                                  section 408 of the FFDCA. Without such                  seeking to establish, amend, or revoke a              production, public health and wood
                                                  a tolerance or an exemption from the                    tolerance by means of filing a petition               protection). For some of these crops,
                                                  requirement of a tolerance, a food                      with EPA. (See FFDCA section                          chlorpyrifos is currently the only cost-
                                                  containing a pesticide residue is                       408(d)(1).) EPA publishes in the Federal              effective choice for control of certain
                                                  ‘‘adulterated’’ under section 402 of the                Register a notice of the petition filing              insect pests. In 2000, the chlorpyrifos
                                                  FFDCA and may not be legally moved                      and requests public comment. After                    registrants reached an agreement with
                                                  in interstate commerce. Section 408 was                 reviewing the petition, and any                       EPA to voluntarily cancel all residential
                                                  substantially rewritten by the Food                     comments received on it, section                      use products except those registered for
                                                  Quality Protection Act of 1996 (FQPA)                   408(d)(4) provides that EPA may issue                 ant and roach baits in child-resistant
                                                  (Pub. L. 104–170, 110 Stat. 1489 (1996)),               a final rule establishing, amending, or               packaging and fire ant mound
                                                  which established a detailed safety                     revoking the tolerance, issue a proposed              treatments.
                                                  standard for pesticides and integrated                  rule to do the same, or deny the                         In 2006, EPA completed FIFRA
                                                  EPA’s regulation of pesticide food                      petition.                                             section 4 reregistration and FFDCA
                                                  residues under the FFDCA with EPA’s                        Once EPA takes final action on the                 tolerance reassessment for chlorpyrifos
                                                  registration and re-evaluation of                       petition by establishing, amending, or                and the OP class of pesticides. Having
                                                  pesticides under FIFRA. The standard                    revoking the tolerance or denying the                 completed reregistration and tolerance
                                                  for issuing or maintaining a tolerance                  petition, section 408(g)(2) allows any                reassessment, EPA is required to
                                                                                                          party to file objections with EPA and                 complete the next re-evaluation of
                                                  under section 408(b)(2)(A)(i) of the
                                                                                                          seek an evidentiary hearing on those                  chlorpyrifos under the FIFRA section
                                                  FFDCA is whether it is ‘‘safe.’’ ‘‘Safe’’ is
                                                                                                          objections. Objections and hearing                    3(g) registration review program by
                                                  defined by section 408(b)(2)(A)(ii) to
                                                                                                          requests must be filed within 60 days.                October 1, 2022. Given ongoing
                                                  mean that ‘‘there is a reasonable
                                                                                                          Section 408(g)(2)(B) provides that EPA                scientific developments in the study of
                                                  certainty that no harm will result from
                                                                                                          shall ‘‘hold a public evidentiary hearing             the OPs generally, in March 2009 EPA
                                                  aggregate exposure to the pesticide
                                                                                                          if and to the extent the Administrator                announced its decision to prioritize the
                                                  chemical residue, including all
                                                                                                          determines that such a public hearing is              FIFRA section 3(g) registration review of
                                                  anticipated dietary exposures and all
                                                                                                          necessary to receive factual evidence                 chlorpyrifos by opening a public docket
                                                  other exposures for which there is
                                                                                                          relevant to material issues of fact raised            and releasing a preliminary work plan
                                                  reliable information.’’                                 by the objections.’’ EPA regulations                  to complete the chlorpyrifos registration
                                                     While the FFDCA authorizes the                       make clear that hearings will only be                 review by 2015—7 years in advance of
                                                  establishment of legal limits for                       granted where it is shown that there is               the date required by law.
                                                  pesticide residues in food, section 3(a)                ‘‘a genuine and substantial issue of                     The registration review of
                                                  of FIFRA requires the approval of                       fact,’’ the requestor has identified                  chlorpyrifos and the OPs has presented
                                                  pesticides prior to their sale and                      evidence ‘which ‘‘would, if established,              EPA with numerous novel scientific
                                                  distribution, and establishes a                         resolve one or more of such issues in                 issues that the agency has taken to
                                                  registration regime for regulating the use              favor of the requestor,’’ and the issue is            multiple FIFRA Scientific Advisory
                                                  of pesticides. FIFRA regulates pesticide                ‘‘determinative’’ with regard to the relief           Panel (SAP) meetings since the
                                                  use in conjunction with its registration                requested. (40 CFR 178.32(b).) Further,               completion of reregistration. [The SAP
                                                  scheme by requiring EPA review and                      a party may not raise issues in                       is a federal advisory committee created
                                                  approval of pesticide labels and                        objections unless they were part of the               by section 25(d) of FIFRA, that serves as
                                                  specifying that use of a pesticide                      petition and an objecting party must                  EPA’s primary source of peer review for
                                                  inconsistent with its label is a violation              state objections to the EPA decision and              significant regulatory and policy matters
                                                  of federal law. In the FQPA, Congress                   not just repeat the allegations in its                involving pesticides.] Many of these
                                                  integrated action under the two statutes                petition. Corn Growers v. EPA, 613 F.2d               complex scientific issues formed the
                                                  by requiring that the safety standard                   266 (D.C. Cir. 2010), cert. denied, 131 S.            basis of the 2007 petition filed by
                                                  under the FFDCA be used as a criterion                  Ct. 2931 (2011). EPA’s final order on the             PANNA and NRDC and EPA therefore
                                                  in FIFRA registration actions as to                     objections is subject to judicial review.             decided to address the Petition on a
                                                  pesticide uses which result in dietary                  (21 U.S.C. 346a(h)(1).)                               similar timeframe to EPA’s expedited
                                                  risk from residues in or on food, (see                                                                        registration review schedule.
                                                  FIFRA section 2(bb)), and directing that                IV. Chlorpyrifos Regulatory                              Although EPA expedited the
                                                  EPA coordinate, to the extent                           Background                                            chlorpyrifos registration review in an
                                                  practicable, revocations of tolerances                     Chlorpyrifos (0,0-diethyl-0-3,5,6-                 attempt to address the novel scientific
                                                  with pesticide cancellations under                      trichloro-2-pyridyl phosphorothioate) is              issues raised by the Petition in advance
                                                  FIFRA. (See FFDCA section 408(l)(1).)                   a broad-spectrum, chlorinated                         of the statutory deadline, the petitioners
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                                                  Under section 3(g) of FIFRA, EPA is                     organophosphate (OP) insecticide that                 were dissatisfied with the pace of EPA’s
                                                  required to re-evaluate pesticides under                has been registered for use in the United             response efforts and have sued EPA in
                                                  the FIFRA standard—which includes a                     States since 1965. By pounds of active                federal court on three separate occasions
                                                  determination regarding the safety of                   ingredient, it is the most widely used                to compel a faster response to the
                                                  existing FFDCA tolerances—every 15                      conventional insecticide in the country.              Petition. As explained in Unit V., EPA
                                                  years under a program known as                          Currently registered use sites include a              had addressed 7 of the 10 claims
                                                  ‘‘registration review.’’ The deadline for               large variety of food crops (including                asserted in the Petition by either


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                                                                                Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 64 / Wednesday, April 5, 2017 / Notices                                           16585

                                                  denying the claim, issuing a preliminary                incorporated into this order as set forth             explained below, EPA believes it is not
                                                  denial or approving label mitigation to                 below. This unit also includes EPA’s                  appropriate to solely rely on the results
                                                  address the claims, but on June 10,                     basis for denying petition claims 7–9.                of the Furlong et al. study, or
                                                  2015, in the PANNA decision, the U.S.                   Each specific petition claim is                       petitioners’ interpretation of those
                                                  Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit                  summarized in this Unit V. immediately                results, for purposes of determining the
                                                  signaled its intent to order EPA to                     prior to EPA’s response to the claim.                 intra-species uncertainty factor. To
                                                  complete its response to the Petition                                                                         determine that factor, EPA first uses
                                                                                                          1. Genetic Evidence of Vulnerable
                                                  and directed EPA to inform the court                                                                          science tools to quantitatively
                                                                                                          Populations
                                                  how—and by when—EPA intended to                                                                               characterize human variability in both
                                                  respond. On June 30, 2015, EPA                             a. Petitioners’ claim. Petitioners claim           exposure and dosimetry, and then
                                                  informed the court that it intended to                  that as part of EPA’s reregistration                  determines the appropriate intra-species
                                                  propose by April 15, 2016, the                          decision (which was completed in 2006                 uncertainty factor to protect sensitive
                                                  revocation of all chlorpyrifos tolerances               with the completion of the                            populations. Specifically, for
                                                  in the absence of pesticide label                       organophosphate cumulative risk                       chlorpyrifos, EPA uses a
                                                  mitigation that ensures that exposures                  assessment) the Agency failed to                      physiologically-based pharmacokinetic
                                                  will be safe. On August 10, 2015, the                   calculate an appropriate intra-species                (PBPK) model to account for human
                                                  court rejected EPA’s time line and                      uncertainty factor (i.e., within human                variability in the absorption,
                                                  issued a mandamus order directing EPA                   variability) for chlorpyrifos in both its             distribution, metabolism and excretion
                                                  to ‘‘issue either a proposed or final                   aggregate and cumulative risk                         (ADME) of chemicals based on key
                                                  revocation rule or a full and final                     assessments (CRA). They assert that                   physiological, biochemicals, and
                                                  response to the administrative Petition                 certain relevant, robust data, specifically           physicochemical determinants of these
                                                  by October 31, 2015.’’                                  the Furlong et al. (2006) study (Ref. 3)              ADME processes, including the
                                                     On October 30, 2015, EPA issued a                    that addresses intra-species variability              influence of PON1 variability.
                                                  proposed rule to revoke all chlorpyrifos                in the behavior of the detoxifying                       Addressing human variability and
                                                  tolerances which it published in the                    enzyme paraoxonase (PON1), indicate                   sensitive populations is an important
                                                  Federal Register on November 6, 2015                    that the Agency should have applied an                aspect of the Agency’s risk assessment
                                                  (80 FR 69080). On December 10, 2015,                    intra-species safety factor ‘‘of at least             process. The Agency is well aware of
                                                  the Ninth Circuit issued a further order                150X in the aggregate and cumulative                  the issue of PON1 and has examined the
                                                  requiring EPA to complete any final rule                assessments’’ rather than the 10X factor              scientific evidence on this source of
                                                  (or petition denial) and fully respond to               EPA applied. Petitioners conclude by                  genetic variability. PON1 is one of the
                                                  the Petition by December 30, 2016. On                   noting that applying an intra-species                 key detoxification enzymes of
                                                  June 30, 2016, EPA sought a 6-month                     factor of 100X or higher would require                chlorpyrifos and is included as part of
                                                  extension to that deadline in order to                  setting tolerances below the level of                 the PBPK model used by EPA in the
                                                  allow EPA to fully consider the most                    detection, which therefore should                     2014 human health risk assessment
                                                  recent views of the FIFRA SAP with                      compel EPA to revoke all chlorpyrifos                 (HHRA) and 2016 revised risk
                                                  respect to chlorpyrifos toxicology. The                 tolerances.                                           assessment. Specifically, PON1 is an A-
                                                  FIFRA SAP report was finalized and                         b. Agency Response. Petitioners are                esterase which can metabolize
                                                  made available for EPA consideration                    correct that the Agency, as part of the               chlorpyrifos-oxon without inactivating
                                                  on July 20, 2016. (Ref. 2) On August 12,                2006 OP CRA, evaluated, but did not                   the enzyme. (Ref. 4) Indeed, as part of
                                                  2016, the court rejected EPA’s request                  rely on Furlong et al. in setting the intra-          the 2008 SAP, EPA performed a
                                                  for a 6-month extension and ordered                     species uncertainty factor for that                   literature review of PON1 and its
                                                  EPA to complete its final action by                     assessment. The Agency did not rely on                possible use in informing the intra-
                                                  March 31, 2017 (effectively granting                    the results of the PON1 data in the OP                species (i.e., within human variability)
                                                  EPA a three-month extension). On                        CRA because these data do not take into               uncertainty factor. This literature review
                                                  November 17, 2016, EPA published a                      consideration the complexity of OP                    can be found in the draft Appendix E:
                                                  notice of data availability (NODA)                      metabolism, which involves multiple                   Data Derived Extrapolation Factor
                                                  seeking public comment on both EPA’s                    metabolic enzymes, not just PON1. In                  Analysis to the draft Science Issue
                                                  revised risk and water assessments and                  addition, EPA believes the methodology                Paper: Chlorpyrifos Hazard and Dose
                                                  reopening the comment period on the                     utilized in the Furlong et al. study to               Response Characterization. (Ref. 5) In
                                                  proposal to revoke all chlorpyrifos (81                 measure intra-species variability—i.e.,               sum, the Agency considered available
                                                  FR 81049). The comment period for the                   combining values from multiple species                PON1 data from more than 25 studies
                                                  NODA closed on January 17, 2017.                        (transgenic mice and human) to                        from diverse human populations
                                                                                                          determine the range of sensitivity                    worldwide.
                                                  V. Ruling on Petition                                   within a single species—is not                           The Agency focused on the PON1–
                                                     This order denies the Petition on the                consistent with well-established                      192 polymorphism since it has been
                                                  nine remaining grounds for which EPA                    international risk assessment practices.              linked to chlorpyrifos-oxon sensitivity
                                                  has not issued a final denial that can be               Further, EPA believes that petitioners’               in experimental toxicology studies and,
                                                  the subject of objections under section                 assertion that the Furlong et al. study               has been evaluated in epidemiology
                                                  408(g)(2) of the FFDCA. As noted in                     supports an intra-species uncertainty                 studies attempting to associate PON1
                                                  Unit II, on July 16, 2012, EPA denied as                factor of at least 150X is based on an                status with health outcomes following
                                                  final agency action petitioners’ claim 6                analysis of the data that is inconsistent             OP pesticide exposure in adults and
                                                  that the registration of chlorpyrifos                   with EPA policy and widely-accepted                   children (Holland et al., 2006; Chen et
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                                                  created an export hazard for workers in                 international guidance on the                         al., 2003. (Ref. 6). [Note, Holland et al.
                                                  foreign countries. That response and the                development of intra-species                          (2006) and Furlong et al. (2006) report
                                                  response of July 15, 2014, also included                uncertainty factors. In addition, the                 findings from the same cohort. The
                                                  EPA’s preliminary denial of petition                    2008 FIFRA SAP did not support the                    Holland reference provides enzymes
                                                  claims 1–5 and 10 (except to the extent                 use of the Furlong et al (2006) study                 activities for specific polymorphisms in
                                                  EPA granted that claim) and EPA’s                       alone in deriving an intra-species factor.            Table 4; the Furlong paper does not
                                                  responses to those claims are now                       For these reasons, and as further                     report such values and provides


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                                                  16586                         Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 64 / Wednesday, April 5, 2017 / Notices

                                                  information primarily in graphical                      outcomes following gestational                        (i.e., to extrapolate from a typical
                                                  form.] However, EPA believes that                       exposure to OPs. (Refs. 9, 10, 11) These              human to a sensitive human). To base
                                                  focusing on PON1 variability in                         studies (Eskanazi., et al., 2010 (Ref. 9);            the factor on the difference between the
                                                  isolation from other metabolic action is                Harley et al., 2011 (Ref. 10); Engel et al.,          single lowest and highest measurements
                                                  not an appropriate approach for                         2011 (Ref. 11)) were evaluated by EPA                 in a given study, as petitioners suggest
                                                  developing a data-driven uncertainty                    in preparation for the April 2012 SAP                 in this instance, would likely greatly
                                                  factor. The Agency solicited feedback                   review.                                               exaggerate potential intra-species
                                                  from the SAP on the utility of the PON1                    Petitioners further emphasize that the             variability. That approach effectively
                                                  data, by itself, for use in risk                        Furlong et al. study supports an intra-               assumes that the point of departure in
                                                  assessment; the SAP was similarly not                   species uncertainty factor of over 164X               an EPA risk assessment will be derived
                                                  supportive of using such data in                        given the range of variability seen in                from the least sensitive test subject,
                                                  isolation. Specifically, the SAP report                 that study. The 164X value is derived                 thereby necessitating the application of
                                                  states:                                                 from sensitivity observed in transgenic               an intra-species factor that accounts for
                                                                                                          mice expressing human PON1Q–192                       the full range of sensitivity across a
                                                    . . . the information on PON1
                                                  polymorphisms should not be used as the                 compared with mice expressing human                   species. Since EPA does not develop its
                                                  sole factor in a data-derived uncertainty               PON1R–192 combined with the range of                  PoDs in this fashion; the approach
                                                  factor for two main reasons: (1) it is only one         plasma arylesterase (AREase) from the                 suggested by petitioners is not
                                                  enzyme in a complex pathway, and is                     newborn with the lowest PON1 level                    appropriate.
                                                  subsequent to the bioactivation reaction;               compared with the mother with the                        In summary, the Agency has carefully
                                                  therefore it can only function on the amount            highest PON1 level from a group of 130                considered the issue of PON1 variability
                                                  of bioactivation product (i.e., chlorpyrifos-           maternal-newborn pairs from the                       and determined that data addressing
                                                  oxon) that is delivered to it by CYP450); and           CHAMACOS (Center for the Health                       PON1 in isolation are not appropriate
                                                  (2) the genotype of PON1 alone is insufficient
                                                  to predict vulnerability because the overall            Assessment of Mothers and Children of                 for use alone in deriving an intra-
                                                  level of enzyme activity is ultimately what             Salinas) cohort.                                      species uncertainty factor and that the
                                                  determines detoxification potential from that              EPA believes it is fundamentally at                issue is more appropriately handled
                                                  pathway; thus, it is better to use PON1 status          odds with international risk assessment               using a PBPK model. Further, the
                                                  because it provides information regarding               practices to combine values from both                 derivation of the 164X value advocated
                                                  PON1 genotype and activity. Some of the                 mouse and human data to determine the                 by the petitioners is based on combining
                                                  data from laboratory animal studies in PON              potential range of variability within a               values from humanized mice with
                                                  knockout animals are using an unrealistic               single species—regardless of whether                  human measured values with a range
                                                  animal model and frequently very high dose              the test animals express a human PON1
                                                  levels, and do not reflect what might happen
                                                                                                                                                                from highest to lowest; the Furlong et al.
                                                  in humans. (Ref. 7)
                                                                                                          enzyme. As the 2008 FIFRA SAP                         derivation is inappropriate and
                                                                                                          explained, PON1 is but a single enzyme                inconsistent with international risk
                                                     Based on a detailed review of the                    that should not be considered in                      assessment practice. (Ref. 2) The 2008
                                                  literature and the comments from the                    isolation to predict the overall level of             FIFRA SAP did not support the PON1
                                                  SAP, the Agency has determined that                     enzyme activity that may affect human                 data used in isolation. Finally,
                                                  such data are not appropriate for use                   sensitivity to a substance. Using a 164X              petitioners’ statement that the Furlong
                                                  alone in deriving an intra-species                      intra-species uncertainty factor derived              et al. study supports an intra-species
                                                  uncertainty factor for use in human                     from the Furlong et al. study would take              uncertainty factor of at least 150X likely
                                                  health risk assessment. As indicated by                 this practice one step further by relying             overstates potential variability. EPA
                                                  the SAP report, multiple factors (e.g.,                 upon combined PON1 values from                        therefore denies this aspect of the
                                                  other enzymes such as P450s,                            different species with differing overall              Petition.
                                                  carboxylesterases,                                      metabolic activity to derive the intra-
                                                  butyrylcholinesterase) are likely to                    species factor. EPA does not believe this             2. Endocrine Disrupting Effects
                                                  impact potential population sensitivity,                approach is an appropriate means of                      a. Petitioners’ claim. Petitioners
                                                  rendering the results of the PON1 data,                 determining the potential range of intra-             summarize a number of studies
                                                  by themselves, insufficiently reliable to               species variability.                                  evaluating the effects of chlorpyrifos on
                                                  support a regulatory conclusion about                      Finally, petitioners’ assertion that the           the endocrine system, asserting that,
                                                  the potential variation of human                        Furlong study supports an intra-species               taken together, the studies ‘‘suggest that
                                                  sensitivity to chlorpyrifos.                            uncertainty factor of at least 150X is                chlorpyrifos may be an endocrine
                                                     Since the 2008 SAP, several                          based on an analysis of that study that               disrupting chemical, capable of
                                                  epidemiological studies have been                       is inconsistent with EPA policy and                   interfering with multiple hormones
                                                  published that considered the                           widely-accepted international guidance                controlling reproduction and
                                                  association between PON status/                         on the development of intra-species                   neurodevelopment.’’ The petitioners
                                                  genotype and health outcome. Hofmann                    uncertainty factors. In deriving the                  then assert that EPA should not have
                                                  et al. (2009) recently reported                         intra-species uncertainty factor in its               delayed consideration of endocrine
                                                  associations between PON1 status and                    risk assessments, EPA is guided by the                effects absent finalization of the
                                                  inhibition of butyrylcholinesterase                     principles of the 2005 IPCS (Ref. 12)                 Endocrine Disruptor Screening Program
                                                  (BuChE) in a group of pesticide handlers                guidance on chemical specific                         (EDSP) (Ref. 14) and should have
                                                  in Washington. The authors note that                    adjustment factors (CSAFs) and the                    quantitatively incorporated the studies
                                                  this study requires replication with                    EPA’s 2014 Guidance for Applying                      into the chlorpyrifos IRED.
                                                  larger sample size(s) and more blood                    Quantitative Data to Develop Data-                       b. Agency Response. This portion of
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                                                  samples. (Ref. 8) Given the limitations                 Derived Extrapolation Factors for                     the Petition appears largely to be a
                                                  of Hofmann et al., the Agency has not                   Interspecies and Intraspecies                         complaint about the completeness of
                                                  drawn any conclusions from this study.                  Extrapolation. (Ref. 13) These guidances              EPA’s reregistration decision and a
                                                  The Q/R–192 and/or C/T–108                              recommend that intra-species factors                  request that EPA undertake quantitative
                                                  polymorphism at the promoter site have                  should be extrapolated from a measure                 incorporation of endocrine endpoints
                                                  been evaluated recently as a factor                     of central tendency in the population to              into its assessment of chlorpyrifos. The
                                                  affecting birth or neurobehavioral                      a measure in the sensitive population                 Petition does not explain whether and


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                                                                                Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 64 / Wednesday, April 5, 2017 / Notices                                            16587

                                                  how endocrine effects should form the                   was included in the initial list of                   Agricultural Health Study (AHS) by Lee
                                                  basis of a decision to revoke tolerances.               chemicals (List 1) to receive EDSP Tier               et al. (2004) (Ref. 17) that evaluated the
                                                  The basis for seeking revocation of a                   1 test orders. The EDSP program is a                  association between chlorpyrifos and
                                                  tolerance is a showing that the pesticide               two-tiered screening and testing                      lung cancer incidence. (Ref. 17) The
                                                  is not ‘‘safe.’’ Petitioners have neither               program, Tier 1 and Tier 2 tests. Tier 1              petition summarizes the results of the
                                                  asserted that EPA should revoke                         includes 11 assays in the battery; these              AHS study, stating that the incidence of
                                                  tolerances because effects on the                       data are intended to allow EPA to                     lung cancer has a statistically significant
                                                  endocrine system render the tolerances                  determine whether certain substances                  association with chlorpyrifos exposure.
                                                  unsafe, nor have petitioners submitted a                (including pesticide active and other                 The Petition then asserts that these data
                                                  factual analysis demonstrating that                     ingredients) have the potential to                    are highly relevant and therefore should
                                                  aggregate exposure to chlorpyrifos                      interact with the endocrine system and                have been referenced in the final
                                                  presents an unsafe risk to humans based                 cause an effect in humans or wildlife                 aggregate assessment for chlorpyrifos or
                                                  on effects on the endocrine system.                     similar to an effect produced by a                    the OP CRA. Petitioners do not
                                                  Rather, the Petition appears to collect a               ‘‘naturally occurring estrogen, or other              otherwise explain whether and how
                                                  number of studies suggesting that                       such endocrine effects as the                         these data support the revocation of
                                                  chlorpyrifos may have effects on the                    Administrator may designate.’’ The                    tolerances or the cancellation of
                                                  endocrine system and that EPA should                    purpose of Tier 2 tests is to identify and            pesticide registrations.
                                                  have considered those health impacts at                 establish a quantitative, dose-response                  b. Agency Response. As explained in
                                                  reregistration in a quantitative                        relationship for any adverse effects that             the previous section, the basis for
                                                  assessment.                                             might result from the interactions with               seeking revocation of a tolerance is a
                                                     To the extent that petitioners are                   the endocrine system.                                 showing that the pesticide is not ‘‘safe.’’
                                                  seeking tolerance revocation on these                      On November 5, 2009, EPA issued                    Claiming that EPA failed to reference
                                                  grounds, the Petition fails to provide a                Tier 1 test orders to the registrants of              certain data in its risk assessment
                                                  sufficient basis for revocation because,                chlorpyrifos, requiring a battery of 11               regarding carcinogenicity does not
                                                  in addition to the preceding defects, the               screening assays to identify the                      amount to illustrating that the
                                                  cited data do not provide quantitative                  potential to interact with the estrogen,              tolerances are unsafe. To show a lack of
                                                  data (i.e., endpoints/points of departure)              androgen, or thyroid hormonal systems.                safety, petitioners would have to present
                                                  that indicate endocrine effects at doses                (Ref. 15)                                             some fact-based argument
                                                  that are more sensitive than the points                    The agency received and reviewed all               demonstrating that aggregate exposure
                                                  of departure used in the chlorpyrifos                   11 EDSP Tier 1 screening assays for                   to chlorpyrifos poses an unsafe
                                                  risk assessment that are based on                       chlorpyrifos. On June 29, 2015, the                   carcinogenic risk. Petitioners have not
                                                  cholinesterase inhibition. While the                    agency completed the EDSP weight of                   presented such an analysis.
                                                  cited studies provide qualitative                       evidence (WoE) conclusions for the Tier               Accordingly, EPA is denying the
                                                  information that exposure to                            1 screening assays for List 1 chemicals,              Petition to revoke chlorpyrifos
                                                  chlorpyrifos may be associated with                     including chlorpyrifos. In addition to                tolerances or cancel chlorpyrifos
                                                  effects on the androgen and thyroid                     the Tier 1 data, the WoE evaluations                  registrations to the extent the Petition
                                                  hormonal pathways, these data alone do                  considered other scientifically relevant              relies on claims pertaining to
                                                  not demonstrate that current human                      information (OSRI), including general                 carcinogenicity.
                                                  exposures from existing tolerances are                  toxicity data and open literature studies                Despite the inadequacy of petitioners’
                                                  unsafe. The Agency noted similar effects                of sufficient quality. In determining                 cancer claims, in the course of the
                                                  during its evaluation of information                    whether chlorpyrifos interacts with the               Agency’s review of chlorpyrifos, EPA
                                                  submitted by People for the Ethical                     estrogen, androgen or thyroid pathways,               has examined the Lee et al. study cited
                                                  Treatment of Animals (PETA) and the                     the agency considered the number and                  by petitioners (Ref. 17) among other
                                                  Physicians Committee for Responsible                    type of effects induced, the magnitude                lines of evidence. EPA has concluded
                                                  Medicine (PCRM) during its review of                    and pattern of responses observed                     that the Lee et al. investigation does not
                                                  existing information as part of EPA’s                   across studies, taxa, and sexes.                      alter the Agency’s weight of evidence
                                                  EDSP, as discussed below. Based on the                  Additionally, the agency also                         determination concerning chlorpyrifos’
                                                  review of that data, EPA concluded that                 considered the conditions under which                 carcinogenic potential, and therefore
                                                  the effects seen in those studies do not                effects occurred, in particular whether               does not alter the Agency’s current
                                                  call into question EPA’s prior safety                   or not endocrine-related responses                    cancer classification for chlorpyrifos.
                                                  determinations supporting the existing                  occurred at dose(s) that also resulted in             Specifically, the Agency does not
                                                  tolerances; the data do not indicate a                  general systemic or overt toxicity. The               believe this evidence raises sufficient
                                                  risk warranting regulatory action, and                  agency concluded that, based on weight                grounds for concern regarding
                                                  the petitioners have provided no                        of evidence considerations, EDSP Tier 2               chlorpyrifos that EPA should consider
                                                  specific information to alter this                      testing is not recommended for                        initiating action based upon this
                                                  determination.                                          chlorpyrifos since there was no                       information that might lead to
                                                     Consequently, the Petition does not                  evidence of potential interaction with                revocation of the chlorpyrifos tolerances
                                                  support a conclusion that existing                      the estrogen, androgen and thyroid                    or cancellation of the chlorpyrifos
                                                  tolerances are unsafe due to potential                  pathways. The EDSP Tier 1 WoE                         registrations.
                                                  endocrine effects. This portion of the                  assessment and associated data                           The Agency was aware of the
                                                  Petition is therefore denied.                           evaluation records for chlorpyrifos are               December 2004 study cited by
                                                     As petitioners may be aware, since the                                                                     petitioners. While Lee et al. observed a
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                                                                                                          available online. (Ref. 16) This
                                                  filing of the petition, EPA has                         assessment further supports EPA’s                     possible association between
                                                  completed the evaluation of                             denial of this portion of the Petition.               chlorpyrifos use and the incidence of
                                                  chlorpyrifos under EPA’s EDSP, as                                                                             lung cancer, the authors also stressed
                                                  required under FFDCA section 408(p)                     3. Cancer Risks                                       that further evaluation was necessary
                                                  that confirms EPA’s conclusions. On                        a. Petitioners’ claim. Petitioners claim           before concluding the association was
                                                  April 15, 2009, a Federal Register notice               that the Agency ‘‘ignored’’ a December                causal in nature. (Ref. 17) Additional
                                                  was published in which chlorpyrifos                     2004 National Institutes of Health                    evaluation is necessary because of


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                                                  16588                         Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 64 / Wednesday, April 5, 2017 / Notices

                                                  possible alternative explanations for the               lack a coherent biologically plausible                showing. For this reason, EPA is
                                                  Lee et al. study, which include                         carcinogenic mode of action. The                      denying the petitioners’ request to
                                                  unmeasured confounding factors or                       authors did note positive exposure-                   revoke chlorpyrifos tolerances or cancel
                                                  confounding factors not fully accounted                 response associations for chlorpyrifos                chlorpyrifos registrations to the extent
                                                  for in the analysis, and possible false                 and lung cancer in two separate                       that request relies on claims pertaining
                                                  positive results due to the performance                 evaluations.                                          to EPA’s failure to provide a 10X safety
                                                  of multiple statistical tests.                             In summary, while there is initial                 factor in the 2006 CRA based on the
                                                     EPA has been a collaborating agency                  suggestive epidemiological evidence of                results of the Zheng et al. study.
                                                  with the AHS since 1993, and continues                  an association between chlorpyrifos and                 Despite the inadequacy of petitioners’
                                                  to closely monitor the AHS literature.                  lung cancer to only form a hypothesis as              FQPA safety factor claims, EPA
                                                  The Agency is working closely with the                  to a carcinogenic mode of action,                     examined the evidence cited by
                                                  AHS researchers to clearly understand                   additional research (including follow-up              petitioners for the purpose of evaluating
                                                  the results of their research efforts to                AHS research) is needed to test the                   whether the evidence raises sufficient
                                                  ensure the Agency appropriately                         hypothesis. Consequently, at this time it             grounds for concern regarding
                                                  interprets these data as future studies                 is reasonable to conclude chlorpyrifos is             chlorpyrifos that EPA should consider
                                                  are published. Between 2003 and 2009                    not a carcinogen in view of the lack of               initiating the actions sought by the
                                                  there have been six nested case-control                 carcinogenicity in the rodent bioassays               petitioners.
                                                  analyses within the AHS which                           and the lack of a genotoxic or mutagenic                In general, when the Agency conducts
                                                  evaluated the use of a number of                        potential. The Agency concludes that                  a cumulative assessment, the scope of
                                                  agricultural pesticides, including                      existing epidemiological data (including              cumulative risk is limited to the
                                                  chlorpyrifos, in association with                       Lee et al.) do not change the current                 common mechanism endpoint—which
                                                  specific anatomical cancer sites, in                    weight of the evidence conclusions. The               in this case of the 2006 OP CRA, was
                                                  addition to the previously published                    Agency continues to believe there is not              cholinesterase inhibition, the primary
                                                  cohort study (Ref. 17) cited by the                     a sufficient basis to alter its assessment            toxicity mode of action for the OPs. As
                                                  petitioners. As noted below, both the                   of chlorpyrifos as not likely to be                   such, for the OP CRA, experimental
                                                  Agency and Health Canada have                           carcinogenic to humans when multiple                  toxicology data on AChE inhibition
                                                  comprehensively reviewed these data.                    lines of evidence are considered (e.g.,               were used for developing relative
                                                     In accordance with the Agency’s 2005                 epidemiology findings, rodent bioassay,               potency estimates, points of departure,
                                                  Guideline for Cancer Risk Assessment                    genotoxicity); therefore, chlorpyrifos                and informing the FQPA safety factor
                                                  (Ref. 18), chlorpyrifos is classified as                cancer risk would not be a factor in any              used in the OP CRA. EPA relied on
                                                  ‘‘Not Likely to be Carcinogenic to                      potential Agency risk determination to                brain AChE data from adult female rats
                                                  Humans’’ based on the lack of evidence                  revoke tolerances for chlorpyrifos.                   dosed for 21 days or longer for
                                                  of carcinogenicity in male or female                                                                          estimating relative potency and points
                                                  mice and male or female rats. In chronic                4. CRA Misrepresents Risks, Failed To                 of departure. At approximately three
                                                  toxicity/carcinogenicity studies, animals               Apply FQPA10X Safety Factor                           weeks of oral exposure to OPs, AChE
                                                  received chlorpyrifos in their feed every                  a. Petitioners’ claim. Petitioners assert          inhibition reaches steady state in the
                                                  day of their lives (78 weeks for mice and               that EPA relied on limited data and                   adult rat such that continued dosing
                                                  104 weeks for rats) at doses thousands                  inaccurate interpretations of data to                 does not result in increased inhibition.
                                                  of times greater than any anticipated                   support its decision to remove the                    This timeframe of toxicity (21-days and
                                                  exposure to humans from authorized                      FQPA safety factor in the 2006 OP CRA.                longer) was selected as there was high
                                                  uses. There was no evidence of cancer                   Specifically, the petitioners challenge               confidence in the potency estimates
                                                  in the experimental animal studies.                     the Agency’s use of data from a paper                 derived from the steady state toxicology
                                                  Additionally, available evidence from in                by Zheng et al. (2000) (Ref. 21) claiming             studies due to the stability of the AChE
                                                  vivo and in vitro assays did not support                that, in contrast to the Agency’s analysis            inhibition.
                                                  a mutagenic or genotoxic potential of                   of the study data, the data does show an                The Agency’s 2006 OP CRA contained
                                                  chlorpyrifos.                                           obvious difference between juvenile and               EPA’s complete FQPA safety factor
                                                     Recently, the Agency conducted its                   adult responses to chlorpyrifos.                      analysis, (Ref. 22) which involved
                                                  own review of the six nested case-                      Petitioners conclude by asserting that                consideration of pre-natal and post-natal
                                                  control analyses and one cohort study                   the Zheng et al. study supports using a               experimental toxicology studies, in
                                                  within the AHS concerning the                           10X safety factor for chlorpyrifos in the             addition to exposure information. In the
                                                  carcinogenic potential of chlorpyrifos.                 CRA.                                                  OP CRA, pre-natal exposure AChE
                                                  (Ref. 19) EPA concluded with respect to                    b. Agency Response. Petitioners’                   studies in rats show that the fetus is no
                                                  the AHS lung cancer results that the                    assertions do not provide a sufficient                more sensitive than the dam to AChE
                                                  findings are useful for generating                      basis for revoking chlorpyrifos                       inhibition and the fetus is often less
                                                  hypotheses, but require confirmation in                 tolerances. As explained previously, the              sensitive than the dam. Thus, evaluating
                                                  future studies. This conclusion is                      ground for seeking revocation of a                    the potential for increased toxicity of
                                                  consistent with that of researchers from                tolerance is a showing that the pesticide             juveniles from post-natal exposure was
                                                  Health Canada. Specifically,                            is not ‘‘safe.’’ The petitioners’ claim that          a key component in determining the
                                                  Weichenthal et al. (2010) (Ref. 20)                     the data EPA relied upon support a                    magnitude of the FQPA safety factors in
                                                  published a review article in                           different FQPA safety factor for                      the OP CRA. Furthermore, because
                                                  Environmental Health Perspectives on                    chlorpyrifos in the CRA does not                      characteristics of children are directly
                                                  pesticide exposure and cancer incidence                 amount to a showing that chlorpyrifos
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                                                                                                                                                                accounted for in the cumulative
                                                  in the AHS cohort. Their review of these                tolerances are unsafe. To show a lack of              exposure assessment, the Agency’s
                                                  same studies concluded that the weight                  safety, petitioners would have to present             methods did not underestimate
                                                  of experimental toxicological evidence                  a factual analysis demonstrating that the             exposure to OPs.
                                                  does not suggest that chlorpyrifos is                   lack of a 10X safety factor in the CRA                  In the 2006 OP CRA, each OP was
                                                  carcinogenic, and that epidemiologic                    for chlorpyrifos poses unsafe                         assigned a 10X FQPA safety factor
                                                  results currently available from the AHS                cumulative exposures to the OPs.                      unless chemical-specific AChE data on
                                                  are inconsistent, lack replication, and                 Petitioners have not made such a                      young animals were available to


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                                                                                Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 64 / Wednesday, April 5, 2017 / Notices                                            16589

                                                  generate a data derived safety factor. To               support the FQPA safety factor of 1X for              issue, when evaluating any study, is its
                                                  best match the relative potency factor                  the AChE inhibition endpoint used in                  scientific soundness and quality, and
                                                  (RPF)s and PODs based on repeated                       the 2006 OP CRA. As such, petitioners’                thus, the level of confidence in the
                                                  dosing, the Agency used repeated                        claims regarding the CRA and FQPA                     study findings to contribute to the risk
                                                  dosing data in juveniles for developing                 safety factor is denied.                              assessment.
                                                  the FQPA safety factors. For                                                                                     The literature was searched, fully
                                                                                                          5. Over-Reliance on Registrant Data                   considered, and provided additional
                                                  chlorpyrifos, at the time of the 2006 OP
                                                  CRA, the only such data available were                     a. Petitioners’ claims. Petitioners                information on, chlorpyrifos mode of
                                                  from the Zheng et al. literature study.                 assert that in reregistering chlorpyrifos             action, pharmacokinetics, epidemiology,
                                                     The petitioners are correct that Dr.                 EPA ‘‘cherry picked’’ data, ‘‘ignoring                neurobehavioral effects in laboratory
                                                  Carey Pope of Oklahoma State                            robust, peer-reviewed data in favor of                animals, and age dependent sensitivity
                                                  University provided the Agency with                     weak, industry-sponsored data to                      to cholinesterase inhibition.
                                                  the raw data from the Zheng et al. study.               determine that chlorpyrifos could be re-                 Therefore, by evaluating registrant
                                                  These raw data were used to develop                     registered and food tolerances be                     data in accordance with internationally
                                                  the plot in the 2006 OP CRA which was                   retained.’’ As such, the Agency’s                     harmonized and scientifically peer-
                                                  reproduced in the Petition. Petitioners                 reassessment decision is not                          reviewed study protocols, undertaking
                                                  accurately note that for other OPs a                    scientifically defensible.                            thorough open literature searches, and
                                                  benchmark dose modeling approach                           b. Agency response. This portion of                considering information provided by the
                                                  was used and that no BMD values were                    the Petition does not purport to be an                public, the Agency is confident that its
                                                  reported for chlorpyrifos. In                           independent basis for revoking                        assessment for chlorpyrifos in 2006 was
                                                  determining the FQPA safety factor,                     chlorpyrifos tolerances or cancelling                 reasonably based upon the best
                                                  petitioners claim that the Agency                       chlorpyrifos registrations. Rather, this              available science at the time of the
                                                  misinterpreted the brain AChE data                      claim appears to underlie petitioners’                assessment. Previous sections of this
                                                  from Zheng et al.                                       arguments in other sections of the                    response to petitioners’ claims regarding
                                                     As shown in the plot reproduced on                   Petition. While petitioners claim that                the Agency’s inadequate use of various
                                                  page 15 of the Petition, the dose-                      EPA ignored robust, peer-reviewed data                data only further highlights and
                                                  response data in the Zheng et al. study                 in favor of weak, industry-sponsored                  supports the scientifically defensible
                                                  are variable and lack a monotonic shape                 data for the reregistration of                        results of the Agency’s assessment.
                                                  at the low dose end of the dose response                chlorpyrifos, petitioners do not cite to              Petitioners’ claim that the Agency
                                                  curve. The Agency acknowledges that at                  any studies other than those used to                  overly relies on registrant data is
                                                  the high dose, the pups appear to be                    support their other claims. In general,               therefore denied.
                                                  more sensitive. However, at the low                     petitioners did not provide any studies
                                                                                                          in the Petition that EPA failed to                    6. EPA Has Failed To Properly Address
                                                  dose end of the response curve, relevant
                                                                                                          evaluate. Since the specific studies cited            the Exporting Hazard in Foreign
                                                  for human exposures and, thus, the
                                                  cumulative risk assessment (i.e., at or                 by petitioners are not associated with                Countries From Chlorpyrifos
                                                  near the 10% inhibition level), little to               this claim, but rather their other claims,               As noted in Unit II., in EPA’s July 16,
                                                  no difference is observed. Therefore,                   EPA’s response to the specific studies                2012 interim petition response EPA
                                                  despite the lack of BMD estimates for                   are, therefore, addressed in its responses            issued a final denial of this claim. That
                                                  the Zheng et al. study, the Agency is                   to petitioners’ other claims. However,                denial constituted final agency action
                                                  confident in the value used to address                  EPA explains below why, as a general                  and EPA is not reopening consideration
                                                  the common mechanism endpoint                           matter, the Agency does not believe it                of that claim.
                                                  (AChE inhibition) addressed in the 2006                 ‘‘over-relied’’ on registrant data in
                                                                                                                                                                7.–9. EPA Failed To Quantitatively
                                                  CRA. Since that time, the Agency                        evaluating the risks of chlorpyrifos in its
                                                                                                                                                                Incorporate Data Demonstrating Long-
                                                  attempted BMD modeling of the Zheng                     2006 reregistration decision.
                                                                                                             In spite of petitioners’ claim, the                Lasting Effects From Early Life Exposure
                                                  et al. data as part of the 2011
                                                                                                          Agency does not ignore robust, peer-                  to Chlorpyrifos in Children; EPA
                                                  preliminary chlorpyrifos HHRA (Ref.
                                                                                                          reviewed data in favor of industry-                   Disregarded Data Demonstrating That
                                                  23) which yielded low confidence
                                                                                                          sponsored data. Further, EPA has a very               There Is No Evidence of a Safe Level of
                                                  results due to the variability in the data.
                                                     Dow AgroSciences submitted a                         public and well-documented set of                     Exposure During Pre-Birth and Early
                                                  comparative cholinesterase study (CCA)                  procedures that it applies to the use and             Life Stages; EPA Failed To Cite or
                                                  for chlorpyrifos. CCA studies are                       significance accorded all data utilized to            Quantitatively Incorporate Studies and
                                                  specially designed studies to compare                   inform risk management decisions.                     Clinical Reports Suggesting Potential
                                                  the dose-response relationship in                       Registrant generated data, in response to             Adverse Effects Below 10%
                                                  juvenile and adult rats. This CCA study                 FIFRA and FFDCA requirements, are                     Cholinesterase Inhibition
                                                  includes two components: (1) Acute,                     conducted and evaluated in accordance                   a. Petitioners’ claims. The petitioners
                                                  single dosing in post-natal day 11 and                  with a series of internationally                      assert that human epidemiology and
                                                  young adult rats and (2) 11-days of                     harmonized and scientifically peer-                   rodent developmental neurotoxicity
                                                  repeating dosing in rat pups from                       reviewed study protocols designed to                  data suggest that pre-natal and early life
                                                  PND11–21 and 11-days of repeated                        maintain a high standard of scientific                exposure to chlorpyrifos can result in
                                                  dosing in adult rats. The CCA study for                 quality and reproducibility. (Refs. 23                long-lasting, possibly permanent
                                                  chlorpyrifos is considered by EPA to be                 and 24.)                                              damage to the nervous system and that
                                                  high quality and well-designed. The                        Additionally, to further inform the                these effects are likely occurring at
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                                                  preliminary risk assessment for                         Agency’s risk assessment, EPA is                      exposure levels below 10%
                                                  chlorpyrifos’ reports BMD estimates                     committed to the consideration of other               cholinesterase inhibition, EPA’s existing
                                                  from this CCA study. Specifically, for                  sources of information such as data                   regulatory standard for chlorpyrifos and
                                                  the repeated dosing portion of the study,               identified in the open, peer-reviewed                 other OPs. They assert that EPA has
                                                  the BMD10s of 0.80 (0.69 BMDL10) and                    literature and information submitted by               therefore used the wrong endpoint as a
                                                  1.0 (0.95 BMDL10) mg/kg/day                             the public as part of the regulatory                  basis for regulation and that, taking into
                                                  respectively for female pups and adults                 evaluation of a pesticide. An important               account the full spectrum of toxicity,


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                                                  16590                         Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 64 / Wednesday, April 5, 2017 / Notices

                                                  chlorpyrifos does not meet the FFDCA                    Appeals that further inquiry into this                decision whether to retain, limit or
                                                  safety standard or the FIFRA standard                   area of unsettled science should delay                remove chlorpyrifos from the market.
                                                  for registration.                                       EPA’s response to the Petition. Faced                 Accordingly, EPA is denying these
                                                     b. Agency response. EPA has grouped                  with an order requiring EPA to respond                Petition claims and intends to complete
                                                  claims 7–9 together because they                        to the Petition, in October 2015, EPA                 a full and appropriate review of the
                                                  fundamentally all raise the same issue:                 chose to issue a proposed rule to revoke              neurodevelopmental data before either
                                                  Whether the potential exists for                        all chlorpyrifos tolerances based in part             finalizing the proposed rule of October
                                                  chlorpyrifos to cause                                   on the uncertain science surrounding                  30, 2015, or taking an alternative
                                                  neurodevelopmental effects in infants                   neurodevelopmental toxicity suggested                 regulatory path.
                                                  and children from exposures (either to                  by certain epidemiology studies. The                     EPA’s denial of the Petition on the
                                                  mothers during pregnancy or directly to                 comments EPA has received on that                     grounds provided above is wholly
                                                  infants and children) that are lower than               proposal and on EPA’s November 17,                    consistent with governing law. The
                                                  those resulting in 10% cholinesterase                   2016 NODA suggest that there continue                 petition provision in FFDCA section
                                                  inhibition—the basis for EPA’s long-                    to be considerable areas of uncertainty               408(d) does not address the timing for
                                                  standing point of departure in regulating               with regard to what the epidemiology                  responding to this petition nor does it
                                                  chlorpyrifos and other OPs. While                       data show and deep disagreement over                  limit the extent to which EPA may
                                                  petitioners may perhaps disagree, unlike                how those data should be considered in                coordinate its petition responses with
                                                  the claims addressed above, these                       EPA’s risk assessment.                                the registration review provisions of
                                                  claims were not truly challenges to                        Although not a legal consideration, it             FIFRA section 3(g). Further, provided
                                                  EPA’s 2006 reregistration decision for                  is important to recognize that for many               EPA completes registration review by
                                                  chlorpyrifos, but rather, challenges to                 decades chlorpyrifos has been and                     October 1, 2022, Congress otherwise
                                                  EPA’s ongoing approval of chlorpyrifos                  remains one of the most widely used                   gave the EPA Administrator the
                                                  under FIFRA and the FFDCA that rely                     pesticides in the United States, making               discretion to determine the schedule
                                                  in large measure on data published after                any decision to retain or remove this                 and timing for completing the review of
                                                  EPA completed both its 2001                             pesticide from the market an extremely                the approximately over 1000 pesticide
                                                  chlorpyrifos Interim Reregistration                     significant policy choice. In light of the            active ingredients currently subject to
                                                  Decision and the 2006 OP CRA that                       significance of this decision and in light            evaluation under section 3(g). EPA may
                                                  concluded the reregistration process for                of the significant uncertainty that exists            lawfully re-prioritize the registration
                                                  chlorpyrifos and all other OPs. As                      regarding the potential for chlorpyrifos              review schedule developed by earlier
                                                  matters that largely came to light after                to cause adverse neurodevelopmental                   administrations provided that decision
                                                  the completion of reregistration, these                 effects, EPA’s preference is to fully                 is consistent with law and an
                                                  petition issues are issues to be                        explore approaches raised by the SAP                  appropriate exercise of discretion. See
                                                  addressed as part of the registration                   and commenters on the proposed rule,                  Federal Communications Commission v.
                                                  review of chlorpyrifos—the next round                   and possibly seek additional                          Fox Television Stations, 129 S.Ct. 1800
                                                  of re-evaluation under section 3(g) of                  authoritative peer review of EPA’s risk               (2009) (Administrative Procedure Act
                                                  FIFRA. As petitioners are aware, past                   assessment prior to finalizing any                    does not require that a policy change be
                                                  EPA administrations prioritized the                     regulatory action in the course of                    justified by reasons more substantial
                                                  registration review of the OPs in no                    registration review. As the 9th Circuit               than those required to adopt a policy in
                                                  small measure to begin to focus on the                  has made clear in its August 12, 2016                 the first instance). Nothing in FIFRA
                                                  question of OP neurodevelopmental                       order in PANNA v. EPA, EPA must                       section 3(g) precludes EPA from altering
                                                  toxicity, which was, and remains, an                    provide a final response to the Petition              a previously established registration
                                                  issue at the cutting edge of science,                   by March 31, 2017, regardless of                      review schedule. Given the absence of a
                                                  involving significant uncertainties. EPA                whether the science remains unsettled                 clear statutory directive, FIFRA and the
                                                  has three times presented approaches                    and irrespective of whatever options                  FFDCA provide EPA with discretion to
                                                  and proposals to the FIFRA SAP for                      may exist for more a complete                         take into account EPA’s registration
                                                  evaluating recent epidemiologic data                    resolution of these issues during the                 review of a pesticide in determining
                                                  (some of which is cited in the Petition)                registration review process.                          how and when the Agency responds to
                                                  exploring the possible connection                          While EPA acknowledges its                         FFDCA petitions to revoke tolerances.
                                                  between in utero and early childhood                    obligation to respond to the Petition as              As outlined above, given the importance
                                                  exposure to chlorpyrifos and adverse                    required by the court, the court’s order              of this matter and the fact that critical
                                                  neurodevelopmental effects. The SAP’s                   does not and cannot compel EPA to                     questions remain regarding the
                                                  reports have rendered numerous                          complete the registration review of                   significance of the data addressing
                                                  recommendations for additional study                    chlorpyrifos in advance of the October                neurodevelopmental effects, EPA
                                                  and sometimes conflicting advice for                    1, 2022 deadline provided in section                  believes there is good reason to extend
                                                  how EPA should consider (or not                         3(g) of FIFRA, 7 U.S.C. 136a(g).                      the registration review of chlorpyrifos
                                                  consider) the epidemiology data in                      Although past EPA administrations had                 and therefore to deny the Petition. To
                                                  conducting EPA’s registration review                    chosen to attempt to complete that                    find otherwise would effectively give
                                                  human health risk assessment for                        review several years in advance of the                petitioners under the FFDCA the
                                                  chlorpyrifos. While industry and public                 statutory deadline (and respond to the                authority to re-order scheduling
                                                  interest groups on both sides of this                   Petition on the same time frame), it has              decisions regarding the FIFRA
                                                  issue can debate what the                               turned out that it is not possible to fully           registration review process that
                                                                                                          address these issues early in the
jstallworth on DSK7TPTVN1PROD with NOTICES




                                                  recommendations mean and which                                                                                Congress has vested in the
                                                  recommendations should be followed,                     registration review period. As a result,              Administrator.
                                                  one thing should be clear to all persons                EPA has concluded that it should alter
                                                  following this issue: the science on this               its priorities and adjust the schedule for            10. Inhalation Exposure From
                                                  question is not resolved and would                      chlorpyrifos so that it can complete its              Volatilization
                                                  likely benefit from additional inquiry.                 review of the science addressing                        a. Petitioners’ claim. Petitioners assert
                                                     EPA has, however, been unable to                     neurodevelopmental effects prior to                   that when EPA completed its 2006 OP
                                                  persuade the 9th Circuit Court of                       making a final registration review                    CRA, EPA failed to consider and


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                                                                                Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 64 / Wednesday, April 5, 2017 / Notices                                               16591

                                                  incorporate significant exposures to                    volatilized chlorpyrifos or its oxon that                  Beckman, K., and Eskenazi, B. (2006).
                                                  chlorpyrifos-contaminated air that exist                are capable of causing adverse effects                     Paraoxonase polymorphisms,
                                                  for some populations in communities                     from cholinesterase inhibition.                            haplotypes, and enzyme activity in
                                                                                                                                                                     Latino mothers and newborns. Environ.
                                                  where chlorpyrifos is applied.
                                                                                                          VI. Regulatory Assessment                                  Health Perspect. 114(7), 985–991; Chen,
                                                  Petitioners assert that these exposures                                                                            J., Kumar, M., Chan, W., Berkowitz, G.,
                                                                                                          Requirements
                                                  exceeded safe levels when considering                                                                              and Wetmur, J. (2003). Increased
                                                  cholinesterase inhibition as a point of                    As indicated previously, this action                    Influence of Genetic Variation on PON1
                                                  departure and that developmental                        announces the Agency’s order denying                       Activity in Neonates. Environmental
                                                  neurotoxicity may occur at even lower                   a petition filed, in part, under section                   Health Perspective 111, 11:1403–9.
                                                  exposure levels than those resulting in                 408(d) of FFDCA. As such, this action                 7. U.S. EPA (2008). Transmittal of Meeting
                                                  cholinesterase inhibition.                              is an adjudication and not a rule. The                     Minutes of the FIFRA Scientific
                                                     b. Agency response. To the extent                    regulatory assessment requirements                         Advisory Panel Meeting Held September
                                                  petitioners are asserting that human                    applicable to rulemaking do not,                           16–18, 2008 on the Agency’s Evaluation
                                                                                                                                                                     of the Toxicity Profile of Chlorpyrifos.
                                                  exposure to chlorpyrifos spray drift and                therefore, apply to this action.                           Available at http://www.epa.gov/scipoly/
                                                  volatilized chlorpyrifos present                                                                                   sap/meetings/2008/september/
                                                                                                          VII. Submission to Congress and the
                                                  neurodevelopmental risks for infants                                                                               sap0908report.pdf at 61.
                                                                                                          Comptroller General
                                                  and children, EPA is denying this claim                                                                       8. Engel, S.M., Wetmur, J., Chen, J., Zhu, C.,
                                                  for the reasons stated above in our                       The Congressional Review Act, 5                          Boyd Barr, D., Canfield, R.L., Wolff,
                                                  response to claims 7–9. As noted, EPA                   U.S.C. 801 et seq., does not apply                         M.S., (2011) Prenatal Exposure to
                                                  believes that, given the uncertainties                  because this action is not a rule for                      Organophosphates, Paraoxonase 1, and
                                                  associated with this identified risk                    purposes of 5 U.S.C. 804(3).                               Cognitive Development in Childhood
                                                  concern, the appropriate course of                                                                                 Environ Health Perspect 119:1182–1188
                                                                                                          IX. References                                             (2011). doi:10.1289/ehp.1003183 [Online
                                                  action is for EPA to deny the Petition
                                                                                                            The following is a listing of the                        21 April 2011].
                                                  and work to further resolve this area of                                                                      9. Hofmann, J.N., Keifer, M.C., Furlong, C.E.,
                                                  unsettled science in the time remaining                 documents that are specifically
                                                                                                                                                                     De Roos, A.J., Farin., F.M., Fenske, R.A.,
                                                  for the completion of registration review               referenced in this document. The docket
                                                                                                                                                                     van Belle, G., Checkoway, H. (2009)
                                                  under section 3(g) of FIFRA.                            includes these documents and other                         Serum Cholinesterase Inhibition in
                                                     With respect to petitioners’ claim that              information considered by EPA,                             Relation to Paraoxonase-1 (PON1) Status
                                                  exposures to spray drift and volatilized                including documents that are referenced                    among Organophosphate-Exposed
                                                  chlorpyrifos present a risk from                        within the documents that are included                     Agricultural Pesticide Handlers./Environ
                                                  cholinesterase inhibition, EPA is                       in the docket, even if the referenced                      Health Perspect 117:1402–1408 (2009).
                                                  denying the Petition for the reasons                    document is not physically located in                      doi:10.1289/ehp.0900682. Available at
                                                  previously identified in EPA’s Spray                    the docket. For assistance in locating                     http://dx.doi.org/ [Online 9 June 2009].
                                                                                                          these other documents, please consult                 10. Eskenazi, B; Huen, K., Marks, A., Harley,
                                                  Drift Mitigation Decision of July 16,
                                                                                                                                                                     K.G., Bradman, A., Boyd Barr, D.,
                                                  2012 [EPA–HQ–OPP–2008–0850] and                         the technical person listed under FOR
                                                                                                                                                                     Holland, N. (2010) PON1 and
                                                  EPA’s interim response of July 15, 2014                 FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT.                               Neurodevelopment in Children from the
                                                  [EPA–HQ–OPP–2007–1005] addressing                       1. The Petition from NRDC and PANNA and                    CHAMACOS Study Exposed to
                                                  chlorpyrifos volatilization. In the Spray                    EPA’s various responses to it are                     Organophosphate Pesticides in Utero.
                                                  Drift Mitigation Decision, EPA                               available in docket number EPA–HQ–                    Environmental Health Perspectives. Vol.
                                                  determined that the chlorpyrifos                             OPP–2007–1005 available at http://                    118 (12): 1775–1781).
                                                  registrants’ adoption of label mitigation                    www.regulations.gov.                             11. Harley KG, Huen K, Schall RA, Holland
                                                  (in the form of label use rate reductions               2. FIFRA Scientific Advisory Panel (2016).                 NT, Bradman A, et al.,(2011) Association
                                                  and no spray buffer zones) eliminated                        ‘‘Chlorpyrifos: Analysis of Biomonitoring             of Organophosphate Pesticide Exposure
                                                                                                               Data’’. Available at: https://                        and Paraoxonase with Birth Outcome in
                                                  risk from cholinesterase inhibition as a
                                                                                                               www.epa.gov/sap/meeting-materials-                    Mexican-American Women. PLoS ONE
                                                  result of spray drift. As for risks                          april-19-21-2016-scientific-advisory-                 6(8): e23923. doi:10.1371/
                                                  presented by volatilized chlorpyrifos                        panel.                                                journal.pone.0023923.
                                                  that may occur following application,                   3. Furlong CE, Holland N, Richter RJ,                 12. IPCS (International Programme on
                                                  EPA’s July 15, 2014 interim response to                      Bradman A, Ho A, Eskenazi B (2006).                   Chemical Safety) 2005. Chemical-
                                                  the Petition explained that recent vapor                     PON1status of farmworker mothers and                  Specific Adjustment Factors for
                                                  phase inhalation studies for both                            children as a predictor of                            Interspecies Differences and Human
                                                  chlorpyrifos and chlorpyrifos-oxon                           organophosphate sensitivity.                          Variability: Guidance Document for Use
                                                  made clear that neither vapor phase                          Pharmacogenet Genomics. 2006 Mar;                     of Data in Dose/Concentration-Response
                                                  chlorpyrifos nor chlorpyrifos-oxon                           16(3):183–90.                                         Assessment. Harmonization Project
                                                                                                          4. Sultatos LG; Murphy SD, (1983). Kinetic                 Document No. 2. World Health
                                                  presents a risk of cholinesterase
                                                                                                               Analysis Of The Microsomal                            Organization, International Programme
                                                  inhibition. Specifically, those studies, as                  Biotransformation Of The                              on Chemical Safety, Geneva,
                                                  indicated in EPA’s memorandum,                               Phosphorothioate Insecticides                         Switzerland.
                                                  Chlorpyrifos: Reevaluation of the                            Chlorpyrifos And Parathion.                      13. U.S. EPA (2014). Guidance for Applying
                                                  Potential Risks from Volatilization in                       Fundemental and Applied Toxicology.                   Quantitative Data to Develop Data-
                                                  Consideration of Chlorpyrifos Parent                         3:16–21.                                              Derived Extrapolation Factors for
                                                  and Oxon Vapor Inhalation Toxicity                      5. U.S. EPA (2008). Draft Appendix E                       Interspecies and Intraspecies
                                                  Studies (Ref. 25), revealed that levels of                   available at http://www.epa.gov/scipoly/              Extrapolation. Available at https://
                                                  chlorpyrifos and chlorpyrifos-oxon in                        sap/meetings/2008/september/                          www.epa.gov/risk/guidance-applying-
jstallworth on DSK7TPTVN1PROD with NOTICES




                                                  vapor form are much lower than the                           appendixe.pdf. Draft Science Issue                    quantitative-data-develop-data-derived-
                                                                                                               Paper: Chlorpyrifos Hazard and Dose                   extrapolation-factors-interspecies-and.
                                                  levels seen in earlier aerosol studies that
                                                                                                               Response Characterization. August 21,            14. For additional information on the
                                                  are better suited for evaluating spray                       2008. Available at http://www.epa.gov/                Endocrine Disruptor Screening program
                                                  drift. Indeed, no cholinesterase                             scipoly/sap/meetings/2008/september/                  see http://www.epa.gov/endo/.
                                                  inhibition was observed in either                            chlorpyrifoscharacter.pdf.                       15. For information related to the status of
                                                  volatility study. What is clear from these              6. Holland, N., Furlong, C., Bastaki, M.,                  EDSP test orders/DCIs, status of EDSP
                                                  data is that the air cannot hold levels of                   Richter, R., Bradman, A., Huen, K.,                   OSRI: order recipient submissions and



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                                                  16592                         Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 64 / Wednesday, April 5, 2017 / Notices

                                                       EPA responses, and other EDSP assay                Washington, DC 20573, within twelve                     Agreement No.: 012477.
                                                       information see http://www.epa.gov/                days of the date this notice appears in                 Title: CMA CGM/HLAG U.S.-West
                                                       endo/pubs/toresources/index.htm.                   the Federal Register. Copies of the                   Med Slot Charter Agreement.
                                                  16. For available Data Evaluation Records                                                                       Parties: CMA CGM, S.A.; and Hapag
                                                                                                          agreements are available through the
                                                       (DERs) for EDSP Tier 1, see https://
                                                       www.epa.gov/endocrine-disruption/                  Commission’s Web site (www.fmc.gov)                   Lloyd AG.
                                                       endocrine-disruptor-screening-program-             or by contacting the Office of                          Filing Party: Draughn B. Arbona, Esq;
                                                       tier-1-screening-determinations-and.               Agreements at (202)-523–5793 or                       CMA CGM (America) LLC; 5701 Lake
                                                  17. Hoppin JA, Lubin JH, Rusiecki JA,                   tradeanalysis@fmc.gov.                                Wright Drive; Norfolk, VA 23502.
                                                       Sandler DP, Dosemeci M, Alavanja MC.                 Agreement No.: 010071–045.                            Synopsis: This Agreement authorizes
                                                       (2004) Cancer incidence among pesticide              Title: Cruise Lines International                   CMA CGM to charter space to HLAG in
                                                       applicators exposed to chlorpyrifos in             Association Agreement.                                the trade between Italy and Spain on the
                                                       the Agricultural Health Study. J Natl                Parties: A-Rosa Flussschiff GmbH;                   one hand, and the U.S. East Coast on the
                                                       Cancer Inst, 96(23), 1781–1789.
                                                                                                          Acromas Shipping, Ltd./Saga Shipping;                 other hand.
                                                       (hereinafter Lee et al., 2004).
                                                  18. U.S. EPA (2005). Guidelines for                     Aida Cruises; AMA Waterways;                            Agreement No.: 012478.
                                                       Carcinogen Risk Assessment. Available              American Cruise Lines, Inc.; Aqua                       Title: NYK/OOCL Space Charter
                                                       at http://www.epa.gov/raf/publications/            Expeditions Pte. Ltd.; Australian Pacific             Agreement.
                                                       pdfs/CANCER_GUIDELINES_FINAL_3-                    Touring Pty Ltd.; Avalon Waterways;                     Parties: Nippon Yusen Kaisha and
                                                       25-05.PDF.                                         Azamara Cruises; Carnival Cruise Lines;               Orient Overseas Container Line Limited.
                                                  19. Christenson, C. (2011). D388167,                    Celebrity Cruises, Inc.; Celestyal                      Filing Party: Joshua P. Stein; Cozen
                                                       Chlorpyrifos Carcinogenicity: Review of            Cruises; Costa Cruise Lines; Compagnie
                                                       Evidence from the U.S. Agricultural
                                                                                                                                                                O’Connor; 1200 Nineteenth Street NW.,
                                                                                                          Du Ponant; Croisieurope; Crystal                      Washington, DC 20036.
                                                       Health Study (AHS) Epidemiologic
                                                                                                          Cruises; Cunard Line; Disney Cruise                     Synopsis: The Agreement authorizes
                                                       Evaluations 2003–2009.
                                                  20. Weichenthal S, Moase C, Chan P (2010).              Line; Dream Cruises Management Ltd.;                  NYK to charter space to OOCL on the
                                                       A review of pesticide exposure and                 Emerald Waterways; French America                     service referred to as the PS1 and
                                                       cancer incidence in the agricultural               Line; Hapag-Lloyd Kreuzfahrten Gmbh;                  operated under THE Alliance
                                                       health study cohort. Cien Saude Colet.             Heritage River Journeys Pvt Ltd.;                     Agreement (FMC Agreement No.
                                                       2012 Jan;17(1):255–70. PubMed PMID:                Holland America Line; Luftner Cruises;                012439) and to enter into arrangements
                                                       22218559.                                          MSC Cruises; NCL Corporation; Oceania
                                                  21. Zheng Q, Olivier K, Won YK, Pope CN.
                                                                                                                                                                related to the chartering of such space.
                                                                                                          Cruises; P & O Cruises; P & O Cruises
                                                       (2000). Comparative cholinergic                    Australia; PandaW River Expeditions;                    By Order of the Federal Maritime
                                                       neurotoxicity of oral chlorpyrifos                                                                       Commission.
                                                                                                          Paul Gauguin Cruises; Pearl Seas
                                                       exposures in pre-weaning and adult rats.                                                                   Dated: March 31, 2017.
                                                       Toxicological Sciences, 55(1): 124–132.            Cruises; Princess Cruises; Pullmantur
                                                                                                          Cruises Ship Management Ltd.; Regent                  Rachel E. Dickon,
                                                  22. For additional information on the
                                                       organophosphate cumulative risk                    Seven Seas Cruises; Riviera Tours Ltd.;               Assistant Secretary.
                                                       assessment, see http://epa.gov/                    Royal Caribbean International; Scenic                 [FR Doc. 2017–06734 Filed 4–4–17; 8:45 am]
                                                       pesticides/cumulative/2006-op/op_cra_              Luxury Cruises & Tours Ltd.; Seabourn                 BILLING CODE 6731–AA–P
                                                       main.pdf.                                          Cruise Line; SeaDream Yacht Club;
                                                  23. U.S. EPA (2011). Chlorpyrifos:                      Shearings Holidays Ltd.; Silversea
                                                       Preliminary Human Health Risk                      Cruises, Ltd.; Star Cruises (HK) Limited;
                                                       Assessment for Registration. Available in                                                                FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
                                                       docket number EPA–HQ–OPP–2008–
                                                                                                          St. Helena Line/Andrew Weir Shipping
                                                       0850, http://www.regulations.gov/                  Ltd.; Tauck River Cruising; Thomson                   Change in Bank Control Notices;
                                                       #!documentDetail;D=EPA-HQ-OPP-2008-                Cruises; Travelmarvel; Tui Cruises                    Acquisitions of Shares of a Bank or
                                                       0850-0025.                                         Gmbh; Uniworld River Cruises, Inc.;                   Bank Holding Company
                                                  (23) For additional information on EPA’s                Venice Simplon-Orient-Express Ltd./
                                                       Harmonized Test Guidelines and                     Belmond; and Windstar Cruises.                          The notificants listed below have
                                                       international efforts at harmonization,              Filing Party: Andre Picciurro, Esq.                 applied under the Change in Bank
                                                       see http://www.epa.gov/opp00001/                   Kaye, Rose & Partners, LLP; Emerald                   Control Act (12 U.S.C. 1817(j)) and
                                                       science/guidelines.htm.                            Plaza, 402 West Broadway, Suite 1300;                 225.41 of the Board’s Regulation Y (12
                                                  (24) Available at http://www.regulations.gov                                                                  CFR 225.41) to acquire shares of a bank
                                                                                                          San Diego, CA 92101–3542.
                                                       in docket EPA–HQ–OPP–2008–0850.                                                                          or bank holding company. The factors
                                                                                                            Synopsis: The Amendment would
                                                    Authority: 7 U.S.C. 136 et seq. and 21                update the Agreement membership and                   that are considered in acting on the
                                                  U.S.C. 346a.                                            revise language in the Agreement                      notices are set forth in paragraph 7 of
                                                    Dated: March 29, 2017.                                regarding the election of the Chair and               the Act (12 U.S.C. 1817(j)(7)).
                                                  E. Scott Pruitt,                                        Vice Chair of the Agreement.                            The notices are available for
                                                  Administrator.                                            Agreement No.: 012476.                              immediate inspection at the Federal
                                                                                                            Title: HSDG/HLAG/CMA CGM Slot                       Reserve Bank indicated. The notices
                                                  [FR Doc. 2017–06777 Filed 4–4–17; 8:45 am]
                                                                                                          Charter Agreement.                                    also will be available for inspection at
                                                  BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
                                                                                                            Parties: Hamburg Sud; Hapag-Lloyd                   the offices of the Board of Governors.
                                                                                                          AG; and CMA CGM S.A.                                  Interested persons may express their
                                                                                                            Filing Party: Wayne Rohde; Cozen                    views in writing to the Reserve Bank
                                                  FEDERAL MARITIME COMMISSION                             O’Connor; 1200 19th Street NW.,                       indicated for that notice or to the offices
                                                                                                                                                                of the Board of Governors. Comments
jstallworth on DSK7TPTVN1PROD with NOTICES




                                                  Notice of Agreements Filed                              Washington, DC 20036.
                                                                                                            Synopsis: The Agreement authorizes                  must be received not later than April 21,
                                                    The Commission hereby gives notice                    HSDG and HLAG to charter space to                     2017.
                                                  of the filing of the following agreements               CMA CGM in the trade between the U.S.                   A. Federal Reserve Bank of
                                                  under the Shipping Act of 1984.                         East Coast on the one hand, and                       Minneapolis (Jacquelyn K. Brunmeier,
                                                  Interested parties may submit comments                  Colombia, Ecuador, Peru and Chile on                  Assistant Vice President) 90 Hennepin
                                                  on the agreements to the Secretary,                     the other hand. The Parties have                      Avenue, Minneapolis, Minnesota
                                                  Federal Maritime Commission,                            requested expedited review.                           55480–0291:


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Document Created: 2018-02-01 14:47:10
Document Modified: 2018-02-01 14:47:10
CategoryRegulatory Information
CollectionFederal Register
sudoc ClassAE 2.7:
GS 4.107:
AE 2.106:
PublisherOffice of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration
SectionNotices
ActionOrder.
DatesThis Order is effective April 5, 2017. Objections and requests for hearings must be received on or before June 5, 2017, and must be filed in accordance with the instructions provided in 40 CFR part 178 (see also Unit I. of the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION.)
ContactPesticide Re-Evaluation Division (7508P), Office of Pesticide Programs, Environmental Protection Agency, 1200 Pennsylvania Ave. NW., Washington, DC 20460-0001; telephone
FR Citation82 FR 16581 

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