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What Is The Toxic Release Inventory?
TRI was established under the Federal Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act of 1986. Facilities report their TRI information annually to the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and to the state in which they are located. Reports must be submitted by July 1 of the following year.
Who Must Report to TRI?
A facility must report to TRI if it:
What Type of Information Must Be Reported?
Among other things, a facility must report the:
What Types of Chemicals Are Required To Be Reported?
Over 600 chemicals and chemical categories are included in the reporting list. Chemicals are included on the list based upon acute or chronic human health or environmental effects.
What Are The Benefits and Uses of TRI Data?
TRI data can be used in a variety of ways:
What Are The Limitations of The Data?
Only a small portion of industries releasing chemicals into the environment are required by EPA to submit the TRI report. The list of chemicals is also not inclusive of all chemicals known to have significant public health or environmental impact.
No special monitoring is required to calculate emission or transfer totals. TRI, therefore, allows emission estimations based upon mass balance calculations, published emission factors or other approaches.
If a chemical release or transfer estimate was below 1000 pounds, companies were allowed to report ranges of 1-10, 11-499, and 500-999 pounds. In such cases, staff entered the midpoint of the range in the State database. These estimations may, therefore, be above or below the actual figure.
Release estimates alone are not sufficient to determine exposure, risk of exposure, or calculate potential adverse health or environmental effects.
The TRI list of chemicals requiring reporting, and methods required to estimate emissions, have changed significantly through the nine year history of TRI reporting. Because of changes in chemical usage, facilities may be required to submit TRI reports for some years and not others. These changes make accurate multiyear comparisons of statewide release or transfer totals difficult.
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