EPA Says Dispersants OK—But Major Questions Remain

This afternoon, on Day 72 of the Gulf spill, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) released the results of its first round of toxicity testing on the chemical dispersants being applied to the crude. Let’s break it down good news/bad news, because that seems kind of bloggy.

Good news: the EPA’s initial tests found that the dispersants Corexit 9500—the main dispersant BP has used in the Gulf—and other chemical brands ranged from “practically nontoxic” to “slightly toxic.” (OK, so “good news” is a relative term, but I’m trying my best to be more optimistic here.) Here’s what the EPA said in a statement:

EPA’s results indicated that none of the eight dispersants tested, including the product in use in the gulf, displayed biologically significant endocrine disrupting activity. While the dispersant products alone – not mixed with oil – have roughly the same impact on aquatic life, JD-2000 and Corexit 9500 were generally less toxic to small fish and JD-2000 and SAF-RON GOLD were least toxic to mysid shrimp. While this is important information to have, additional testing is needed to further inform the use of dispersants.

Here’s how the EPA defined toxic: lab workers determined what concentration of parts per million of the chemical—eight brands were tested—was needed to kill half the fish or shrimp in the EPA’s sample. (The EPA used shrimp and a small fish called inland silverside.) Corexit 9500—which is banned in Britain for use in oil spills because of concerns about its toxicity—was lethal to half the shrimp or fish at 130 parts per million, and therefor got the label “practically nontoxic. Dispersit SPC 1000, the worst-ranking chemical, killed half the fish or shrimp at just 2.9 parts per million, which is enough to qualify you as “moderately toxic.” You can find the full report here in PDF.

Paul Anastas, the EPA’s assistant administrator for research and development (and the father of green chemistry), said in a conference call with reporters this afternoon that the agency recognized that dispersants still carried side effects—and that they would continue to caution BP in their use. He noted that since the EPA Administrator had expressed concern about a month ago about the amount of dispersants BP had been using on the oil spill, the company had reduced the its volume by 70%. (Of course, during the same time period BP managed to partially cap the well and reduce the rate of the oil flow, which should have reduced the need for dispersants.) But the conclusion for the EPA, at least for now, was clear: using dispersants seemed to be better than not using them. “Oil is the number one enemy here,” Anastas said.

Bad news: where do I begin? There’s the fact that the EPA has only now completed the first round of toxicity tests on dispersants—on the 72nd day of the oil spill, after well over 100 million gallons of crude has spilled into the ocean, after BP has already poured nearly 1.6 million lbs. of chemical dispersants into the Gulf. Imagine if this is the way we tested drugs—let millions of people take it, and then come out with our safety recommendations. It certainly is a good thing that it turned out that BP’s favored brand, Corexit 9500, wasn’t overly toxic—would have been rather embarrassing if that didn’t turn out to be true.

Now, the EPA and industry might argue that Corexit 9500 and other dispersants have undergone toxicity tests before. Dispersants have to be tested to be included on the National Contingency Plan Product Schedule—the EPA’s list of accepted dispersants for oil spills. But that doesn’t mean they’ve actually been tested by the EPA, or by anyone independently. As Marian Wang points out over at ProPublica, the EPA has just been rubber-stamping safety tests carried out by industry:

The toxicity tests are part of the listing criteria only in the sense that they must be done and the paperwork must be filed with the EPA. But there’s no maximum toxicity for products to be included on the EPA’s list. That means the 14 products, once deemed to be above a certain threshold of effectiveness, could be placed on the list as long as toxicity tests were done and the paperwork was complete, regardless of what the toxicity tests found. (To be applied to an oil spill, however, a product that is authorized must still be approved by the federal on-scene coordinators and regional response teams.)

In other words, the EPA was taking the manufacturers’ word for it that their chemicals were safe—and only began testing independently a month into the spill. (Shades of the Mineral Management Service here, which let oil companies fill out environmental impact assessments themselves in pencil.) The toxicity definition used in this round of EPA tests is one the agency created on the spot—there was no toxic standard for dispersants before.

In addition, the EPA has yet to test the chemicals independently to see how effective they actually are at helping to clean up the oil—something that’s important, given that everyone recognizes that there’s a cost-benefit equation with dispersants. At least we now have an idea of the cost to the aquatic environment—though not fully, as the EPA hasn’t yet tested how toxic an oil/dispersant mix might be—but we don’t yet independently know the benefit. That might come later. Anastas stressed that the EPA planned additional rounds of tests—although given that the spill might well have ended by early August, when the relief wells are scheduled to be completed, it’s hard to say what benefit they might bring.

Indeed, the dispersants debacle is one more sign of just how unprepared both industry and the government were for a spill of this magnitude. The government let BP pour hundreds of thousands of gallons of chemical dispersants into the Gulf—and use them deep under water, something that had never been tried before—without any independent verification that this was safe. Maybe that’s acceptable in the early stages of a disaster—but on Day 72? That’s ridiculous.

Ultimately, though the EPA can’t bear that much blame. Our system for regulating environmental chemicals is wholly dysfunctional and completely in the favor of the industry. The EPA has only independently tested a relative handful of the tens of thousands of industrial chemicals approved for use now—otherwise, we depend on industry’s assurances. The situation is so badly skewed that the EPA was able to claim victory when it forced Nalco, the manufacturer of Corexit, to reveal the dispersant’s ingredients, which had been largely kept secret for business confidentiality, something that is regularly claimed by chemical companies. Think about that: in the midst of the greatest environmental disaster, the government had to force a company to reveal the ingredients of a chemical being poured into the oceans, and it still took weeks. As I wrote in a long story for TIME earlier this year, we need change in our chemical regulation system:

If scientists were slow to arrive at that conclusion, Washington has been even slower. The Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA), the 34-year-old vehicle for federal chemical regulation, has generally been a failure. The burden of proving chemicals dangerous falls almost entirely on the government, while industry confidentiality privileges built into the TSCA deny citizens and federal regulators critical information about how substances are made and what their effects are. In the years since the TSCA became law, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has been able to issue restrictions on only a handful of chemicals and has lacked the power to ban even a dangerous carcinogen like asbestos.

Until that happens, it’ll be mostly bad news for us.

Related Topics: BP dispersants, chemical dispersants, chemical regulation, Corexit, dispersants, EPA, EPA dispersants, Nalco, oil dispersants, oil spill dispersants, toxic dispersants, Oil, Regulation
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  • mkassowitz

    The chemical industry has for many years pushed to make “low levels of exposure” seem like a non-issue for us. Nothing could be further from the truth. Chemicals can accumulate in the body. Low levels of toxic exposures can become major health issues, period. Here’s a video clip that helps illustrate this: http://organicconnectmag.com/wp/2010/02/slow-death-by-rubber-duck/

  • http://davideconnollyjr.wordpress.com davideconnollyjr

    No, the dispersant is not OK. One of the conclusions Exxon came to, 20 years after the Exxon Valdez accident, is that the dispersant that they used after the spill actually caused more damage to the environment than if they had not used it. The dispersant used after the Deep water Horizon spill is outlawed in Great Britain because of its toxicity. The EPA has been instructed by the administration to say that the dispersant is safe, because anything else would be admitting that the administration did not have a handle on this spill during the early days, when the decision was made to drop one million plus barrels of toxic dispersant into the Gulf of Mexico. Underestimating the gravity of this spill, and then leaving it to British Petroleum to decide that a million plus barrels of highly toxic dispersant will poison our Gulf of Mexico was nothing short of idiotic.

  • cosmotopper777

    Although it’s beside the point, did anyone test the toxicity of the dispersed and invisible oil slick created by these chemicals? I wonder if anyone in the media will bother to find out? It doesn’t matter, it’s a technical detail…

    The most egregious offenders, other than those with material responsibility for this disaster are the legions of Obama sycophants who refuse to acknowledge both the President’s incompetence as Commander in Chief, and the adroit and methodical means chosen by his staff to cover it up. Demonize BP, but conveniently allow them to do the one thing they knew would buy them some time: sweep the oil along the sea-bottom, out of sight, and out of the public mind.

    The headline that never was: “Another Day That Will Live in Infamy…” A massive dirty bomb is detonated off our southern shores, and the President is caught paralyzed, a doe in the headlights.

    The idea that our President could both vilify BP for causing the disaster, and then obsequiously outsource the task of defending our nation from it, is beneath contempt. But that’s exactly what happened, and it is the obscenity which remains a work in progress.

    Now that the “A WHALE” is about to be approved for use at ground-zero, it seems the question of stopping the dispersants is still being put off, in the desperate hope that BP will find a way to plug the well before the picture of what could have, and should have been done within the first week: surround the leaking will within a perimeter of oil containment booms, and focus the preponderance of our oil skimming and extracting resources on a few square miles of ocean.

    Although it has been obvious to anyone with common sense from the beginning, dispersing the oil at the well-head was the worst possible strategy for containing the spill and protecting the Gulf. It is the equivalent of detonating a nuclear device above the target, rather than allowing it to hit the ground: far more devastating. And yet, to this day, protecting himself from exposure as the fraud that he actually is, remains Barrack Obama’s top priority, notwithstanding the unprecedented economic and ecological damage which has and will continue to result.

    For the record: I am a Republican who not only voted for Mr. Obama, I spent countless hours writing blogs for the “Republicans for Obama” group on his campaign website in 2008. I have watched in awe as this Charlatan has offered elaborate sophistry, in lieu of delivering on his lofty vision of transparency and bi-partisanship (that would supposedly elevate the politics of this nation out of it’s sewer), and gotten away with it. But faced with the empirical fact of an oil leak (which may yet escalate into an ecological extinction event if we are not lucky), his “talking point defense”, while successful with CNN and just about all in the mainstream media, goes unnoticed by Mother Nature.

    This blog attempts to deflect the blame away from our inspirational leader, and lay it off on the nameless (but fully employed) bureaucrats who’s negligence threatens to taint “the Dream Presidency”. It fails to mention the Oil Pollution Act of 1990 which explicitly assigns responsibility for containing this spill to the United States government (and whoever happens to be in charge of that entity at the moment), and never anticipated the notion that the President would simply opt out of that obligation. But even if that Act had never been conceived, was it conceivable that a clear and present danger of this magnitude would be handed off to someone else like a hot-potato?

    I never imagined that I would see the end of the Soviet Union in my lifetime, but I did. In 2007 and 2008 I came to terms with a Presidency utterly disastrous to this nation, and hoped (audaciously it seems) that Senator Obama’s candidacy offered a chance to recoup at least a part of what had been lost. Now I wonder if this country will survive his first term in some recognizable form.

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