Release date: 05/21/2010
Contact Information: Enesta Jones, jones.enesta@epa.gov,
202-564-4355, 202-564-7873 LaTisha Petteway,
petteway.latisha@epa.gov, 202-564-4355, 202-564-3191
WASHINGTON
- The U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) has reached a significant milestone toward the
completion of the agency’s dioxin reassessment with the
public release of its draft scientific report, EPA’s
Reanalysis of Key Issues Related to Dioxin Toxicity and
Response to NAS Comments.
The draft dioxin report is
EPA’s response to key comments and recommendations made by
the National Academy of Sciences on the agency’s draft
dioxin reassessment.
EPA is moving forward with
Administrator Lisa P. Jackson’s commitment to complete the
long-awaited dioxin reassessment. This comprehensive human
health and exposure risk assessment on dioxin, one of the
most toxic environmental contaminants, aims to protect the
health of the American public. The draft report will now
undergo scientific peer review by independent, external
experts as well as public review and comment.
EPA previously asked the National Academy
of Sciences (NAS), the science advisors to the nation, to
review EPA’s 2003 draft dioxin reassessment. The NAS
completed its review in 2006. The draft report released
today contains the agency’s response to key comments and
recommendations in the NAS’s 2006 report. EPA’s draft report
also includes significant new analyses that relate to issues
raised by the NAS, including potential cancer and non-cancer
human health effects that may result from exposures to
dioxins. Thus, this draft dioxin report includes an oral
reference dose (RfD) for TCDD -- the most well-studied and
considered to be among the most toxic of the dioxin-like
compounds. An RfD was not in the 2003 draft dioxin
reassessment.
As part of EPA’s commitment to scientific
quality, integrity, and transparency, EPA’s draft scientific
report will undergo external peer review by an expert panel
of scientists convened by EPA’s Science Advisory Board (SAB)
in July 2010. Public comments on this draft report are
encouraged, and a Federal Register Notice published today
provides details on how to submit comments. EPA will use the
feedback and recommendations of the expert panel, as well as
the public comments, to update and complete its draft dioxin
reassessment.
Dioxin is a general term that describes a
group of hundreds of chemicals that are highly persistent in
the environment. Dioxins are formed during combustion or
burning. Sources of dioxins include commercial or municipal
waste incineration; the burning of fuels like wood, coal, or
oil; and natural processes such as forest fires.
While dioxin levels in the United States
environment have been declining for the last 30 years due to
reductions in emissions from man-made sources, the chemicals
break down so slowly that dioxins from past releases will
still be in the environment for many years.
EPA and other federal agencies have
updated a series of questions and answers to provide the
public with general information on dioxins, including what
they are, where they can be found, and major sources of
dioxins. They also discuss possible effects of dioxin
exposure in humans, include advice about consumption of food
that might contain dioxins, and explain the review process
for the dioxin reassessment. To view the questions and
answers:
http://www.fda.gov/Food/FoodSafety/FoodContaminantsAdulteration/ChemicalContaminants/DioxinsPCBs/ucm077524.htm
To read the draft report:
http://www.epa.gov/dioxin
Federal Register Notice with details on
the public comment process:
http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR-2010-05-21/html/2010-12280.htm
EPA’s Risk Assessment Process:
http://epa.gov/riskassessment/basicinformation.htm#arisk
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