New CSB guidance covers spill reporting under Part 1604
After receiving numerous requests, the Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board (CSB) finally posted guidance on 40 CFR 1604, the Reporting of Accidental Releases Standard, which took effect in March 2020. The 30-page document entitled, “CSB Guidance on 40 C.F.R. Part 1604,” is considered guidance and does not constitute a rulemaking. It offers:
- Information on CSB’s legislative authority,
- A history behind the legislation,
- A summary of the standard and the rule that created it,
- Guidance for owners and operators that may experience an accidental release, and
- Seven general and 38 specific questions and answers.
“Our goal is to make sure that owners and operators report chemical releases to the CSB as required by law,” explains CSB Interim Executive Steve Owens. “While many companies already have been complying with the rule and submitting their required reports, this guidance should help resolve any uncertainties about the reporting requirement. If someone is unsure about what to do, they should report, rather than risk violating the rule.”
More about the guidance
CSB explains that the latest guidance is provided so that owners and operators of facilities involved in the production, processing, handling, or storage of chemical substances may better understand the rule and comply with the requirement to submit a report to the CSB within eight hours after an accidental release has occurred that results in a fatality, serious injury, or substantial property damage.
The CSB’s guidance document:
- Clarifies key terms found in the reporting regulation, such as what constitutes regulated substances for the reporting requirement and the threshold amounts related to property damage for which reporting is required;
- Addresses specific scenarios and emphasizes that if an owner or operator is unsure about whether to report a release to the CSB, they should do so, rather than risk violating the rule by failing to report; and
- Makes clear that while there is no sanction for reporting an accidental release that, in retrospect, did not have to be reported, the failure to make a required report could result in an enforcement action.
Reported release data is made public
In July 2022, the CSB released its first set of data collected from the reporting rule, which includes all the reportable events received by the CSB since the rule went into effect. The CSB’s data is comprised of 162 incidents, of which 25 resulted in fatalities. In addition, 92 of the events resulted in serious injuries, and there were 68 instances of substantial property damage.
Where to go for more information
For a copy of the new guidance, the regulation, the reporting form and instructions, and the latest release data, go to the CSB website and click Investigations, then Incident Reporting Rule.
Key to remember
Regulation 40 CFR 1604, the Reporting of Accidental Releases Standard, took effect in March 2020. Long-awaited guidance from CSB is now available entitled, “CSB Guidance on 40 C.F.R. Part 1604.”