[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 16, Volume 2]
[Revised as of January 1, 2003]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 16CFR1304.5]

[Page 382-383]
 
                     TITLE 16--COMMERCIAL PRACTICES
 
             CHAPTER II--CONSUMER PRODUCT SAFETY COMMISSION
 
PART 1304--BAN OF CONSUMER PATCHING COMPOUNDS CONTAINING RESPIRABLE FREE-FORM ASBESTOS--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 1304.5  Findings.

    (a) The degree and nature of the risk of injury. The Commission 
finds that the risk of injury which this regulation is designed to 
eliminate or reduce is from cancer, including lung cancer and 
mesothelioma. In assessing the degree and nature of the risk of injury 
to consumers, the Commission has reviewed experimental data and human 
experience information. The Commission noted that in the scientific 
literature, there is general agreement that there is no known threshold 
level below which exposure to respirable free-form asbestos would be 
considered safe. Further, on the basis of such scientific opinion, it 
appears to the Commission that children are particularly vulnerable to 
carcinogens because of their longer potential lifetime and their rapid 
rate of growth. In areas of the country where asbestos may not be 
prevalent in the environment, the major risk of exposure for children 
and others may occur in the household. In areas of the country where 
more asbestos fibers are present in the environment, the public is 
exposed to additional risks from the presence of asbestos fibers in 
households and other consumer environments. The Commission concluded on 
the basis of these factors that consumer patching compounds containing 
respirable free-form asbestos present an unreasonable risk of injury to 
the public. In addition, a risk assessment was made. For purposes of 
this assessment, the Commission considered the use of patching compounds 
by the consumer, for six hours a day four times a year, to be a high yet 
reasonably foreseeable exposure. The increased risk of death from 
respiratory cancer induced by this exposure is estimated at between 10 
and 2,000 per million. For five years of exposure at these levels, the 
risk increases geometrically and is estimated at between 1,000 and 
12,000 per million. The lower estimate of 10 per million is closer to 
the actual risk for a one-year exposure. Nevertheless, in view of the 
seriousness of the injury and the cumulative effects of asbestos 
exposure, even this minimum figure represents an unacceptable risk. The 
Commission believes that reducing exposure to respirable free-form 
asbestos in the home represents a substantial decrease in risk to 
consumers, since, for many people, the major exposure to inhalable 
asbestos is in the home.
    (b) Products subject to the ban. Consumer patching compounds as 
defined in Sec. 1034.3 (d), (e), (f) includes such products as drywall 
spackling compounds and tape joint compounds (commonly known as ``joint 
cement'' or ``tape joint mud''). The Commission estimates annual 
shipments of patching compounds subject to the ban at approximately 30-
50 million ``units,'' or individual packages, of various sizes from 0.5 
to 25 pounds (dry) or 0.5 to 5 gallons (wet). The Commission believes 
that about half the patching compounds sold in 1977, and intended for 
sale to or use or enjoyment by consumers, were formulated with asbestos. 
Many others containing significant levels of asbestos contamination will 
also be affected by the ban.
    (c) Need of the public for the products and effects of the rule on 
their utility, cost and availability. Patching compounds, though used 
primarily by commercial construction workers, are also used by 
consumers, and are used for the patching and sealing of cracks and 
joints in and around the household and in other consumer environments 
either by consumers or professional applicators. The compounds are used 
to cover areas on gypsum drywall which might otherwise be aesthetically 
undesirable or which might lead to structural damage, energy loss or 
lower property value. The asbestos in these compounds acts as a 
structural reinforcing agent which helps to reduce cracking and 
shrinkage of the compound over time, and which renders the compound more 
pliable or ``workable'' upon application.
    (1) Utility. The elimination of asbestos from these products may 
result in the increased use or new development of substitutes which have 
similar properties to those of asbestos, or which impart similar 
qualities to the product. In current reformulations, asbestos is 
replaced by a combination of substances, of which the most common is 
attapulgite, a fibrous clay. Some non-

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asbestos formulations are reportedly not as effective as those 
containing asbestos in controlling shrinkage and cracking over time. The 
workability of some compounds may be diminished as well. This may 
adversely affect the utility derived from the product by consumers, and 
by professional contractors until such time as improved formulations are 
developed and available to end-users.
    (2) Cost. Asbestos-free patching compound formulations may require 
more time to use. This would tend to increase the direct labor costs of 
residential and other construction and renovation. The expected increase 
is between 10 and 25 percent. The Commission estimates that the annual 
labor cost of drywall finishing in these consumer environments is on the 
order of $1 billion. The use of nonasbestos patching compound 
formulations in all applications may increase this cost by $50-$125 
million, assuming that roughly half the current labor costs (i.e., that 
portion now associated with the use of asbestos formulations) are 
affected by the 10-25 percent increase. The burden of this cost is 
expected to fall directly on owners of existing homes who may engage in 
some renovation, and on purchasers of newly-renovated or newly-
constructed homes. These increased costs are expected to diminish over 
time as formulations improve and as applicators become more accustomed 
to using nonasbestos formulations. The use of asbestos substitutes may 
also lead to cost increases in the manufacture of patching compounds. 
The Commission estimates this cost, which may vary widely from firm to 
firm, at an average of 5-15 percent. This is made up primarily of 
increased costs of raw materials and of formulation research and 
development. It is expected that the price of many patching compounds 
may rise as a result. Producers, distributors, and retailers of patching 
compounds may also have to incur costs associated with the disposal of 
products in inventory. The Commission estimates that the wholesale value 
of manufacturers' and distributors' inventories at the time the ban 
becomes effective will be approximately $15 million. These costs may be 
reflected in the prices charged for asbestos-free patching compound 
formulations, and in the prices of other drywall and paint products. It 
appears that, because of competitive pressure from asbestos-containing 
compounds, producers of asbestos-free formulations have not yet passed 
on to purchasers their increased costs. If the increased production 
costs of asbestos-free formulations can be passed on completely as a 
result of the ban, the total annual price effect for the year following 
the issuance of the ban may be $10-$60 million. The magnitude of this 
effect may be reduced significantly in successive years following the 
issuance of the ban as producers' development costs are amortized, as 
raw materials become more widely available, and as price competition is 
strengthened because of market pressure and economies of sale associated 
with production.
    (3) Availability. The supply of asbestos substitutes, particularly 
attapulgite clay and relatively uncontaminated talc, for use in the 
manufacture of patching compounds may be insufficient to meet the short-
run demand which is expected to be stimulated by the promulgation of the 
ban. Further, many small producers probably lack the technical 
capability to reformulate their products, and may be forced to cease 
production, at least until formulations of satisfactory cost and 
performance are developed. This may affect some professional 
contractors. In the short run, consumers may be indirectly affected by 
delays in drywall finishing and building completion.
    (d) Any means of achieving the objective of the ban while minimizing 
adverse effects on competition or disruption or dislocation of 
manufacturing and other commercial practices consistent with the public 
health and safety. The adverse effects of the ban on patching compounds 
containing asbestos is reduced by limiting the ban to intentionally 
added asbestos. Other alternatives such as limiting the scope of the ban 
only to products purchased and used by consumers or to issuing a ban 
with a later effective date, were considered by the Commission. However, 
none was found that would cause less disruption or dislocation of 
manufacturing and other commercial practices, consistent with public 
health and safety.

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