[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 40, Volume 28]
[Revised as of July 1, 2003]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 40CFR710.58]

[Page 58-59]
 
                   TITLE 40--PROTECTION OF ENVIRONMENT
 
         CHAPTER I--ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY (CONTINUED)
 
PART 710--TSCA CHEMICAL INVENTORY REGULATIONS--Table of Contents
 
        Subpart C--Inventory Update Reporting for 2006 and Beyond
 
Sec. 710.58   Confidentiality.

    (a) Any person submitting information under this subpart may assert 
a business confidentiality claim for the information at the time it is 
submitted. These claims will apply only to the information submitted 
with the claim. New confidentiality claims, if necessary, must be 
asserted with regard to information submitted during the next submission 
period. Guidance for asserting confidentiality claims is provided in the 
instruction booklet identified in Sec. 710.59. Information claimed as 
confidential in accordance with this section will be treated and 
disclosed in accordance with the procedures in part 2 of this chapter.
    (b) Chemical identity. A person may assert a claim of 
confidentiality for the chemical identity of a specific chemical 
substance only if the identity of that substance is treated as 
confidential in the Master Inventory File as of the time the report is 
submitted for that substance under this subpart. The following steps 
must be taken to assert a claim of confidentiality for the identity of a 
reportable chemical substance:
    (1) The submitter must submit with the report detailed written 
answers to the following questions signed and dated by an authorized 
official.
    (i) What harmful effects to your competitive position, if any, do 
you think would result from the identity of the chemical substance being 
disclosed in connection with reporting under this subpart? How could a 
competitor use such information? Would the effects of disclosure be 
substantial? What is the causal relationship between the disclosure and 
the harmful effects?
    (ii) How long should confidential treatment be given? Until a 
specific date, the occurrence of a specific event, or permanently? Why?
    (iii) Has the chemical substance been patented? If so, have you 
granted licenses to others with respect to the patent as it applies to 
the chemical substance? If the chemical substance has been patented and 
therefore disclosed through the patent, why should it be treated as 
confidential?
    (iv) Has the identity of the chemical substance been kept 
confidential to the extent that your competitors do not know it is being 
manufactured or imported for a commercial purpose by anyone?
    (v) Is the fact that the chemical substance is being manufactured 
(including imported) for a commercial purpose available to the public, 
for example in technical journals, libraries, or State, local, or 
Federal agency public files?
    (vi) What measures have been taken to prevent undesired disclosure 
of the

[[Page 59]]

fact that the chemical substance is being manufactured (including 
imported) for a commercial purpose?
    (vii) To what extent has the fact that this chemical substance is 
manufactured (including imported) for commercial purposes been revealed 
to others? What precautions have been taken regarding these disclosures? 
Have there been public disclosures or disclosures to competitors?
    (viii) Does this particular chemical substance leave the site of 
manufacture (including import) in any form, e.g., as product, effluent, 
emission? If so, what measures have been taken to guard against the 
discovery of its identity?
    (ix) If the chemical substance leaves the site in a product that is 
available to the public or your competitors, can the substance be 
identified by analysis of the product?
    (x) For what purpose do you manufacture (including import) the 
substance?
    (xi) Has EPA, another Federal agency, or any Federal court made any 
pertinent confidentiality determinations regarding this chemical 
substance? If so, please attach copies of such determinations.
    (2) If any of the information contained in the answers to the 
questions listed in paragraph (b)(1) of this section is asserted to 
contain confidential business information, the submitter must clearly 
identify the information that is claimed confidential by marking the 
specific information on each page with a label such as ``confidential 
business information,'' ``proprietary,'' or ``trade secret.''
    (c) Site identity. A submitter may assert a claim of confidentiality 
for a site only if the linkage of the site with a reportable chemical is 
confidential and not publicly available. The following steps must be 
taken to assert a claim of confidentiality for a site identity:
    (1) The submitter must submit with the report detailed written 
answers to the following questions signed and dated by an authorized 
official:
    (i) Has site information been linked with a chemical identity in any 
other Federal, state or local reporting scheme? For example, is the 
chemical identity linked to a facility in a filing under the Emergency 
Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act (EPCRA) section 311, namely 
through a Material Safety Data Sheet (MSDS)? If so, identify all such 
schemes. Was the linkage claimed as confidential in any of these 
instances?
    (ii) What harmful effect, if any, to your competitive position do 
you think would result from the identity of the site and the chemical 
substance being disclosed in connection with reporting under this 
subpart? How could a competitor use such information? Would the effects 
of disclosure be substantial? What is the causal relationship between 
the disclosure and the harmful effects?
    (2) If any of the information contained in the answers to the 
questions listed in paragraph (c)(1) of this section is asserted to 
contain confidential business information, the submitter must clearly 
identify the information that is claimed confidential by marking the 
specific information on each page with a label such as ``confidential 
business information,'' ``proprietary,'' or ``trade secret.''
    (d) If no claim of confidentiality is indicated on the reporting 
form submitted to EPA under this subpart, or if confidentiality claim 
substantiation required under paragraphs (c) and (d) of this section is 
not submitted with the reporting form, EPA may make the information 
available to the public without further notice to the submitter.