Title 15 › Chapter CHAPTER 53— - TOXIC SUBSTANCES CONTROL › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER VI— - FORMALDEHYDE STANDARDS FOR COMPOSITE WOOD PRODUCTS › § 2697
Sets limits on how much formaldehyde can come from certain wood panels and finished products sold or made in the United States, and requires the EPA Administrator to write rules to make those limits work. Key terms used are: finished good (a final product that contains certain panels), hardwood plywood, medium-density fiberboard (MDF), particleboard, hardboard, manufactured home, modular home, recreational vehicle, laminated product, “no-added formaldehyde-based resin,” and “ultra low-emitting formaldehyde resin” (each name is defined in the rules). The main limits (measured by the ASTM test methods named in the rules) are: hardwood plywood with veneer core 0.05 parts per million (ppm); hardwood plywood with composite core 0.08 ppm until July 1, 2012 and 0.05 ppm after that date; medium-density fiberboard 0.21 ppm until July 1, 2011 and 0.11 ppm after that date; thin MDF 0.21 ppm until July 1, 2012 and 0.13 ppm after that date; and particleboard 0.18 ppm until July 1, 2011 and 0.09 ppm after that date. The standards start to apply 180 days after the EPA issues the implementing rules, unless the EPA issues a sell-through rule. The law tells EPA how to measure and check compliance (quarterly lab tests and ongoing quality-control tests, with options to accept equivalent methods), and requires EPA to issue rules by January 1, 2013 covering labeling, chain-of-custody, sell-through rules, testing and third-party certification, auditing and reporting, recordkeeping, enforcement, and related topics. It also sets specific lower emission levels and testing rules for products made with “no-added formaldehyde” or “ultra low-emitting” resins, including exact ppm limits and pass/fail criteria. Many building and structural products are carved out, such as certain structural plywood and panels, oriented strand board, glued laminated lumber, prefabricated I-joists, finger-jointed lumber, wood packaging, and composite wood inside brand-new vehicles not yet sold or registered, plus windows with less than 5% composite wood by volume and exterior or garage doors with less than 3% by volume (or made with the no-added or ultra-low resins). EPA must update certain customs rules by July 1, 2013, and anyone who breaks these requirements is treated as committing a prohibited act under the enforcement law.
Full Legal Text
Commerce and Trade — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
15 U.S.C. § 2697
Title 15 — Commerce and Trade
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73