2025-19920Proposed Rule

EPA Syncs Chemical Rules with New OSHA Safety Standards

Published Date: 11/17/2025

Proposed Rule

Summary

The EPA is updating hazardous chemical reporting rules to match OSHA’s new 2024 safety standards. This helps businesses report chemicals more clearly and keeps communities and first responders safer. If no one objects by December 17, 2025, these changes will roll out smoothly without extra delays or costs.

Analyzed Economic Effects

2 provisions identified: 2 benefits, 0 costs, 0 mixed.

Less paperwork for facilities — copy SDS info

If your business must prepare a Safety Data Sheet (SDS), EPA proposes you can copy the hazard categories directly from the SDS onto EPCRA inventory forms because EPA will adopt OSHA's 2024 Hazard Communication hazard categories (increasing EPCRA categories to match OSHA's detailed categories). EPA estimates 465,692 facilities are affected and says this action reduces respondent burden by 169,753 hours (total estimated burden remains 6,793,536 hours and total estimated cost $311,066,556 per year). Submit comments by December 17, 2025.

More detailed hazard info for responders

EPA proposes to adopt OSHA's 2024 Hazard Communication Standard categories (including more granular hazard categories and changes like replacing Flammable Aerosols with Aerosols and Chemicals Under Pressure) so first responders and communities get more specific hazard information on EPCRA reports. EPA says this will improve first responder and community safety and reduce confusion when using SDSs for inventory reports. Comments are due by December 17, 2025.

Your PRIA Score

Score Hidden

Personalized for You

How does this regulation affect your finances?

Sign up for a PRIA Policy Scan to see your personalized alignment score for this federal register document and every other regulation we track. We analyze your financial profile against policy provisions to show you exactly what matters to your wallet.

Free to start

Key Dates

Published Date
Comments Due
11/17/2025
12/17/2025

Department and Agencies

Department
Independent Agency
Agency
Environmental Protection Agency
Source: View HTML

Related Federal Register Documents

Previous / Next Documents

Back to Federal Register

Take It Personal

Get Your Personalized Policy View

Start a Free Government Policy Watch to see how policy affects your household, then upgrade to PRIA Full Coverage for year-round monitoring.

Already have an account? Sign in