Title 7 › Chapter 6— INSECTICIDES AND ENVIRONMENTAL PESTICIDE CONTROL › Subchapter II— ENVIRONMENTAL PESTICIDE CONTROL › § 136q
The Administrator can make pesticide makers give information and money to keep products safe. The Administrator may require studies and label instructions about how to transport, store, and throw away a pesticide, its containers, and any rinse water or spill cleanup. If a pesticide’s registration is suspended or canceled, the Administrator can make rules or orders about who may store, move, or dispose of the pesticide, its containers, rinsate, or other cleanup materials. The Administrator can also require a recall if that is needed to protect health or the environment. The Administrator may ask the registrant to propose a voluntary recall plan and must get that plan within 60 days. If the plan is acceptable, the Administrator will approve it and order the recall. If not, the Administrator will set a mandatory recall plan that can apply to registrants, sellers, distributors, and successors. Any recall plan must say how far down the distribution chain the recall goes, give a timeline, and explain how the recall’s success will be checked. Rules can require people to provide storage sites, accept returned stocks, help with transport, and tell holders how to return the pesticide. A registrant who wants payment back for storage costs must quickly send a storage-and-disposal plan after suspension. Reimbursement rules are: none for costs before the plan; 100% for costs after plan submission or after cancellation, whichever is later, but before plan approval; 50% for costs during the 1-year after plan approval or cancellation, whichever is later; none for costs during the 3-year period that starts the 366th day after approval or cancellation; and 25% starting the first day of the 5th year after approval or cancellation until a state disposal permit is issued or an approved alternative plan is in place. The Administrator must make container design rules within 3 years and require compliance within 5 years. The Administrator must also make procedures for removing pesticides from containers (for example triple-rinsing) within 3 years and may exempt household-only products. States may not fully take over enforcement related to rinsing rules until 5 years after the rule unless the Administrator finds their program adequate. The Administrator must study ways to promote return, refill, reuse, cleaner formulas, and bulk storage and report to Congress within 2 years. Agreements between buyers and sellers about who pays for storage, transport, or disposal are allowed. Federal waste law still applies.
Full Legal Text
Agriculture — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
7 U.S.C. § 136q
Title 7 — Agriculture
Last Updated
Apr 3, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60