Two Countries Collaborate to Reduce Toxicity from the Great Lakes Basin
Signed in 1997, the Great Lakes Binational Toxics
Strategy: Canada-United States Strategy for the Virtual
Elimination of Persistent Toxic Substances in the Great
Lakes (Binational Toxics Strategy) is an international
agreement between Canada and the United States that
seeks the reduction and virtual elimination of persistent
toxic substances from the Great Lakes Basin. Battelle
has provided strategic planning and technical support for
the implementation of the strategy since its inception.
Implementation has been a collaborative process involving
Environment Canada (EC), the United States Environmental
Protection Agency (US EPA), and stakeholders
from industry, academia, state/provincial and local
governments, Tribes, First Nations, and environmental
and community groups.
The Binational Toxics Strategy sets challenge goals to
reduce 12 Level I substances within a 10-year time frame
and identifies a number of Level II substances for which
challenge goals are not specified but for which pollution
prevention activities to reduce levels in the environment
are encouraged. The Strategy also includes a specified
four-step analytical process for the Level I substances
that requires an assessment of sources and releases,
programs and regulations, reduction opportunities, and
implementation. The early focus of Battelle's support for
the Binational Toxics Strategy included strategic planning
of implementation activities, development of stakeholder
recruitment materials, and facilitation and technical
support for establishing chemical-specific workgroups
and a cross-cutting Integration Workgroup. Substancespecific
workgroups were created in 1998 to oversee the
analytical process and to pursue opportunities for substance
reductions both inside and outside the Great
Lakes Basin.
For some of the substances, in addition to the requirement
of applying the four-step analytical process,
the Strategy includes target dates for reporting on the
challenge goals. In the first few years of the Strategy,
Battelle gathered information and drafted reports that
formed the technical basis for both the four-step analytical
process as well as the reporting on the challenge goals.
As implementation proceeded, Battelle was responsible
for: developing technical background papers to support
workgroups, facilitating workgroup and other meetings
to help EPA respond to technical questions, collecting
and interpreting information to inform workgroup
reports and decisions, compiling annual strategy implementation
progress reports, drafting outreach materials,
and assisting EPA in preparing for public meetings.
Recent support includes developing a process for reassessing
the status of Level I substances and also developing
a process for nominating new substances that present
threats to the Great Lakes ecosystem, as called for in the
Strategy.
More information about the Binational Toxics Strategy
is available at www.epa.gov/glnpo/bns or
www.binational.net. For more information about
Battelle's support for the Binational Toxics
Strategy, please contact Ms. Amy Thomas at
(614) 424-3431, thomasa@battelle.org.
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