[Federal Register Volume 63, Number 224 (Friday, November 20, 1998)]
[Notices]
[Pages 64481-64484]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 98-31070]


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ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY

[PF-846; FRL-6043-9]


BASF Corporation; Pesticide Tolerance Petition Filing

AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).

ACTION: Notice.

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SUMMARY: This notice announces the initial filing of pesticide 
petitions proposing the establishment of regulations for residues of a 
certain pesticide chemical in or on various food commodities.
DATES: Comments, identified by the docket control number PF-846, must 
be received on or before December 21, 1998.
ADDRESSES: By mail submit written comments to: Information and Records 
Integrity Branch, Public Information and Services Divison (7502C), 
Office of Pesticides Programs, Environmental Protection Agency, 401 M 
St., SW., Washington, DC 20460. In person bring comments to: Rm. 119, 
CM #2, 1921 Jefferson Davis Highway, Arlington, VA.
    Comments and data may also be submitted electronically by following 
the instructions under SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION. No confidential 
business information should be submitted through e-mail.
    Information submitted as a comment concerning this document may be 
claimed confidential by marking any part or all of that information as 
``Confidential Business Information'' (CBI). CBI should not be 
submitted through e-mail. Information marked as CBI will not be 
disclosed except in accordance with procedures set forth in 40 CFR part 
2. A copy of the comment that does not contain CBI must be submitted 
for inclusion in the public record. Information not marked confidential 
may be disclosed publicly by EPA without prior notice. All written 
comments will be available for public inspection in Rm. 119 at the 
address given above, from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m., Monday through Friday, 
excluding legal holidays.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Joanne I. Miller, Product Manager 23, 
Herbicide Branch, Registration Division (7505C), Office of Pesticide 
Programs, Environmental Protection Agency, 401 M St., SW, Washington, 
DC 20460. Office location, telephone number, and e-mail address: Rm. 
237, Crystal Mall #2, 1921 Jefferson Davis Highway, Arlington, VA 
22202, (703) 305-6224; e-mail: [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: EPA has received pesticide petitions as 
follows proposing the establishment and/or amendment of regulations for 
residues of certain pesticide chemical in or on various food 
commodities under section 408 of the Federal Food, Drug, and Comestic 
Act (FFDCA), 21 U.S.C. 346a. EPA has determined that this petition 
contains data or information regarding the elements set forth in 
section 408(d)(2); however, EPA has not fully evaluated the sufficiency 
of the submitted data at this time or whether the data supports 
granting of the petition. Additional data may be needed before EPA 
rules on the petition.
    The official record for this notice of filing, as well as the 
public version, has been established for this notice of filing under 
docket control number [PF-846] (including comments and data submitted 
electronically as described below). A public version of this record, 
including printed, paper versions of electronic comments, which does 
not include any information claimed as CBI, is available for inspection 
from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m., Monday through Friday, excluding legal 
holidays. The official record is located at the address in 
``ADDRESSES'' at the beginning of this document.
    Electronic comments can be sent directly to EPA at:
    [email protected]


    Electronic comments must be submitted as an ASCII file avoiding the 
use of special characters and any form of encryption. Comment and data 
will also be accepted on disks in Wordperfect 5.1/6.1 file format or 
ASCII file format. All comments and data in electronic form must be 
identified by the docket control number (PF-846) and appropriate 
petition number. Electronic comments on this notice may be filed online 
at many Federal Depository Libraries.

List of Subjects

    Environmental protection, Agricultural commodities, Food additives, 
Feed additives, Pesticides and pests, Reporting and recordkeeping 
requirements.

    Dated: November 4, 1998.

James Jones,

Director, Registration Division, Office of Pesticide Programs.

Summary of Petition

    The petitioner summary of the pesticide petition is printed below 
as required by section 408(d)(3) of the FFDCA. The summary of the 
petition was prepared by the petitioner and represents the views of the 
petitioner. EPA is publishing the petition summaries verbatim without 
editing them in any way. The petition summary announces the 
availability of a description of the analytical methods available to 
EPA for the detection and measurement of the pesticide chemical 
residues or an explanation of why no such method is needed.

 BASF Corporation

PP 6F 4604 and 4F 3041/FAP 4H5428

    EPA has received pesticide petitions (PP 6F 4604 and 4F 3041/FAP 
4H5428) from BASF Corporation, 26 Davis Drive, Research Triangle Park, 
P.O. Box 13528, NC 27709, proposing pursuant to section 408 (d) of the 
Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, 21 U.S.C. 346a(d), to amend 40 
CFR 180.227 by establishing and revising tolerances for residues of the 
herbicide dicamba (3,6-dichloro-o-anisic acid) and its two metabolites; 
3,6-dichloro-5-hydroxy-o-anisic acid and 3,6-dichloro-2-hydroxybenzoic 
acid. The tolerances requested for residues in or on the following raw 
agricultural commodities are described as follows:
    1. Revise tolerances for residues of dicamba (3,6-dichloro-o-anisic 
acid) and its metabolite 3,6-dichloro-5-hydroxy-o-anisic acid in or on: 
barley grain to 6 ppm, barley straw to 15 ppm; cottonseed to 3 ppm; 
wheat grain to 2 ppm, wheat straw to 30 ppm.
    2. Establish new tolerances for residues of dicamba (3,6-dichloro-
o-anisic acid) and its metabolite 3,6-dichloro-5-hydroxy-o-anisic acid 
in or on: barley hay at 2 ppm, corn, field, forage at 3 ppm; corn, 
field, stover at 3 ppm, corn, pop, stover at 3 ppm;

[[Page 64482]]

cottonseed meal at 5 ppm; Crop Group 17 (grass forage, fodder, and hay) 
forage at 125 ppm and hay at 200 ppm; oats forage at 80 ppm, oats hay 
at 20 ppm; wheat forage at 80 ppm, wheat hay at 20 ppm.
    3. Revise tolerances for residues of dicamba (3,6-dichloro-o-anisic 
acid) and its metabolite 3,6-dichloro-2-hydroxybenzoic acid in or on: 
asparagus to 4 ppm.
    4. Revise tolerances for residues of dicamba (3,6-dichloro-o-anisic 
acid) and its metabolites; 3,6-dichloro-2-hydroxybenzoic acid and 3,6-
dichloro-5-hydroxy-o-anisic acid in or on: soybean seed to 10 ppm.
    5. Establish new tolerances for residues of dicamba (3,6-dichloro-
o-anisic acid) and its metabolites; 3,6-dichloro-2-hydroxybenzoic acid 
and 3,6-dichloro-5-hydroxy-o-anisic acid in or on: aspirated grain 
fractions at 5,100 ppm, and soybean hulls at 13 ppm.
    6. Delete the following tolerances: grasses, hay at 40 ppm; 
grasses, pasture at 40 ppm; and grasses, rangeland at 40 ppm as these 
tolerances are being replaced by Crop Group 17 in point 2.
    The proposed analytical methods involve extraction, partition, 
clean-up and detection of residues by gas chromatography/electron 
capture detector (gc/ecd). EPA has determined that the petition 
contains data or information regarding the elements set forth in 
section 408(d)(2) of the FFDCA; however, EPA has not fully evaluated 
the sufficiency of the submitted data at this time or whether the data 
supports granting of the petition. Additional data may be needed before 
EPA rules on the petition.

A. Residue Chemistry

    1. Plant metabolism. Metabolism is adequately understood on the 
basis of soybean, asparagus, cotton, sugarcane and published data on 
grass. In the majority of registered crops, the major metabolite is the 
3,6 dichloro-5-hydroxy-o-anisic acid. Tolerances are expressed as the 
dicamba parent and/or the respective 5-hydroxy and 2-hydroxy 
metabolites depending on the raw agricultural commodity of concern.
    2. Analytical method. BASF Crop, has provided suitable 
independently validated analytical methods for detecting and measuring 
levels of dicamba and its metabolites in or on food with a limit of 
detection that allows monitoring of food with residues at or above the 
levels described in these and the existing tolerances. Adequate methods 
are available in PAM-II for enforcement purposes. The analytical method 
involves extraction, partition, clean-up and detection of residues by 
gas chromatography/electron capture detector (gc/ecd).
    3. Magnitude of residues--i. Plant. Residue trials have been 
conducted with dicamba on the crops for expanded use requested in the 
subject petitions. Multiple salts of dicamba were studied in side-by-
side testing to confirm that no effect on magnitude of the residues was 
caused by the salt formulation type of the dicamba. The tolerances 
listed in the first paragraph (section 1) are based on the maximum 
expected residue from geographically representative field trial data.
    Only newly generated data, or data not implicated in the CRAVEN 
Laboratories indictment are used to support the subject petitions.
    ii. Animal. The amended uses proposed do not yield secondary 
residues in meat and milk above the tolerances already published under 
40 CFR 180.227. Data from metabolism and feeding studies in poultry 
have established that the maximum expected dietary burden from crops 
treated with dicamba will not result in quantifiable residues above the 
limits of the analytical method.

B. Toxicological Profile

    Data are provided that are representative of the mammalian toxicity 
effects of dicamba and are part of the many studies conducted to 
support BASF Corp. assertion of safety of dicamba to humans.
    1. Acute toxicity--i. Oral rat LD50: 1879 mg/kg (m); 
1581 mg/kg (f).
    ii. Acute dermal rat LD50: > 2,000 kg/kg (m/f).
    iii. Acute inhalation rat LC50: > 9.6 mg/L (m/f).
    iv. Primary eye irritation: Extremely irritating and corrosive to 
the eye.
    v. Primary dermal irritation rabbits. Not a primary skin irritant.
    vi. Dermal sensitization guinea pigs. Moderate potential to cause 
dermal sensitization.
    vii. Acute neurotoxicity. no observed adverse effect level (NOAEL) 
< 300 milligrams/kilogram (mg/kg) (low dose). No neuropathological 
effects were found.
    2. Genotoxicty-- Ames- negative. In vitro chromosome aberration in 
Chinese Hamster Ovary: Negative; Sex-linked recessive lethal in 
Drosophila: Negative; Aberrations in rat bone marrow: Negative; Mitotic 
recombination: Negative; UDH (UDS with WI-38 human lung fibroblasts: 
Negative; Differential toxicity with E. coli polA and B. subtillus: 
Positive; Differential toxicity with S. typhimurium: Negative; UDS in 
human lung lymphocytes with activation: Negative; slight increase of 
sister chromatid exchange in human cultured lymphocytes; positive in in 
vivo unwinding of liver DNA in ip injected rats insert text.
    3. Reproductive and developmental toxicity--Rodent Developmental 
Toxicity Rat: Oral doses of 0, 64, 160, or 400 mg/kg were administered 
daily during gestation days 6 to 19. The numbers of implantations, 
resorptions, and fetuses for test animals were similar to those numbers 
for control animals. No abnormalities were attributed to exposure to 
dicamba. Technical dicamba was not found to be teratogenic with the 
test system/study design employed. Maternal toxicity was found only at 
the HDT and the NOAEL was 160 mg/kg/day.
    4. Rabbit developmental toxicity. Dicamba was administered orally 
(undiluted) via capsule to groups of 20 artificially inseminated New 
Zealand White rabbits. Dose levels of 0, 30, 150, or, 300 mg/kg were 
administered once daily on days 6-18 of presumed-gestation (day 0 = day 
of insemination). Females were sacrificed on day 29 of presumed 
gestation. There were no deaths attributed to treatment. At the 150 mg/
kg and 300 mg/kg levels, increased numbers of does with decreased motor 
activity and statistically significant numbers of does with ataxia were 
noted. At 300 mg/kg, a significant number of does had rales and an 
increased number of does showed labored breathing, perinasal substance, 
dried feces, impaired righting reflex, and red substance in the cage 
pan. These clinical observations were considered to be effects of 
treatment. Females in the 300 mg/kg group had statistically significant 
body weight loss for the entire dosage period. At 150 mg/kg, females 
lost weight on days 7-8 of presumed gestation. Although compensatory 
weight gains occurred during the post-treatment period (days 19-29-of 
gestation), body weight gains remained statistically significantly 
reduced on days 6-29 of gestation in the 300 mg/kg group. No 
significant differences were obtained in litter averages for corpora 
lutea, implants, litter sizes, resorption sites, percent male fetuses, 
fetal body weight, percent resorbed conceptuses or number of does with 
any resorptions. No gross external, soft tissue or skeletal alterations 
in fetuses were considered to be related to treatment. The maternal 
NOAEL for technical dicamba to pregnant rabbits was 30 mg/kg/day. 
Levels of 150 and 300 mg/kg caused abortions, but were at significant 
maternally toxic doses. The developmental NOAEL was the highest dose 
tested (HDT), 300 mg/kg/day.

[[Page 64483]]

 There were no effects on embryo-fetal viability or development at any 
level.
    5. 2-generation reproduction rat. Potential effects on growth and 
reproductive performance were assessed over 2-generations of rats 
maintained on diets containing Technical Dicamba at concentrations of 0 
(control), 500, 1,500, or 5,000 parts per million (ppm). Exposure at 
5,000 ppm was associated with a slower growth rate of F1 pups prior to 
weaning and resulted in lower initial body weights in those selected as 
parental animals. The lower body weight was associated with a decrease 
in both food consumption and water intake. Sexual maturation was 
slightly delayed among males, but was likely associated with the 
initial reduced growth rate. Increased liver weights were noted 
consistently for adults of both generations and for weanlings. There 
were no effects on reproductive ability from treatment at any level. 
The low pregnancy rate among F, females in all groups was considered to 
be due to increased weights of those females. The NOAEL and lowest 
observed adverse effect level (LOAEL) for system toxicity were 1,500 
and 5,000 ppm, respectively. The NOAEL and LOAEL for reproductive 
toxicity were 500 (45 mg/kg/day) and 1,500 ppm, respectively.
    6. Subchronic toxicity--21 day dermal. There were no dicamba 
related changes in general behavior, appearance, body weight, or in 
blood and urine analysis. There were no compound-related gross 
pathology lesions, only skin lesions. There were no significant organ 
weight variations observed.
    7. Thirteen-week rodent feeding-rat. Rats were offered technical 
dicamba at dietary concentrations of 0, 1,000, 5,000, or 10,000 ppm. 
The mean body weight and food consumption values for the high dietary 
level animals were decreased from the control values. No adverse 
treatment-related findings were noted in either the blood parameters 
investigated or necropsy evaluation. Microscopic examinations of the 
liver revealed an absence or reduction of cytoplasmic vacuolation in 
the hepatocytes of the high dietary level animals. The NOAEL was 
suggested to be 5,000 ppm.
    8. Eight-week non-rodent-dog. Technical dicamba was offered orally 
at dietary concentrations of 0 (Control), 100, 500, or 2,500 ppm to 
dogs for 1-year. Initially, a decrease in food consumption was noted 
mainly among males at 500 and 2,500 ppm. This was most notable in a 
single 2,500 ppm male resulting in almost no food consumed for the 1st 
3 weeks of feeding. Following administration of the 2,500 ppm diet in a 
water slurry during weeks 4-6, this male was placed back on feed and 
food consumption stabilized. There appears to be a limit to the amount 
of material that can be added to the feed before dogs will not consume 
the diet. The 2,500 ppm level was considered close to the maximum that 
could be employed, as one dog failed to consume the diet when offered 
in the usual form. Due mainly to the aforementioned male, mean body 
weight of 2,500 ppm males did not increase until week 5. The overall 
body weight gain for the 1-year period was comparable for all groups. 
It was concluded that aside from the lower food consumption, the NOAEL 
for toxicity was 50-60 mg dicamba/kg body weight (2,500 ppm) in both 
males and females.
    Because of the lack of toxicity shown in this study the reference 
dose (RfD) Peer review Committee concurred that the NOAEL was 2,500 ppm 
HDT and a LOAEL was not established. OPP's HED Branch is to decide if a 
new dog feeding study is required.
    9. Sub-chronic neurotoxicity. NOAEL was established at 401 (M) and 
472 (F) mg/kg/day. No histopathological effects on the peripheral or 
central nervous system were noted.
    10. Chronic toxicity--Chronic feeding/oncogenicity in rat. Groups 
of 60 rats/sex were maintained on diets containing technical dicamba at 
concentrations of either 0, 50, 250, or 2,500 ppm. An interim sacrifice 
of 10/sex/level was conducted at 12 months. Initially scheduled as a 27 
month study, males were sacrificed at 115-weeks and females at 118-
weeks due to survival rates.
    In males, no statistically significant differences in data for all 
tumors combined, all benign tumors combined, and all malignant tumors 
combined were obtained. A slight increase in malignant lymphoma was not 
statistically significant (pairwise comparisons) and was not considered 
to be toxicologically significant. A slight increase in thyroid 
parafollicular cell carcinoma in the high treatment group was noted but 
was not statistically significant in pairwise comparisons.
    In females, no statistically significant differences were noted in 
comparisons with all tumors combined, all benign tumors combined, and 
all malignant tumors combined or in any individual tumor type.
    In summary, no signs of toxicity related to administration of 
dicamba were noted. Findings among animals in the three treatment 
groups were considered to be comparable to findings among the control 
animals. Dicamba was not oncogenic for animals of the species, strain, 
and age under the conditions of the study. Based on the results of the 
study, the no effect level was considered to be 2,500 ppm.
    11. Oncogenicity in mice. Groups of 52 male and 52 female mice were 
fed diets containing dicamba at oncentrations of 0, 50, 150, 1,000, or 
3,000 ppm. Males were killed following 89-weeks of feeding and females 
were killed following 104-weeks of feeding. Reduced body weight gain 
(not statistically different) was noted among 3,000 ppm females. 
Increased mortality noted among 3,000 ppm males was considered unlikely 
to be related to treatment but could not be completely excluded. An 
increased incidence in lymphoid tumors, showing a statistical 
significance at 150 and 1,000 ppm, occurred in females. However, the 
incidence at 3,000 ppm did not statistically differ from control. 
Additionally, there was no significant trend with dosage and the values 
for treated females were within historical control data. Finally, the 
incidence of benign and malignant tumors in any tissue were similar for 
treated and control animals.
    Administration of dicamba in the diet at achieved intakes ranging 
from 5.5 to 364 mg/kg/day produced no evidence of tumorigenic 
potential. Generally, no findings among mice receiving 1,000 ppm or 
below were considered to be of toxicological significance. The dietary 
level of 1,000 ppm (108 mg/kg/day in males and 121 mg/kg/day in 
females) was defined as the no toxic effect level.
    However, the RfD committee chose to establish the NOAEL at 3,000 
ppm and stated that no LOAEL had been established.
    12. Estrogenic or other ndocrine effects. No specific tests have 
been conducted with dicamba to determine whether the pesticide may have 
an effect in humans that is similar to an effect produced by a 
naturally occurring estrogen or other endocrine effect. However, 
available data have not implicated dicamba in such effects.
    13. Animal metabolism. Dicamba has been tested in rats, dogs, 
cattle, goats and hens. In all cases, dicamba is excreted very rapidly, 
mainly as unchanged dicamba and to a lesser extent as 3,6-dichloro-2-
hydroxybenzoic acid with trace amounts of 3,6-dichloro-5-hydroxy-o-
anisic acid. The results of these studies demonstrate that dicamba is 
not persistent and does not accumulate in animals.
    14. Metabolite toxicology. Toxicity of the metabolites of dicamba 
to humans is concurrently evaluated during toxicity testing because 
both plant and animal metabolites are formed during the

[[Page 64484]]

course of toxicity tests. Both plant and animal major metabolites are 
considered not of toxicological concern.

C. Aggregate Exposure

    1. Dietary exposure. Exposure from the use of Dicamba in the 
culture of wheat, barley, oats, millet, sorghum, corn, soybeans, 
grasses, cotton, sugarcane and asparagus crops is discussed under the 
below topics of food and drinking water.
    2. Food. The subject petition amends these uses but does not add 
new crops. The potential dietary exposure of the population to residues 
of dicamba or its metabolites is calculated based on the Theoretical 
Maximum Residue Contribution (TMRC) for all crops with dicamba use. The 
TMRC is a worst case estimate of dietary exposure since it assumes that 
100% of all crops for which tolerances are established are treated with 
dicamba, and that pesticide residues are present at the tolerance 
levels. The resulting dietary exposure estimate therefore overestimates 
exposure and is considered conservative. The number is then determined 
to be a percentage of the EPA decided RfD. Dietary exposure may occur 
from crop commodities and meat and milk. Based on the EPA DRES model 
BASF Corp. has estimated that the average U.S. population dietary 
exposure to dicamba to be only 1.87% of the RfD. This number is very 
low and considered very safe as an active ingredient is allowed up to 
100% before less conservative risk assessment measures are initiated.
    Acute dietary analysis compared the daily dietary exposure to the 
lowest NOAEL for acute and subchronic studies. EPA's current policy for 
Tier I analysis uses the conservative assumption that all residues are 
at a high end estimate or maximum, typically taken as the tolerance 
value. Acute dietary assessment for dicamba is made by comparing the 
ratio of exposure and the NOAEL from acute neurotoxicity of 300 mg/kg/
day to achieve a Margin of Exposure (MOE). A MOE of 300 is required 
because a NOAEL was not reached in the acute neurotoxicity test. The 
following MOE values are obtained for key population subgroups.

 
------------------------------------------------------------------------
            Population Subgroup                  Margin of Exposure
------------------------------------------------------------------------
US Population.............................  16000
Infants <1 year...........................  13000
Children 1 to 6...........................  13000
Females 13+ years.........................  117000
Males 13+ years...........................  110000
------------------------------------------------------------------------

    3. Drinking water. Dicamba has been used commercially for in excess 
of 30 years. From available public data, detections in ground water 
from commercial uses have been very low and infrequent. The typical 
level found in ground water is less than 5 ppb. This should be compared 
to the current Health Advisory Level (HAL) of 200 ppb and the 
anticipated HAL of 3,000 ppb under the newly revised RfD of 0.45 mg/kg/
day.
    These infrequent and low levels of detection in groundwater 
demonstrate that significant movement of dicamba is not likely and is 
not a considerable factor in assessing human health risk.
    4. Non-dietary exposure. Non-dietary exposure would mainly occur 
from the use of dicamba for broadleaf weed control on residential or 
recreational turf. BASF is currently collecting data on the potential 
exposure from non-dietary sources such as residential turf use. 
However, no reliable information are currently available for risk 
assessment at this time. This petition is only related to already 
approved crop uses and therefore non-dietary route of exposure is not 
considered to be a factor in assessing additional human risk.

D. Cumulative Effects

    Dicamba belongs to the benzoic acid class of compounds. There are 
no other compounds of this class in significant use and none in food 
use. Therefore, cumulative effects from dietary or non-occupational 
exposure from pesticides of similar chemistry are considered unlikely. 
BASF Corp. does not have reliable data to indicate a common mechanism 
of toxicity to other compounds. Therefore cumulative effects from 
common mechanisms of action are also unlikely.

E. Safety Determination

    The RfD for dicamba is 0.45 mg/kg/day. The RfD is a level at or 
below which daily aggregate exposure over a lifetime will not cause 
appreciable human health risk. The estimates of exposure are based on 
conservative assumptions that all crops with a tolerance for dicamba 
are treated and that all residues found are at the maximum or tolerance 
level.
    1. U.S. population. Using the conservative assumptions described 
above, BASF Corp. has estimated that the U.S. population dietary 
exposure to dicamba is 1.87% of the RfD.
    2. Infants and children. Dicamba is not a reproductive or 
developmental toxicant. Therefore no specific effects on infants and 
children are expected. Based on the weight of evidence of the toxicity 
studies an additional safety factor is not warranted.
    Using the conservative assumptions described above, BASF Corp. has 
estimated the dietary exposure to infants and children as percent of 
the RfD. From the current and new proposed use of dicamba dietary 
exposure for the most sensitive subgroups are 6.65% for non-nursing 
infants (<1-year old) and 4.6% for children 1-6 years old.
    Aggregate exposure due to the combined residues in food, drinking 
water and non-dietary exposure through direct contact with residues in 
a residential setting (lawn) should be pursued through the use of a 
reserve risk approach. The elements for consideration are therefore 
estimated as follows:
     Food: Total Population 1.87%
            Non-nursing Infants <6yrs. 6.7%
     Water/Lawn:     Low human risk......expected to be 
inconsequential
    BASF Corp. believes that the water and non-dietary exposure risk 
for the most sensitive subgroup is inconsequential due to demonstrated 
low findings in water relative to the HAL and low toxicity to humans 
with respect to oral, dermal and inhalation exposure.
    Aggregate exposure is therefore estimated to be less than 10% of 
the RfD for the most sensitive population subgroup. Therefore, BASF 
Corp. concludes that there is reasonable certainty that no harm will 
result from aggregate exposure of residues of dicamba or its 
metabolites including all dietary and other non-occupational exposures.

F. International Tolerances

    No international tolerances have been established under CODEX. 
Therefore there is no need to ensure consistency.
[FR Doc. 98-31070 Filed 11-19-98; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560-50-F