Bill

BILL • US SENATE

S 3879

Spent Petroleum Catalyst Recycling and Critical Minerals and Metals Recovery Exemption Act

119th Congress
Introduced by Jon Husted,

Exempts spent petroleum catalysts from hazardous waste regulations when recycled for critical minerals recovery, reducing regulatory compliance costs but potentially lowering environmental oversight standards.

Introduced in Senate
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Bill Summary • S 3879

Legislative bill overview

S 3879 creates an exemption from hazardous waste regulations for spent petroleum catalysts that are being recycled to recover critical minerals and metals. The bill aims to streamline the recycling process for materials containing valuable elements like cobalt, nickel, and molybdenum by reducing regulatory barriers that currently classify these spent catalysts as hazardous waste.

Why is this important

Spent petroleum catalysts contain strategically important minerals and metals that are critical for electronics, batteries, and defense applications. Reducing regulatory friction for their recycling could increase domestic supply chain resilience for critical materials while potentially lowering recycling costs. However, this must be balanced against environmental and worker safety protections that hazardous waste regulations were designed to provide.

Potential points of contention

  • Environmental protection standards: Exempting materials from hazardous waste rules could reduce oversight of handling practices that prevent contamination, soil degradation, or worker exposure to toxic substances
  • Economic incentives vs. oversight: While exemptions may make recycling more profitable, critics may argue this creates insufficient motivation for safe handling procedures without regulatory requirements
  • Scope of exemption: The bill's specific criteria for what qualifies as "spent petroleum catalysts" intended for recycling could be defined broadly enough to create loopholes or narrowly enough to limit its usefulness

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Key Provisions Impacts Timeline
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