CARB Survey Proposal Will Result In Category Confusion – J&J
This article was originally published in The Rose Sheet
Executive Summary
Inferences drawn from the California Air Resources Board's proposed 2003 Consumer & Commercial Products Survey will be biased based upon the categories companies choose to classify their products, Johnson & Johnson Consumer Products division says in comments to the agency Sept. 7
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Calif. survey release
California Air Resources Board releases 2003 Consumer & Commercial Products Survey Nov. 4, with preliminary forms due back to the agency by Nov. 24. All responsible parties and formulators must complete the survey and submit to CARB by March 15. Agency will conduct a survey training session on Dec. 3 at CARB headquarters in Sacramento. Survey will update state's volatile organic compound emissions inventory from consumer products and determine future emission reductions. Industry has opposed certain aspects of the survey, including the wide range of product categories included and the 120-day time limit for completion (1"The Rose Sheet" Sept. 20, 2004, p. 3)...
Calif. survey release
California Air Resources Board releases 2003 Consumer & Commercial Products Survey Nov. 4, with preliminary forms due back to the agency by Nov. 24. All responsible parties and formulators must complete the survey and submit to CARB by March 15. Agency will conduct a survey training session on Dec. 3 at CARB headquarters in Sacramento. Survey will update state's volatile organic compound emissions inventory from consumer products and determine future emission reductions. Industry has opposed certain aspects of the survey, including the wide range of product categories included and the 120-day time limit for completion (1"The Rose Sheet" Sept. 20, 2004, p. 3)...
Industry Challenges CARB Survey’s “Overfill” Reporting Requirement
Requiring the average "overfill" amount for each size product sold in the California Air Resources Board's 2003 Consumer & Commercial Products Survey is a burdensome request, L'Oréal states in comments to the agency Oct. 7