Pollution Prevention
Pollution prevention, also known as “P2” or “source reduction,” is any practice that reduces or eliminates pollution at its source prior to waste management. With less waste being created, the likelihood of impacts to human health and the environment is reduced. Additionally, it is often less expensive for facilities to prevent pollution from being created than to pay for control, treatment, or disposal of wastes.
Under the Pollution Prevention Act of 1990 (PPA), facilities that report to the Toxics Release Inventory (TRI) Program are required to include information on any newly implemented P2 activities. Many facilities also choose to include additional details that further describe their P2 actions. As a result, TRI serves as a robust tool for identifying effective P2 practices and highlighting pollution prevention successes.
- TRI facilities implemented 3,589 new source reduction activities.
- Facilities implemented source reduction activities for almost 200 different chemicals.
As with any dataset, there are many factors to consider when using TRI data. Find a summary of key factors associated with the data used in the National Analysis in the Introduction. For more information see Factors to Consider When Using Toxics Release Inventory Data.
This page was published in March 2024 and uses the 2022 TRI National Analysis dataset made public in TRI Explorer in October 2023.