U.S Code last checked for updates: Nov 22, 2024
§ 826.
Production quotas for controlled substances
(a)
Establishment of total annual needs
(1)
The Attorney General shall determine the total quantity and establish production quotas for each basic class of controlled substance in schedules I and II and for ephedrine, pseudoephedrine, and phenylpropanolamine to be manufactured each calendar year to provide for the estimated medical, scientific, research, and industrial needs of the United States, for lawful export requirements, and for the establishment and maintenance of reserve stocks. Except as provided in paragraph (2), production quotas shall be established in terms of quantities of each basic class of controlled substance and not in terms of individual pharmaceutical dosage forms prepared from or containing such a controlled substance.
(2)
The Attorney General may, if the Attorney General determines it will assist in avoiding the overproduction, shortages, or diversion of a controlled substance, establish an aggregate or individual production quota under this subsection, or a procurement quota established by the Attorney General by regulation, in terms of pharmaceutical dosage forms prepared from or containing the controlled substance.
(b)
Individual manufacturing quotas; revised quotas
(c)
Manufacturing quotas for registered manufacturers
(d)
Quotas for registrants who have not manufactured controlled substance during one or more preceding years
(e)
Quota increases
(f)
Incidental production exception
(g)
Reference to ephedrine, pseudoephedrine, or phenylpropanolamine
(h)
Quotas applicable to drugs in shortage
(1)
Not later than 30 days after the receipt of a request described in paragraph (2), the Attorney General shall—
(A)
complete review of such request; and
(B)
(i)
as necessary to address a shortage of a controlled substance, increase the aggregate and individual production quotas under this section applicable to such controlled substance and any ingredient therein to the level requested; or
(ii)
if the Attorney General determines that the level requested is not necessary to address a shortage of a controlled substance, the Attorney General shall provide a written response detailing the basis for the Attorney General’s determination.
The Secretary shall make the written response provided under subparagraph (B)(ii) available to the public on the Internet Web site of the Food and Drug Administration.
(2)
A request is described in this paragraph if—
(A)
the request pertains to a controlled substance on the list of drugs in shortage maintained under section 356e of this title;
(B)
the request is submitted by the manufacturer of the controlled substance; and
(C)
the controlled substance is in schedule II.
(i)
Strengthening considerations for DEA opioid quotas
(1)
(A)
In establishing any quota under this section, or any procurement quota established by the Attorney General by regulation, for fentanyl, oxycodone, hydrocodone, oxymorphone, or hydromorphone (in this subsection referred to as a “covered controlled substance”), the Attorney General shall estimate the amount of diversion of the covered controlled substance that occurs in the United States.
(B)
In estimating diversion under this paragraph, the Attorney General—
(i)
shall consider information the Attorney General, in consultation with the Secretary of Health and Human Services, determines reliable on rates of overdose deaths and abuse and overall public health impact related to the covered controlled substance in the United States; and
(ii)
may take into consideration whatever other sources of information the Attorney General determines reliable.
(C)
After estimating the amount of diversion of a covered controlled substance, the Attorney General shall make appropriate quota reductions, as determined by the Attorney General, from the quota the Attorney General would have otherwise established had such diversion not been considered.
(2)
(A)
For any year for which the approved aggregate production quota for a covered controlled substance is higher than the approved aggregate production quota for the covered controlled substance for the previous year, the Attorney General, in consultation with the Secretary of Health and Human Services, shall include in the final order an explanation of why the public health benefits of increasing the quota clearly outweigh the consequences of having an increased volume of the covered controlled substance available for sale, and potential diversion, in the United States.
(B)
Not later than 1 year after October 24, 2018, and every year thereafter, the Attorney General shall submit to the Committee on the Judiciary, the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions, and the Committee on Appropriations of the Senate and the Committee on the Judiciary, the Committee on Energy and Commerce, and the Committee on Appropriations of the House of Representatives the following information with regard to each covered controlled substance:
(i)
An anonymized count of the total number of manufacturers issued individual manufacturing quotas that year for the covered controlled substance.
(ii)
An anonymized count of how many such manufacturers were issued an approved manufacturing quota that was higher than the quota issued to that manufacturer for the covered controlled substance in the previous year.
(3)
Not later than 1 year after October 24, 2018, the Attorney General shall submit to Congress a report on how the Attorney General, when fixing and adjusting production and manufacturing quotas under this section for covered controlled substances, will—
(A)
take into consideration changes in the accepted medical use of the covered controlled substances; and
(B)
work with the Secretary of Health and Human Services on methods to appropriately and anonymously estimate the type and amount of covered controlled substances that are submitted for collection from approved drug collection receptacles, mail-back programs, and take-back events.
(Pub. L. 91–513, title II, § 306, Oct. 27, 1970, 84 Stat. 1257; Pub. L. 94–273, § 3(16), Apr. 21, 1976, 90 Stat. 377; Pub. L. 109–177, title VII, § 713, Mar. 9, 2006, 120 Stat. 264; Pub. L. 112–144, title X, § 1005, July 9, 2012, 126 Stat. 1105; Pub. L. 115–271, title III, § 3282(a), Oct. 24, 2018, 132 Stat. 3954.)
cite as: 21 USC 826