emawican, if you read the article, it stated that almost all of the asbestos currently used in the us is used by chlorine manufacturers.
if your point was that companies aren't going go around shoving asbestos in building materials again just because the federal govt is relaxing regulations, i agree with you.
"EPA is now allowing asbestos back into manufacturing"
Let's slow down on the EPA allowing companies to produce friable asbestos insulation fantasy talking point.
People that live, work, or even visit a building that was built prior to 1985 are around asbestos everyday.
What % have been abated?
Asbestos only has to be abated based on planned disturbance (demo or renovation), type, and/or condition of the material. If a material has over 1% asbestos, it is then regulated as an "asbestos containing material."
Asbestos is in everything - floor tiles and mastic, pinhole/textured ceiling tiles (the drop ceilings everywhere), sheet rock and joints, plaster, adhesives, fireproofing, piping joints, insulation, roofing materials, weather proofing materials, window glazing, caulks, cove base and mastic, insulation, doors, valve packings, industrial fuses, etc. So neglecting materials with 0.01-0.9999% asbestos and asbestos materials that aren't required to be abated I'd put it at around 10-15%. 85-90% of buildings have asbestos in them somewhere.
There's asbestos in building materials that were installed as recently as the mid to late-2000s but those are pretty rare.