Transcript Slide 1

Sandia is a multi-program laboratory operated by Sandia Corporation, a Lockheed Martin Company,
for the United States Department of Energy’s National Nuclear Security Administration
under contract DE-AC04-94AL85000.
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Hazardous waste definitions and characteristics
Chemical management
Hazardous waste survey – Deficiency recognition
Hazardous waste – Collection, segregation,
storage, labeling, recycling, lab treatment
(including peroxides) and pickup
Legacy waste and lab cleanout procedures
Chemical waste accidents – Case Studies
Hazardous waste disposal – technologies,
policies and procedures
Workshop Wrap Up
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Definition of Wastes – Basel
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Definition of Hazardous Wastes – EPA
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Characteristic – Ignitable-Corrosive-Reactive-Toxic
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Listed – Industrial source-Type
“substances or objects which are disposed of or are to be
disposed of or are required to be disposed of by the
provisions of national law”
“liquid, solid, contained gas, or sludge wastes that contain
properties that are dangerous or potentially harmful to
human health or the environment.”
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Used oil (uncontaminated) is not considered hazardous waste.
Label Containers "USED OIL", not "hazardous waste."
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Uncontaminated PPE (gloves, wipes)
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Triple rinsed glassware (bottles, droppers, pipettes)
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Salts (KCl, NaCl, Na2CO3)
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Sugars - Amino acids
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Inert materials (uncontaminated resins and gels)
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Ignitable: the waste will catch fire under certain
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Corrosive: the waste has a very high (12.5 or
greater) or low (2 or less) pH.
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conditions.
Reactive: the waste is unstable, reacts violently,
explodes, and/or produces toxic fumes when
mixed with water or subjected to heat or
pressure.
Toxic: the waste is harmful or fatal when
ingested or absorbed. It will leach toxic
chemicals.
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Liquid: has a flash point less than 60ºC (this is the
temperature at which enough vapor is emitted to
ignite in the presence of a spark/flame).
• (Example: gasoline, isopropyl alcohol)
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Non-liquid: will cause fire via friction, absorption of
moisture, or spontaneous chemical change.
• (Example: metal dusts)
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Compressed Gas: cylinders or aerosol sprays using
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flammable gases as a propellant. (Example: hydrogen,
propane)
Oxidizer: initiating combustion by contributing
oxygen. (Example: oxygen, peroxides, hypochlorite)
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Thousands of regulated
hazardous materials
Differences in
regulations by country
Penalties can be severe
• Willfully violation of US
hazardous material
transportation regulations
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Fines up to $250,000
Prison for up to 5 years
Both fine and prison
‣ International regulations
• UN Model Regulations
• International Maritime Dangerous
Goods (IMDG) Code
• International Air Transport
Association (IATA)
‣ Special requirements,
restrictions, or limitations
‣ Training requirements,
certifications
Take regulations into account when
making hazardous shipments
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Assistance from trained
person
• CSSO, other
• Knows regulations
• Has required certifications
• Can ensure use of
licensed, approved
shipping companies
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Container within a container
Specific requirements depend on material and other factors
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Safety Data Sheets
Shipping order
Bill of lading
Manifest
Full shipper, receiver
addresses
Packing and labeling
certification
Verification of receipt
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Follow up documentation
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• Incident/accident reports
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Emergency contacts
• Regulation requirements
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local, national, international
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Public relations
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Higher risk shipments
require higher security
• Designate spokesperson
beforehand
• Be responsive to public
concerns
• Special regulations
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Hazard Labels
• GHS
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Transportation Labels
• Transportation pictograms
◦ Combination labels
• Container label (inner and
outer)
• Transportation
documentation
◦ Packing list
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Properly and fully identify
material
use proper, full chemical name
• no abbreviations
• ID codes, e.g., UN Numbers
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Specify quantities,
concentrations,
number of containers
Indicate specific hazard class
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Include emergency information
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Language(s)
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• according to regulations
• contact names
24/7 phone numbers
• proper universal symbols
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Corrosive
Irritant
Health Hazard
Acute Toxicity
Flammable
Explosion
Oxidizer
Compressed Gas
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Where, how, who opens shipment?
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Should package be opened in a
hood?
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Is material radioactive, flammable,
reactive, explosive, etc.?
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Is monitoring equipment needed?
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Is special storage needed on
receipt?
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Managers
Packers
Handlers
Loaders
Drivers
All shipping and
receiving personnel
Mailroom personnel
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Secondary Containment
• Hand carry
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Carts
• PPE
• Spill kit
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Documentation
• Update Inventory
• SDS
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UNECE, “Globally Harmonized System Of Classification
and Labeling of Chemicals (GHS),” 1st edition, 2003,
online,
http://www.unece.org/trans/danger/publi/ghs/ghs_re
v00/00files_e.html
International Airlines Transportation Association,
Dangerous Goods Regulations(DGR), 2008, not online,
http://www.iata.org/ps/publications/9065.htm
UN International Maritime Organization (IMO),
http://www.imo.org/
European Union (EU) Transport Activities
http://europa.eu/
US Department of Transportation (DOT)
http://www.dot.gov
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• International Labour Organization (ILO)
• International Occupational Safety and Health Centre
(CIS)
• Programme on Safety and Health at Work and the
Environment (SafeWork)
• http://www.ilo.org/public/english/protection/safe
work/cis/index.htm
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