BATTERED, BELITTLED AND BEWILDERED, BUT NEVER BEATEN BY LITHIUM BATTERIES

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Here are some questions recently received from an awesome seminar attendee!

Are there DOT Hazardous Material Regulation (HMR) exceptions when shipping lithium cells or batteries?

The Department of Transportation (DOT), provides exceptions for smaller cells and lithium batteries in 49 CFR, paragraph 173.185(c),  based on the number of cells or batteries in each outside packaging and the “Wh hours” listed on ion rechargeable and the “amount of lithium” contained in each metal cell or battery. This paragraph can except shippers from hazardous material shipping papers, marks, hazard class labels, emergency response information and UN/DOT specification packaging requirements. 

Note: In 173.185(d), when larger cells or batteries are shipped for disposal or recycling, DOT provides relief from UN/DOT specification container requirements, but not the hazard communication requirements in Subpart C through subpart H of part 172.

How do you select DOT approved proper shipping names and containers when offering lithium cells or batteries?

When shipping lithium cells, batteries or any other hazardous material, proper shipping names are found in column 2 and packaging instructions in column number 7 and 8 of the 172.101 Hazardous Materials Table in the HMR. In the case of packaging both columns of the table must be referenced, for example, column number 8 of the HMT, could recommend packaging that column number 7 could restrict and vice versa.

How often does DOT container closure training have to be carried out when shipping lithium cells or batteries ?

All UN/DOT specification containers have closure requirements per manufacturer instructions. Specification hazardous material containers must pass drop, stacking, vibration and leak proof testing. All closure notifications and instructions per 173.22(4)(ii), must be maintained for at least 90 days after a container is closed for shipment. And re-training would be required every three years unless the container or it's instructions changed. (see; Rob’s Blog “Closure Requiremets”)

Are placards required when cells or lithium batteries are being transported?

Paragraph 172.504(f), provides exceptions from placarding, in subparagraph (9), for shippers and carriers from offering or displaying the Class 9 placard. However there is no exception for displaying the UN identification number on packaging or transport units when shipping Class 9 in bulk containers.

Can we ship ion and metal lithium cells and batteries in the same outside packaging?

Rechargeable Ion and non-rechargeable metal cell and lithium battery packaging authorizations are found in 173.185, as specified in column 8 of the 172.101 HMT, and are authorized to be shipped in the same outside packaging in certain cases. As long as the inner packaging requirements and the Special Provisions in column 7 of the HMT, are also met.

Are “RQ” requirements applicable when shipping lithium cells and batteries?

Lithium chromate is the only lithium listed in Appendix A to the172.10 HMT, the List of Hazardous Substances and Reportable Quantities, in which Lithium chromate, lists a “RQ” value of 10 pounds, for each package when shipped. A quick scan of a few OSHA safety data sheets, seems to reveal that lithium chromate is not a major or even a common component in most cells or batteries. However, it is always the shipper’s responsibility to decide if RQ values are met.

“LITHIUM CELLS AND BATTERIES ARE NOT DIFFICULT TO SHIP PER SAY, HOWEVER WHEN DOING SO, KNOWING THE ANSWERS TO THE FOLLOWING QUESTIONS BEFORE YOU REFERENCE SECTION 173.185 WOULD MAKE THE JOB MUCH EASIER”.

 Are you shipping batteries or cells?

Can you get a copy of the OSHA Safety Data Sheet?

Are the cells or batteries being shipped “individually” or are they shipped “with” or contained “in” equipment?

What is the Watt hour range on the lithium ion cell or battery?

What is the lithium content in the metal lithium cell or battery?

What is the gross weight of each cell or battery?

Are you shipping lithium cells or batteries for disposal or recycling?

Can you ship your smaller lithium cells or batteries using the 173.185(c) hazard communication and packaging exemptions?

Are you shipping by air, ground or both?

Are they being shipped in overpacks? 

If they are being re-shipped can you get a copy of the original hazardous material shipping paper and a photo of any of the inner and outer container with the markings that were used?

I love conducting my seminars, but your questions help me truly understand the regulations, provide me with examples and usually make me look more impressive in my next session. Thank you.


Be safe!

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Robert J. Keegan 

Publisher and President 

Hazardous Materials Publishing Company

Transportation Skills Programs Inc

Hazmat.tsp@gmail.com









“JUDGE A MAN BY HIS QUESTIONS RATHER THAN BY HIS ANSWERS.”

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Simple questions, difficult answers about hazardous material, the seminar and me.

DOT, EPA, OSHA, IATA and IMDG, what is the difference and what is required by each?  

DOT
 CFR 49 The Department of Transportation, regulates chemicals in trucks, trains, ships and airplanes, they have hazard material identification, hazard communication and container requirements.

EPA
CFR 40 The Environmental Protection Agency, protects the environment. They regulate chemicals as hazardous waste when you no longer want them, you spill them or dispose of them. 

OSHA
CFR 29 The Occupational Health and Safety Administration, regulates chemicals, in addition to those listed above to protect workers, regardless of whether that chemical is in use, transportation or being disposed of.  

IATA
The International Air Transport Association, is an association of airlines that requires you to train on additional ICAO International Dangerous Goods Recommendations. 

IMDG

The International Maritime Dangerous Goods Code is written by a branch of the United Nations, again these are additional recommendations, that you agreed to meet with the vessel transportation companies, when you use their services. 

IATA and IMDG training is part of your contractual agreements with the aircraft and vessel carriers.

How do you know if something is hazardous?

(Inside the front cover of the Hazardous Materials Substance and Waste Compliance Guide on the first page you will find “How to use the 2019/20 Hazardous Materials, Substances and Wastes Compliance Guide”)

DOT in 49 CFR 171.8, regulates hazardous materials hazardous wastes, marine pollutants, elevated temperature materials and hazardous substances and can be found on the second and third page of your book, in addition to pages 89 and page 1965.

EPA in 40 CFR 261.3, 302.4 and 355, regulates hazardous waste and hazardous substances and can be found on the third and fourth page of your book, in addition to pages 1244, 1640 and 1967 respectively.

OSHA in 29 CFR 1910.120(a) and 1910.1200, regulates hazardous substances and hazardous chemicals, and can be found on the fourth and fifth page of your book in addition to pages 1815 though 1864 and 1969.

Be aware that none of these words share the same definition under these three federal agencies.

What information does DOT require on a hazardous material bill of lading and EPA hazardous waste manifest?

DOT 49 CFR 172.200, Shipping Papers details the information or “shipping description” required by the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Transportation Safety Administration on hazardous material shipping papers, bills of lading and hazardous waste manifests. You will find this in your compliance guide on pages 386 to 391 and in the checklist on page 1961 to 1962.

What has recently changed and how does it apply to us?

On May 15, 2020 HM-215O DOT published hundreds of changes in the federal register aligning their regulations with UN recommendations. Government regulations change constantly in the Federal Register and it's the responsibility of the company to check them every day, which we make clear in the seminar. We even provide a Federal Register Reprint Service on our website, free of charge. But again, very few companies know about this or make this required effort. 

The Federal Register contains both proposed and final rules, with preambles containing hundreds of pages of explanation and interpretations. It includes additional compliance information, at least one contact person at the agency and best of all it’s written in layman‘s terms. Monitoring, understanding, training and implementing regulatory changes can be a full-time job.

How does EPA and OSHA apply to DOT and us?  

The EPA regulates your unclaimed, unwanted, spilled or discarded chemicals. These hazardous wastes are always regulated as hazardous materials under DOT. So, it is covered in the Hazardous Material, Substances and Waste Compliance Seminar. There is no way to get around it, unless you requested that it be eliminated from the training material and certifications for your in-house seminar.

OSHA protects workers with SDS’s and container labels. Most shippers simply copy the information off the SDS when they ship a package. Unfortunately the Department of Transportation does not recommend SDS’s to be used for identifying shipments of hazardous materials. 

DOT requires hazardous material shippers to quantify the chemical’s hazards on shipping documents, which could include testing, However, OSHA’s Safety Data Sheets, or a SDS hazard information may be estimated, so SDS’s are not authorized by DOT, for use when identifying hazardous material shipments. EPA hazardous wastes become DOT hazardous materials when you ship them, so we cover hazardous waste even in our “Strictly DOT Hazardous Material Seminar”.

All DOT hazardous materials and EPA hazardous wastes are OSHA hazardous substances. regardless of whether they are being used, transported or disposed, mandating additional worker protection training under OSHA.

What do I need to be aware of when checking documents?

In the Hazardous Materials, Substances and Wastes Compliance Guide you will find over 50 pages of checklists, diagrams and additional compliance material which are listed in the “TABLE OF CONTENTS” . 

DOT CHECKLIST

There is currently a checklist for shipments of DOT hazardous materials in your compliance guide on page 1961 to 1964.

EPA  CHECKLIST

In Appendix A, to Part 262 there is a checklist of the information that is required on a EPA hazardous waste manifest, it can be found on Pages 1307 through 1308.

OSHA CHECKLIST 

OSHA Safety Data Sheet and container labels examples and a checklist are found on pages 1925 though 1928, Appendix D on page 1929.

SDS – what is it used for and what do you do with it?

A safety data sheet or SDS is required by OSHA to be sent with the first shipment of a chemical, whether it is a hazardous material or not. They contain worker protection information. However, there is no requirement to test a material, when a manufacturer, distributor or importer fills it out.  The SDS’s, in many cases over identified hazards, to protect workers. Also, It is only based on the original shipment from the manufacturer or distributor based on the size and the amount in the container.

 Therefore unless you were using the exact same container, in the exact same amounts and the material was not a mixture or solution the information listed on the SDS would not be correct. That is the reason I do not recommend the use of them during the seminar for shipping hazardous materials. Many cannot be trusted, and the shipper can be fined when the information is wrong.

Who needs to be trained and certified?

There are no job titles, it could be anyone from management to maintenance.

You need to tell those who are allowed and most importantly those who are not qualified to do the job, whether they have been trained on the regulations or not.

DOT TRAINING

Under the Department of Transportation any employee, who carries out any of the following functions must be trained, tested and certified. Determines a hazard class. Selects, Fills, Secures, Marks, Labels or Prepares a hazardous material packaging. Provides or Affixes a placard. Certifies, Loads, Unloads, Segregates, Prepares or is responsible for hazardous materials safety.

EPA TRAINING

The Environmental Protection Agency requires any workers having responsibilities within the corporation's HAZARDOUS WASTE MANAGEMENT PLAN be trained including Identification, Documentation, Storage, Shipping and Disposal of hazardous waste.

OSHA TRAINING

The Occupational Health and Safety Administration requires any workers who could come in contact with hazardous chemicals be trained to the First Responder Awareness Level and on the company’s WORKER PROTECTION HAZARD COMMUNICATION PROGRAM’S Safety Data Sheet, (SDS), and container Labels, regardless of whether they are in your plant, in a truck or being discarded.

How long is the training certification good for?

DOT, as long as there are no changes in the regulations that affect your company, there is a three-year training and testing requirement.

EPA has hazardous waste management training requirements for small quantity generators (SQG). And annual training requirement  for large quantity generators (LQG).

OSHA, then has a First Responder Awareness training requirement, for individuals who may come in contact with hazardous materials, wastes and chemicals,  requiring training each year.

Then, of course immediate training would be required by the employer if any regulatory changes became applicable or if there were a change in the employee's job function.

What is the pace and information flow of your seminars?

We cover regulations that you have contracted us to, in the time frame you have requested. Regulations are written for enforcement, not compliance. 

 However, our one day Hazardous Material, Substances and Waste Compliance Seminar is designed to certify attendees on how to cross reference three separate federal chemical regulations, DOT for shipping, EPA for disposal and finally OSHA regulations for worker protection. You can't Google that. It is fast and furious.

So many companies opt for an in-house seminar, provide their haz-mat plan and the chemicals, products, SDS’s, shipping papers, bills of lading concerning the materials that they want covered or omitted, who is attending and the jobs they have or that they will be given. Reducing information presented and some cross referencing overload. 

We would love the opportunity to spend more time on the regulation. But, there is nothing that we would add or choose to leave out based on the certifications in our one day DOT, EPA, OSHA seminar.

MONSTERS EXIST, BUT THEY ARE TOO FEW IN NUMBER TO BE TRULY DANGEROUS. MORE DANGEROUS ARE THE COMMON MEN, THE FUNCTIONARIES READY TO BELIEVE AND TO ACT WITHOUT ASKING QUESTIONS.”

― Primo Lev

Can I ask questions during your seminar?

Yes! We encourage questions before, during and after the seminar, which unfortunately sometimes we failed to make clear. 

So at the first break, lunch and at the end of the seminar I am always the last person to leave the meeting room or to “log off”, so that any “questions, comments or concerns” can be addressed. In addition, I always make sure that each attendee receives my personal cell phone number, (610-587-3978) and email (hazmat.tsp@gmail.com), to contact us for free guidance and further direction . 

Is your DOT EPA OSHA seminar focused on the recertification of attendees, or those with no prior exposure to handling hazardous materials?

No one should attend the seminar without some prior experience or exposure to your written HAZARDOUS MATERIAL TRANSPORTATION PLAN. New attendees should review HOW TO USE THE HAZARDOUS MATERIAL  REGULATIONS and “THE HAZARDOUS MATERIALS GENERAL AWARENESS AND FAMILIARIZATION TRAINING MANUAL including the EPA’s LEARN THE BASICS OF EPA HAZARDOUS WASTE  and OSHA’s FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS UNDER OSHA 1910.120 HAZWOPPER pre-training material, if applicable, that is available on our website in Rob’s Office. 

Training a person on their job, is not the same as training them on regulations that affect the jobs you have given them. Every company should have a HAZARDOUS MATERIAL TRANSPORTATION PLAN, many don’t.

Is there a basic 101 powerpoint presentation regarding Hazardous material or something that the guy off the street can relate to and follow?

We do not have a basic hazardous materials transportation PowerPoint presentation, but a quick search of the DOT website  or the Internet will provide hundreds. They can be used in addition to your training, but they do not meet any of the DOT requirements other than the General Awareness Training, not the In-depth training requirements.

THE DOT PIPELINE AND HAZARDOUS MATERIALS SAFETY ADMINISTRATION HAZARDOUS MATERIAL TRAINING MODULES.

I hope my answers were as good as the questions, If not or you have any more let me know.

Be Safe!


Robert J Keegan

Publisher and President 

Hazardous Materials Publishing Company

Transportation Skills Programs Inc.

hazmat.tsp@gmail.com









 

DON’T BE TAKEN

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I can’t spell, flunked algebra and find it very hard to pay attention, which is the reason for the first two. But…… “what I do have are a very particular set of skills, skills I have acquired  over a very long career, skills that make me a nightmare for people like you”.

 I am a Dangerous Goods Specialist. 

Download the book;

HOW TO USE THE HAZARDOUS MATERIAL REGULATIONS

1) SKILL: NUMBERS

Algebra, calculus and trigonometry. No! I am not even sure what they mean, let alone how to use them. But I can count, which is critical when searching and referencing numerical Titles, Chapters, Parts and Sections. 

TITLE 49; 

the “DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION”. 

CHAPTER I; 

the “PIPELINE AND HAZARDOUS MATERIALS SAFETY ADMINISTRATION”

PART 171; 

the “HAZARDOUS MATERIAL REGULATIONS GENERAL INFORMATION”

SECTION; 172.101 

the “ THE HAZARDOUS MATERIALS TABLE”

Federal regulations start, not alphabetically, but numerically. They are not dictionaries. You will not find “empty” containers under a giant letter “E”, or “training”, under a “T” and so on. You look up numbers.


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2) ADDITIONAL SKILLS:

 ALPHABETICAL SEQUENCING AND UNDERSTANDING THE LAW’S CASES


Second and third, I have cobbled together a basic understanding of alphabetical sequencing and quite unremarkably, as I’ve been told, is the fact that I am able to clearly distinguish the difference between uppercase and lowercase letters, which you will find imperative when distinguishing between Subpart “A” from Paragraph (a). 

172.101(a)(1)(i)(A)

Then because. the Subtitles, Subchapters and Subparts are in alphabetical order, it’s not that important that you know how to spell, as much as you know the order of the alphabet. A, B, C, D, E and so on. Also, regulatory paragraphs are not composed strictly of one group of sentences like in English Lit, they can include subparagraphs and sub-subparagraphs. So, if the paragraphs are in lowercase letters like “(a)”, this of course would force the subparagraphs back to numerical, like “(1)”  as in 172.101(a)(1).

“THERE’S A HUGE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN BEING EXCEPTED FROM SUBPART “A”, THEN FROM SUB-SUB-SUBPARAGRAPH (A)”                                                                   

Here’s where it gets tricky for me, because the sub-subparagraphs do not return to alphabetical, but convert to Roman numerals, like “(i)”. This would leave the sub-sub-subparagraphs to be capital letters, like the letter (A), as in 172.101(a)(1)(i)(A).

I am telling you, if you can count, I mean that you know that the number 2 appears directly after the number 1 and you can sing the alphabet song, you too, could play a part in this dangerous profession.

*Quote: 

Movie: TAKEN 


Be Safe!


Robert J. Keegan
Publisher and President
Hazardous Materials Publishing Company
hazmat.tsp@gmail.com
Facebook: Hazmat Rob 





I AM A MAN OF SUBSTANCE

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Money, influence and power, unfortunately no, Hazardous Substance. So, I’m pretty confident when I say to you, “when you know, then you go by the Department of Transportation, DOT hazardous materials chemical’s amount, if you don’t know, go by the Environmental Protection Agency, EPA hazardous waste codes”.

 I am talking about the 40 CFR, 302.4, EPA Hazardous Substance List, that was copied into DOT’s 49 CFR, Appendix A to the 172.101 Hazardous Materials Table, after it was charged by the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act of 1980 (CERCLA) to be use for identifying Hazardous Substances or Reportable Quantities in transportation, so that carriers would have the ability to notify the National Response Center  (NRC) when reportable quantity releases occurred in transportation.

The Department of Transportation has no specific requirements or authority to notify the NRC when “reportable quantities” are released. Only, “RQ” notations and identification requirements on EPA hazardous waste manifests, bills of lading and non-bulk containers. Which is accomplished by marking the letters “RQ” and the name of the chemical or waste code, or in the case of mixtures the top two of those, with the lowest reportable quantity values, in association with the required shipping information.

OK, 49 CFR 171.16, makes shippers and carriers submit a detailed hazardous material incident report in the event any amount of hazardous waste is released from a container during transportation. However, that notification is only to the Department and can be made as late as 30 days after the release, again only when discovered during transportation. The EPA 302.4 hazardous substance release report is only the beginning. Facility operators also should be aware that EPA’s Part 355  mandates notification when spills mitigate off your site, to the Local Emergency Planning Commission  and to 911 when they occur in transportation. 

Sorry, background, if you didn’t know. This blog is only really about which “RQ” amount should be used when shipping hazardous waste on manifests, because not only chemicals, but some waste codes, like D001 ignitable, have their “own” reportable quantities listed in “Appendix A”.

Acetone is a DOT Flammable Liquid, in Class 3,  because it flashes below 140 degrees, when shipped, but when discarded it could be a EPA listed spent solvent; F003, in 261.31 , in addition to; D001 in  261.21, (ignitable), which both share the same 100 pound, “RQ'' value. But then, unwanted off-spec Acetone, U002, in 261.33 and the product Acetone also both list a 5000 pound “ RQ”! So, what gives?

 So, is Waste Acetone’s “RQ” value 100 pounds or is it 5000 pounds?

If you know, then you go by the chemical’s amount in your waste container, if you don’t, go by the waste code’s “RQ” value. At least that's what I think this Letter of Interpretation on the PHMSA website says.

EPA ignitable hazardous waste U002, unwanted pure Acetone, is always a hazardous material when shipped, because it’s a EPA hazardous waste and a flammable liquid. But I’m pretty sure, it may not always be a hazardous substance unless you ship in bulk containers or tanks, when you know the chemical amounts. 

Note, when shipping by vessel or in any bulk container check out the 172.101 Appendix B, the List of Marine Pollutants, which are based on percentages in amounts of 1% to 10% for severe and non severe marine pollutants respectively, but another time.

Be Safe.

Robert J. Keegan
Publisher and President
Hazardous Materials Publishing Company
Transportation Skills Programs Inc
hazmat.tsp@gmail.com

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COMBUSTIBLE LIQUIDS DESTROY INTERNATIONAL CLASS 9 DOMESTICALLY

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Hazmat,

I have a chemical that is not listed in the PHMSA’s 49 CFR, 172.101 Hazardous Materials Table, by chemical name, however it has a Flashpoint of 190 degrees (Link) and is listed in Appendix A, list of Hazardous Substances, with a 5000 pound, in one container, “RQ” value (Link

The first person I asked said;  “Listen, I ship cargo tanks full of it, ship it as;

“RQ”, NA1993, Combustible Liquid N.O.S., Combustible Liquid, III

(Isophorone)

The second person said;  “I was told by a DOT inspector, that my IBC’s, are not Hazardous Substances so the “RQ” notation is not allowed, describe as;

NA1993, Combustible Liquid N.O.S., III

(Isophorone)

And the last person I asked said, “We ship trucks, full of the stuff, in drums both domestically and internationally as;

“Non-Regulated, as a Non-Hazardous Material.”

Who should I trust ?  “Why, all of them, …….of course.”

COMBUSTIBLE LIQUIDS OUTRANK DOMESTIC CLASS 9’s, LIKE DOT “RQ” REPORTABLE QUANTITIES, WHEN SHIPPED DOMESTICALLY,  BUT NOT INTERNATIONAL CLASS 9’s, LIKE IMDG “MARINE POLLUTANTS”, WHEN SHIPPED INTERNATIONALLY, AS COMBUSTIBLE LIQUIDS DON'T EXIST INTERNATIONALLY, PER 173.2a (link), AND THE PHMSA LOI; https://www.phmsa.dot.gov/regulations/title49/interp/10-0249

It seems your chemical could be a Hazardous Substance, Combustible Liquid, both or….. neither. Isophorone, is listed with a 5000 lb “RQ” value in Appendix A, to the 49 CFR 172.101 Hazardous Materials Table in PHMSA’s Hazardous Material Regulations, with a flashpoint well over 140 degrees but below 200 degrees, 173.120(b)(1), at about 190 degrees Fahrenheit (Link) and it meets no other DOT hazard class as per, it’s Safety Data Sheets, So:.

1) In Bulk containers over 5000 lbs as in a “Cargo Tank”, at 45,000 lbs.

US Domestically only;

“RQ”, NA1993, Combustible Liquid N.O.S., Combustible Liquid, PG III, (Isophorone)

Internationally to or from the US;

(US portion of shipment,171.22 (Link))

“RQ”, NA1993, Combustible Liquid N.O.S., Combustible Liquid, PG III, (Isophorone)

When a material is both a Combustible Liquid and, a domestic Class 9 EPA Hazardous Waste, an DOT Appendix ”B” Marine Pollutant, or as in this case, a an Appendix “A” Hazardous Substance, it’s Class 9 is beaten and banished, because Combustible Liquid rule the day, as foretold in 49 CFR 173.2a Classification of a material having more than one hazard class (link), therefore as “RQ”, NA1993, Combustible liquid N.O.S., Combustible Liquid, PG III, with the name of the “RQ” and combustible chemical, “Isophorone”, accompanied by the letters “RQ”, the shipper would cover 172.203(k) for the domestic portion for the hazardous substance under 171.23(b)(5)(Link) and the 172.203(c)(Link), requirements.

 

Internationally only and “not to or from” the US;

Non-Regulated, Internationally

Non- regulated, as no “RQ” internationally and only the US regulates liquids that flash over 140 degrees, not IMDG or ICAO. 

2) In Bulk containers over 199 gl / 882 lbs, but less than 5,000 lbs as in “IBC”, at 2,420 lbs each.

Domestic or Internationally to or from the US;

(US portion of shipment,171.22 (Link))


NA1993, Combustible Liquid N.O.S., PG III, (Isophorone)

The reason, there is not an “RQ” amount in each IBC of “ISOPHORONE”. Which would leave only the requirements in 173.150(f)(3) (link) for combustible liquids in bulk containers. Then the name of the chemical, “Isophorone” is added as directed by the “G” in column 1 of 172.101 and the “UN” number, has been replaced with an “NA”  because of the “D” in column 1 of table. Note; Class name not required per 172.202(a)(3)(iii) (Link).

International only not to or from US

Non-Regulated, Bulk Internationally,


IBC containers not regulated as not “RQ” and no international combustible liquid regulations, if it flashes over 140 degrees regardless of container size.

3) In Non-bulk “Drums” less than 119 gallons each.


Non-Regulated, Non-bulk Domestic and Internationally,


It is non regulated domestically as non-bulk containers under 119 gls / 882 lbs would not be an “RQ” (not 5000 lbs in each container), and would become unregulated, per 49 CFR 173.150(f)(2), (link), as a combustible liquid, in non-bulk containers, that flash over 140 degrees. Then, it is not regulated internationally, because DGR / IMDG / ICAO do not regulate materials that flash between 140 and 200 degrees.

DOT PHMSA; Letter of Interpretation https://www.phmsa.dot.gov/regulations/title49/interp/08-0066

I think they were all correct, based on each individual's departure points, destinations and types of containers. Let me know if this looks right, or if I missed something. Who says that everyone can’t be right, not me.

Schedule a live, online in-house for your workers whether they are back on the job or still at home getting ready or sign them up for one of our scheduled live, online Hazardous Materials Substances and Waste Compliance Seminars, in your time zone, now through September to take care of their DOT, EPA, and OSHA required certifications! 

You sign them up, pick the people and dates, we ship each training kit to the attendees location and you will still receive a group discount.

Be safe,

Robert J. Keegan 
Publisher and President
Hazardous Materials Publishing Company
Transportation Skills Programs Inc
Hazmat.tsp@gmail.com
Facebook: Hazmat Rob