产品搜索:  
收藏本站 | 联系我们
上海盈培科贸易有限公司官网,是油品化学品泄漏预防和控制专家
 English
首 页
关于ENPAC
新闻中心
产品中心
解决方案
技术中心
法规和标准
联系我们
在线留言
法规和标准
 
 
首页 法规和标准法规和标准美国法规和标准美国法规和标准
 
新的包装法规影响危险品运输商
文章来源:ENPAC    点击数:2184    更新时间:2009/5/7 16:50:12    

New Packaging Regulations Affect HazMat Shippers
11-1-2004

Meeting the challenges of today’s packaging regulations can be difficult and time consuming for shippers. And it keeps getting tougher to stay current with packaging regulations. New federal regulations are affecting domestic and international shippers of hazardous materials. And then there is the continued turnover in shipper personnel in today’s job market, which creates a never-ending demand for knowledge training and a constant drain on company resources just to keep up and stay current. These issues and more seem to lead to confusion on the part of shippers everywhere about what types of containers are appropriate for use with hazardous materials, how to verify that the selected container is acceptable for use with a particular waste stream, and so on. For example, something as simple as container closure procedures can turn into a major headache without the proper information. Container closure instructions are not generic, and while at first it may seem a simple matter of common sense on how to close a package, there is more to it than meets the eye.
Container closure is particularly important to public safety and especially for all those involved in the transport, handling, and disposal or reclamation of hazardous materials. Effective and complete container closure in accordance with package qualification is critical to preventing leakage of hazardous materials in transport. The US Department of Transportation considers container closure so critical to transport safety that it has made the topic an important part of the newly reformatted and enhanced US DOT regulations. These enhancements, which became effective 10-1-2004, makes all shippers of hazardous materials responsible for strictly following the manufacturer’s closure instructions that accompany all DOT and UN marked packagings (reference Title 49, Code of Federal Regulations, Section 178.2c). Significantly, shippers are required under the regulations to assure that proper closure procedures have been followed. DOT even goes one step further by suggesting that shippers incorporate verification of container closure in their operating procedures prior to offering closed containers for shipment.
We could all likely agree that training, good procedures, and follow up are essential to success in any situation, but we might have to look hard to find an area of packaging operations that has had less training emphasis than closure and closure verification as a feature of health, safety and security responsibilities. Understandably, there are many potential interpretations of these new requirements, but the one sure and certain way that exists for shippers to virtually guarantee their compliance, to reduce potentially dangerous transport conditions and reduce potential liability is to obtain, maintain, and make it everyone’s responsibility to follow the manufacturer’s closure instructions for each package or packaging in use.
How do closure instructions really affect hazardous material shipment? Take Salvage Drums for instance. Salvage Drums are probably the most recognized specialty container in the hazardous material-shipping arena. But do the shipper’s personnel really understand what a Salvage Drum is and how to properly use and close them? It’s their business to understand, because the shipper is legally responsible and liable for assuring that all packages offered for transport are selected, used, labeled, and closed in accordance with all the applicable regulations. Following manufacturer’s closure instructions is vitally important to package performance and transport safety in critical hazardous material shipments. The ease of use of a particular closure may make one packaging more desirable to a shipper than another. For instance, a screw-top Salvage Drum which requires no special tools to close may be better suited for a shipper’s operations due to the personnel costs and time savings when compared to a similar container with another type of closure, a bolt-ring for instance. Without proper closure, however, the shipper may be offering hazardous materials that can leak in transport and cause further contamination and damage. Not the least of our collective concerns, of course, is the risk to human life.
Salvage Drums may perhaps be best understood by what they aren’t. For example, despite their looks and our tendency to think of them as such, Salvage Drums aren’t simply just oversized trashcans. Salvage Drums are actually specialized containers engineered, designed, manufactured, and tested specifically for transport of dangerous goods that are either damaged, leaking, or have spilled. The closures have been designed for just such purposes and to provide safety and security in transport of hazardous materials. Salvage Drums, like many other types of containers, will have a UN number embossed on them, and perhaps even applied to their product label. Again, this in-and-of-itself is not unusual and applies to many other types of containers. The presence of a UN mark does not guarantee that any package with such a mark meets the necessary requirements of a Salvage Drum. These requirements are clearly and concisely spelled out in Federal and International regulations (reference 49CFR173.3c). Salvage Drums for example are required to have the words “Salvage” or “Salvage Drum” embossed on them and/or applied by the manufacturer on a label. Only by following the proper instructions for container closure can the shipper be certain that the packages being offered for transport are actually closed in conformance with all performance objectives for the container. Does your packaging have these markings and important statements present when delivered by the manufacturer or your local supplier? Can you verify package closure, visually or otherwise?
Salvage Drum status and performance is contingent upon being able to successfully close the packaging. This is verified and certified to the shipper and to the public authorities such as US DOT through a Packaging Qualification Notice prepared by each manufacturer of Salvage Drums and updated periodically. This qualification document should be on file, and up-to-date at each shipper’s location where Salvage Drums are offered for transport. Does your packaging have a Qualification Notice? Salvage Drum operation and closure is conveyed to the shipper once again through a written set of closure instructions. These may include diagram(s) and recommended tools that are helpful in accomplishing the task of completing and verifying container closure. Some packagings need no special tools other than a 2x4 or a shovel handle. The Closure Instructions for a packaging are prepared by each package manufacturer and should be included with each delivery of packagings. Does your packaging have a set of Closure Instructions to allow the user to comply with US and International Packaging Regulations and requirements?
Shippers should make it a priority to always be up-to-date on packaging regulations and on package documentation. This helps the shipper to avoid costly, and potentially dangerous, misapplication of packagings. Shippers should insist on maintaining current manufacturer data, certifications, and instructions for all packagings from outside suppliers of hazardous material containers, such as Salvage Drums. For more information about packagings for hazardous material applications, contact the US Department of Transportation, or your local supplier or the manufacturer of hazardous material packagings used in your operations. Shippers can avoid possible penalty assessments for non-conforming shipments through closure verification. Be safe. Follow all package closure and use instructions as well as all state, federal, and international regulations and requirements. Good shipping!

   

上一篇:NPDES暴雨法案影响的行业和领域   
下一篇:了解美国有关暴雨法规
 
版权所有© 沪ICP备09037902号