|
Vol. 140, No. 35 September 2, 2006
Interprovincial Movement of Hazardous Waste and Hazardous Recyclable Material Regulations
Statutory authority
Canadian Environmental Protection Act, 1999
Sponsoring department
Department of the Environment
REGULATORY IMPACT ANALYSIS STATEMENT
(This statement is not part of the Regulations.)
Description
Purpose
The purpose of the proposed Interprovincial Movement of Hazardous Waste and Hazardous Recyclable Material Regulations (hereinafter referred to as the "proposed Regulations") is to repeal and replace the existing Interprovincial Movement of Hazardous Waste Regulations (hereinafter referred to as the "current Regulations"). The proposed Regulations are required as a consequence of the requirements under section 189 of the Canadian Environmental Protection Act, 1999 (CEPA 1999) and the Export and Import of Hazardous Wastes and Hazardous Recyclable Material Regulations (the Export and Import Regulations) adopted under section 191 of CEPA 1999, which came into force on November 1, 2005. The proposed Regulations ensure coherence with respect to the new definitions of hazardous waste and hazardous recyclable material, and the movement document (formerly known as the manifest and maintained to track the movements of hazardous waste and hazardous recyclable materials) introduced in the Export and Import Regulations.
Hence, the proposed Regulations would ensure that the definitions of "hazardous waste" and "hazardous recyclable material" as well as that of "movement document" are consistent in federal regulations governing the international and interprovincial movements of hazardous wastes and hazardous recyclable materials under CEPA 1999.
The proposed Regulations are being made pursuant to section 191 of CEPA 1999, and will come into force on the day on which they are registered.
Background
Under section 191 of CEPA 1999, the Governor in Council has the authority to make regulations to define words and expressions. The current Regulations do not differentiate between hazardous waste and hazardous recyclable material and provide for the use of the manifest to track movements of hazardous waste and hazardous recyclable materials. The Export and Import Regulations include distinct definitions of hazardous waste and hazardous recyclable material, and also replace the manifest form with the movement document form. To ensure consistency, the definition of hazardous waste and the manifest in the current Regulations must also be replaced. Therefore, the proposed Regulations will include definitions of the terms "hazardous waste," "hazardous recyclable material" and "movement document." These measures will enable progress toward a federal/provincial/ territorial harmonized approach to the management of hazardous waste and hazardous recyclable material in Canada.
The proposed Regulations
The proposed Regulations include the following provisions:
- Replace the definition of "manifest" with that of "movement document" and
include the movement document in the proposed Regulations. (This is required
to ensure that the movement of waste is harmonized with CEPA 1999 and the Export
and Import Regulations.)
- Replace the definition of "hazardous waste" and related provisions
(definition of recycling and threshold quantities) with the new definitions
of hazardous waste and hazardous recyclable material.
The proposed Regulations will retain the same requirements as those under the current Regulations for filling out and distribution of copies of the movement document, which replaces the former "manifest." The same movement document form that is referred to in Schedule 9 of the Export and Import Regulations will be used for interprovincial movement of both hazardous waste and hazardous recyclable materials. This will align the proposed Regulations with the Export and Import Regulations in respect to the use of the movement document. The movement document also meets the requirements for a shipping document under the Transportation of Dangerous Goods Regulations (TDGR) of the Transportation of Dangerous Goods Act (TDGA). In order to achieve a federal/provincial/territorial harmonized approach, the movement document has been developed with the collaboration of the provinces and territories.
The definitions of "hazardous waste" and "hazardous recyclable material" to be included in the proposed Regulations will continue to capture the wastes and recyclable materials that exhibit a hazard, with certain specific low-risk recyclables being exempted. The new definitions also refer to lists of hazardous waste or hazardous recyclable material that would be considered hazardous. Some of these hazardous wastes or hazardous recyclable materials are already regulated by the provinces and territories.
Alternatives
Status quo
This option does not allow removing the inconsistency prevailing between the current Regulations and the Export and Import Regulations, in terms of the definitions of hazardous waste and hazardous recyclable material. As well, the more stringent requirements of the current Regulations regarding interprovincial movements of low-risk recyclables do not offer the same flexibility as in the Export and Import Regulations, as they do not include the exemptions for low-risk recyclables. Hence, given the need to harmonize the current Regulations with the Export and Import Regulations, the status quo was rejected.
Repeal and replace the current Regulations with the proposed Regulations
Under this alternative, the movement document would be included in the proposed Regulations and definitions of "hazardous waste" and "hazardous recyclable material" would be consistent with those in the Export and Import Regulations. This option also ensures continuing compliance with the requirements of the movement document, as well as administrative convenience, through the use of a sole harmonized movement document that would meet requirements for both provincial and international movements of hazardous waste and hazardous recyclable material, by and for the regulated community. The latter encompasses many who undertake exports, imports or transit under the Export and Import Regulations. For these reasons, the proposed Regulations were determined to be the appropriate alternative.
Benefits and costs
Benefits
With the proposed Regulations, given that the definitions of "hazardous waste" and "hazardous recyclable material" are harmonized to the extent possible with provincial/territorial definitions, most of the wastes and materials that would be captured under these definitions would already be regulated by the provinces and territories. As a result, the regulated community (which includes generators or shippers, carriers and disposal and recycling facilities) involved in the management and interprovincial transport of hazardous waste and hazardous recyclable material would already be familiar with which wastes and which recyclable materials would be hazardous, as a result of the application of the definitions. Therefore, aligning the proposed Regulations with the Export and Import Regulations eliminates confusion and facilitates compliance by the regulated community, who may fall under the Export and Import Regulations and provincial or territorial regimes. The proposed Regulations also treat hazardous waste and hazardous recyclable materials that are shipped interprovincially in a similar manner to international shipments that fall under the Export and Import Regulations.
In addition, since the affected parties would be required to use the same movement document as under the Export and Import Regulations, the proposed Regulations lead to a harmonized document being retained for tracking both interprovincial and international movements of hazardous waste and hazardous recyclable material. The movement document, developed in collaboration with the provinces and territories, further contributes to federal/provincial/territorial harmonization. The movement document also meets the requirements of a shipping document under the TDGR; therefore, one document, rather than two, may be used to meet the requirements under both the proposed Regulations and the TDGR. This reduces the administrative and regulatory burden for both affected partiesindustry and government.
Furthermore, the proposed Regulations also exclude from their definition of "hazardous recyclable material" certain low-risk recyclable materials destined for recycling, provided that they meet criteria set out in the definition. This measure will enhance the protection of the environment by facilitating and promoting recycling of valuable resources. The exemptions for low-risk recyclable materials from the definition of "hazardous recyclable material" in the proposed Regulations would result in cost savings to the sector by decreasing the administrative burden. However, these benefits are technically difficult to quantify.
Costs
It is reasonable to assume that there will be no incremental compliance costs for the regulated community, as the control regime is not changing.
As well, there will be no additional costs for Environment Canada with respect to enforcement of these proposed Regulations. However, compliance promotion material developed for the Export and Import Regulations and movement document can be adapted for the proposed Regulations at an estimated cost of $10,000.
Consultation
Two rounds of consultations were held in 2000 and 2002. They included multi-stakeholder sessions that were attended by industry, environmental non-governmental organizations, provincial and territorial governments and other federal government departments. These consultations built on previous consultations held in 1996 and 1999 and on the recommendations on the definition of hazardous waste and hazardous recyclable material made by the Canadian Council of Ministers of the Environment (CCME) Hazardous Waste Task Group (HWTG).
The purpose of the first round of consultations in 2000 was to achieve the following:
- provide an opportunity to review the integration of requirements
previously under the TDGR and the recommendation of the CCME HWTG;
- solicit feedback on the direction of any proposed regulations;
- seek consensus on major issues, such as definitions and documentation
(manifest); and
- identify areas that need clarification, such as harmonization
and promoting recycling.
Following the first round of consultations, a second was held in 2002, at the request of stakeholders, to present a document that elaborated on the details of a regulation for stakeholders' review and comments.
Three elements were discussed with respect to the definition of hazardous waste and hazardous recyclable material for interprovincial movements, including the following:
- harmonized definitions for international and interprovincial movements;
- use of lists versus hazard characteristic; and
- controls on low-risk recyclables.
Given that the development of the Export and Import Regulations and work on the proposed Regulations were undertaken in parallel, stakeholders indicated that the definitions of "hazardous waste" and "hazardous recyclable material" should be harmonized between both Regulations under CEPA 1999. As a result, the definitions of "hazardous waste" and "hazardous recyclable material" in the proposed Regulations now match those in the Export and Import Regulations. In addition, the lists of hazardous waste and hazardous recyclable material referred to in the definitions were reviewed to ensure compatibility to the extent possible with the controls set by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
Over the summer and fall of 2003, further discussions addressing the definitions of hazardous waste and hazardous recyclable material took place with the provinces and territories via the CEPA National Advisory Committee and the CCME. Their input was taken into account in the development of the proposed Regulations, to ensure harmonization to the extent possible with the provinces, and territories' approach to the management of hazardous waste and hazardous recyclable material.
Some stakeholders expressed concern over the use of lists to identify hazardous waste and hazardous recyclable material. Environment Canada indicated that because small- and medium-sized enterprises are often not able to afford the cost of testing for hazardous properties, the list would allow them to easily identify those wastes and materials that should be considered hazardous. The proposed definitions of "hazardous waste" and "hazardous recyclable material" use both a listing approach and hazardous-property criteria. The proposed Regulations use lists preferentially, followed by hazardous property testing.
Some stakeholders indicated that they would like to see exemptions included in the Regulations for certain categories of low-risk recyclable materials that are valuable secondary feedstocks for the recycling industry. Environment Canada incorporated the definition of "hazardous recyclable material" in the proposed Regulations, which effectively excludes certain low-risk recyclable materials from being regulated if they met the criteria set out in the definition. The nature of the definition is expected to promote sustainable recycling, thereby enhancing the protection of the environment through the recycling of valuable materials.
Overall, the majority of industry stakeholders support the harmonization of the definitions of "hazardous waste" and "hazardous recyclable material" with those of the Export and Import Regulations, since this also results in exemption of certain low-risk recyclable materials. The proposed approach for the definitions for hazardous waste and hazardous recyclable material will also enable progress toward a federal/provincial/territorial harmonized approach for the management of waste and recyclable material, including low-risk hazardous recyclable material.
Compliance and enforcement
As the proposed Regulations are made under CEPA 1999, enforcement officers will, when verifying compliance with the Regulations, apply the Compliance and Enforcement Policy for CEPA 1999. The Policy also sets out the range of possible responses to alleged violations: warnings, directions, environmental protection compliance orders, ticketing, ministerial orders, injunctions, prosecution, and environmental protection alternative measures (which are an alternative to a court trial after the laying of charges for a CEPA 1999 violation). In addition, the Policy explains when Environment Canada will resort to civil suits by the Crown for cost recovery.
When, following an inspection or an investigation, an enforcement officer discovers an alleged violation, the officer will choose the appropriate enforcement action based on the following factors:
- Nature of the alleged violation: This includes consideration of
the damage, the intent of the alleged violator, whether it is a repeat violation,
and whether an attempt has been made to conceal information or otherwise
subvert the objectives and requirements of the Act.
- Effectiveness in achieving the desired result with the alleged
violator: The desired result is compliance within the shortest possible time
and with no further repetition of the violation. Factors to be considered
include the violator's history of compliance with the Act, willingness to
co-operate with enforcement officers, and evidence of corrective action already
taken.
- Consistency: Enforcement officers will consider how similar situations
have been handled in determining the measures to be taken to enforce the
Act.
Contacts
Ms. Tanya Smyth-Monteiro, Senior Program Engineer, Instrument Development, Waste Management Division, Pollution Prevention Directorate, Environment Canada, 70 Cremazie Street, 6th Floor, Gatineau, Quebec K1A 0H3, 819-994-0599 (telephone), 819-997-3068 (fax), tanya.smyth-monteiro@ec.gc.ca (email); and Ms. Céline Labossière, Policy Manager, Impact Analysis and Instrument Choice Division, Environment Canada, 10 Wellington Street, 24th Floor, Gatineau, Quebec K1A 0H3, 819-997-2377 (telephone), 819-997-2769 (fax), celine.labossiere@ec.gc.ca (email).
PROPOSED REGULATORY TEXT
Notice is hereby given, pursuant to subsection 332(1) (see footnote a) of the Canadian Environmental Protection Act, 1999 (see footnote b), that the Governor in Council proposes, pursuant to section 191 of that Act, to make the annexed Interprovincial Movement of Hazardous Waste and Hazardous Recyclable Material Regulations.
Any person may, within 60 days after the date of publication of this notice, file with the Minister of the Environment comments with respect to the proposed Regulations or a notice of objection requesting that a board of review be established under section 333 of the Canadian Environmental Protection Act, 1999 (see footnote c) and stating the reasons for the objection. All comments and notices must cite the Canada Gazette, Part I, and the date of publication of this notice, and be addressed to France Jacovella, Director, Waste Management Division, Department of the Environment, Ottawa, Ontario K1A 0H3.
A person who provides information to the Minister of the Environment may submit with the information a request for confidentiality under section 313 of the Canadian Environmental Protection Act, 1999 (see footnote d).
Ottawa, August 25, 2006
MARY O'NEILL
Assistant Clerk of the Privy Council
INTERPROVINCIAL MOVEMENT OF HAZARDOUS WASTE AND HAZARDOUS RECYCLABLE MATERIAL REGULATIONS
INTERPRETATION
1. (1) In Division 8 of Part 7 and Part 10 of the Act and in these Regulations, "hazardous waste" means anything that is intended to be disposed of using one of the operations set out in Schedule 1 and that
(a) is set out in column 2 of Schedule 3;
(b) is included in at least one of Classes 2 to 6, 8 or 9 of the Transportation of Dangerous Goods Regulations;
(c) is set out in column 2 of Schedule 4 and is included in at least one of Classes 2 to 6, 8 or 9 of the Transportation of Dangerous Goods Regulations;
(d) is set out in column 1 of Schedule 5 in a concentration equal to or greater than the applicable concentration set out in column 2 of that Schedule;
(e) produces a leachate containing a constituent set out in column 2 of Schedule 6 in a concentration equal to or greater than the applicable concentration set out in column 3 of that Schedule, determined in accordance with Method 1311, Toxicity Characteristic Leaching Procedure, July 1992, in Test Methods for Evaluating Solid Waste, Volume 1C: Laboratory Manual, Physical/Chemical Methods, Third Edition, SW-846, November 1986, published by the United States Environmental Protection Agency, which, for the purposes of this definition, shall be read without reference to section 7.1.3; or
(f) is set out in column 2 of Schedule 7, is pure or is the only active ingredient, and is unused.
(2) The definition "hazardous waste" in subsection (1) does not include anything that is
(a) transported within Canada in a quantity of less than 5 kg or 5 L per shipment or, in the case of mercury, in a quantity of less than 50 mL per shipment, other than anything that is included in Class 6.2 of the Transportation of Dangerous Goods Regulations;
(b) collected from households in the course of regular municipal waste collection services; or
(c) part of the consignor's or consignee's personal effects or household effects not resulting from commercial use.
2. (1) In Division 8 of Part 7 and Part 10 of the Act and in these Regulations, "hazardous recyclable material" means anything that is intended to be recycled using one of the operations set out in Schedule 2 and that
(a) is set out in column 2 of Schedule 3;
(b) is included in at least one of Classes 2 to 6, 8 or 9 of the Transportation of Dangerous Goods Regulations;
(c) is set out in column 2 of Schedule 4 and is included in at least one of Classes 2 to 6, 8 or 9 of the Transportation of Dangerous Goods Regulations;
(d) is set out in column 1 of Schedule 5 in a concentration equal to or greater than the applicable concentration set out in column 2 of that Schedule;
(e) produces a leachate containing a constituent set out in column 2 of Schedule 6 in a concentration equal to or greater than the applicable concentration set out in column 3 of that Schedule, determined in accordance with Method 1311, Toxicity Characteristic Leaching Procedure, July 1992, in Test Methods for Evaluating Solid Waste, Volume 1C: Laboratory Manual, Physical/Chemical Methods, Third Edition, SW-846, November 1986, published by the United States Environmental Protection Agency, which, for the purposes of this definition, shall be read without reference to section 7.1.3; or
(f) is set out in column 2 of Schedule 7, is pure or is the only active ingredient, and is unused.
(2) The definition "hazardous recyclable material" in subsection (1) does not include anything that is
(a) transported within Canada in a quantity of less than 5 kg or 5 L per shipment or, in the case of mercury, in a quantity of less than 50 mL per shipment, other than anything that is included in Class 6.2 of the Transportation of Dangerous Goods Regulations;
(b) collected from households in the course of regular municipal waste collection services;
(c) part of the consignor's or consignee's personal effects or household effects not resulting from commercial use;
(d) transported within Canada and that
(i) is in a quantity of 25 kg or 25 L or less,
(ii) is transported for the purpose of conducting measurements, tests or research with respect to the recycling of that material,
(iii) is accompanied by a shipping document, as defined in section 1.4 of the Transportation of Dangerous Goods Regulations, that includes the name and address of the consignor or consignee and the words "test samples" or "échantillons d'épreuve", and
(iv) is not and does not contain an infectious substance as defined in section 1.4 of the Transportation of Dangerous Goods Regulations; or
(e) transported within Canada and that
(i) is set out in Schedule 8,
(ii) produces a leachate containing a constituent set out in column 2 of Schedule 6 in a concentration equal to or greater than the applicable concentration set out in column 3 of that Schedule, determined in accordance with Method 1311, Toxicity Characteristic Leaching Procedure, July 1992, in Test Methods for Evaluating Solid Waste, Volume 1C: Laboratory Manual, Physical/Chemical Methods, Third Edition, SW-846, November 1986, published by the United States Environmental Protection Agency, which, for the purposes of this definition, shall be read without reference to section 7.1.3, and
(iii) is intended to be recycled at an authorized facility using one of the operations set out in Schedule 2.
3. For the purposes of the definition "hazardous waste" in section 1 and the definition "hazardous recyclable material" in section 2, references to the Transportation of Dangerous Goods Regulations shall be read as follows:
(a) the reference to "public safety" in subparagraph 2.43(b)(i) shall be read as a reference to "the environment and human health"; and
(b) subparagraph 2.43(b)(i) shall be read without reference to "during transport".
4. The definitions in this section apply in these Regulations.
"Act" means the Canadian Environmental Protection Act, 1999. (Loi)
"authorized carrier" means a carrier that is authorized under the laws of Canada or of a province to transport hazardous waste or hazardous recyclable material. (transporteur agréé)
"authorized facility" means a facility that is authorized by the authorities of the province in which the facility is located to
(a) dispose of the hazardous waste being transported within Canada using an operation set out in Schedule 1; or
(b) recycle the hazardous recyclable material being transported within Canada using an operation set out in Schedule 2. (installation agréée)
"consignee" means the person to whom hazardous waste or hazardous recyclable material is being or is intended to be transported. (destinataire)
"consignor" means a person who has possession of hazardous waste or hazardous recyclable material immediately before it is shipped. (expéditeur)
"movement document" means the form set out in Schedule 9. (document de mouvement)
APPLICATION
5. These Regulations do not apply to the movement within Canada of hazardous waste or hazardous recyclable material to which the Export and Import of Hazardous Waste and Hazardous Recyclable Material Regulations apply.
CONDITIONS
6. All transport within Canada of hazardous waste or hazardous recyclable material is subject to compliance with the conditions set out in sections 7 to 13.
7. (1) Every shipment of hazardous waste or hazardous recyclable material for transport within Canada must be accompanied by a movement document that contains a reference number.
(2) The reference number is to be provided by the Minister to a consignor who requests one or by a competent authority in the province of origin or the province of destination of the waste or material.
8. Prior to shipping the hazardous waste or hazardous recyclable material, the consignor must complete Part A of a movement document, indicate the movement document reference number and provide the movement document to the first authorized carrier.
9. Immediately on receipt of the movement document, the first authorized carrier must complete Part B of the movement document and provide a copy of it to the consignor.
10. Within three working days after the day on which the hazardous waste or hazardous recyclable material is shipped, the consignor must send a copy of the movement document, completed in accordance with sections 8 and 9, to
(a) the authorities of the province of origin; and
(b) the authorities of the province of destination.
11. Every other authorized carrier that transports the hazardous waste or hazardous recyclable material must complete Part B of the movement document and provide the document to the next authorized carrier or consignee, as the case may be, on delivery of the waste or material to that carrier or the consignee.
12. Within three working days after the day on which the hazardous waste or hazardous recyclable material is delivered, the consignee must complete Part C of the movement document and send a copy of the document to
(a) the consignor;
(b) the authorities of the province of origin; and
(c) the authorities of the province of destination.
13. The consignor and consignee, as well as each authorized carrier, must keep a copy of the movement document at their principal place of business in Canada for a period of two years after the hazardous waste or hazardous recyclable material is delivered to the consignee.
REPEAL
14. The Interprovincial Movement of Hazardous Waste Regulations (see footnote 1) are repealed.
COMING INTO FORCE
15. These Regulations come into force on the day on which they are registered.
SCHEDULE 1
(Subsection 1(1) and section 4)
DISPOSAL OPERATIONS FOR HAZARDOUS WASTE
Item |
Column 1
Disposal Code |
Column 2
Operation |
1. |
D1 |
Release into or onto land, other than by any of operations D3 to D5 or D12. |
2. |
D2 |
Land treatment, such as biodegradation of liquids or sludges in soil. |
3. |
D3 |
Deep injection, such as injection into wells, salt domes, mines or naturally occurring repositories. |
4. |
D4 |
Surface impoundment, such as placing liquids or sludges into pits, ponds or lagoons. |
5. |
D5 |
Specially engineered landfilling, such as placement into separate lined cells that are isolated from each other and the environment. |
6. |
D6 |
Release into water, other than a sea or ocean, other than by operation D4. |
7. |
D7 |
Release into a sea or ocean, including sea-bed insertion, other than by operation D4. |
8. |
D8 |
Biological treatment, not otherwise set out in this Schedule. |
9. |
D9 |
Physical or chemical treatment, not otherwise referred to in this Schedule, such as calcination, neutralization or precipitation. |
10. |
D10 |
Incineration or thermal treatment on land. |
11. |
D11 |
Incineration or thermal treatment at sea. |
12. |
D12 |
Permanent storage. |
13. |
D13 |
Blending or mixing, prior to any of operations D1 to D12. |
14. |
D14 |
Repackaging, prior to any of operations D1 to D13. |
15. |
D15 |
Release, including the venting of compressed or liquified gases, or treatment, other than by any of operations D1 to D12. |
16. |
D16 |
Testing of a new technology to dispose of a hazardous waste. |
17. |
D17 |
Interim storage, prior to any of operations D1 to D12. |
SCHEDULE 2
(Subsection 2(1), subparagraph 2(2)(e)(iii) and section 4)
RECYCLING OPERATIONS FOR HAZARDOUS RECYCLABLE MATERIAL
Item |
Column 1
Recycling
Code |
Column 2
Operation |
1. |
R1 |
Use as a fuel in an energy recovery system, where the net heating value of
the material is at least 12 780 kJ/kg. |
2. |
R2 |
Recovery or regeneration of substances that have been used as solvents. |
3. |
R3 |
Recovery of organic substances that have not been used as solvents. |
4. |
R4 |
Recovery of metals and metal compounds. |
5. |
R5 |
Recovery of inorganic materials other than metals or metal compounds. |
6. |
R6 |
Regeneration of acids or bases. |
7. |
R7 |
Recovery of components used for pollution abatement. |
8. |
R8 |
Recovery of components from catalysts. |
9. |
R9 |
Re-refining or re-use of used oil, other than by operation R1. |
10. |
R10 |
Land treatment resulting in agricultural or ecological improvement. |
11. |
R11 |
Use of residual materials obtained by any of operations R1 to R10 or R14. |
12. |
R12 |
Exchange of a recyclable material for another recyclable material prior to recycling by any of operations R1 to R11 or R14. |
13. |
R13 |
Accumulation prior to recycling by any of operations R1 to R11 or R14. |
14. |
R14 |
Recovery or regeneration of a substance or use or re-use of a recyclable
material, other than by any of operations R1 to R10. |
15. |
R15 |
Testing of a new technology to recycle a hazardous recyclable material. |
16. |
R16 |
Interim storage prior to any of operations R1 to R11 or R14. |
SCHEDULE 3
(Paragraphs 1(1)(a) and 2(1)(a))
HAZARDOUS WASTES AND HAZARDOUS RECYCLABLE MATERIALS
Item |
Column 1
Identification No. |
Column 2
Description of Hazardous Waste and Hazardous Recyclable Material |
1. |
HAZ1 |
Biomedical waste the following wastes, other than those generated from building maintenance, office administration or food preparation and consumption, that are generated by human or animal health care establishments, medical, health care or veterinary teaching or research establishments, clinical laboratories or facilities that test or produce vaccines and needle and syringe exchange programs: (a) human tissues, organs or body parts, excluding teeth, hair or nails; (b) human blood or blood products; (c) human bodily fluids that are contaminated with blood; (d) human bodily fluids removed in the course of autopsy, treatment, or surgery for diagnosis; (e) animal tissues, organs, body parts or carcasses, excluding teeth, nails, hair, bristles, feathers, horns and hooves, resulting from the treatment of an animal for contamination or suspected contamination with one or more of the agents set out in paragraph 2.36(a) or (b) of the Transportation of Dangerous Goods Regulations; (f) animal blood or blood products resulting from the treatment of an animal for contamination or suspected contamination with one or more of the agents set out in paragraph 2.36(a) or (b) of the Transportation of Dangerous Goods Regulations; (g) animal bodily fluids that are visibly contaminated with animal blood and that result from the treatment of an animal for contamination or suspected contamination with one or more of the agents set out in paragraph 2.36(a) or (b) of the Transportation of Dangerous Goods Regulations;
(h) animal bodily fluids removed in the course of surgery, treatment or necropsy, and that result from the treatment of an animal for contamination or suspected contamination with one or more of the agents set out in paragraph 2.36(a) or (b) of the Transportation of Dangerous Goods Regulations;
(i) live or attenuated vaccines, human or animal cell cultures, microbiology laboratory cultures, stocks or specimens of microorganisms and any items that have come into contact with them;
(j) any items that are saturated with the blood or bodily fluids referred
to in paragraphs (b) to (d)
or (f) to (h), including items that were saturated
but that have dried; and
(k) cytotoxic drugs and any items, including tissues, tubing, needles or gloves, that have come into contact with a cytotoxic drug.
Biomedical waste does not include
(a) urine or feces;
(b) wastes that are controlled under the Health of Animals Act; or
(c) wastes that result from the breeding or raising of animals. |
2. |
HAZ2 |
Used lubricating oils in quantities of 500 L or more, from internal combustion engines or gear boxes, transmissions, transformers, hydraulic systems or other equipment associated with such engines. |
3. |
HAZ3 |
Used oil filters containing more than 6% of oil by mass. |
4. |
HAZ4 |
Cyanide, or substances containing cyanide, in a concentration equal to or greater than 100 mg/kg. |
5. |
HAZ5 |
Wastes that contain more than 2 mg/kg of polychlorinated terphenyls or polybrominated biphenyls described in Schedule 1 to the Act. |
6. |
HAZ6 |
Wastes that contain, in a concentration of more than 100 ng/kg of 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin
equivalent,
(a) total polychlorinated dibenzofurans that have a molecular formula C12H8-nClnO in which "n" is greater than 1; or (b) total polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins that have a molecular formula C12H8-nClnO2 in which "n" is greater than 1. The concentration is calculated in accordance with "International Toxicity Equivalency Factor (I-TEF) Method of Risk Assessment for Complex Mixtures of Dioxins and Related Compounds", Pilot Study on International Information Exchange on Dioxins and Related Compounds, Committee on the Challenges of Modern Society, North Atlantic Treaty Organization, Report Number 176, August 1988, as amended from time to time, using the following factors: 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzodioxin 1.0 1,2,3,7,8-pentachlorodibenzodioxin 0.5 1,2,3,4,7,8-hexachlorodibenzodioxin 0.1
1,2,3,7,8,9-hexachlorodibenzodioxin 0.1
1,2,3,6,7,8-hexachlorodibenzodioxin 0.1
1,2,3,4,6,7,8-heptachlorodibenzodioxin 0.01
octachlorodibenzodioxin 0.001
2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzofuran 0.1
2,3,4,7,8-pentachlorodibenzofuran 0.5
1,2,3,7,8-pentachlorodibenzofuran 0.05
1,2,3,4,7,8-hexachlorodibenzofuran 0.1
1,2,3,7,8,9-hexachlorodibenzofuran 0.1
1,2,3,6,7,8-hexachlorodibenzofuran 0.1
2,3,4,6,7,8-hexachlorodibenzofuran 0.1
1,2,3,4,6,7,8-heptachlorodibenzofuran 0.01
1,2,3,4,7,8,9-heptachlorodibenzofuran 0.01
octachlorodibenzofuran 0.001 |
SCHEDULE 4
(Paragraphs 1(1)(c) and 2(1)(c))
PART 1
HAZARDOUS WASTES AND HAZARDOUS RECYCLABLE MATERIALS FROM NON-SPECIFIC SOURCES
Item |
Column 1
Identification No. |
Column 2
Description of Hazardous Waste and Hazardous Recyclable Material |
1. |
F001 |
The following spent halogenated solvents used in degreasing: tetrachloroethylene,
trichloroethylene, methylene chloride, 1,1,1-trichloroethane, carbon tetrachloride
and chlorinated fluorocarbons; all spent solvent mixtures and blends used in
degreasing containing, before use, a total of 10% or more (by volume) of one
or more of the above halogenated solvents or those solvents listed as F002,
F004 or F005; and still bottoms from the recovery of those spent solvents and
spent solvent mixtures. |
2. |
F002 |
The following spent halogenated solvents: tetrachloroethylene, methylene chloride, trichloroethylene, 1,1,1-trichloroethane, chlorobenzene, 1,1,2-trichloro-1,2,2-trifluoroethane, ortho-dichlorobenzene, trichlorofluoromethane and 1,1,2-trichloroethane; all spent solvent mixtures and blends containing, before use, a total of 10% or more (by volume) of one or more of the above halogenated solvents or those listed as F001, F004 or F005; and still bottoms from the recovery of those spent solvents and spent solvent mixtures. |
3. |
F003 |
The following spent non-halogenated solvents: xylene, acetone,
ethyl acetate, ethyl benzene, ethyl ether, methyl isobutyl ketone, n-butyl
alcohol, cyclohexanone and methanol; all spent solvent mixtures and blends
containing, before use, only the above spent non-halogenated solvents; and
all spent solvent mixtures and blends containing, before use, one or more of
the above spent non-halogenated solvents, and a total of 10% or more (by volume)
of one or more of those solvents listed as F001, F002, F004 or F005; and still
bottoms from the recovery of those spent solvents and spent solvent mixtures. |
4. |
F004 |
The following spent non-halogenated solvents: cresols, cresylic acid and nitrobenzene; all spent solvent mixtures and blends containing, before use, a total of 10% or more (by volume) of one or more of the above spent non-halogenated solvents or those solvents listed as F001, F002 or F005; and still bottoms from the recovery of these spent solvents and spent solvent mixtures. |
5. |
F005 |
The following spent non-halogenated solvents: toluene, methyl ethyl ketone,
carbon disulphide, isobutanol, pyridine, benzene, 2-ethoxyethanol and 2-nitropropane;
all spent solvent mixtures and blends containing, before use, a total of 10%
or more (by volume) of one or more of the above spent non-halogenated solvents
or those solvents listed as F001, F002 or F004; and still bottoms from the
recovery of those spent solvents and spent solvent mixtures. |
6. |
F006 |
Wastewater treatment sludges from electroplating operations except for the following processes:
(1) sulphuric acid anodizing of aluminum; (2) tin plating on carbon steel;
(3) zinc plating (on a segregated basis) on carbon steel; (4) aluminum or
aluminum-zinc plating on carbon steel; (5) cleaning or stripping associated
with tin, zinc or aluminum plating on carbon steel; and (6) chemical etching
and milling of aluminum. |
7. |
F007 |
Spent cyanide plating bath solutions from electroplating operations. |
8. |
F008 |
Plating bath sludge from the bottom of plating baths from electroplating operations where cyanides are used in the process. |
9. |
F009 |
Spent stripping and cleaning bath solutions from electroplating operations where cyanides are used in the process. |
10. |
F010 |
Quenching bath sludge from oil baths from metal heat treating operations where cyanides are used in the process. |
11. |
F011 |
Spent cyanide solutions from salt bath pot cleaning from metal heat treating operations. |
12. |
F012 |
Quenching wastewater treatment sludge from metal heat treating operations where cyanides are used in the process. |
13. |
F019 |
Wastewater treatment sludge from the chemical conversion coating of aluminum except from zirconium phosphating in aluminum can washing if such phosphating is an exclusive conversion coating process. |
14. |
F020 |
Wastes from the production or manufacturing use (as a reactant, chemical intermediate or component in a formulating process) of tri- or tetrachlorophenol or of intermediates used to produce their pesticide derivatives, excluding wastewater and spent carbon from hydrogen chloride purification and wastes from the production of hexachlorophene from highly purified 2,4,5-trichlorophenol. |
15. |
F021 |
Wastes from the production or manufacturing use (as a reactant, chemical intermediate or component in a formulating process) of pentachlorophenol or of intermediates used to produce its derivatives, excluding wastewater and spent carbon from hydrogen chloride purification. |
16. |
F022 |
Wastes from the manufacturing use (as a reactant, chemical intermediate or component in a formulating process) of tetra-, penta- or hexachlorobenzenes under alkaline conditions, excluding wastewater and spent carbon from hydrogen chloride purification. |
17. |
F023 |
Wastes from the production of materials on equipment previously used for the production or manufacturing use (as a reactant, chemical intermediate or component in a formulating process) of tri- and tetrachlorophenols, excluding wastewater and spent carbon from hydrogen chloride purification and wastes from equipment used only for the production or use of hexachlorophene from highly purified 2,4,5-trichlorophenol. |
18. |
F024 |
Process wastes, including, but not limited to, distillation residues, heavy ends, tars and reactor clean-out wastes from the production of certain chlorinated aliphatic hydrocarbons by free radical catalyzed processes, those chlorinated aliphatic hydrocarbons being those having carbon chain lengths ranging from 1 to and including 5, with varying amounts and positions of chlorine substitution, and excluding wastewaters, wastewater treatment sludge, spent catalysts and wastes set out in Schedule 7. |
19. |
F025 |
Condensed light ends, spent filters and filter aids, and spent desiccant wastes from the production of certain chlorinated aliphatic hydrocarbons, by free radical catalyzed processes, those chlorinated aliphatic hydrocarbons being those having carbon chain lengths ranging from 1 to and including 5, with varying amounts and positions of chlorine substitution. |
20. |
F026 |
Wastes from the production of materials on equipment previously used for the manufacturing use (as a reactant, chemical intermediate or component in a formulating process) of tetra-, penta- or hexachlorobenzene under alkaline conditions, excluding wastewater and spent carbon from hydrogen chloride purification. |
21. |
F027 |
Discarded unused formulations containing tri-, tetra- or pentachlorophenol
or discarded unused formulations containing compounds derived from those chlorophenols,
excluding formulations containing hexachlorophene synthesized from prepurified
2,4,5-trichlorophenol as the sole component. |
22. |
F028 |
Residues resulting from incineration or treatment of soil contaminated with wastes listed as F020, F021, F022, F023, F026 or F027. |
23. |
F032 |
Wastewaters, spent formulations from wood preserving processes generated
at plants that currently use or have previously used chlorophenolic formulations,
process residuals and preservative drippage, except wastewaters that have not
come into contact with process contaminants, spent formulations that potentially
cross-contaminated wastes from wood preserving processes at plants that do
not resume or initiate use of chlorophenolic preservatives, and bottom sediment
sludge listed as K001. |
24. |
F034 |
Wastewaters, process residuals, preservative drippage and spent formulations from wood preserving processes generated at plants that use creosote formulations, excluding bottom sediment sludge listed as K001 and wastewaters that have not come into contact with process contaminants. |
25. |
F035 |
Wastewaters, process residuals, preservative drippage and spent formulations from wood preserving processes generated at plants that use inorganic preservatives containing arsenic or chromium, excluding bottom sediment sludge listed as K001 and wastewaters that have not come into contact with process contaminants. |
26. |
F037 |
Petroleum refinery primary oil, water and solids separation sludge; sludge
generated from the gravitational separation of oil, water and solids during
the storage or treatment of process wastewaters and oil cooling wastewaters
from petroleum refineries, including, but not limited to, those generated in
oil, water and solids separators, tanks and impoundments, ditches and other
conveyances, sumps and stormwater units receiving dry weather flow; sludge
generated in stormwater units that do not receive dry weather flow; sludge
generated from non-contact once-through cooling waters segregated for treatment
from other processes or oily cooling waters; sludge generated in biological
treatment units that employ one of the following treatment methods: activated
sludge, trickling filter, rotating biological contactor for the continuous
accelerated biological oxidation of wastewaters, or high-rate aeration (including
sludge generated in one or more additional units after wastewaters have been
treated in biological treatment units). Wastes listed as K051 are excluded. |
27. |
F038 |
Petroleum refinery secondary (emulsified) oil, water and solids
separation sludge; sludge or float generated from the physical or chemical
separation of oil, water and solids in process wastewaters and oily cooling
wastewaters from petroleum refineries, including, but not limited to, sludge
and floats generated in induced air flotation (IAF) units, tanks and impoundments,
and in dissolved air flotation (DAF) units; sludge generated in stormwater
units that do not receive dry weather flow; sludge generated from non-contact
once-through cooling waters segregated for treatment from other processes or
oily cooling water; sludge and float generated in biological treatment units
that employ one of the following treatment methods: activated sludge, trickling
filter, rotating biological contactor for the continuous accelerated biological
oxidation of wastewaters, or high-rate aeration (including sludge and float
generated in one or more additional units after wastewaters have been treated
in a biological treatment unit). Wastes listed as F037, K048 and K051 are excluded. |
28. |
F039 |
Leachate (liquids that percolated through land disposed wastes) resulting from the disposal of more than one waste classified as a hazardous waste by being included in this Schedule. |
PART 2
HAZARDOUS WASTES AND HAZARDOUS RECYCLABLE MATERIALS FROM SPECIFIC SOURCES
Item |
Column 1
Identification No. |
Column 2
Description of Hazardous Waste and Hazardous Recyclable Material |
Wood Preservation |
1. |
K001 |
Bottom sediment sludge from the treatment of wastewaters from wood preserving processes that use creosote or pentachlorophenol or both. |
Inorganic Pigments |
2. |
K002 |
Wastewater treatment sludge from the production of chrome yellow and orange pigments. |
3. |
K003 |
Wastewater treatment sludge from the production of molybdate orange pigments. |
4. |
K004 |
Wastewater treatment sludge from the production of zinc yellow pigments. |
5. |
K005 |
Wastewater treatment sludge from the production of chrome green pigments. |
6. |
K006 |
Wastewater treatment sludge from the production of chromeoxide green pigments (anhydrous and hydrated). |
7. |
K007 |
Wastewater treatment sludge from the production of iron blue pigments. |
8. |
K008 |
Oven residue from the production of chromeoxide green pigments. |
Organic Chemicals |
9. |
K009 |
Distillation bottoms from the production of acetaldehyde from ethylene. |
10. |
K010 |
Distillation side cuts from the production of acetaldehyde from ethylene. |
11. |
K011 |
Bottom stream from the wastewater stripper in the production of acrylonitrile. |
12. |
K013 |
Bottom stream from the acetonitrile column in the production of acrylonitrile. |
13. |
K014 |
Bottoms from the acetonitrile purification column in the production of acrylonitrile. |
14. |
K015 |
Still bottoms from the distillation of benzylchloride. |
15. |
K016 |
Heavy ends or distillation residues from the production of carbon tetrachloride. |
16. |
K017 |
Heavy ends (still bottoms) from the purification column in the production of epichlorohydrin. |
17. |
K018 |
Heavy ends from the fractionation column in ethyl chloride production. |
18. |
K019 |
Heavy ends from the distillation of ethylene dichloride in ethylene dichloride production. |
19. |
K020 |
Heavy ends from the distillation of vinyl chloride in vinyl chloride monomer production. |
20. |
K021 |
Aqueous spent antimony catalyst waste from fluoromethanes production. |
21. |
K022 |
Distillation bottom tars from the production of phenol and acetone from cumene. |
22. |
K023 |
Distillation light ends from the production of phthalic anhydride from naphthalene. |
23. |
K024 |
Distillation bottoms from the production of phthalic anhydride from naphthalene. |
24. |
K025 |
Distillation bottoms from the production of nitrobenzene by the nitration of benzene. |
25. |
K026 |
Stripping still tails from the production of methyl ethyl pyridines. |
26. |
K027 |
Centrifuge and distillation residues from toluene diisocyanate production. |
27. |
K028 |
Spent catalyst from the hydrochlorinator reactor in the production of 1,1,1-trichloroethane. |
28. |
K029 |
Waste from the product stream stripper in the production of 1,1,1-trichloroethane. |
29. |
K030 |
Column bottoms or heavy ends from the combined production of trichloroethylene and perchloroethylene. |
30. |
K083 |
Distillation bottoms from aniline production. |
31. |
K085 |
Distillation or fractionating column bottoms from the production of chlorobenzenes. |
32. |
K093 |
Distillation light ends from the production of phthalic anhydride from o-xylene. |
33. |
K094 |
Distillation bottoms from the production of phthalic anhydride from o-xylene. |
34. |
K095 |
Distillation bottoms from the production of 1,1,1-trichloroethane. |
35. |
K096 |
Heavy ends from the heavy ends columns from the production of 1,1,1-trichloroethane. |
36. |
K103 |
Process residues from aniline extraction from the production of aniline. |
37. |
K104 |
Combined wastewater streams from nitrobenzene and aniline production. |
38. |
K105 |
Separated aqueous stream from the reactor product washing step in the production of chlorobenzene. |
39. |
K107 |
Column bottoms from product separation from the production of 1,1-dimethyl-hydrazine (UDMH) from carboxylic acid hydrazines. |
40. |
K108 |
Condensed column overheads from product separation and condensed reactor vent gases from the production of 1,1-dimethylhydrazine (UDMH) from carboxylic acid hydrazides. |
41. |
K109 |
Spent filter cartridges from product purification from the production of 1,1- dimethylhydrazine (UDMH) from carboxylic acid hydrazides. |
42. |
K110 |
Condensed column overheads from
intermediate separation from the production
of 1,1-dimethylhydrazine (UDMH) from carboxylic acid hydrazides. |
43. |
K111 |
Product washwaters from the production of dinitrotoluene via nitration of toluene. |
44. |
K112 |
Reaction by-product water from the drying column in the production of toluenediamine via hydrogenation of dinitrotoluene. |
45. |
K113 |
Condensed liquid light ends from the purification of toluenediamine in the production of toluenediamine via hydrogenation of dinitrotoluene. |
46. |
K114 |
Vicinals from the purification of toluenediamine in the production of toluenediamine via hydrogenation of dinitrotoluene. |
47. |
K115 |
Heavy ends from the purification of toluenediamine in the production of toluenediamine via hydrogenation of dinitrotoluene. |
48. |
K116 |
Organic condensate from the solvent recovery column in the production of toluene diisocyanate via phosgenation of toluenediamine. |
49. |
K117 |
Wastewater from the reactor vent gas scrubber in the production of ethylene dibromide via bromination of ethene. |
50. |
K118 |
Spent adsorbent solids from the purification of ethylene dibromide in the production of ethylene dibromide via bromination of ethene. |
51. |
K136 |
Still bottoms from the purification of ethylene dibromide in the production of ethylene dibromide via bromination of ethene. |
52. |
K140 |
Floor sweepings, off-specification product
and spent filter media from the production of 2,4,6-tribromophenol. |
53. |
K149 |
Distillation bottoms from the production of
alpha- (or methyl-) chlorinated toluenes,
ring- chlorinated toluenes, benzoyl chlorides and compounds with mixtures of
those functional groups, excluding still bottoms from the distillation of
benzyl chloride. |
54. |
K150 |
Organic residuals, excluding spent carbon adsorbent, from the spent chlorine
gas and hydrochloric acid recovery processes associated with the production
of alpha- (or methyl-) chlorinated toluenes,
ring-chlorinated toluenes, benzoyl chlorides and compounds with mixtures of
those functional groups. |
55. |
K151 |
Wastewater treatment sludge generated during
the treatment of wastewaters from the production
of alpha- (or methyl-) chlorinated toluenes, ring-chlorinated toluenes, benzoyl
chlorides and compounds with mixtures of those functional groups, excluding
neutralization and biological sludge. |
56. |
K156 |
Organic waste (including heavy ends, still bottoms, light ends, spent solvents, filtrates and decantates) from the production of carbamates and carbamoyl oximes, excluding waste generated from the manufacture of 3-iodo-2-propynyl n-butylcarbamate. |
57. |
K157 |
Wastewaters (including scrubber waters, condenser waters, washwaters and
separation waters) from the production of carbamates and carbamoyl oximes,
excluding wastes generated from the manufacture of 3-iodo-2-propynyl n-butylcarbamate. |
58. |
K158 |
Bag house dusts and filter or separation solids from the production of carbamates and carbamoyl oximes, excluding wastes generated from the manufacture of 3-iodo-2-propynyl n-butylcarbamate. |
59. |
K159 |
Organics from the treatment of thiocarbamate wastes. |
60. |
K161 |
Purification solids (including filtration, evaporation and centrifugation solids), bag house dust and floor sweepings from the production of dithiocarbamate acids and their salts, excluding substances listed as K125 or K126. |
Inorganic chemicals |
61. |
K071 |
Brine purification sludge from the mercury cell process in chlorine production if separately prepurified brine is not used. |
62. |
K073 |
Chlorinated hydrocarbon wastes from the purification step of the diaphragm
cell process using graphite anodes in chlorine production. |
63. |
K106 |
Wastewater treatment sludge from the mercury cell process in chlorine production. |
Pesticides |
64. |
K031 |
By-product salts generated in the production of monosodium acid methanearsonate (MSMA) and cacodylic acid. |
65. |
K032 |
Wastewater treatment sludge from the production of chlordane. |
66. |
K033 |
Wastewater and scrub water from the chlorination of cyclopentadiene in the production of chlordane. |
67. |
K034 |
Filter solids from the filtration of hexachlorocyclopentadiene in the production of chlordane. |
68. |
K035 |
Wastewater treatment sludge from the production of creosote. |
69. |
K036 |
Still bottoms from toluene reclamation distillation in the production of disulfoton. |
70. |
K037 |
Wastewater treatment sludge from the production of disulfoton. |
71. |
K038 |
Wastewater from the washing and stripping of phorate production. |
72. |
K039 |
Filter cake from the filtration of diethylphosphorodithioic acid in the production of phorate. |
73. |
K040 |
Wastewater treatment sludge from the production of phorate. |
74. |
K041 |
Wastewater treatment sludge from the production of toxaphene. |
75. |
K042 |
Heavy ends or distillation residues from the distillation of tetrachlorobenzene in the production of 2,4,5-T. |
76. |
K043 |
2,6-Dichlorophenol waste from the production of 2,4-D. |
77. |
K097 |
Vacuum stripper discharge from the chlordane chlorinator in the production of chlordane. |
78. |
K098 |
Untreated process wastewater from the production of toxaphene. |
79. |
K099 |
Untreated wastewater from the production of 2,4-D. |
80. |
K123 |
Process wastewater, including supernates, filtrates and washwaters, from the production of ethylenebisdithiocarbamic acid and its salts. |
81. |
K124 |
Reactor vent scrubber water from the production of ethylenebisdithiocarbamic acid and its salts. |
82. |
K125 |
Filtration, evaporation and centrifugation solids from the production of ethylenebisdithiocarbamic acid and its salts. |
83. |
K126 |
Baghouse dust and floor sweepings in milling and packaging operations from
the production or formulation of ethylenebisdithiocarbamic acid and its salts. |
84. |
K131 |
Wastewater from the reactor and spent sulfuric acid from the acid dryer from the production of methyl bromide. |
85. |
K132 |
Spent absorbent and wastewater separator solids from the production of methyl bromide. |
Explosives |
86. |
K044 |
Wastewater treatment sludge from the manufacturing and processing of explosives. |
87. |
K045 |
Spent carbon from the treatment of wastewater containing explosives. |
88. |
K046 |
Wastewater treatment sludge from the manufacturing, formulation and loading
of lead-based initiating compounds. |
89. |
K047 |
Pink and red water from the production of TNT. |
Petroleum refining |
90. |
K048 |
Dissolved air flotation (DAF) float from the petroleum refining industry. |
91. |
K049 |
Slop oil emulsion solids from the petroleum refining industry. |
92. |
K050 |
Heat exchanger bundle cleaning sludge from the petroleum refining industry. |
93. |
K051 |
American Petroleum Institute (API) separator sludge from the petroleum refining industry. |
94. |
K052 |
Tanks bottoms (leaded) from the petroleum refining industry. |
95. |
K169 |
Crude oil storage tank sediment from refining petroleum. |
96. |
K170 |
Clarified slurry oil tank sediment and in-line filter or separation solids from refining petroleum. |
97. |
K171 |
Spent hydrotreating catalyst from refining petroleum, including guard beds used to desulfurize feeds to other catalytic reactors, excluding inert support media. |
98. |
K172 |
Spent hydrorefining catalyst from refining petroleum, including guard beds used to desulfurize feeds to other catalytic reactors, excluding inert support media. |
Iron and steel |
99. |
K061 |
Emission control dust and sludge from the primary production of steel in electric furnaces. |
100. |
K062 |
Spent pickle liquor from steel finishing operations of facilities within the iron and steel industry at steel works, blast furnaces (including coke ovens), rolling mills, iron and steel foundries, gray and ductile iron foundries, malleable iron foundries, steel investment foundries or other miscellaneous steel foundries, or at facilities in the electrometallurgical products (except steel) industry, steel wiredrawing and steel nails and spikes industry, coldrolled steel sheet, strip and bars industry or steel pipes and tubes industry. |
Primary copper |
101. |
K064 |
Acid plant blowdown slurry and sludge resulting from the thickening of blowdown slurry from primary copper production. |
Primary lead |
102. |
K065 |
Surface impoundment solids contained in and dredged from surface impoundments
at primary lead smelting facilities. |
Primary zinc |
103. |
K066 |
Sludge from treatment of process wastewater and acid plant blowdown from primary zinc production. |
Primary aluminum |
104. |
K088 |
Spent potliners from primary aluminum reduction. |
Ferroalloys |
105. |
K090 |
Emission control dust or sludge from ferrochromiumsilicon production. |
106. |
K091 |
Emission control dust or sludge from ferrochromium production. |
Secondary lead |
107. |
K069 |
Emission control dust and sludge from secondary lead smelting. |
108. |
K100 |
Waste leaching solution from acid leaching of emission control dust and sludge from secondary lead smelting. |
Veterinary pharmaceuticals |
109. |
K084 |
Wastewater treatment sludge from the production of veterinary pharmaceuticals
from arsenic or organo-arsenic compounds. |
110. |
K101 |
Distillation tar residues from the distillation of aniline-based compounds
in the production of veterinary pharmaceuticals from arsenic or organo-arsenic
compounds. |
111. |
K102 |
Residue from the use of activated carbon for decolourization in the production of veterinary pharmaceuticals from arsenic or organo-arsenic compounds. |
Ink formulation |
112. |
K086 |
Solvent washes and sludge, caustic washes and sludge or water washes and sludge from cleaning tubs and equipment used in the formulation of ink
from pigments, driers, soaps and stabilizers containing chromium and lead. |
Coking |
113. |
K060 |
Ammonia still lime sludge from coking operations. |
114. |
K087 |
Decanter tank tar sludge from coking operations. |
115. |
K141 |
Process residues from the recovery of coal tar, including, but not limited to, collecting sump residues from the production of coke from coal and the recovery of coke by-products produced from coal, excluding those wastes listed as K087. |
116. |
K142 |
Tar storage tank residues from the production of coke from coal or from the recovery of coke by-products produced from coal. |
117. |
K143 |
Process residues from the recovery of light oil, including, but not limited
to, those generated in stills, decanters and wash oil recovery units from the
recovery of coke by-products produced from coal. |
118. |
K144 |
Wastewater sump residues from light oil refining, including, but not limited
to, intercepting or contamination sump sludge from the recovery of coke by-products
produced from coal. |
119. |
K145 |
Residues from naphthalene collection and recovery operations from the recovery of coke by-products produced from coal. |
120. |
K147 |
Tar storage tank residues from coal tar refining. |
121. |
K148 |
Residues from coal tar distillation, including, but not limited to, still bottoms. |
SCHEDULE 5
(Paragraphs 1(1)(d) and 2(1)(d))
ENVIRONMENTALLY HAZARDOUS SUBSTANCES
Item |
Column 1
Substance |
Column 2
Concentration by Mass (mg/kg) |
1. |
Acetaldehyde |
100.0 |
2. |
Acetaldehyde ammonia |
100.0 |
3. |
Acetic acid |
100.0 |
4. |
Acetic anhydride |
100.0 |
5. |
Acetone cyanohydrin |
100.0 |
6. |
Acetyl bromide |
100.0 |
7. |
Acetyl chloride |
100.0 |
8. |
Acrolein, stabilized |
100.0 |
9. |
Acrylonitrile, stabilized |
100.0 |
10. |
Adipic acid |
100.0 |
11. |
Allethrin |
100.0 |
12. |
Allyl alcohol |
100.0 |
13. |
Allyl chloride |
100.0 |
14. |
Aluminum sulphate |
100.0 |
15. |
N-Aminopropylmorpholine |
100.0 |
16. |
Ammonia |
100.0 |
17. |
Ammonia solutions |
100.0 |
18. |
Ammonium acetate |
100.0 |
19. |
Ammonium benzoate |
100.0 |
20. |
Ammonium bicarbonate |
100.0 |
21. |
Ammonium bisulphite |
100.0 |
22. |
Ammonium carbamate |
100.0 |
23. |
Ammonium carbonate |
100.0 |
24. |
Ammonium chloride |
100.0 |
25. |
Ammonium citrate, dibasic |
100.0 |
26. |
Ammonium oxalate |
100.0 |
27. |
Ammonium sulphamate |
100.0 |
28. |
Ammonium sulphide |
100.0 |
29. |
Ammonium tartrate |
100.0 |
30. |
Ammonium thiocyanate |
100.0 |
31. |
Ammonium thiosulphate |
100.0 |
32. |
Amyl acetates |
100.0 |
33. |
Aniline |
100.0 |
34. |
Antimony pentachloride |
100.0 |
35. |
Antimony potassium tartrate |
100.0 |
36. |
Antimony tribromide |
100.0 |
37. |
Antimony trichloride |
100.0 |
38. |
Antimony trioxide |
100.0 |
39. |
Benzidine |
100.0 |
40. |
Benzoic acid |
100.0 |
41. |
Benzonitrile |
100.0 |
42. |
Benzoyl chloride |
100.0 |
43. |
Benzyl chloride |
100.0 |
44. |
Beryllium chloride |
100.0 |
45. |
Butyl acetates |
100.0 |
46. |
n-Butylamine |
100.0 |
47. |
n-Butyl phthalate |
100.0 |
48. |
Calcium hypochlorite |
100.0 |
49. |
Captan |
100.0 |
50. |
Carbon disulphide |
100.0 |
51. |
Chlordecone |
100.0 |
52. |
2-Chlorophenol |
100.0 |
53. |
Chlorosulphonic acid (with or without sulphur trioxide) |
100.0 |
54. |
Cobaltous bromide |
100.0 |
55. |
Cobaltous formate |
100.0 |
56. |
Cobaltous sulphamate |
100.0 |
57. |
Copper-based pesticides (all forms) |
100.0 |
58. |
Copper chloride |
100.0 |
59. |
Coumaphos |
100.0 |
60. |
Creosote |
100.0 |
61. |
Crotonaldehyde |
100.0 |
62. |
Cupric acetate |
100.0 |
63. |
Cupric oxalate |
100.0 |
64. |
Cupric sulphate |
100.0 |
65. |
Cupric sulphate, ammoniated |
100.0 |
66. |
Cupric tartrate |
100.0 |
67. |
Cyclohexane |
100.0 |
68. |
Dichlobenil |
100.0 |
69. |
Dichlone |
100.0 |
70. |
1,1-Dichloro-2,2-di-(p-chlorophenyl) ethane |
100.0 |
71. |
Dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane |
100.0 |
72. |
2,2-Dichloroethyl ether |
100.0 |
73. |
Dichloropropene |
100.0 |
74. |
2,2-Dichloropropionic acid |
100.0 |
75. |
Dichlorvos |
100.0 |
76. |
Dicofol |
100.0 |
77. |
Diethylamine |
100.0 |
78. |
Dimethylamine |
100.0 |
79. |
Dinitrobenzenes |
100.0 |
80. |
Dinitrophenol |
100.0 |
81. |
Dinitrotoluenes (excluding 2,4-dinitrotoluene) |
100.0 |
82. |
Disulfoton |
100.0 |
83. |
Endosulfan |
100.0 |
84. |
Epichlorohydrin |
100.0 |
85. |
Ethion |
100.0 |
86. |
Ethylbenzene |
100.0 |
87. |
Ethylenediamine |
100.0 |
88. |
Ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid |
100.0 |
89. |
Ethylene dibromide |
100.0 |
90. |
Ethylene dichloride |
100.0 |
91. |
Ferric ammonium citrate |
100.0 |
92. |
Ferric ammonium oxalate |
100.0 |
93. |
Ferric chloride |
100.0 |
94. |
Ferric nitrate |
100.0 |
95. |
Ferric sulphate |
100.0 |
96. |
Ferrous ammonium sulphate |
100.0 |
97. |
Ferrous chloride |
100.0 |
98. |
Ferrous sulphate |
100.0 |
99. |
Formaldehyde |
100.0 |
100. |
Formic acid |
100.0 |
101. |
Fumaric acid |
100.0 |
102. |
Furfural |
100.0 |
103. |
Hexachlorocyclopentadiene |
100.0 |
104. |
Isobutyl acetate |
100.0 |
105. |
Isobutylamine |
100.0 |
106. |
Isobutyric acid |
100.0 |
107. |
Isoprene |
100.0 |
108. |
Kelthane |
100.0 |
109. |
Mercaptodimethur |
100.0 |
110. |
Methyl bromide and ethylene dibromide mixtures |
100.0 |
111. |
Methyl methacrylate |
100.0 |
112. |
Methylamine |
100.0 |
113. |
Mevinphos |
100.0 |
114. |
Mexacarbate |
100.0 |
115. |
Naled |
100.0 |
116. |
Naphthalene |
100.0 |
117. |
Naphthenic acid |
100.0 |
118. |
Nickel ammonium sulphate |
100.0 |
119. |
Nickel chloride |
100.0 |
120. |
Nickel hydroxide |
100.0 |
121. |
Nickel sulphate |
100.0 |
122. |
Nitrophenols (o-, m-, p-) |
100.0 |
123. |
Nitrotoluenes (o-, m-, p-) |
100.0 |
124. |
Organotin compounds (all forms) |
100.0 |
125. |
Organotin Pesticides (all forms) |
100.0 |
126. |
Oxalates, water soluble |
100.0 |
127. |
Paraformaldehyde |
100.0 |
128. |
Phencapton |
100.0 |
129. |
Phenol |
100.0 |
130. |
Phosphorus |
100.0 |
131. |
Phosphorus oxychloride |
100.0 |
132. |
Phosphorus pentasulphide |
100.0 |
133. |
Phosphorus trichloride |
100.0 |
134. |
Polychlorinated biphenyls |
50.0 |
135. |
Potassium permanganate |
100.0 |
136. |
Propargite |
100.0 |
137. |
Propionic acid |
100.0 |
138. |
Propionic anhydride |
100.0 |
139. |
Propylene dichloride |
100.0 |
140. |
Propylene oxide |
100.0 |
141. |
Pyrethrins |
100.0 |
142. |
Quinoline |
100.0 |
143. |
Resorcinol |
100.0 |
144. |
Silver nitrate |
100.0 |
145. |
Sodium bisulphite |
100.0 |
146. |
Sodium dodecylbenzene sulphonate (branched chain) |
100.0 |
147. |
Sodium hydrogen sulphite |
100.0 |
148. |
Sodium hydrosulphide |
100.0 |
149. |
Sodium methylate |
100.0 |
150. |
Sodium phosphate, dibasic |
100.0 |
151. |
Sodium phosphate, tribasic |
100.0 |
152. |
Strychnine or Strychnine mixtures |
100.0 |
153. |
Strychnine salts or Strychnine salt mixtures |
100.0 |
154. |
Styrene |
100.0 |
155. |
Sulphur monochloride |
100.0 |
156. |
Tetrachloroethane |
100.0 |
157. |
Tetraethyl Pyrophosphate |
100.0 |
158. |
Thallium sulphate |
100.0 |
159. |
Thiram |
100.0 |
160. |
Titanium sulphate |
100.0 |
161. |
Toluene |
100.0 |
162. |
Triazine Pesticides |
100.0 |
163. |
Trichlorphon |
100.0 |
164. |
Triethylamine |
100.0 |
165. |
Trimethylamine |
100.0 |
166. |
Vanadium pentoxide, non-fused form |
100.0 |
167. |
Vanadyl sulphate |
100.0 |
168. |
Vinyl acetate |
100.0 |
169. |
Xylenes |
100.0 |
170. |
Xylenols |
100.0 |
171. |
Zinc acetate |
100.0 |
172. |
Zinc ammonium chloride |
100.0 |
173. |
Zinc carbonate |
100.0 |
174. |
Zinc chloride |
100.0 |
175. |
Zinc formate |
100.0 |
176. |
Zinc phenolsulphonate |
100.0 |
177. |
Zinc phosphide |
100.0 |
178. |
Zinc sulphate |
100.0 |
179. |
Zirconium sulphate |
100.0 |
SCHEDULE 6
(Paragraphs 1(1)(e) and 2(1)(e) and subparagraph 2(2)(e)(ii))
HAZARDOUS CONSTITUENTS CONTROLLED UNDER LEACHATE TEST AND REGULATED LIMITS
Item |
Column 1
Hazardous Constituent
Code No. |
Column 2
Hazardous Constituents
(synonyms and descriptors) |
Column 3
Concentration
(mg/L) |
1. |
L32 |
Aldicarb |
0.900 |
2. |
L3 |
Aldrin + Dieldrin |
0.070 |
3. |
L4 |
Arsenic |
2.500 |
4. |
L33 |
Atrazine + N-dealkylated metabolites |
0.500 |
5. |
L34 |
Azinphos-methyl |
2.000 |
6. |
L5 |
Barium |
100.000 |
7. |
L35 |
Bendiocarb |
4.000 |
8. |
L36 |
Benzene |
0.500 |
9. |
L37 |
Benzo(a)pyrene |
0.001 |
10. |
L6 |
Boron |
500.000 |
11. |
L38 |
Bromoxynil |
0.500 |
12. |
L7 |
Cadmium |
0.500 |
13. |
L8 |
Carbaryl/Sevin/1-Naphthyl-N methyl carbamate |
9.000 |
14. |
L39 |
Carbofuran |
9.000 |
15. |
L40 |
Carbon tetrachloride (Tetrachloromethane) |
0.500 |
16. |
L41 |
Chloramines |
300.000 |
17. |
L9 |
Chlordane |
0.700 |
18. |
L42 |
Chlorobenzene (Monochlorobenzene) |
8.000 |
19. |
L43 |
Chloroform |
10.000 |
20. |
L44 |
Chlorpyrifos |
9.000 |
21. |
L10 |
Chromium |
5.000 |
22. |
L45 |
Cresol (Mixture total of all isomers, when isomers cannot be differentiated) |
200.000 |
23. |
L46 |
m-Cresol |
200.000 |
24. |
L47 |
o-Cresol |
200.000 |
25. |
L48 |
p-Cresol |
200.000 |
26. |
L49 |
Cyanazine |
1.000 |
27. |
L11 |
Cyanide |
20.000 |
28. |
L2 |
2,4-D / (2,4-Dichlorophenoxy)acetic acid |
10.000 |
29. |
L50 |
2,4-DCP / (2,4-Dichlorophenol) |
90.000 |
30. |
L12 |
DDT (total isomers) |
3.000 |
31. |
L13 |
Diazinon/Phosphordithioic acid, o,o-diethyl o-(2-isopropyl 6-
methyl-4-pyrimidinyl) ester |
2.000 |
32. |
L51 |
Dicamba |
12.000 |
33. |
L52 |
1,2-Dichlorobenzene (o-Dichlorobenzene) |
20.000 |
34. |
L53 |
1,4-Dichlorobenzene (p-Dichlorobenzene) |
0.500 |
35. |
L54 |
1,2-Dichloroethane (Ethylene dichloride) |
5.000 |
36. |
L55 |
1,1-Dichloroethylene (Vinylidene chloride) |
1.400 |
37. |
L56 |
Dichloromethane (also see methylene chloride) |
5.000 |
38. |
L57 |
Diclofop-methyl |
0.900 |
39. |
L58 |
Dimethoate |
2.000 |
40. |
L59 |
2,4-Dinitrotoluene |
0.130 |
41. |
L60 |
Dinoseb |
1.000 |
42. |
L70 |
Diquat |
7.000 |
43. |
L71 |
Diuron |
15.00 |
44. |
L14 |
Endrin |
0.02 |
45. |
L15 |
Fluoride |
150.00 |
46. |
L72 |
Glyphosate |
28.00 |
47. |
L16 |
Heptachlor + Heptachlor epoxide |
0.30 |
48. |
L73 |
Hexachlorobenzene |
0.13 |
49. |
L74 |
Hexachlorobutadiene |
0.50 |
50. |
L75 |
Hexachloroethane |
3.00 |
51. |
L17 |
Lead |
5.00 |
52. |
L18 |
Lindane |
0.40 |
53. |
L76 |
Malathion |
19.00 |
54. |
L19 |
Mercury |
0.10 |
55. |
L20 |
Methoxychlor/1,1,1-Trichloro- 2,2-bis(p-methoxyphenyl) ethane |
90.00 |
56. |
L77 |
Methyl ethyl ketone / Ethyl methyl ketone |
200.00 |
57. |
L21 |
Methyl Parathion |
0.70 |
58. |
L78 |
Methylene chloride / Dichloromethane |
5.00 |
59. |
L79 |
Metolachlor |
5.00 |
60. |
L80 |
Metribuzin |
8.00 |
61. |
L81 |
Nitrate |
4500.00 |
62. |
L22 |
Nitrate + Nitrite |
1000.00 |
63. |
L23 |
Nitrilotriacetic acid (NTA) |
40.00 |
64. |
L24 |
Nitrite |
320.00 |
65. |
L82 |
Nitrobenzene |
2.00 |
66. |
L83 |
Paraquat |
1.00 |
67. |
L26 |
Parathion |
5.00 |
68. |
L84 |
Pentachlorophenol |
6.00 |
69. |
L85 |
Phorate |
0.20 |
70. |
L86 |
Picloram |
19.00 |
71. |
L100 |
Polychlorinated dibenzo dioxins and furans |
0.0000015 TEQ |
72. |
L87 |
Pyridine |
5.00 |
73. |
L27 |
Selenium |
1.00 |
74. |
L88 |
Simazine |
1.00 |
75. |
L89 |
2,4,5-T (2,4,5- Trichlorophenoxyacetic acid) |
28.00 |
76. |
L1 |
2,4,5-TP/ Silvex/ 2-(2,4,5-Trichlorophenoxy)propionic acid |
1.00 |
77. |
L90 |
Temephos |
28.00 |
78. |
L91 |
Terbufos |
0.10 |
79. |
L92 |
Tetrachloroethylene |
3.00 |
80. |
L93 |
2,3,4,6-Tetrachlorophenol / (2,3,4,6-TeCP) |
10.00 |
81. |
L29 |
Toxaphene |
0.50 |
82. |
L94 |
Triallate |
23.00 |
83. |
L95 |
Trichloroethylene |
5.00 |
84. |
L96 |
2,4,5-Trichlorophenol / (2,4,5-TCP) |
400.00 |
85. |
L97 |
2,4,6-Trichlorophenol / (2,4,6-TCP) |
0.50 |
86. |
L98 |
Trifluralin |
4.50 |
87. |
L30 |
Trihalomethanes Total (also see Chloroform) |
10.00 |
88. |
L31 |
Uranium |
10.00 |
89. |
L99 |
Vinyl chloride |
0.20 |
SCHEDULE 7
(Paragraphs 1(1)(f) and 2(1)(f) and Schedule 4)
PART 1
ACUTE HAZARDOUS WASTE AND HAZARDOUS RECYCLABLE MATERIAL CHEMICALS
Item |
Column 1
Identification No. |
Column 2
Description of Hazardous Waste or Hazardous Recyclable Material |
1. |
P026 |
1-(o-Chlorophenyl)thiourea |
2. |
P081 |
1,2,3-Propanetriol, trinitrate |
3. |
P042 |
1,2-Benzenediol,4-[1-hydroxy-2-(methylamino)ethyl]- |
4. |
P067 |
1,2-Propylenimine |
5. |
P185 |
1,3-Dithiolane-2-carboxaldehyde, 2,4-dimethyl-, O-[(methylamino)-carbonyl]oxime |
6. |
P004 |
1,4,5,8-Dimethanonaphthalene,1,2,3,4,10,10-hexa-chloro-1,4,4a,5,8,8a,-hexahydro-, (1alpha,4alpha,4abeta,5alpha,8alpha,8abeta) |
7. |
P060 |
1,4,5,8-Dimethanonaphthalene,1,2,3,4,10,10-hexa-chloro-1,4,4a,5,8,8a-hexahydro-, (1alpha,4alpha,4abeta,5beta,8beta,8abeta)- |
8. |
P002 |
1-Acetyl-2-thiourea |
9. |
P048 |
2,4-Dinitrophenol |
10. |
P051 |
2,7:3,6-Dimethanonaphth[2,3-b]oxirene, 3,4,5,6,9,9-hexachloro-1a,2,2a,3,6,6a,7,7a-octahydro-,
(1aalpha,2beta,2abeta,3alpha,6alpha,
6abeta,7beta,7aalpha)-, and metabolites |
11. |
P037 |
2,7:3,6-Dimethanonaphth[2,3-b]oxirene, 3,4,5,6,9,9-hexachloro-1a,2,2a,3,6,6a,7,7a-octahydro-,
(1aalpha,2beta,2aalpha,3beta,6beta,
6aalpha,7beta,7aalpha)-[b]oxirene,
3,4,5,6,9,9-hexachloro- |
12. |
P045 |
2-Butanone, 3,3-dimethyl-1-methylthio)-, O-[methylamino)carbonyl]oxime |
13. |
P034 |
2-Cyclohexyl-4,6-dinitrophenol |
14. |
P001 |
2H-1-Benzopyran-2-one, 4-hydroxy-3-(3-oxo-1-phenylbutyl)-, and salts, when present at concentrations greater than 0.3% |
15. |
P069 |
2-Methyllactonitrile |
16. |
P017 |
2-Propanone, 1-bromo- |
17. |
P005 |
2-Propen-1-ol |
18. |
P003 |
2-Propenal |
19. |
P102 |
2-Propyn-1-ol |
20. |
P007 |
3(2H)-Isoxazolone, 5-(aminomethyl)- |
21. |
P027 |
3-Chloropropionitrile |
22. |
P202 |
3-Isopropylphenyl N-methylcarbamate |
23. |
P047 |
4,6-Dinitro-o-cresol, and salts |
24. |
P059 |
4,7-Methano-1H-indene, 1,4,5,6,7,8,8-heptachloro-3a,4,7,7a-tetrahydro- |
25. |
P008 |
4-Aminopyridine |
26. |
P008 |
4-Pyridinamine |
27. |
P007 |
5-(Aminomethyl)-3-isoxazolol |
28. |
P050 |
6,9-Methano-2,4,3-benzodioxathiepin, 6,7,8,9,10,10-hexachloro-1,5,5a,6,9,9a-hexahydro-,
3-oxide |
29. |
P127 |
7-Benzofuranol, 2,3-dihydro-2,2-dimethyl-, methylcarbamate |
30. |
P088 |
7-Oxabicyclo[2.2.1]heptane-2,3-dicarboxylic acid |
31. |
P023 |
Acetaldehyde, chloro- |
32. |
P057 |
Acetamide, 2-fluoro- |
33. |
P002 |
Acetamide, N-(aminothioxomethyl)- |
34. |
P058 |
Acetic acid, fluoro-, sodium salt |
35. |
P003 |
Acrolein |
36. |
P070 |
Aldicarb |
37. |
P203 |
Aldicarb sulfone |
38. |
P004 |
Aldrin |
39. |
P005 |
Allyl alcohol |
40. |
P046 |
alpha,a-Dimethylphenethylamine |
41. |
P072 |
alpha-Naphthylthiourea |
42. |
P006 |
Aluminum phosphide |
43. |
P009 |
Ammonium picrate |
44. |
P119 |
Ammonium vanadate |
45. |
P099 |
Argentate(1-), bis(cyano-C)-, potassium |
46. |
P010 |
Arsenic acid H3AsO4 |
47. |
P012 |
Arsenic oxide As2O3 |
48. |
P011 |
Arsenic oxide As2O5 |
49. |
P011 |
Arsenic pentoxide |
50. |
P012 |
Arsenic trioxide |
51. |
P038 |
Arsine, diethyl- |
52. |
P036 |
Arsonous dichloride, phenyl- |
53. |
P054 |
Aziridine |
54. |
P067 |
Aziridine, 2-methyl- |
55. |
P013 |
Barium cyanide |
56. |
P024 |
Benzenamine, 4-chloro- |
57. |
P077 |
Benzenamine, 4-nitro- |
58. |
P028 |
Benzene, (chloromethyl)- |
59. |
P046 |
Benzeneethanamine, alpha,alpha-dimethyl- |
60. |
P014 |
Benzenethiol |
61. |
P188 |
Benzoic acid, 2-hydroxy-, compd with (3aS-cis)-1,2,3,3a,8,8a-hexahydro-1,3a,8-trimethylpyrrolo
[2,3-b]indol-5-yl methylcarbamate ester (1:1) |
62. |
P028 |
Benzyl chloride |
63. |
P015 |
Beryllium powder |
64. |
P017 |
Bromoacetone |
65. |
P018 |
Brucine |
66. |
P021 |
Calcium cyanide |
67. |
P021 |
Calcium cyanide Ca(CN)2 |
68. |
P189 |
Carbamic acid, [(dibutylamino)-thio]methyl-, 2,3-dihydro-2,2-dimethyl-7-benzofuranyl
ester |
69. |
P191 |
Carbamic acid, dimethyl-, 1-[(dimethyl-amino)carbonyl]-5-methyl-1H-pyrazol-3-yl ester |
70. |
P190 |
Carbamic acid, methyl-, 3-methylphenyl ester |
71. |
P192 |
Carbamic acid,dimethyl-,3-methyl-1-(1methylethyl)-1H-pyrazol-5-yl ester |
72. |
P127 |
Carbofuran |
73. |
P022 |
Carbon disulfide |
74. |
P095 |
Carbonic dichloride |
75. |
P189 |
Carbosulfan |
76. |
P023 |
Chloroacetaldehyde |
77. |
P029 |
Copper cyanide |
78. |
P029 |
Copper cyanide Cu(CN) |
79. |
P030 |
Cyanides (soluble cyanide salts), not otherwise specified |
80. |
P031 |
Cyanogen |
81. |
P033 |
Cyanogen chloride |
82. |
P033 |
Cyanogen chloride (CN)Cl |
83. |
P016 |
Dichloromethyl ether |
84. |
P036 |
Dichlorophenylarsine |
85. |
P037 |
Dieldrin |
86. |
P038 |
Diethylarsine |
87. |
P041 |
Diethyl-p-nitrophenyl phosphate |
88. |
P043 |
Diisopropylfluorophosphate (DFP) |
89. |
P044 |
Dimethoate |
90. |
P191 |
Dimetilan |
91. |
P020 |
Dinoseb |
92. |
P085 |
Diphosphoramide, octamethyl- |
93. |
P111 |
Diphosphoric acid, tetraethyl ester |
94. |
P039 |
Disulfoton |
95. |
P049 |
Dithiobiuret |
96. |
P050 |
Endosulfan |
97. |
P088 |
Endothall |
98. |
P051 |
Endrin |
99. |
P051 |
Endrin, and metabolites |
100. |
P042 |
Epinephrine |
101. |
P031 |
Ethanedinitrile |
102. |
P194 |
Ethanimidothioc acid, 2-(dimethylamino)-N-[[(methylamino)carbonyl]oxy]-2-oxo-, methyl ester |
103. |
P066 |
Ethanimidothioic acid, N-[[(methylamino)carbonyl]oxy]-, methyl ester |
104. |
P101 |
Ethyl cyanide |
105. |
P054 |
Ethyleneimine |
106. |
P097 |
Famphur |
107. |
P056 |
Fluorine |
108. |
P057 |
Fluoroacetamide |
109. |
P058 |
Fluoroacetic acid, sodium salt |
110. |
P198 |
Formetanate hydrochloride |
111. |
P197 |
Formparanate |
112. |
P065 |
Fulminic acid, mercury(2+) salt |
113. |
P059 |
Heptachlor |
114. |
P062 |
Hexaethyl tetraphosphate |
115. |
P068 |
Hydrazine, methyl- |
116. |
P116 |
Hydrazinecarbothioamide |
117. |
P063 |
Hydrocyanic acid |
118. |
P063 |
Hydrogen cyanide |
119. |
P096 |
Hydrogen phosphide |
120. |
P060 |
Isodrin |
121. |
P192 |
Isolan |
122. |
P196 |
Manganese, bis(dimethylcarbamodithioato-S,S')- |
123. |
P196 |
Manganese dimethyl dithiocarbamate |
124. |
P202 |
M-Cumenyl methylcarbamate |
125. |
P065 |
Mercury fulminate |
126. |
P092 |
Mercury, (acetato-O)phenyl- |
127. |
P082 |
Methanamine, N-methyl-N-nitroso- |
128. |
P064 |
Methane, isocyanato- |
129. |
P016 |
Methane, oxybis[chloro- |
130. |
P112 |
Methane, tetranitro- |
131. |
P118 |
Methanethiol, trichloro- |
132. |
P197 |
Methanimidamide, N,N-dimethyl-N'-[2-methyl-4-[[(methylamino)carbonyl]oxy]phenyl]- |
133. |
P198 |
Methanimidamide, N,N-dimethyl-N'-[3-[[(methylamino)-carbonyl]oxy]phenyl]-, monohydrochloride |
134. |
P199 |
Methiocarb |
135. |
P066 |
Methomyl |
136. |
P068 |
Methyl hydrazine |
137. |
P064 |
Methyl isocyanate |
138. |
P071 |
Methyl parathion |
139. |
P190 |
Metolcarb |
140. |
P128 |
Mexacarbate |
141. |
P073 |
Nickel carbonyl |
142. |
P073 |
Nickel carbonyl Ni(CO)4, (T-4)- |
143. |
P074 |
Nickel cyanide |
144. |
P074 |
Nickel cyanide Ni(CN)2 |
145. |
P075 |
Nicotine, and salts |
146. |
P076 |
Nitric oxide |
147. |
P078 |
Nitrogen dioxide |
148. |
P076 |
Nitrogen oxide NO |
149. |
P078 |
Nitrogen oxide NO2 |
150. |
P081 |
Nitroglycerine |
151. |
P082 |
N-Nitrosodimethylamine |
152. |
P084 |
N-Nitrosomethylvinylamine |
153. |
P040 |
O,O-Diethyl O-pyrazinyl phosphorothioate |
154. |
P085 |
Octamethylpyrophosphoramide |
155. |
P087 |
Osmium oxide OsO4,(T-4)- |
156. |
P087 |
Osmium tetroxide |
157. |
P194 |
Oxamyl |
158. |
P089 |
Parathion |
159. |
P024 |
p-Chloroaniline |
160. |
P020 |
Phenol, 2-(1-methylpropyl)-4,6-dinitro- |
161. |
P009 |
Phenol, 2,4,6-trinitro-, ammonium salt |
162. |
P048 |
Phenol, 2,4-dinitro- |
163. |
P034 |
Phenol, 2-cyclohexyl-4,6-dinitro- |
164. |
P047 |
Phenol, 2-methyl-4,6-dinitro-, and salts |
165. |
P202 |
Phenol, 3-(1-methylethyl)-, methylcarbamate |
166. |
P201 |
Phenol, 3-methyl-5-(1-methylethyl)-, methylcarbamate |
167. |
P199 |
Phenol, (3,5-dimethyl-4-(methylthio)-, methylcarbamate |
168. |
P128 |
Phenol, 4-(dimethylamino)-3,5-dimethyl-, methylcarbamate (ester) |
169. |
P092 |
Phenylmercury acetate |
170. |
P093 |
Phenylthiourea |
171. |
P094 |
Phorate |
172. |
P095 |
Phosgene |
173. |
P096 |
Phosphine |
174. |
P041 |
Phosphoric acid, diethyl 4-nitrophenyl ester |
175. |
P094 |
Phosphorodithioic acid, O,O-diethyl S-[(ethylthio)methyl] ester |
176. |
P039 |
Phosphorodithioic acid, O,O-diethyl S-[2-(ethylthio)ethyl] ester |
177. |
P044 |
Phosphorodithioic acid, O,O-dimethyl S-[2-(methylamino)-2-oxoethyl] ester |
178. |
P043 |
Phosphorofluoridic acid, bis(1-methylethyl) ester |
179. |
P071 |
Phosphorothioic acid, O,O,-dimethyl O-(4-nitrophenyl) ester |
180. |
P089 |
Phosphorothioic acid, O,O-diethyl O-(4-nitrophenyl) ester |
181. |
P040 |
Phosphorothioic acid, O,O-diethyl O-pyrazinyl ester |
182. |
P097 |
Phosphorothioic acid, O-[4-[(dimethylamino)sulfonyl]phenyl]
O,O-r dimethyl ester |
183. |
P188 |
Physostigmine salicylate |
184. |
P204 |
Physostigmine |
185. |
P110 |
Plumbane, tetraethyl- |
186. |
P077 |
p-Nitroaniline |
187. |
P098 |
Potassium cyanide |
188. |
P098 |
Potassium cyanide K(CN) |
189. |
P099 |
Potassium silver cyanide |
190. |
P201 |
Promecarb |
191. |
P203 |
Propanal, 2-methyl-2-(methyl-sulfonyl)-, O-[(methylamino)carbonyl]oxime |
192. |
P070 |
Propanal, 2-methyl-2-(methylthio)-, O-[(methylamino)carbonyl]oxime |
193. |
P101 |
Propanenitrile |
194. |
P069 |
Propanenitrile, 2-hydroxy-2-methyl- |
195. |
P027 |
Propanenitrile, 3-chloro- |
196. |
P102 |
Propargyl alcohol |
197. |
P075 |
Pyridine, 3-(1-methyl-2-pyrrolidinyl)-, (S)-, and salts |
198. |
P204 |
Pyrrolo[2,3-b]indol-5-ol,1,2,3,3a,8,8a-hexahydro-1,3a,8- trimethyl-, methylcarbamate
(ester), (3aS-cis)- |
199. |
P114 |
Selenious acid, dithallium(1+) salt |
200. |
P103 |
Selenourea |
201. |
P104 |
Silver cyanide |
202. |
P104 |
Silver cyanide Ag(CN) |
203. |
P105 |
Sodium azide |
204. |
P106 |
Sodium cyanide |
205. |
P106 |
Sodium cyanide Na(CN) |
206. |
P108 |
Strychnidin-10-one, and salts |
207. |
P018 |
Strychnidin-10-one, 2,3-dimethoxy- |
208. |
P108 |
Strychnine, and salts |
209. |
P115 |
Sulfuric acid, dithallium(1+) salt |
210. |
P110 |
Tetraethyl lead |
211. |
P111 |
Tetraethyl pyrophosphate |
212. |
P109 |
Tetraethyldithiopyrophosphate |
213. |
P112 |
Tetranitromethane |
214. |
P062 |
Tetraphosphoric acid, hexaethyl ester |
215. |
P113 |
Thallic oxide |
216. |
P113 |
Thallium oxide Tl2O3 |
217. |
P114 |
Thallium(I) selenite |
218. |
P115 |
Thallium(I) sulfate |
219. |
P109 |
Thiodiphosphoric acid, tetraethyl ester |
220. |
P045 |
Thiofanox |
221. |
P049 |
Thioimidodicarbonic diamide [(H2N)C(S)]2NH |
222. |
P014 |
Thiophenol |
223. |
P116 |
Thiosemicarbazide |
224. |
P026 |
Thiourea, (2-chlorophenyl)- |
225. |
P072 |
Thiourea, 1-naphthalenyl- |
226. |
P093 |
Thiourea, phenyl- |
227. |
P185 |
Tirpate |
228. |
P123 |
Toxaphene |
229. |
P118 |
Trichloromethanethiol |
230. |
P119 |
Vanadic acid, ammonium salt |
231. |
P120 |
Vanadium oxide V2O5 |
232. |
P120 |
Vanadium pentoxide |
233. |
P084 |
Vinylamine, N-methyl-N-nitroso- |
234. |
P001 |
Warfarin, and salts, when present at concentrations greater than 0.3% |
235. |
P121 |
Zinc cyanide |
236. |
P121 |
Zinc cyanide Zn(CN)2 |
237. |
P122 |
Zinc phosphide Zn3P2, when present at concentrations greater than 10% |
238. |
P205 |
Zinc, bis(dimethylcarbamodithioato-S,S')-, |
239. |
P205 |
Ziram |
PART 2
HAZARDOUS WASTE AND HAZARDOUS RECYCLABLE MATERIAL CHEMICALS
Item |
Column 1
Identification No. |
Column 2
Description of Hazardous Waste or Hazardous Recyclable Material |
1. |
U021 |
[1,1-Biphenyl]-4,4-diamine |
2. |
U073 |
[1,1'-Biphenyl]-4,4'-diamine, 3,3'-dichloro- |
3. |
U091 |
[1,1'-Biphenyl]-4,4'-diamine, 3,3'-dimethoxy- |
4. |
U095 |
[1,1'-Biphenyl]-4,4'-diamine, 3,3'-dimethyl- |
5. |
U208 |
1,1,1,2-Tetrachloroethane |
6. |
U209 |
1,1,2,2-Tetrachloroethane |
7. |
U227 |
1,1,2-Trichloroethane |
8. |
U078 |
1,1-Dichloroethylene |
9. |
U098 |
1,1-Dimethylhydrazine |
10. |
U207 |
1,2,4,5-Tetrachlorobenzene |
11. |
U085 |
1,2:3,4-Diepoxybutane |
12. |
U069 |
1,2-Benzenedicarboxylic acid, dibutyl ester |
13. |
U088 |
1,2-Benzenedicarboxylic acid, diethyl ester |
14. |
U102 |
1,2-Benzenedicarboxylic acid, dimethyl ester |
15. |
U107 |
1,2-Benzenedicarboxylic acid, dioctyl ester |
16. |
U028 |
1,2-Benzenedicarboxylic acid, bis(2-ethylhexyl) ester |
17. |
U202 |
1,2-Benzisothiazol-3(2H)-one, 1,1-dioxide, and salts |
18. |
U066 |
1,2-Dibromo-3-chloropropane |
19. |
U079 |
1,2-Dichloroethylene |
20. |
U099 |
1,2-Dimethylhydrazine |
21. |
U109 |
1,2-Diphenylhydrazine |
22. |
U155 |
1,2-Ethanediamine, N,N-dimethyl-N'-2-pyridinyl-N'-(2-thienylmethyl)- |
23. |
U193 |
1,2-Oxathiolane, 2,2-dioxide |
24. |
U142 |
1,3,4-Metheno-2H-cyclobuta[cd]pentalen-2-one, 1,1a,3,3a,4,5,5,5a,5b,6-decachlorooctahydro- |
25. |
U234 |
1,3,5-Trinitrobenzene |
26. |
U182 |
1,3,5-Trioxane, 2,4,6-trimethyl- |
27. |
U201 |
1,3-Benzenediol |
28. |
U364 |
1,3-Benzodioxol-4-ol, 2,2-dimethyl-, |
29. |
U278 |
1,3-Benzodioxol-4-ol, 2,2-dimethyl-, methyl carbamate |
30. |
U141 |
1,3-Benzodioxole, 5-(1-propenyl)- |
31. |
U203 |
1,3-Benzodioxole, 5-(2-propenyl)- |
32. |
U090 |
1,3-Benzodioxole, 5-propyl- |
33. |
U128 |
1,3-Butadiene, 1,1,2,3,4,4-hexachloro- |
34. |
U130 |
1,3-Cyclopentadiene, 1,2,3,4,5,5-hexachloro- |
35. |
U084 |
1,3-Dichloropropene |
36. |
U190 |
1,3-Isobenzofurandione |
37. |
U186 |
1,3-Pentadiene |
38. |
U193 |
1,3-Propane sultone |
39. |
U074 |
1,4-Dichloro-2-butene |
40. |
U108 |
1,4-Diethyleneoxide |
41. |
U108 |
1,4-Dioxane |
42. |
U166 |
1,4-Naphthalenedione |
43. |
U166 |
1,4-Naphthoquinone |
44. |
U172 |
1-Butanamine, N-butyl-N-nitroso- |
45. |
U031 |
1-Butanol |
46. |
U011 |
1H-1,2,4-Triazol-3-amine |
47. |
U186 |
1-Methylbutadiene |
48. |
U167 |
1-Naphthalenamine |
49. |
U279 |
1-Naphthalenol, methylcarbamate |
50. |
U194 |
1-Propanamine |
51. |
U111 |
1-Propanamine, N-nitroso-N-propyl- |
52. |
U110 |
1-Propanamine, N-propyl- |
53. |
U235 |
1-Propanol, 2,3-dibromo-, phosphate (3 :1) |
54. |
U140 |
1-Propanol, 2-methyl- |
55. |
U243 |
1-Propene, 1,1,2,3,3,3-hexachloro- |
56. |
U084 |
1-Propene, 1,3-dichloro- |
57. |
U085 |
2,2-Bioxirane |
58. |
T140 |
2,3,4,6-Tetrachlorophenol |
59. |
U237 |
2,4-(1H,3H)-Pyrimidinedione, 5-[bis(2-chloroethyl)amino]- |
60. |
T140 |
2,4,5-T |
61. |
T140 |
2,4,5-Trichlorophenol |
62. |
U408 |
2,4,6-Tribromophenol |
63. |
T140 |
2,4,6-Trichlorophenol |
64. |
U240 |
2,4-D, salts and esters |
65. |
U081 |
2,4-Dichlorophenol |
66. |
U101 |
2,4-Dimethylphenol |
67. |
U105 |
2,4-Dinitrotoluene |
68. |
U197 |
2,5-Cyclohexadiene-1,4-dione |
69. |
U147 |
2,5-Furandione |
70. |
U082 |
2,6-Dichlorophenol |
71. |
U106 |
2,6-Dinitrotoluene |
72. |
U236 |
2,7-Naphthalenedisulfonic acid, 3,3'-[(3,3'-dimethyl[1,1'-biphenyl]-4,4'-diyl)bis(azo)bis[5-amino-4-hydroxy]-, tetrasodium salt |
73. |
U005 |
2-Acetylaminofluorene |
74. |
U159 |
2-Butanone |
75. |
U160 |
2-Butanone, peroxide |
76. |
U053 |
2-Butenal |
77. |
U074 |
2-Butene, 1,4-dichloro- |
78. |
U143 |
2-Butenoic acid, 2-methyl-, 7-[[2,3-dihydroxy-2- (1-methoxyethyl)-3-methyl-1-oxobutoxy]methyl]-2,3,5,7a-tetrahydro-1H-pyrrolizin-1-yl
ester,
[1S-[1alpha(Z), 7(2S*,3R*), 7aalpha]]- |
79. |
U042 |
2-Chloroethyl vinyl ether |
80. |
U125 |
2-Furancarboxaldehyde |
81. |
U058 |
2H-1,3,2-Oxazaphosphorin-2-amine, N,N-bis(2-chloroethyl)tetrahydro-, 2-oxide |
82. |
U248 |
2H-1-Benzopyran-2-one, 4-hydroxy-3-(3-oxo-1-phenyl-butyl)-, and salts, when present at concentrations of 0.3% or less |
83. |
U116 |
2-Imidazolidinethione |
84. |
U168 |
2-Naphthalenamine |
85. |
U171 |
2-Nitropropane |
86. |
U191 |
2-Picoline |
87. |
U002 |
2-Propanone |
88. |
U007 |
2-Propenamide |
89. |
U009 |
2-Propenenitrile |
90. |
U152 |
2-Propenenitrile, 2-methyl- |
91. |
U008 |
2-Propenoic acid |
92. |
U118 |
2-Propenoic acid, 2-methyl-, ethyl ester |
93. |
U162 |
2-Propenoic acid, 2-methyl-, methyl ester |
94. |
U113 |
2-Propenoic acid, ethyl ester |
95. |
U073 |
3,3'-Dichlorobenzidine |
96. |
U091 |
3,3'-Dimethoxybenzidine |
97. |
U095 |
3,3'-Dimethylbenzidine |
98. |
U148 |
3,6-Pyridazinedione, 1,2-dihydro- |
99. |
U157 |
3-Methylcholanthrene |
100. |
U164 |
4(1H)-Pyrimidinone, 2,3-dihydro-6-methyl-2-thioxo- |
101. |
U158 |
4,4'-Methylenebis(2-chloroaniline) |
102. |
U036 |
4,7-Methano-1H-indene, 1,2,4,5,6,7,8,8-octachloro-2,3,3a,4,7,7a-hexahydro- |
103. |
U030 |
4-Bromophenyl phenyl ether |
104. |
U049 |
4-Chloro-o-toluidine, hydrochloride |
105. |
U161 |
4-Methyl-2-pentanone |
106. |
U059 |
5,12-Naphthacenedione,8-acetyl-10-[(3-amino-2,3,6-trideoxy)-alpha-L-lyxo-hexopyranosyl)oxy]-7,8,9,10-tetrahydro-6,8,11-trihydroxy-1-methoxy-, (8S-cis)- |
107. |
U181 |
5-Nitro-o-toluidine |
108. |
U094 |
7,12-Dimethylbenz[a]anthracene |
109. |
U367 |
7-Benzofuranol, 2,3-dihydro-2,2-dimethyl- |
110. |
U394 |
A2213 |
111. |
U001 |
Acetaldehyde |
112. |
U034 |
Acetaldehyde, trichloro- |
113. |
U187 |
Acetamide, N-(4-ethoxyphenyl)- |
114. |
U005 |
Acetamide, N-9H-fluoren-2-yl- |
115. |
U112 |
Acetic acid ethyl ester |
116. |
T140 |
Acetic acid, (2,4,5-trichlorophenoxy)- |
117. |
U240 |
Acetic acid, (2,4-dichlorophenoxy)-, salts and esters |
118. |
U144 |
Acetic acid, lead(2+) salt |
119. |
U214 |
Acetic acid, thallium(1+) salt |
120. |
U002 |
Acetone |
121. |
U003 |
Acetonitrile |
122. |
U004 |
Acetophenone |
123. |
U006 |
Acetyl chloride |
124. |
U007 |
Acrylamide |
125. |
U008 |
Acrylic acid |
126. |
U009 |
Acrylonitrile |
127. |
U096 |
alpha,alpha-Dimethylbenzylhydroperoxide |
128. |
U167 |
alpha-Naphthylamine |
129. |
U011 |
Amitrole |
130. |
U012 |
Aniline |
131. |
U136 |
Arsinic acid, dimethyl- |
132. |
U014 |
Auramine |
133. |
U015 |
Azaserine |
134. |
U010 |
Azirino[2,3_3,4]pyrrolo[1,2-a]indole-4,7-dione, 6-amino-8-[[(aminocarbonyl)oxy]methyl]-1,1a,2,8,8a,8b-hexahydro-8a-methoxy-5-methyl-,
[1aS-(1aalpha,8beta,8aalpha,8balpha)]- |
135. |
U280 |
Barban |
136. |
U278 |
Bendiocarb |
137. |
U364 |
Bendiocarb phenol |
138. |
U271 |
Benomyl |
139. |
U018 |
Benz[a]anthracene |
140. |
U094 |
Benz[a]anthracene, 7,12-dimethyl- |
141. |
U016 |
Benz[c]acridine |
142. |
U157 |
Benz[j]aceanthrylene, 1,2-dihydro-3-methyl- |
143. |
U017 |
Benzal chloride |
144. |
U192 |
Benzamide, 3,5-dichloro-N-(1,1-dimethyl-2-propynyl)- |
145. |
U012 |
Benzenamine |
146. |
U328 |
Benzenamine, 2-methyl- |
147. |
U222 |
Benzenamine, 2-methyl-, hydrochloride |
148. |
U181 |
Benzenamine, 2-methyl-5-nitro- |
149. |
U014 |
Benzenamine, 4,4-carbonimidoylbis[N,N-dimethyl- |
150. |
U158 |
Benzenamine, 4,4-methylenebis[2-chloro- |
151. |
U049 |
Benzenamine, 4-chloro-2-methyl-, hydrochloride |
152. |
U353 |
Benzenamine, 4-methyl- |
153. |
U093 |
Benzenamine, N,N-dimethyl-4-(phenylazo)- |
154. |
U019 |
Benzene |
155. |
U055 |
Benzene, (1-methylethyl)- |
156. |
U017 |
Benzene, (dichloromethyl)- |
157. |
U023 |
Benzene, (trichloromethyl)- |
158. |
U247 |
Benzene, 1,1-(2,2,2-trichloroethylidene)bis[4- methoxy- |
159. |
U207 |
Benzene, 1,2,4,5-tetrachloro- |
160. |
U070 |
Benzene, 1,2-dichloro- |
161. |
U234 |
Benzene, 1,3,5-trinitro- |
162. |
U071 |
Benzene, 1,3-dichloro- |
163. |
U223 |
Benzene, 1,3-diisocyanatomethyl- |
164. |
U072 |
Benzene, 1,4-dichloro- |
165. |
U030 |
Benzene, 1-bromo-4-phenoxy- |
166. |
U105 |
Benzene, 1-methyl-2,4-dinitro- |
167. |
U106 |
Benzene, 2-methyl-1,3-dinitro- |
168. |
U037 |
Benzene, chloro- |
169. |
U239 |
Benzene, dimethyl- |
170. |
U127 |
Benzene, hexachloro- |
171. |
U056 |
Benzene, hexahydro- |
172. |
U220 |
Benzene, methyl- |
173. |
U169 |
Benzene, nitro- |
174. |
U183 |
Benzene, pentachloro- |
175. |
U185 |
Benzene, pentachloronitro- |
176. |
U061 |
Benzene, 1,1-(2,2,2-trichloroethylidene)bis[4-chloro- |
177. |
U060 |
Benzene, 1,1-(2,2-dichloroethylidene)bis[4-chloro- |
178. |
U038 |
Benzeneacetic acid, 4-chloro-alpha-(4-chlorophenyl)-alpha-hydroxy-, ethyl ester |
179. |
U035 |
Benzenebutanoic acid, 4-[bis(2-chloroethyl)amino]- |
180. |
U221 |
Benzenediamine, ar-methyl- |
181. |
U020 |
Benzenesulfonic acid chloride |
182. |
U020 |
Benzenesulfonyl chloride |
183. |
U021 |
Benzidine |
184. |
U022 |
Benzo[a]pyrene |
185. |
U064 |
Benzo[rst]pentaphene |
186. |
U023 |
Benzotrichloride |
187. |
U047 |
beta-Chloronaphthalene |
188. |
U168 |
beta-Naphthylamine |
189. |
U225 |
Bromoform |
190. |
U136 |
Cacodylic acid |
191. |
U032 |
Calcium chromate |
192. |
U280 |
Carbamic acid, (3-chlorophenyl)-, 4-chloro-2-butynyl ester |
193. |
U409 |
Carbamic acid, [1,2-phenylenebis (iminocarbonothioyl)]bis-, dimethyl ester |
194. |
U271 |
Carbamic acid, [1-[(butylamino)carbonyl]-1H-benzimidazol-2-yl]-, methyl ester |
195. |
U372 |
Carbamic acid, 1H-benzimidazol-2-yl, methyl ester |
196. |
U238 |
Carbamic acid, ethyl ester |
197. |
U178 |
Carbamic acid, methylnitroso-, ethyl ester |
198. |
U373 |
Carbamic acid, phenyl-, 1-methylethyl ester |
199. |
U097 |
Carbamic chloride, dimethyl- |
200. |
U114 |
Carbamodithioic acid, 1,2-ethanediylbis-, salts and esters |
201. |
U389 |
Carbamothioic acid, bis(1-methylethyl)-, S-(2,3,3-trichloro-2-propenyl)ester |
202. |
U062 |
Carbamothioic acid, bis(1-methylethyl)-S-(2,3-dichloro-2-propenyl) ester |
203. |
U387 |
Carbamothioic acid, dipropyl-, S-(phenylmethyl) ester |
204. |
U279 |
Carbaryl |
205. |
U372 |
Carbendazim |
206. |
U367 |
Carbofuran phenol |
207. |
U033 |
Carbon oxyfluoride |
208. |
U211 |
Carbon tetrachloride |
209. |
U215 |
Carbonic acid, dithallium(1+) salt |
210. |
U033 |
Carbonic difluoride |
211. |
U156 |
Carbonochloridic acid, methyl ester |
212. |
U034 |
Chloral |
213. |
U035 |
Chlorambucil |
214. |
U036 |
Chlordane, alpha and gamma isomers |
215. |
U026 |
Chlornaphazin |
216. |
U037 |
Chlorobenzene |
217. |
U038 |
Chlorobenzilate |
218. |
U044 |
Chloroform |
219. |
U046 |
Chloromethyl methyl ether |
220. |
U032 |
Chromic acid H2CrO4, calcium salt |
221. |
U050 |
Chrysene |
222. |
U051 |
Creosote |
223. |
U052 |
Cresol (cresylic acid) |
224. |
U053 |
Crotonaldehyde |
225. |
U055 |
Cumene |
226. |
U246 |
Cyanogen bromide (CN)Br |
227. |
U056 |
Cyclohexane |
228. |
U129 |
Cyclohexane, 1,2,3,4,5,6-hexachloro-, (1alpha,2alpha,3beta,4alpha,5alpha,6beta)- |
229. |
U057 |
Cyclohexanone |
230. |
U058 |
Cyclophosphamide |
231. |
U059 |
Daunomycin |
232. |
U060 |
DDD |
233. |
U061 |
DDT |
234. |
U206 |
D-Glucose, 2-deoxy-2-[[(methylnitrosoamino)-carbonyl]amino]- |
235. |
U062 |
Diallate |
236. |
U063 |
Dibenz[a,h]anthracene |
237. |
U064 |
Dibenzo[a,i]pyrene |
238. |
U069 |
Dibutyl phthalate |
239. |
U075 |
Dichlorodifluoromethane |
240. |
U025 |
Dichloroethyl ether |
241. |
U027 |
Dichloroisopropyl ether |
242. |
U024 |
Dichloromethoxy ethane |
243. |
U088 |
Diethyl phthalate |
244. |
U395 |
Diethylene glycol, dicarbamate |
245. |
U028 |
Diethylhexyl phthalate |
246. |
U089 |
Diethylstilbestrol |
247. |
U090 |
Dihydrosafrole |
248. |
U102 |
Dimethyl phthalate |
249. |
U103 |
Dimethyl sulfate |
250. |
U092 |
Dimethylamine |
251. |
U097 |
Dimethylcarbamoyl chloride |
252. |
U107 |
Di-n-octyl phthalate |
253. |
U111 |
Di-n-propylnitrosamine |
254. |
U110 |
Dipropylamine |
255. |
U041 |
Epichlorohydrin |
256. |
U001 |
Ethanal |
257. |
U404 |
Ethanamine, N,N-diethyl- |
258. |
U174 |
Ethanamine, N-ethyl-N-nitroso- |
259. |
U208 |
Ethane, 1,1,1,2-tetrachloro- |
260. |
U226 |
Ethane, 1,1,1-trichloro- |
261. |
U209 |
Ethane, 1,1,2,2-tetrachloro- |
262. |
U227 |
Ethane, 1,1,2-trichloro- |
263. |
U024 |
Ethane, 1,1'-[methylenebis(oxy)]bis[2-chloro- |
264. |
U076 |
Ethane, 1,1-dichloro- |
265. |
U117 |
Ethane, 1,1'-oxybis- |
266. |
U025 |
Ethane, 1,1'-oxybis[2-chloro- |
267. |
U067 |
Ethane, 1,2-dibromo- |
268. |
U077 |
Ethane, 1,2-dichloro- |
269. |
U131 |
Ethane, hexachloro- |
270. |
U184 |
Ethane, pentachloro- |
271. |
U218 |
Ethanethioamide |
272. |
U394 |
Ethanimidothioic acid, 2-(dimethylamino)-N-hydroxy-2-oxo-, methyl ester |
273. |
U410 |
Ethanimidothioic acid, N,N'-[thiobis[(methylimino)carbonyloxy]]bis-, dimethyl
ester |
274. |
U173 |
Ethanol, 2,2'-(nitrosoimino)bis- |
275. |
U395 |
Ethanol, 2,2'-oxybis-, dicarbamate |
276. |
U359 |
Ethanol, 2-ethoxy- |
277. |
U004 |
Ethanone, 1-phenyl- |
278. |
U042 |
Ethene, (2-chloroethoxy)- |
279. |
U078 |
Ethene, 1,1-dichloro- |
280. |
U079 |
Ethene, 1,2-dichloro-, (E)- |
281. |
U043 |
Ethene, chloro- |
282. |
U210 |
Ethene, tetrachloro- |
283. |
U228 |
Ethene, trichloro- |
284. |
U112 |
Ethyl acetate |
285. |
U113 |
Ethyl acrylate |
286. |
U238 |
Ethyl carbamate (urethane) |
287. |
U117 |
Ethyl ether |
288. |
U118 |
Ethyl methacrylate |
289. |
U119 |
Ethyl methanesulfonate |
290. |
U067 |
Ethylene dibromide |
291. |
U077 |
Ethylene dichloride |
292. |
U359 |
Ethylene glycol monoethyl ether |
293. |
U115 |
Ethylene oxide |
294. |
U114 |
Ethylenebisdithiocarbamic acid, salts and esters |
295. |
U116 |
Ethylenethiourea |
296. |
U076 |
Ethylidene dichloride |
297. |
U120 |
Fluoranthene |
298. |
U122 |
Formaldehyde |
299. |
U123 |
Formic acid |
300. |
U124 |
Furan |
301. |
U213 |
Furan, tetrahydro- |
302. |
U125 |
Furfural |
303. |
U124 |
Furfuran |
304. |
U206 |
Glucopyranose, 2-deoxy-2-(3-methyl-3-nitrosoureido)-, D- |
305. |
U126 |
Glycidylaldehyde |
306. |
U163 |
Guanidine, N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitroso- |
307. |
U127 |
Hexachlorobenzene |
308. |
U128 |
Hexachlorobutadiene |
309. |
U130 |
Hexachlorocyclopentadiene |
310. |
U131 |
Hexachloroethane |
311. |
U132 |
Hexachlorophene |
312. |
U243 |
Hexachloropropene |
313. |
U133 |
Hydrazine |
314. |
U098 |
Hydrazine, 1,1-dimethyl- |
315. |
U086 |
Hydrazine, 1,2-diethyl- |
316. |
U099 |
Hydrazine, 1,2-dimethyl- |
317. |
U109 |
Hydrazine, 1,2-diphenyl- |
318. |
U134 |
Hydrofluoric acid |
319. |
U134 |
Hydrogen fluoride |
320. |
U135 |
Hydrogen sulfide |
321. |
U135 |
Hydrogen sulfide H2S |
322. |
U096 |
Hydroperoxide, 1-methyl-1-phenylethyl- |
323. |
U137 |
Indeno[1,2,3-cd]pyrene |
324. |
U140 |
Isobutyl alcohol |
325. |
U141 |
Isosafrole |
326. |
U142 |
Kepone |
327. |
U143 |
Lasiocarpine |
328. |
U144 |
Lead acetate |
329. |
U145 |
Lead phosphate |
330. |
U146 |
Lead subacetate |
331. |
U146 |
Lead, bis(acetato-O)tetrahydroxytri- |
332. |
U129 |
Lindane |
333. |
U150 |
L-Phenylalanine, 4-[bis(2-chloroethyl)amino]- |
334. |
U015 |
L-Serine, diazoacetate (ester) |
335. |
U147 |
Maleic anhydride |
336. |
U148 |
Maleic hydrazide |
337. |
U149 |
Malononitrile |
338. |
U071 |
m-Dichlorobenzene |
339. |
U150 |
Melphalan |
340. |
U151 |
Mercury |
341. |
U152 |
Methacrylonitrile |
342. |
U092 |
Methanamine, N-methyl- |
343. |
U029 |
Methane, bromo- |
344. |
U045 |
Methane, chloro- |
345. |
U046 |
Methane, chloromethoxy- |
346. |
U068 |
Methane, dibromo- |
347. |
U080 |
Methane, dichloro- |
348. |
U075 |
Methane, dichlorodifluoro- |
349. |
U138 |
Methane, iodo- |
350. |
U211 |
Methane, tetrachloro- |
351. |
U225 |
Methane, tribromo- |
352. |
U044 |
Methane, trichloro- |
353. |
U121 |
Methane, trichlorofluoro- |
354. |
U119 |
Methanesulfonic acid, ethyl ester |
355. |
U153 |
Methanethiol |
356. |
U154 |
Methanol |
357. |
U155 |
Methapyrilene |
358. |
U247 |
Methoxychlor |
359. |
U154 |
Methyl alcohol |
360. |
U029 |
Methyl bromide |
361. |
U045 |
Methyl chloride |
362. |
U156 |
Methyl chlorocarbonate |
363. |
U226 |
Methyl chloroform |
364. |
U159 |
Methyl ethyl ketone (MEK) |
365. |
U160 |
Methyl ethyl ketone peroxide |
366. |
U138 |
Methyl iodide |
367. |
U161 |
Methyl isobutyl ketone |
368. |
U162 |
Methyl methacrylate |
369. |
U068 |
Methylene bromide |
370. |
U080 |
Methylene chloride |
371. |
U164 |
Methylthiouracil |
372. |
U010 |
Mitomycin C |
373. |
U163 |
MNNG |
374. |
U086 |
N,N'-Diethylhydrazine |
375. |
U026 |
Naphthalenamine, N,N'-bis(2-chloroethyl)- |
376. |
U165 |
Naphthalene |
377. |
U047 |
Naphthalene, 2-chloro- |
378. |
U031 |
n-Butyl alcohol |
379. |
U217 |
Nitric acid, thallium(1+) salt |
380. |
U169 |
Nitrobenzene |
381. |
U173 |
N-Nitrosodiethanolamine |
382. |
U174 |
N-Nitrosodiethylamine |
383. |
U172 |
N-Nitrosodi-n-butylamine |
384. |
U176 |
N-Nitroso-N-ethylurea |
385. |
U177 |
N-Nitroso-N-methylurea |
386. |
U178 |
N-Nitroso-N-methylurethane |
387. |
U179 |
N-Nitrosopiperidine |
388. |
U180 |
N-Nitrosopyrrolidine |
389. |
U194 |
n-Propylamine |
390. |
U087 |
O,O-Diethyl S-methyl dithiophosphate |
391. |
U048 |
o-Chlorophenol |
392. |
U070 |
o-Dichlorobenzene |
393. |
U328 |
o-Toluidine |
394. |
U222 |
o-Toluidine hydrochloride |
395. |
U115 |
Oxirane |
396. |
U041 |
Oxirane, (chloromethyl)- |
397. |
U126 |
Oxiranecarboxyaldehyde |
398. |
U182 |
Paraldehyde |
399. |
U197 |
p-Benzoquinone |
400. |
U039 |
p-Chloro-m-cresol |
401. |
U072 |
p-Dichlorobenzene |
402. |
U093 |
p-Dimethylaminoazobenzene |
403. |
U183 |
Pentachlorobenzene |
404. |
U184 |
Pentachloroethane |
405. |
U185 |
Pentachloronitrobenzene (PCNB) |
406. |
T140 |
Pentachlorophenol |
407. |
U161 |
Pentanol, 4-methyl- |
408. |
U187 |
Phenacetin |
409. |
U188 |
Phenol |
410. |
U411 |
Phenol, 2-(1-methylethoxy)-, methylcarbamate |
411. |
T140 |
Phenol, 2,3,4,6-tetrachloro- |
412. |
T140 |
Phenol, 2,4,5-trichloro- |
413. |
T140 |
Phenol, 2,4,6-trichloro- |
414. |
U081 |
Phenol, 2,4-dichloro- |
415. |
U101 |
Phenol, 2,4-dimethyl- |
416. |
U082 |
Phenol, 2,6-dichloro- |
417. |
U048 |
Phenol, 2-chloro- |
418. |
U089 |
Phenol, 4,4'-(1,2-diethyl-1,2-ethenediyl)bis-, (E)- |
419. |
U039 |
Phenol, 4-chloro-3-methyl- |
420. |
U170 |
Phenol, 4-nitro- |
421. |
U052 |
Phenol, methyl- |
422. |
T140 |
Phenol, pentachloro- |
423. |
U132 |
Phenol, 2,2'-methylenebis[3,4,6-trichloro- |
424. |
U145 |
Phosphoric acid, lead(2+) salt (2:3) |
425. |
U087 |
Phosphorodithioic acid, O,O-diethyl S-methyl ester |
426. |
U189 |
Phosphorus sulfide |
427. |
U190 |
Phthalic anhydride |
428. |
U179 |
Piperidine, 1-nitroso- |
429. |
U170 |
p-Nitrophenol |
430. |
U192 |
Pronamide |
431. |
U066 |
Propane, 1,2-dibromo-3-chloro- |
432. |
U083 |
Propane, 1,2-dichloro- |
433. |
U027 |
Propane, 2,2'-oxybis[2-chloro- |
434. |
U171 |
Propane, 2-nitro- |
435. |
U149 |
Propanedinitrile |
436. |
T140 |
Propanoic acid, 2-(2,4,5-0 trichlorophenoxy)- |
437. |
U373 |
Propham |
438. |
U411 |
Propoxur |
439. |
U083 |
Propylene dichloride |
440. |
U387 |
Prosulfocarb |
441. |
U353 |
p-Toluidine |
442. |
U196 |
Pyridine |
443. |
U191 |
Pyridine, 2-methyl- |
444. |
U180 |
Pyrrolidine, 1-nitroso- |
445. |
U200 |
Reserpine |
446. |
U201 |
Resorcinol |
447. |
U202 |
Saccharin, and salts |
448. |
U203 |
Safrole |
449. |
U204 |
Selenious acid |
450. |
U204 |
Selenium dioxide |
451. |
U205 |
Selenium sulfide |
452. |
U205 |
Selenium sulfide SeS2 |
453. |
T140 |
Silvex (2,4,5-TP) |
454. |
U206 |
Streptozotocin |
455. |
U189 |
Sulfur phosphide |
456. |
U103 |
Sulfuric acid, dimethyl ester |
457. |
U210 |
Tetrachloroethylene |
458. |
U213 |
Tetrahydrofuran |
459. |
U216 |
Thallium chloride TlCl |
460. |
U214 |
Thallium(I) acetate |
461. |
U215 |
Thallium(I) carbonate |
462. |
U216 |
Thallium(I) chloride |
463. |
U217 |
Thallium(I) nitrate |
464. |
U218 |
Thioacetamide |
465. |
U410 |
Thiodicarb |
466. |
U153 |
Thiomethanol |
467. |
U244 |
Thioperoxydicarbonic diamide[(H2N)C(S)]2S2, tetramethyl- |
468. |
U409 |
Thiophanate-methyl |
469. |
U219 |
Thiourea |
470. |
U244 |
Thiram |
471. |
U220 |
Toluene |
472. |
U223 |
Toluene diisocyanate |
473. |
U221 |
Toluenediamine |
474. |
U389 |
Triallate |
475. |
U228 |
Trichloroethylene |
476. |
U121 |
Trichloromonofluoromethane |
477. |
U404 |
Triethylamine |
478. |
U235 |
Tris(2,3-dibromopropyl) phosphate |
479. |
U236 |
Trypan blue |
480. |
U237 |
Uracil mustard |
481. |
U176 |
Urea, N-ethyl-N-nitroso- |
482. |
U177 |
Urea, N-methyl-N-nitroso- |
483. |
U043 |
Vinyl chloride |
484. |
U248 |
Warfarin, and salts, when present at concentrations of 0.3% or less |
485. |
U239 |
Xylene |
486. |
U200 |
Yohimban-16-carboxylic acid,11,17-dimethoxy-18-[(3,4,5-trimethoxybenzoyl)oxy]-, methyl ester,(3beta,16beta,17alpha,18beta,20alpha)- |
487. |
U249 |
Zinc phosphide Zn3P2, when present at concentrations of 10% or less |
SCHEDULE 8
(Subparagraph 2(2)(e)(i))
EXCLUDED MATERIALS
Item |
Description |
1. |
Slags, skimmings and dross containing precious metals, copper or zinc for further refining |
2. |
Platinum group metal (PGM) automobile catalysts |
3. |
Electronic scrap such as circuit boards, electronic components and wires that are suitable for base or precious metal recovery |
4. |
Brass in the form of turnings, borings and choppings |
SCHEDULE 9
(Section 4)
MOVEMENT DOCUMENT
![Movement document](/web/20071116032147im_/http://canadagazette.gc.ca/partI/2006/20060902/html/image-2.jpg)
[35-1-o]
Footnote a
S.C. 2004, c. 15, s. 31
Footnote b
S.C. 1999, c. 33
Footnote c
S.C. 1999, c. 33
Footnote d
S.C. 1999, c. 33
Footnote 1
SOR/2002-301
|