Search

EPA May Delist Electroplating Sludge from RCRA Hazardous Waste Definition

Posted on 7/17/2017 by Roger Marks

In response to a petition from Samsung Austin Semiconductor, US EPA has announced a proposal to delist Copper filter cake generated by the electroplating process (an F006 waste) from the definition of hazardous waste under the Resource Conservational and Recovery Act (RCRA). 

Samsung does not believe that this electroplating waste meets the criteria of an F006 listed waste. Under the RCRA hazardous waste regulations, EPA can delist a waste produced at a particular facility from the definition of hazardous waste per 40 CFR 260.22.

electroplating-2.jpgIn order to successfully delist the waste, the petitioner must “demonstrate that the waste… does not meet any of the criteria under which the waste was listed as a hazardous or acutely hazardous waste….” This includes proving that the waste in question does not exhibit any hazardous waste characteristic—ignitability (I), corrosivity (C), reactivity (R), or toxicity (E).

EPA will accept public comment until August 14, 2017 on the petition to remove Copper filter cake generated at Samsung’s electroplating facility. Read more about the petition in the Federal Register, here.


What Are F-List Hazardous Wastes Under RCRA?

Within the RCRA regulations, US EPA has organized hazardous wastes into four lists—the F List, the U List, the K List, and the P List.

Two of these lists, F and K, are reserved for spent materials from non-specific (F List) or specific (K List) sources. The other two, P and U, are comprised of unused chemical substances. EPA added the F and K Lists to RCRA in January 1981 and has amended the lists several times.

F006 wastes, with a few exceptions, are defined as “Wastewater treatment sludges from electroplating operations.” This waste is listed with a (T) hazard code in RCRA, meaning it exhibits the toxicity characteristic. To successfully have the waste delisted, Samsung will have to prove the Copper filter cake its facility generates does not exhibit that characteristic.


What is Electroplating?

Used since the 1800’s, electroplating is the process by which manufacturers add a layer of metal to a product, like jewelry, using electricity. In essence, the product is placed in an electrolyte bath with the plating metal, with both connected to charged electrodes. An electric current is applied, oxidizing and effectively dissolving the metal atoms in the bath. The dissolved metal is then reduced and placed on the piece.  


In August: RCRA Training Comes to Texas, Tulsa, New Orleans, Seattle, Vegas, & Phoenix

New RCRA hazardous waste rules under EPA’s “Generator Improvements” are in effect now. Be confident you know what’s changing and how these landmark updates to RCRA will impact your facility.
Join us for live, expert-led training to meet EPA’s annual training mandate and prepare to keep your site in compliance with major changes to the RCRA rules. Next month, RCRA training trusted nationwide comes to Houston, Dallas, San Antonio, Tulsa, New Orleans, Phoenix, and Seattle.
Reserve your seat now.
 

Tags: hazardous, RCRA, waste

Find a Post

Compliance Archives

Lion - Quotes

Energetic/enthusiastic! Made training enjoyable, understandable and fun!

Amanda Walsh

Hazardous Waste Professional

I really enjoyed this training. Even after years on both sides of the comprehension coin, I find myself still learning! The quality of the delivery exceeded much of the training I have received in the past.

Neil Ozonur

Safety Officer

Attending Lion Technology classes should be mandatory for every facility that ships or stores hazmat.

Genell Drake

Outbound Lead

Our instructor was very dynamic and kept everyone's interest. Hazmat shipping can be a dry, complicated topic but I was engaged the entire time.

Kimberly Arnao

Senior Director of EH&S

One of the best trainings I have ever received!

Brandon Morfin

EH&S Manager

Amazing instructor; real-life examples. Lion training gets better every year!

Frank Papandrea

Environmental Manager

We have a very busy work schedule and using Lion enables us to take the course at our own time. It makes it easy for me to schedule my employees' training.

Timothy Mertes

Hazmat Shipping Professional

Excellent. I learned more in two days with Lion than at a 5-day program I took with another provider.

Francisco Gallardo

HES Technician

I had a positive experience utilizing this educational program. It was very informative, convenient, and rewarding from a career perspective.

John Gratacos

Logistics Manager

I love that the instructor emphasized the thought process behind the regs.

Rebecca Saxena

Corporate Product Stewardship Specialist

Download Our Latest Whitepaper

What to do before, during, and after a RCRA hazardous waste inspection to defend your site from rising State and Federal penalties.

Latest Whitepaper

By submitting your phone number, you agree to receive recurring marketing and training text messages. Consent to receive text messages is not required for any purchases. Text STOP at any time to cancel. Message and data rates may apply. View our Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy.