Chemical Spill
Chemical Spill
Chemical Spill
ANTHROPOGENIC HAZARD
GROUP 1
Table of Contents
01 02
INTRODUCTION OF EXPLAIN CHEMICAL
ANTHROPOGENIC SPILL
HAZARD
03 04
TYPES OF EMERGENCY
CHEMICAL SPILL PLAN
01
ANTHROPOGENIC
HAZARD
Introduction
Chemical Spill
The unintentional release
of a liquid chemical that
is considered hazardous
to human health,
regardless of the volume
or location of release—
indoors or outdoors—that
is identified with
hazardous materials labels
in a workplace.
Ø A chemical disaster occurs when one or more chemical
danger compounds are released unintentionally, posing
a risk to human health and the environment.
Ø e.g. fires, explosions, leaks, or the release of toxic
or hazardous materials that can cause illness,
injury, or disability to people.
Ø when toxic materials are stored, transported, or
used, chemical accidents can occur; the most
serious are industrial accidents involving major
chemical manufacturing and storage facilities.
Highly Toxic Chemical Spills
1. Aromatic Amines
2. Bromines
3. Carbon Disulfude
4. Cyanides
5. Ethers
6. Hydrazine
7. Nitriles
8. Nitro-Compounds
9. Organic Halide
Main Effects of Chemical Spills
Human Effects
Ø Toxic or poisonous gases can cause serious sickness, and in certain
circumstances, death. The higher the concentration of harmful
chemicals spilled or leaked, the greater the risk of serious injury or
death.
Ø When corrosive chemicals are contacted, they can inflict severe burns,
damage eyesight, and harm the respiratory tract.
Ø Some chemical spills cause cancer years after the first exposure, such
as asbestos inhalation, which causes lung cancer years later.
q Some of the most common spills involve tanker trucks and railroad
tankers containing gasoline, chlorine, acid, or other industrial
chemicals.
placard system is as follows:
1. Hazard class 1: Explosives (class 1.1-1.6, compatibility
groups A–L)
2. Hazard class 2: Gases (nonflammable, flammable, toxic gas,
oxygen, inhalation hazard)
3. Hazard class 3: Flammable liquids
4. Hazard class 4: Flammable solids (flammable solid,
spontaneously combustible, dangerous when wet)
5. Hazard class 5: Oxidizer and organic peroxide
6. Hazard class 6: Toxic/poisonous and infectious substances
labels (PG III, inhalation hazard, poison, toxic)
7. Hazard class 7: Radioactive (I, II, III, and fissile)
8. Hazard class 8: Corrosive
9. Hazard class 9: Miscellaneous dangerous goods
Two Types of Chemical Spill
EMERGENCY PLAN
In a Laboratory
1. Put on protective equipment such as a lab coat, splash goggles, and
chemically resistant gloves.
2. Work with another person to clean-up the spill. Do not clean-up a
spill alone.
3. Do not add water to the spill.
CONFINE
Keep the spill area contained by closing the spill area's closest doors. Isolate anyone
who has been contaminated and don't let them leave or transmit the disease. Drains
should be covered to prevent spills from entering the environment.
SECURE
Ensure that no one enters the spill location until emergency response workers arrive.
If the location has many entries, someone should be stationed at each one to prevent
entry.
CLEANUP
Only qualified individuals with the necessary training, protective equipment, and
cleanup supplies should do cleanup. Depending on the nature and extent of the spill,
skilled department or laboratory personnel may be able to clean it up using the
procedures outlined below. Otherwise, emergency response personnel are accessible 24
hours a day, seven days a week.
A Quick and Effective Spill Response Plan