Reducing the quantity of hazardous waste generated by the University will not only
help protect the environment, but will save money in hazardous materials disposal
costs, minimize liability, and reduce regulatory requirements of the University. Hazardous
waste minimization involves various strategies to reduce the consumption and/or toxicity
of hazardous materials used by the University.
It is the responsibility of everyone who generates wastes to reduce or eliminate the
generation of hazardous waste to the extent that is economically and technically feasible,
including reducing the volume or quantity and/or toxicity of the wastes generated
in accordance with local, state, and federal regulations.
The Environmental Health & Safety Department has developed a Hazardous Waste Reduction
Policy (ERM.EHS.HMW 211 Hazardous Waste Reduction Policy) which outlines methodologies for reducing the generation of hazardous waste.
Limiting quantities purchased - Purchase chemicals in the smallest volumes needed.
Consider buying pre-weighed or pre-measured reagent packets where waste generation
is high.
Chemical exchange - Laboratories should check with other labs in their department,
or even other departments on campus, to see if they have excess chemicals they would
be willing to share. It costs 20-40 times the original purchase price of a chemical
to dispose of that same chemical. The American Chemical Society estimates that 40%
of chemical wastes generated by labs consists of unused chemicals. Do not accept any
chemicals from another department or outside organization unless you are sure these
substances will be used.
Inventory management and control - Laboratories should constantly monitor their chemical
inventory and dispose of any unwanted or expired chemicals through EH&S. New containers
should be dated when they are received so that older products will be used first.
Environmental Health and Safety has implemented a new Chemical Inventory module as
part of its Safety Management System (“SMS”) – more information about the SMS can
be found at https://ehs.stonybrook.edu/resources/sms/.
Principal Investigators are encouraged to develop and use validated experimental procedures
that replace hazardous materials with non-hazardous materials. This is especially
important during any pre-experimental planning stages.
Use of computer modeling and/or instrumentation to eliminate chemical use.
Use of micro-chemistry or using reduced volumes in an experiment. Procedures to switch
to micro-chemistry include:
Switching from conventional to fast microprocessor-based, top loading balances that
are sensitive to 0.1 mg.
Use of chromatographic techniques, such as high performance and ion exchange that
can clearly separate and purify milligram quantities of a substance.
Use of microscale glassware, including pipettes, burettes, syringes, reactors and
stills for handling reagents and their products.
Switching from conventional to sensitive spectrometers that can analyze milligram
quantities of substance.
Product substitution with a non-hazardous or less hazardous material. Examples of
product substitution include:
Using a biodegradable non-toxic preservative, such as ethanol, in lieu of formaldehyde-based
substances (formalin).
Replacing flammable scintillation fluid with non-hazardous biodegradable scintillation
fluid.
Replacing hazardous solvents or cleaning solutions in parts washers with non-hazardous
solutions.
Substituting copper sulfate for mercuric oxide in Kjeldahl analyses.
Avoid mixing hazardous waste with non-hazardous waste.
Replacing mercury thermometers with alcohol-based or digital thermometers.
Do not mix water, or other non-hazardous substances with hazardous waste.
Do not mix used oil with solvents or heavy metals, or the used oil cannot be recycled.
Spill prevention - Care should be taken when weighing or transferring chemicals to
minimize spills. Containers should be sealed when not in use and processes should
be contained (i.e., fume hoods) to prevent the escape of fumes or leaks into the environment.
Housekeeping - This includes properly labeling all containers with their hazardous
contents and keeping an up-to-date chemical inventory. Dispose of chemicals when no
longer usable or needed, or once expired – holding onto chemicals indefinitely not
only increases potential risk of exposure, but aging container labels can fade or
otherwise become illegible which leads to “unknown chemicals” which are more costly
to dispose of.
Training - Include waste minimization practices in student and employee orientation
training sessions. All employees and students who generate hazardous waste must also
take ENV 001 – Hazardous Waste Management training.
Segregation - Wastes must be properly segregated once they are generated and stored
in chemically compatible containers. For example, acid waste should not be stored
together with caustics and oxidizers should not be stored with flammables. Hydrofluoric
acid waste should not be stored in glass containers. Waste should be stored in secondary
containment (i.e. tubs) when appropriate to ensure proper segregation during storage.
Eliminating unknown chemicals - Chemicals that are unlabeled cost up to 10 times more
for disposal than properly labeled chemicals. At the end of the semester, or when
students are leaving the lab, ensure all chemical containers are properly labeled.
Conduct periodic monitoring of students’ work in the lab to ensure proper labeling
is being practiced and reinforced.
Recycling - There are many good reasons to recycle. Some of these reasons include:
Conserves energy
Protects the environment
Reduces the need to build new landfills and incinerators
Saves money and energy
Stimulates the development of green technologies
Provides valuable raw materials to industry
Current waste recycling initiatives:
Universal waste, such as rechargeable batteries, fluorescent lamps and used oil, are
sent to commercial recyclers.
Solvents with high BTU values are reclaimed and burned as fuel in incinerators.
Mercury from thermometers and equipment is collected for retorting.
Used photographic fixer is filtered for silver recovery.
Some solvents can be re-distilled and reused. There are two solvent recovery units
currently on Campus.
Elementary neutralization - Acids and bases can be neutralized if they don’t contain
any heavy metals or organics. Contact EHS before conducting any elementary neutralization
for approval.
Prevent improper disposal - The following methods of hazardous chemical disposal are
not acceptable and are considered a violation of state and federal environmental regulations
and institutional policy:
Evaporation
Dilution
Combustion
Storm sewer
Sanitary sewer
Sharps container
Regular trash
Biohazard waste containers
Combining wastes to render them nonhazardous - Intentional mixing of waste to change
the characteristic is a direct violation of the US EPA Resource Conservation and Recovery
Act (RCRA) land disposal treatment standards. A permit is generally required to treat
hazardous waste.
MANAGER OF HAZARDOUS MATERIALS AND WASTE
Walter Julias | (631) 632-3739 | Walter.Julias@stonybrook.edu