Industry | EPA Hazardous Waste Number | Hazardous Waste | Hazard Code |
Organic Chemical | MD01 | Filter cake and chemical sludge from API separators, generated during the production of phthalate esters | (T) |
Military | MD02 | Except for those wastes excluded by Regulation .26 of this chapter, reaction products resulting from the decontamination of any of the following compounds, including residues from the decontamination of mixtures containing one or more of these compounds: | (T) |
Ethyl dimethylamidocyanophosphate, also known by the common names GA and Tabun and the following alternate chemical names: | |||
Ethyl N,N dimethylphosphoramidocyanidate; and | |||
Dimethylamidoethoxyphosphoryl cyanide; | |||
Isopropyl methanefluorophosphonate, also known by the common names GB and Sarin and the following alternate chemical names: | |||
Isopropyl methylphosphonofluoridate; and | |||
Isopropyl ester of methylphosphonofluoridic acid; | |||
3,3-dimethyl-n-but-2-yl methylphosphonofluoridate, also known by the common names GD and Soman and the following alternate chemical names: | |||
Pinacolyl methylphosphonofluoridate; | |||
1,2,2-trimethylpropyl methylphosphonofluoridate; and | |||
Pinacoloxymethylphosphoryl fluoride; | |||
O-ethyl S-(2-diisopropyl-aminoethyl) methylphosphonothioate, also known by the common name VX; | |||
Chlorovinylarsine dichloride, also known by the common names L and Lewisite and the following alternate chemical names: | |||
Dichloro (2-chlorovinyl) arsine; and | |||
2-chlorovinyldichlorarsine; | |||
Phenarsazine chloride, also known by the common names DM and Adamsite; | |||
Bis(2-chloroethyl) sulfide, also known by the common names sulfur mustard, H, HS, and HD; | |||
2-2'-di(3-chloroethylthio)-diethyl ether, also known by the common name T and the following alternate chemical name: | |||
Bis-(2-chloroethylthioethyl) ether | |||
MD03 | Except for those wastes as excluded by Regulation .26 of this chapter: | (T) | |
(a) Residues from the treatment of a liquid having one or more of the hazardous waste numbers K991-K999 if the treatment method, to the Secretary's satisfaction, consistently produces no residue that meets the criteria of Regulation .09A(2) of this chapter for listing as an acute hazardous waste; or | |||
(b) A solid item that: | |||
(i) Is known to or is thought to have contained, on the item's surface or within the item through sorption, one or more of the hazardous wastes K991-K999; | |||
(ii) Has been successfully decontaminated, that is, has been decontaminated sufficiently to allow safe disposition through commercial hazardous waste treatment, storage, and disposal facilities; and | |||
(iii) Contains none of the wastes K991-K999 in greater than very small, insignificant amounts. | |||
Agency note: Once the MD03 hazardous waste number is assigned to a waste, the K hazardous waste number associated with the waste from which the MD03 waste is derived is no longer applicable. | |||
Agency note: A solid item, assigned a hazardous waste number K991-K999 because it contained the corresponding waste, no longer carries the K hazardous waste number if the solid item has been successfully decontaminated and no longer contains the K waste in more than very small, insignificant amounts. A solid item that no longer contains residues from the decontamination of a hazardous waste K991-K999 does not carry the MD03 hazardous waste number. |
Md. Code Regs. 26.13.02.18
Regulation .18 amended effective July 8, 2002 (29:13 Md. R. 992)