Safety in Chemical Production
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by M. D. Booth
Safety in Chemical Production
by M. D. Booth
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| Workshop Opening Session |
On 20 November 2002 a workshop entitled Safety and Toxicology was held at the premises of the SINOPEC Corporation in Beijing, China. The workshop, the fifth in a series organized by the IUPAC Committee on Chemistry and Industry (COCI), was cosponsored by UNESCO and SINOPEC.
> see 4th workshop report
The workshop was chaired by Qi Zhai, the head of SINOPEC’s Safety and Environment Bureau. Present were Yang Youming, deputy director of Work Safety Supervision, State Administration of Work Safety; and Axel Hebel, the UNESCO representative in Beijing. SINOPEC arranged for the workshop to coincide with a meeting of their safety and environment managers, which swelled the audience to over 150 delegates. Several members of the Chemical Industry and Engineering Society of China were in attendance.
Nelson Wright provided a brief introductory talk on IUPAC and COCI, concentrating on activities pertinent to industry. He was followed by Mike Booth who summarized the history of the safety workshops and provided an outline of the plan of implementation arising from the World Summit on Sustainable Development that had taken place in Johannesburg, South Africa, in August. Booth emphasized Section 22, which covers the management of chemicals throughout their life cycle. The full text of the plan of implementation can be found at <www.icca-at-wssd.org/Plan.pdf>.
Axel Hebel, program specialist for Science, Technology, and Environment of UNESCO in Beijing, provided a historical perspective on UNESCO’s efforts to assist developing countries and countries in transition with chemical safety programs. Hebel explained that UNESCO helps build up national and regional research and training capacities in the field of chemical safety through cooperation with competent international and regional networks and centers and national specialized scientific bodies and institutions. He intimated that the gap between developing countries and developed countries in the areas of safety education research and the implementation of safety measures has been widening. Therefore, he said, it has become vitally important to promote the communication and dissemination of state-of-the-art knowledge about safety and environmental protection in chemical production. Hebel also mentioned the Safety Training Programme—jointly developed by IUPAC, UNESCO, and the U.N. Industrial Development Organization—that promotes safety and environmental protection in chemical, pharmaceutical, and biotechnological research and production.
Steven Harper, who spent 11 years as a U.K. Government Chemical Inspector and who authored the National Chemical Guidance, summarized how the U.K. chemical industries have implemented the SEVESCO II directive. He later discussed the classification and labeling of hazardous substances, with references to both U.K. and UN guidelines, and then outlined "emergency plans and preparedness."
Judy Castledine, director of Environment, Health, & Safety at Dow Chemical Pacific Limited (based in Hong Kong), talked about Dow’s worldwide efforts on safety/environment/toxicology control and made particular reference to Dow’s Asian plants and to the important role of Responsible Care, which makes every employee from the CEO down "responsible."
Harry C. Y. Heo, technical and safety manager, Asia Pacific Region, Nitriles, BP Chemicals (based in Seoul), outlined what BP does to improve awareness among customers and service providers about the safe handling of toxic materials such as acrylonitrile. He summarized BP’s emergency response system and practices and emphasized the company’s "Product Stewardship" program.
The workshop was organized by Jinliang Qiao, COCI representative from China and Mike Booth, COCI representative from South Africa.
Mike Booth <caiainfo@iafrica.com> is director of the Information Resources department of the Chemical and Allied Industries Association, in Auckland Park, South Africa, and is a member of the IUPAC Committee on Chemistry and Industry.
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Articles in the same Issue
- Masthead
- From the Editor
- Contents
- Vice President’s Column
- Camptothecin and Taxol
- Striving for Open Access
- Chemical Weapons Convention
- IUPAC Announces Prize Winners
- Highlights of the Executive Committee Meeting
- IUPAC Funds Three Conferences to be Held in 2004 in Developing and Disadvantaged Countries
- Bio-Unions to Pursue Science for Health and Well-Being
- Methods of Analysis and Sampling of Food Products
- IUPAC Elections
- NMR Chemical Shifts: Updated Conventions
- Terminology for Radical Polymerizations with Minimal Termination
- Toward a Core Organic Chemistry Curriculum for Latin American Universities
- Rules for Stating When a Limiting Value is Exceeded
- Provisional Recommendations
- Critical Evaluation of Stability Constants for α-Hydroxycarboxylic Acid Complexes with Protons and Metal Ions and the Accompanying Enthalpy Changes Part II: Aliphatic α-Hydroxycarboxylic Acids (IUPAC Technical Report)
- Endocrine Disruptors in the Environment (IUPAC Technical Report)
- Measurement of pH: Definition, Standards, and Procedures. (IUPAC Recommendations 2002)
- Natural Products
- Molecular Order and Mobility in Polymer Systems
- New Polymeric Materials
- The Experimental Determination of Solubilities
- Chemicals in the Atmosphere: Solubility, Sources and Reactivity
- Photochemical Purification of Water and Air
- Safety in Chemical Production
- Physiological Reference Values: A Shared Business?
- Solution Chemistry
- Multi-Component Materials
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- Bio-Based Polymers
- Solubility Phenomena
- Organic Synthesis
- Chemical Education
- Mark Your Calendar
