LINDE GASES ALIGNS WITH U.N. CHEMICAL RECLASSIFICATIONS
Its entire range of gases and chemicals will eventually adhere to the forthcoming Globally Harmonized System of Classification and Labelling of Chemicals.
Posted: June 7, 2010
Linde Gases, a division of The Linde Group, is taking the necessary steps to align itself to the forthcoming United Nations-developed international chemicals re-classification system ? Globally Harmonized System of Classification and Labelling of Chemicals (GHS) ? across its entire range of gases and chemicals. Moreover, Linde has also launched an initiative to help its gases customers to understand and adopt the multiple changes that will impact the way gases are transported, stored and handled across their supply chains.
To facilitate this initiative, the company has published a detailed Gases and Applications handbook. The handbook, which provides clear pictorial representations of the new GHS classification and labelling system and comparisons with existing EU classification systems, aims to clarify updated property descriptions of hazardous products and their main labelling information.
?With its innovative gases technologies, Linde plays a pioneering role in the global gases market,? says Stephen Harrison, head of Specialty Gases and Equipment at Linde. ?The agility with which Linde is implementing GHS is testament to our unwavering commitment to customers to partner in their success through safety and compliance. Customers are invited to engage with EU classification experts from Linde to understand how these changes benefit them.?
The global implementation of GHS will affect over sixty countries and will directly impact all pure gases in the EU countries from 1 December 2010, with the re-classification of gas mixtures being implemented from 2015.
While most countries have systems for the classification of hazardous chemicals – including gases – to ensure safe transportation, storage, use and disposal, to date various national or regional systems have not always been compatible. This incompatibility has often meant the re-labelling, or the use of multiple labels, on a product, increasing the risks involved in handling gases. For organisations operating at an international level, the need to comply with multiple regulations on hazard classification and labelling has meant that end users may perceive inconsistent label warnings, therefore increasing the risks involved in handling a particular gas, in addition to the added time or barriers companies may face to align their classification and labelling with local requirements.
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