Chemical and Hazardous Waste

Summary

How to manage, store, and dispose of chemical and hazardous waste.

Who is this for?

  • Building and operations management.
  • Harvard construction project managers.
  • Lab and research staff.

Chemical and hazardous waste at Harvard

All hazardous waste, including hazardous chemical waste, must be properly managed to protect people and the environment.

Hazardous waste meets either of these criteria:

  • The Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection (MassDEP) defines the specific chemical as hazardous waste.
  • The waste exhibits certain characteristics defined by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and MassDEP. These characteristics include corrosivity, ignitability, reactivity, and toxicity.

Hazardous waste is subject to strict regulations and must follow specific management and handling practices. This includes:

  • Correctly identifying waste.
  • Properly storing waste and following storage time limits.
  • Performing weekly inspections.

A material is subject to hazardous waste regulations once it will no longer be used for its intended purpose.

Common chemical and hazardous waste

Required training

You must complete training before generating, handling, inspecting, or managing hazardous waste.

EHS conducts hazardous waste training online through the Harvard Training Portal (HTP). Certain EHS general safety courses also include hazardous waste training.

After your first training, you must complete follow-up training each year. 

Ensure your facility or lab staff complete sufficient training and have training records.

Waste reduction

Always use waste minimization techniques to limit and reduce the volume and toxicity of hazardous waste. This includes:

  • Modifying or adjusting your equipment and processes.
  • Recycling.
  • Segregating and separating waste.
  • Substituting toxic materials.

Waste storage and disposal

Satellite accumulation areas (SAA) are locations where you collect hazardous waste. Each SAA must:

  • Be under the control of only the person or people generating the waste.
  • Be located at or near where those people generate the waste.
  • Have an appropriate sign posted near the waste collection area.
  • Use appropriate containers for waste collection and storage.
  • Be inspected every week.

Main accumulation areas (MAA) are designated waste storage areas with longer term storage time limitations than SAAs and additional requirements.

Waste shipping and transportation

Related resources

Find documents and online tools to manage hazardous and chemical waste.

Chemical Hygiene Plan

Chemical safety requirements and guidelines for labs, including lab chemical standard operating procedures (SOP)

EHS support

Contact EHS for more information about chemical and hazardous waste, including:

  • Identifying, managing, storing, shipping, and transporting waste.
  • Chemical waste storage compatibility.
  • Harvard EPA and MassDEP chemical and hazardous waste identification numbers.
  • Hazardous waste disposal vendors and facilities approved by Harvard.
  • SAA posters.

Contact lab_safety@harvard.edu or your Lab Safety Advisor (LSA) for more information about waste in labs.

Support for Harvard EHS

Contact EHS

If you have questions or concerns about environmental health and safety at Harvard, please contact us.

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