IPC’18 Base Oils and Waxes
For the second time, the Base Oils and Waxes (BOW) session was held in parallel with the general session on petrochemicals. Organized by AFPM staff and superbly moderated by Ernie Henderson, this session featured three presentations on waxes and one on base oils.
EPA Nomenclature Update
Jim Cooper, Senior Petrochemical Advisor at AFPM, is working with the Alliance for Chemical Nomenclature, to help ensure that any nomenclature for a hydrocarbon-based product which more specifically defines what it
Initial meetings at EPA were not productive, but that improved after regulatory reform that included language in Section 8 that requires EPA to accept existing nomenclature. EPA staff have stated they would now like to use CAS (Chemical Abstracts Service) designations, which are inherently molecular Jim sought the informal consent of the attendees to continue working with the alliance to be more specific on UVC with EPA, and CAS through ACS (the American Chemical Society). No one objected, simply asked that are new classification be backwardly compatible.
Note the revises TSCA bill was passed in
The issue over nomenclature was triggered by enforcement letters, which looked to AFPM, and later the alliance, like trying to promulgate legislation through enforcement. The language now inserted in Section 8 should help to protect against a new chemical review process, simply through
Why MOAH Needs to be a Concern for Manufacturers
Tim Yasika,
The industry has moved away from testing using animals and developed an extraction-based test known as IP436. This test, correlated with prior mouse-painting data, has resulted in a cut-off criterion based on
This methodology has been adopted outside of Europe, for example in Australia and Malaysia. Tim Yasika through his membership of ATSM D06 Fuels Committee is maintaining a watching brief in the USA. There are also simpler alternatives to IP436, such as
EU Issues Which Could Affect US Manufacturers
Sasol gave a presentation developed by Dr. Dirk Danneels of EWF. The topic was concern about the use of paraffin wax and microcrystalline
Public concern was then raised about printing ink from used paper and cardboard used for food packaging, NGOs pushing to be free of MOSH (Mineral Oil Saturated Hydrocarbons). EWF is actively working to clarify for the wider community the differences between waxes and oils, and the fact that human ability to metabolize normal amounts was also seen in the Sprague-Dawley mice tests on the 1960s: these 90-day tests are now being repeated, as part of a dossier to document that n-alkanes do not accumulate in human livers, because they are metabolized. Only the F-344 mice appear unable to metabolize the n-alkanes.
This summary covers the first afternoon, following the keynotes. The final topic of the final presentation within this BOW session “The Future of Electric Vehicles” will be covered in a summary of the
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