You are on page 1of 54

Globally Harmonized System (GHS)

Change from
Material Safety Data Sheet (MSDS)
to
Safety Data Sheet (SDS)

Pesticide Education Program


Objectives

History of GHS
Major Changes Under GHS
What Do You Need to Do
Step by Step Compliance

Pesticide Education Program


History of GHS
An international mandate to harmonize labels
was adopted at the United Nations
Conference on the Environment and
Development (UNCED) in 1992 in Brazil:
A globally-harmonized hazard classification and
compatible labeling system, including material
safety data sheets and easily understandable
symbols, should be available, if feasible, by the
year 2000.

Pesticide Education Program


In March 2012, Occupational Safety
and Health Administration (OSHA)
published a final rule to align its
Hazardous Communication
Standards (HCS) regulations with the
Globally Harmonized System (GHS)
of Classification and labeling of
chemicals
Pesticide Education Program
The primary goal of GHS is improved
protection of human health and the
environment by providing chemical
users and handlers with enhanced
and consistent information on
chemical hazards.

Pesticide Education Program


The GHS is based on major existing
systems for industrial chemicals,
pesticides, consumer chemicals, and
chemicals in transport, but
implementation of the GHS would
require some changes in all existing
systems in order to achieve
harmonization.
Pesticide Education Program
However, it is important for growers who
use Federally regulated pesticides to
note that the Environment Protection
Agency (EPA) has NOT yet moved to
amend its pesticide labeling regulations
under the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide,
and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA) to align with
the GHS.

Pesticide Education Program


Why the switch from MSDS to SDS?

Under the HazCom 2012, the MSDS


will be replaced with a Safety Data
Sheet (SDS).

Pesticide Education Program


Why the switch from MSDS to SDS?
Before the HazCom 2012, there were several
acceptable MSDS formats. OSHAs adoption of
Global Harmonization Standards (GHS)
requires the use of a single format.
All SDS will have 16 sections that appear in a
specific order.

Pesticide Education Program


Major Changes Under GHS

Pesticide Education Program


Changes
MSDS to SDS Format
Labeling Requirements/Pictograms
Hazard Classification

Pesticide Education Program


Changes

MSDS to SDS Format


MSDS will now be referred to as Safety Data
Sheets

There is now a specified 16-section format that


must be followed.

Pesticide Education Program


Section 1
Identification of Substance and Supplier

Pesticide Education Program


Section 2
Hazard Identification

Pesticide Education Program


Section 3
Composition/Information on Ingredients

Pesticide Education Program


Section 4
First Aid Measures

Pesticide Education Program


Section 5
Firefighting Measures

Pesticide Education Program


Section 6
Accidental Release Measures

Pesticide Education Program


Section 7
Handling and Storage

Pesticide Education Program


Section 8
Precautions to Control Exposure/Personal
Protection

Pesticide Education Program


Section 9
Physical and Chemical Properties

Pesticide Education Program


Section 10
Stability and Reactivity

Pesticide Education Program


Section 11
Toxicological Information

Pesticide Education Program


Section 12
Ecological Information

Pesticide Education Program


Section 13
Waste Disposal Consideration

Pesticide Education Program


Section 14
Transportation Information

Pesticide Education Program


Section 15
Regulatory Information

Pesticide Education Program


Section 16
Other Information

Pesticide Education Program


Pictograms

Pesticide Education Program


Pictograms
Health Hazard
Carcinogen
Respiratory sensitizer
Reproductive toxicity
Target Organ toxicity
Mutagenicity
Aspiration toxicity

Pesticide Education Program


Pictogram
Flame
Flammables
Self-Reactives
Pyrophorics
Self-Heating
Emits flammable gas
Organic peroxides

Pesticide Education Program


Pictograms
Exclamation Mark
Skin and eye irritant
Skin sensitizer
Acute toxicity
Narcotic effects
Respiratory tract irritant

Pesticide Education Program


Pictograms
Gas Cylinder
Gas Under Pressure
Flames Over Circle
Oxidizer

Pesticide Education Program


Pictograms
Corrosion
Corrosives

Skull and Crossbones


Acute Toxicity (Severe)

Pesticide Education Program


Pictograms
Exploding Bomb
Explosives
Self-Reactive
Organic peroxides

Pesticide Education Program


Pictograms
Environment
Aquatic Toxicity

Pesticide Education Program


Hazard Classification
The definitions of hazard have been changed to
provide specific criteria for classification of health
and physical hazards, as well as classification of
mixtures
These specific criteria will help to ensure that
evaluations of hazardous effects are consistent
across manufacturers, and that labels and safety
data sheets are more accurate as a result

Pesticide Education Program


Will the change require that both and MSDS
and an SDS be kept for the same product?
For compliance with the new OSHA HazCom 2012
regulatory requirements, maintaining both an MSDS
and a SDS for the same chemical is not necessary.
As the SDS becomes available for individual products,
they will replace the existing MSDSs.
Although there is no requirement to keep the older
MSDS once it is replaced with an SDS, a good
management practice would be to keep an electronic
copy on file, especially if existing stocks of the chemical
were purchased under the older MSDS.

Pesticide Education Program


Will the change require that both and MSDS
and an SDS be kept for the same product?
When the chemical in question is a pesticide
and the content of the MSDS and the SDS
differs, a copy of both documents must be
maintained to ensure compliance with OSHA
HazCom 2012 and FIFRA which regulates
pesticide products.

Pesticide Education Program


The differences between EPAs
current requirements and the GHS
are related to classification criteria,
hazard statements, pictograms, and
signal words.

Pesticide Education Program


For example, FIFRA pesticide product
labels may contain the following signal
words: of Danger Poison with the skull
and crossbones graphic, Warning, or
Caution depending on the toxicity
level of the product, and Danger for a
product that may be a potential skin or
eye irritant.

Pesticide Education Program


The GHS uses only two signal
words, Danger and Warning.

Pesticide Education Program


How this may cause a problem for
example is the label of a chemical
that has an oral LD50 of 550 mg/kg
bears the signal word Caution
under current FIFRA labeling
practices but would require the
signal word Warning under the
GHS Safety Data Sheet format.
Pesticide Education Program
For pesticide products, FIFRA labels
approved by EPA pre-empt OSHAs
label requirements, but not the
requirements for SDS and worker
training (except for certified
applicators and agricultural workers
for whom EPA has training
requirements).
Pesticide Education Program
EPA realizes that this may require users
of the SDS that are prepared for
pesticide products to become familiar
with two different systems, at least
until the agencies requirements are
harmonized.

Pesticide Education Program


As a result, EPA issued guidance in the
April 20, 2012 Federal Register to
manufactures so that when changes
are made to the SDS to meet the OSHA
requirements, the new SDS format will
also be in compliance with the
pesticide regulations under FIFRA.

Pesticide Education Program


Will the change require that both and MSDS
and an SDS be kept for the same product?

When the chemical in question is a pesticide


and the content of the MSDS and the SDS
differs, a copy of both documents must be
maintained to ensure compliance with OSHA
HazCom 2012 and FIFRA which regulates
pesticide products.

Pesticide Education Program


HazCom 2012 Compliance
Dates and Deadlines:
There is a 3 year phase in period
through 2016

Pesticide Education Program


HazCom 2012 Compliance
Dates and Deadlines:

December 1, 2013
Employers must train employees on how to read
GHS formatted labels and SDSs.
Changes to labels are probably more substantial,
however, employees need to understand where to
find information on the SDS.

Pesticide Education Program


HazCom 2012 Compliance
Dates and Deadlines:
2013 2015 On an Ongoing Basis
Employers should replace existing MSDSs with
new SDSs as they become available.
For pesticide products, employers must be sure
to determine if there are any differences
between the MSDS and SDS. If differences exist,
a copy of the MSDS must also be maintained to
be in compliance with both HasCom2012 and
FIFRA.

Pesticide Education Program


HazCom 2012 Compliance
Dates and Deadlines:

June 1, 2015 Chemical manufacturers and


distributors should have completed their
reclassification of chemicals and be shipping
GHS formatted SDS and labels with their
shipments.

Pesticide Education Program


HazCom 2012 Compliance
Dates and Deadlines:
December 1, 2015 Distributors have an
additional 6 months beyond the June 1, 2015
date to pass along manufacturer labels and
SDSs in the older formats. However, beyond
December 1, 2015, all MSDSs and labels in the
U.S. should be in compliance with HazCom
2012 provisions.

Pesticide Education Program


HazCom 2012 Compliance
Dates and Deadlines:
June 1, 2016
Employers should be fully compliant with
HazCom 2012. That includes making any
necessary updates to their HazCom program,
training employees on any newly identified
chemical hazards (identification of new hazards is
likely during the reclassification process chemical
manufacturers undertake), and updating SDS
libraries and secondary labels.

Pesticide Education Program


This presentation was created in partnership with the
Pesticide Education Program, Penn State Cooperative Extension;
and the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture.

For more information on this and other resources, please visit


extension.psu.edu/pested

Where trade names appear, no discrimination is intended, and no endorsement by Penn State Cooperative Extension is implied.
Penn State is committed to affirmative action, equal opportunity, and the diversity of its workforce.

The Pennsylvania State University 2012 November 2012

Pesticide Education Program

You might also like