Document 0vBNDjjbkmGXrzMYr6Yz6y4R
Danger Downwind
A Report on the Release of Billions of Pounds of Toxic Air Pollutants
Jerry Poje, PhD Norman L Dean Randall J. Burke
March 22,1989
Environmental Quality Division National Wildlife Federation 1400 16th Street, N.W. Washington, D.C. 20036
CMA. 051963
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Executive Summary......................................................................................................... 1 Introduction .................................................................................................................. 3 Toxic Release Inventory Data...................................................................................... 3
Facilities ..............................................................................................................4 Toxic Release Inventory Chemicals .................................................................5 State by State Emissions Inventories .............................................................. 6 Recommendations........................................................................................................... 7 Passage of National Air Toxics Legislation.....................................................7 Reform of Environmental Permitting.............................................................. 8 Adoption by Industry of Reduction Goals....................................................... 9 Increase Citizen Involvement........................................................................... 10
TABLES TABLE 1: Reported Releases of Toxic Air Pollutants by Industrial Category, 1987. TABLE 2: Toxic Air Pollutants, 1987, Ranked in Order of Pounds Released. TABLE 3: Toxic Air Pollutants, 1987, Sorted Alphabetically. TABLE 4: State Summaries of Toxic Release Inventory Data, 1987, Ranked in Order
of Pounds Released. APPENDICES
Appendix A: EPA Form R: An Annotated Guide to the Toxics Release Inventory Reporting Form,
Appendix B: State and Federal Contacts for Toxic Release Inventory Data. Appendix C: Known Health and Environmental Effects of TRI Chemicals. Appendix D: Profiles of the 25 Chemicals Emitted in the Largest Quantities. Appendix E: Summary of Toxic Chemical Releases by State and Chemical, 1987.
CMA 051964
Acknowledgments
This report was prepared in an unusually short period of time. We gratefully acknowledge the assistance of Susan Cooper, Jeanne Byrne, and Lynn Sweetapple for their research and other support Without their around-the-clock efforts, this report could not have been completed.
The source of all of the data in this report, unless otherwise indicated, is the EPA computer data summary of the Toxic Release Inventory, dated February 22, 1989.
CMA 051965
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
The nation's program for regulating toxic air pollutants has been a total failure. As detailed in this report, although the Clean Air Act was passed over 18 years ago, more than 2J billion pounds of toxic chemicals were released to the air from manufacturing facilities in 1987. This conclusion is based on data reported by industry to the federal Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) under Title in of the Superfund law. The reports cover 308 individual chemicals and 20 classes of toxic chemicals. According to the EPA data, ten chemicals were emitted in amounts greater than 100 million pounds; 32 chemicals were emitted at greater than 10 million pounds; and 80 chemicals were emitted at greater than one million pounds.
Texas, Louisiana, Tennessee, Virginia, Ohio, Michigan, Indiana and Illinois ranked the highest in annual emissions of air toxics with greater than 100 million pounds recorded. Industry in only 10 states emitted less than 10 million pounds; and, of these 10, only Hawaii reported releases of less than one million pounds.
As shocking as these data are, they underestimate the scope of the problem. Among other things, these numbers do not include air pollution from numerous small sources, from many industrial categories such as petroleum tank farms, or from federal facilities. Numerous known toxic chemicals are not included in the data and there is evidence that a significant number of industrial firms have failed to file the required reporting forms.
Despite the emission of hundreds of toxic chemicals in quantities measured in billions of pounds, EPA has set National Emissions Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants (NESHAPs) for only seven air toxics: arsenic, asbestos, benzene, beryllium, mercury, radon-222, and vinyl chloride. Only benzene is among the top 25 chemicals. Numerous carcinogens, mutagens, teratogens, neurotoxicants, reproductive toxicants, environmental toxicants, bioaccumulators and persistent chemicals are among the unregulated chemicals.
The amount of toxics currently being emitted into our air poses unacceptable risks to public health and the environment One EPA study of 20 toxic air pollutants concluded that those 20 chemicals alone would cause 2,000 cancer cases per year. In addition to cancer, toxic air pollutants cause and contribute to other diseases, harm fish and wildlife and cause ecological damage. Among the chemicals being released are chloroflorocarbons that are damaging the earth's protective ozone layer exposing the world to even higher levels of dangerous ultraviolet radiation.
The nation needs a major effort to control these huge quantities of unregulated toxic air pollutants. A national strategy for controlling toxic air pollution should be implemented, including the following four initiatives:
1. PASSAGE OF NATIONAL AIR TOXICS LEGISLATION. The first and most critical action needed is passage of comprehensive legislation to control toxic air pollution. Such legislation should include provisions to:
CMA 051966
-2-
* Reduce Routine Emissions from Major Stationary Sources such as industrial plants;
* Control toxic air pollution from Area Sources such as Dry cleaners; and * Prevent Chemical Accidents. 2. REFORM OF ENVIRONMENTAL PERMITTING REQUIREMENTS. The Administrator of EPA has the legal authority to control many of these toxic emissions using existing law. He should implement immediately a comprehensive program to do so. Every industry applying for a new or revised air pollution control or other federal pollution control permit should be required to demonstrate that it is employing the best technology available to reduce toxic emissions into the air and other media. 3. ADOPTION BY INDUSTRY OF GOALS FOR REDUCTION AND EVENTUAL ELIMINATION OF TOXIC AIR POLLUTION. The Chief Executive Officer of Monsanto has announced that his company will reduce its emissions of toxic chemicals to the air by 90% by 1992. The company's long term goal is to reduce toxic air emissions to zero. Other corporations should adopt similar goals. 4. INCREASED CITIZEN INVOLVEMENT. Citizens need to be more actively involved in the effort to control toxic air pollution. Citizens should serve as environmental watchdogs promoting better local air quality by gathering and analyzing toxic release inventory data for facilities in their neighborhoods. Citizens can reduce chemical risks by demanding that each facility adopt reduction goals, that federal, state and local officials legislate rigorous reduction laws, and that environmental agencies promulgate and enforce reduction regulations. This report contains a list of contacts in each state where citizens can learn more about their local toxic air pollution problems.
CMA 051967
-3-
INTRODUCTION
This may be how the world will end - not with a bang but with an ecological whimper".
- Abu Abraham, referring to the accident in Bhopal (Sunday Observer, December 23,1984)
In the early morning hours of December 3,1984, a methyl isocyanate (MIC) storage tank at the Union Carbide plant in Bhopal, India burst open, releasing more than 30 metric tons of this highly toxic gas into the air. Inadequate safety systems at the plant failed to contain the noxious cloud, and it spread like a white pall over the nearby community. Many people died in their beds. Others awoke to the sounds of their own choking as they struggled to escape into the streets; those who were able to flee could only run so far before collapsing and writhing on the ground, engulfed by the deadly vapor. When the air cleared, nearly 3000 people lay dead and 100,000 more were left permanently disabled.
Growing evidence of the public's vulnerability to hazardous chemical emergencies, and the determination of environmentalists and labor activists to improve chemical safety, moved Congress to action. Building upon model legislation passed in more than 30 states and scores of counties to handle such situations, federal legislation was enacted to ensure that all communities exposed to hazardous material dangers would be knowledgeable and ready to respond.
On October 17, 1986, the Superfund Amendments and Reauthorization Act (SARA) was signed by the President Not only did SARA address the potential for Bhopal type chemical accidents in the U.S., but it also broke new ground by creating a "toxic release inventory" containing the annual emissions of certain especially dangerous chemicals at selected manufacturing facilities. The toxic release inventory for 1987 provides the basis of this report
Toxic Release Inventory Data
Starting July 1, 1988, certain facilities were required to submit annual reports to U.S. EPA and state agencies to be included in the "toxic release inventory" (TRI). Those reports cover information about the releases of more than 320 toxic chemicals to the environment Facilities must report TRI data if they are classified as manufacturers (i.e. have a Standard Industrial Classification code of 20-39); have 10 or more full time employees; and handle TRI-listed chemicals above threshold amounts.
For the 1987 data in this report, the threshold amounts were 75,000 lb/year for
CMA 051968
-4-
chemicals manufactured, imported or processed, and 10,000 lb/year for chemicals used in any other manner. The threshold requirement will drop to 50,000 Ib/year for 1988 reports and 25,000 lb/year for subsequent years.
Required information includes facility identification, including all off-site locations to which toxic chemical wastes are transferred. In addition, for each reported chemical, manufacturers must include two pages of detailed information on chemical uses in manufacturing and processing; releases (in pounds per year) to: air (including point source and fugitive emissions), waterways, underground injection, and land; transfers to off-site waste treatment or disposal facilities; types of processes used; and optional information on waste minimization. Appendix A presents an annotated guide to Form R, the reporting form for the Toxic Release Inventory. Appendix B lists the state and federal contacts for access to Toxic Release Inventory data.
1. Facilities
Table 1 summarizes the ranked emissions identified by Standard Industrial Gassification codes. The Chemical and Allied Product manufacturers released more than 886 million pounds of toxic chemicals to the air from fugitive (273 million pounds) and stack emissions (612 million pounds). Fugitive emissions are those which do not come from a stack and include such discharges as volatile hydrocarbon leaks from valve seals and asbestos escaping from exhaust systems. Paper (178 million pounds), Raw Metals (151 million pounds), and Transportation (121 million pounds) contributed the next highest amounts of stack emissions. Transportation (70 million pounds), Raw Metals (64 million pounds) and Petroleum (44 million pounds) contributed the highest amounts of fugitive air emissions.
The reported data underestimate the total burden of air toxics, due to noncompliance by covered facilities and also due to the failure to require reporting by other major sources of emissions. Federal facilities are excluded from the list of covered facilities, despite the fact that nearly one third of new sites on the National Priorities List sites under Superfund are federal facilities, primarily arsenals, munitions factories and bases operated by the Department of Defense. Significant releases of toxic chemicals have also been identified at Department of Energy facilities, such as the Lawrence Livermore Laboratory and the Hanford facilities.
Facilities may manufacture, process, or otherwise use a covered chemical at levels above the designated threshold even though their major SIC code designation lies outside codes 20-39. Tank farms, publicly owned treatment works, incinerators, other treatment, storage and disposal facilities (TSDFs) are not included in the TRI data. In the New Jersey Industrial Survey which has contributed greatly to EPA's approach on Section 313, one of the largest chemical user groups was SIC 42 (warehousing, presumably SIC 4226 - special warehousing and storage), and significant contributions were found in SIC 56 (Apparel and Accessories) and SIC 67 (Holding and Investment Companies).
CMA 051969
-5-
Finally, emissions from facilities with fev'<er than 10 employees, such as dry cleaners, can contribute significantly to impaired air quality.
2. Toxic Release Inventory Chemicals
Almost 70,000 known chemicals are usee in commerce in the United States. In addition, a large number of other chemicals are formed during chemical processes in industry and in the atmosphere. Substantial poitions of these can become airborne and when inhaled by people at sufficient concentrat ons can cause a multitude of adverse effects. For one effect, cancer, EPA has recent y ranked exposure to hazardous and toxic air pollutants as among the highest reladvs risks. A quantitative assessment of just 20 toxic chemicals to which people are exposed in ambient air resulted in a calculation of more than 2000 cancer cases per year. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Unfinished Business: A Comparative Assessment of Environmental Problems, Appendix 1. Report of the Cancer Risk Work Group, Office o : Policy Analysis, (February, 1987).
Also alarming is the evidence that hazard;ous chemicals move from one media to another. PCBs and the banned pesticide DDT have migrated from contaminated soils, into the air and eventually have accumulated in the fish and wildlife of the Great Lakes many hundreds of miles away. (Fitchko, J., Lite'iiature Review of the Effects of Persistent Toxic Substances on Great Lakes Biota, Intemational Joint Commission, Windsor, Ontario (December, 1986).) Similarly, persistei t toxic chemicals emitted into the air eventually fallout onto the earth and surface watiers.
Finally, an important lesson in caution must be drawn from our experience with chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs). CFCs are volatile chemicals which pose relatively low risks to people from direct exposure. However, CFCs can deplete the stratospheric ozone layer, thereby increasing the earth's exposure to cancer-causing ultraviolet radiation. Each year's wasteful emissions of CFCs have aeded to the global burden, such that EPA has projected a steadily increasing risk of melar oma and non-melanoma skin cancers resulting in over 20,000 annual deaths by the year 2100. (U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Unfinished Business: A Comparative Assessment of Environmental Problems. Appendix 1. Report of the Cancer Risk Work Group, Office of Policy Analysis, Washington, D.C. (February, 1987).) Prevention of additional emissions is essential. However, the existing burden of CFCs will continue to deplete the ozone layer for several years to come.
The original TRI list of 329 chemicals wjis generated from a combined list of chemicals used by the states of Maryland and New Jersey for their emissions reporting requirements. Unfortunately, the chemical list does not include every hazardous chemical found in each neighborhood.
Congress intended the TRI list to include 1) chemicals which can cause acute health effects; 2) chemicals which can cause can cer, teratagenic effects, serious or
CMA 051970
-6-
irreversible reproductive dysfunctions, serious or irreversible neurological disorders, serious or irreversible heritable genetic mutations, or other serious or irreversible other chronic health effects; and 3) chemicals which can cause, or can reasonably be anticipated to cause, because of their toxicity, because of their toxicity and environmental persistance, or because of their toxicity and bioaccumulative potential, a significant and serious adverse environmental effect. Appendix C presents EPA's preliminary screening of the TRI chemicals for ten adverse health and environmental effects.
During 1987, eighty of these chemicals were emitted in amounts greater than one million pounds, thirty-two chemicals were emitted in amounts greater than 10 million pounds, and ten chemicals were released in amounts greater than 100 million pounds (Table 2, ranked list and Table 3, alphabetized list). Carcinogens, neurotoxicants, reproductive toxicants, environmental toxicants and chemicals capable of indirect environmental damage such as stratospheric ozone depletion and low-level ozone pollution constitute the list of the twenty-five highest emitted chemicals.
Only 308 individual chemicals and 20 classes of chemicals have been included on the Toxic Release Inventory (TRI). Some TRI chemicals may be familiar, such as the hydrocarbon benzene, the pesticide chlordane, and the metal mercury. Many will be unfamiliar; 1,3-butadiene, hydrogen fluoride and 1,1,1-trichloroethane. Appendix D presents chemical profiles identifying the total amount released, emissions for important states, and brief toxicology summaries for each of the twenty-five highest emitted chemicals.
3. State-By-State Emissions Inventories
Texas, Louisiana, Tennessee, Virginia, Ohio, Michigan, Indiana and Illinois ranked the highest in annual emissions of air toxics with greater than 100 million pounds recorded (Table 4). Only 10 states emitted less than 10 million pounds; and of these 10 only Hawaii reported releases of less than one million pounds.
During 1987, in nineteen states more than 10 pounds of air toxic chemicals were released for every resident (based upon 1986 estimates from the U.S. Bureau of Census). In twenty-three states, releases amounted to more than 1000 pounds per square mile of land area. Appendix E presents a state-by-state air emissions inventory for Toxic Release Inventory chemicals.
CMA 051972
-7-
RECOMMENDATIONS The nation needs a series of major new initiatives to control toxic air pollution. A national strategy for controlling toxic air pollution should include the following four key elements: 1. PASSAGE OF NATIONAL AIR TOXICS LEGISLATION. Congress should pass a comprehensive Air Toxics Bill that will: A. Reduce Routine Emissions from Major Stationary Sources.
* Expand the list of Toxic Pollutants. Congress should establish a list of all important hazardous pollutants, including those on the Superfund section 313 list.
* Establish Health-Based Standards. Public-health based standards must be required for all listed pollutants.
* Implement Best Technology Standards. EPA must establish standards for pollution control equipment within 5 years. Best available control technology (BACT) must be used.
* Promote Safe Substitution. EPA should encourage industry to seek safer substitutes for dangerous chemicals.
* Assure Compliance by New and Existing Sources All new sources must comply immediately; existing sources must comply within 2 years, with a maximum 3 year extension.
* Require Permits Each source must obtain a state operating permit.
* Conduct Emission Audits Each major source must employ an EPA-certified auditor to monitor emissions rates.
* Monitor Toxic Emissions Continuous monitoring with state-of-the-art technology must be required, and regular public reports must be issued.
B. Control Area Sources (Dry cleaners, solvent users, etc.). * Reduce by 90%. A 90% reduction in each pollutant from each type of area source must be required within 10 years. * Phase-Out Asbestos A complete phase-out by December, 1992. * Phase-Down Chlorinated Solvents Chlorinated solvents, which include both
CMA 051972
-8-
probable carcinogens and ozone-depleters, should be phased down to 50% of current production and import within 10 years. EPA should be granted authority to require faster cuts if warranted.
C. Prevent Chemical Accidents. * Shift the Burden of Proof onto Facilities. All facilities using listed chemicals should be required to: 1. Register with EPA, and pay a program support fee. 2. Perform hazard assessments for ALL hazardous chemicals used. 3. Show financial responsibility for the consequences of all accidents. * Establish a Chemical Safety and Hazards Investigation Board. An independent board, modeled after the National Transportation Safety Board, should be established to investigate all accidents, report on their causes, and make recommendations for preventing recurrences. * Build an Effective EPA Prevention Program. EPA should: 1. Maintain a national computer database of facilities handling extremely hazardous chemicals. 2. Establish standards for tanks, valves and all other equipment that can cause accidental releases. 3. Require containment and treatment equipment where dangerous quantities of chemicals are used.
2. REFORM OF ENVIRONMENTAL PERMITTING REQUIREMENTS The Bush Administration should implement immediately a comprehensive program of source reduction for every toxic chemical emitted into the nation's air shed. The Environmental Protection Agency should institute thorough reform of air, water and waste disposal permitting processes. At every permit renewal, cumulative and multimedia impacts should be analyzed and a time schedule for adopting best available reduction and control technology should be established.
CMA 051973
-9-
In order to make reduction a multimedia program, source reduction certification should be made a part of each permit to discharge, emit, or dispose of hazardous chemicals to any environmental medium. Reduction certification should be required on all permits for all substances listed as toxic or hazardous pollutants.
The basis for the source reduction program should be establishment of national source reduction goals. Multimedia reduction permit certification should require all applicants to certify that the facility is reducing its toxic chemical emissions and hazardous waste generation consistent with the national goals. Putative permittees should be required to substantiate their claimed reduction through the submission of detailed product-specific and process-specific information. Permit applicants who are not achieving reductions consistent with the national goal should bear the burden of providing detailed information substantiating why they are not meeting the goal.
At least one state has employed a similar permitting program. In an effort to expand waste reduction efforts beyond its RCRA authorized program. New Jersey has experimented with reduction certification language in selected air and water permits. This has allowed the state to collect significant information concerning technologies which result in reducing air and water pollutants at their source.
The information provided through this certification program should be compiled into a database to enable EPA to assess which particular facilities and which categories of industries are not achieving- reduction as called for by the national goal and thus warrant performance standards, and technical and financial assistance. This information should also be appended to the Toxic Risk Inventory data and be made public. This is essential if the public is to take a proactive role in reducing hazardous waste generation and toxic risk in their communities.
3. ADOPTION BY INDUSTRY OF GOALS FOR REDUCTION AND EVENTUAL ELIMINATION OF TOXIC AIR POLLUTION.
The Chief Executive Officer of Monsanto has announced that his company will reduce its emissions of toxic air pollutants to the air by 90% by 1992. The company's long term goal is to reduce toxic emissions to zero. Other corporations should adopt similar goals.
Source reduction can not only help protect the environment but will save industry money in the long run. The Congressional Budget Office has projected savings of $2.7 billion in annual industrial expenditures if waste reduction opportunities are pursued. (U.S. Congressional Budget Office, Hazardous Waste Management: Recent Changes and Policy Alternatives, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C., (1985).) Actual cost savings for specific industries have been measured. For example, Exxon and Stauffer saved more than $200,000 annually from waste reduction practices. (Sarokin, D. et. al,, Cutting Chemical Waste, Inform, New York, (1985).) Over the last twelve years, 3M has instituted
CMA 051974
-10-
nearly 2100 projects which eliminated the annual discharge of nearly 110,000 tons of air pollutants, one billion gallons of wastewater, and 280,000 tons of sludge and solid waste, while saving over $390 million by reducing pollution control facilities, operating costs, manufacturing costs, and increasing the acceptability of environmentally sound products. (The Woodlands Forum, Robert P. Bringer, World Should Share Environmental Protection Technology, Woodlands, TX (1987).) However, the waste reduction opportunities taken to date represent only the tip of the cost savings iceberg. Too few industrial facilities and too few processes within facilities have been targeted for waste reduction programs.
4. INCREASE CITIZEN INVOLVEMENT Before July 1, 1988, EPA anticipated receiving reports from as many as 30,000 facilities nationwide, with an average of 10 chemicals per facility, for a total of 300,000 reports. Currently, EPA has received approximately 75,000 reports from less than 19,000 facilities. Understaffed and underfunded, EPA cannot be a vigilant watchdog enforcing compliance with the TRI data reporting. Citizens should become effective environmental advocates promoting better local air quality by gathering and analyzing toxic release inventory data for facilities in their neighborhood Citizens can reduce chemical risks by demanding that each facility adopt reduction goals, that federal, state and local officials legislate rigorous reduction laws, and that environmental agencies promulgate and enforce reduction regulations.
CMA 051975
Tabid 1: Raportad Releasas of Toxic Air Pollutants
by Industrial Catagory, 1987 (EPA, Toxic Ralaasa Invantory Data, 1989)
CMA 051976
Reported Releases fToxic Air Pollutants by Industrial Category, 1987
SIC INDUSTRIAL CODE CATEGORY
--ik RELEASES
28 Chemical*
888,571,603
33 Primary metals
26 Paper
207^880,908
37 Transportation Equip. -It2^48^40
Multiple categories
30 Rubber A plastics
^?132S037^08
34 Fabricated metals
Vi- tKW2r^J0*
36 Electrical
29 Petroleum A coal
27 Printing
35 Machinery 25 Furniture
48^*2,688 *Klw>layyy
38 Instruments
41,622^88
22 Textiles
Non-manufacturing
32 Stone, day A glass 24 Lumber A wood
24,98872*
39 Miscellaneous
-.!
f1
20 Food
31 Leather
21 Tobacco
23 Apparel
^^^kOMSSOttr
TOTAL
FUGITIVE
EMISSIONS
273,875,903 64,071,870 29,383,004 70,689,380 61,571,314 33,040,480 39,059,266 29,240,278 44,419,358 30,824,505 21,692,815 5,797,413 11,990,294 8,538,070 8,284,424 9,734,378 8158,808 5,061,147 11,135,474 1,523,988 8219,217 1,458,673
771,738,020
POINT SOURCE
EMISSIONS
612,695,700 151,028,591 178,527,902 121,356,874 123,215,446
98,997,145 71,168,042 60,468,737 31,094,339 18,177,553 24,549,851 39,454,809 29,632,092 26,378,007 28487,488 15,956,082 18,829,918 18,687,163
8518185 12,259,481
3,241,243 638287
1,681,336,911
National Wlldlifa Federation
CMA 051977
Tabla 2: Toxic Air Pollutants, 1987 ranked in order of pounds released (EPA, Toxic Release Inventory Data, 1989)
CMA 051978
Toxic Air Pollutants R leased, 1987 (S rted in Order of Pounds Reieas d)
CHEMICAL NAME
POUNDS RELEASED
TOLUENE AMMONIA ACETONE METHANOL CARBON DISULFIDE 1,1,1 -TRICHLOROETHANE METHYL ETHYL KETONE XYLENE (MIXED ISOMERS) DICHLOROMETHANE CHLORINE ALUMINUM OXIDE ETHYLENE HYDROCHLORIC ACID FREON 113 TRICHLOROETHYLENE PROPYLENE GLYCOL ETHERS TETRACHLOROETHYLENE N-BUTYL ALCOHOL METHYL ISOBUTYL KETONE BENZENE STYRENE CHLOROFORM. CHLOROMETHANE CARBONYL SULFIDE SULFURIC ACID FORMALDEHYDE ISOPROPYL ALCOHOL (MANUFACTURING) ETHYLENE GLYCOL CHLORINE DIOXIDE HYDROGEN FLUORIDE CYCLOHEXANE 1,3-BUTADIENE PHENOL
235,686,684 233,435,468 186,153,611 182,521,041 137,239,693 130,932,398 124,626,050 120,120,266 112,252,293 103,423,754
73,132,776 54,199,221 50,474,094 49,061,620 47,509,637 37,832,734 32,865,927 28,093,496 27,144,279 25,284,541 24,895,833 24,694,164 23,728,300 20,858,189 19,775,085 15,422,225 15,026,270 14,363,700 13,337,401 12,086,233 11,793,228 10,621,381
9,872,710 8,513,582
National Wildlife Fed ration
Page 1
CMA 051979
Toxic Air Pollutants Released, 1987 (S rted in Ord r of Pounds R l ased)
CHEMICAL NAME
AMMONIUM NITRATE (SOLUTION) 2-METHOXYETHANOL P-XYLENE NITRIC ACID ALUMINUM (FUME OR DUST) VINYLACETATE 1,2-DICHLOROETHANE SOOIUM HYDROXIDE (SOLUTION) ACETALDEHYDE ETHYLBENZENE ETHYLENE OXIDE SODIUM SULFATE (SOLUTION) CHLOROETHANE TOTAL FOR MIXTURES CARBON TETRACHLORIDE ACRYLONITRILE CHLOROBENZENE PROPYLENE OXIDE CUMENE METHYL METHACRYLATE ZINC COMPOUNDS NAPHTHALENE ZINC (FUME OR DUST) O-XYLENE ACETONITRILE COPPER COMPOUNDS 2-ETHOXYETHANOL M-XYLENE COPPER 1,2,4-TRIMETHYLBENZENE DIMETHYL PHTHALATE METHYL TERT-BUTYL ETHER 1,1,2-TRICHLOROETHANE BUTYRALDEHYDE
National Wildlife Federation
POUNDS RELEASED
8,321,561 8,113,631 7,094,911 6,660,433 6,045,198 5,954,126 5,712,143 5,484,290 5,205,755 5,008,405 4,950,571 4,435,245 4,400,509 4,357,364 4,259,720 4,035,384 3,875,644 3,660,826 3,501,738 3,275,442 3,161,659 3,142,805 2,938,830 2,880,900 2,721,212 2,662,047 2,581,257 2,495,507 2,397,474 2,276,124 2,113,257 2,067,002 1,690,764 1,671,714
Page 2
CMA 051980
Toxic Air Pollutants Released, 1987 (Sorted in Order of Pounds Rel ased)
CHEMICAL NAME
MANGANESE COMPOUNDS DI-(2-ETHYLHEXYL) PHTHALATE BIPHENYL VINYL CHLORIDE PHOSPHORIC ACID ISOBUTYRALDEHYDE 1,2,4-TRICHLOROBENZENE LEAD CHLOROPRENE CYANIDE COMPOUNDS PROPIONALDEHYDE 1,2-DICHLOROPROPANE METHYLENEBIS(PHENYUSOCYANATE) BARIUM COMPOUNDS LEAD COMPOUNDS TERT-8UTYL ALCOHOL V1NYUDENE CHLORIDE ACRYLIC ACID CRESOL (MIXED ISOMERS) SEC-BUTYL ALCOHOL CHROMIUM COMPOUNDS BROMOMETHANE METHYLACRYLATE BUTYL ACRYLATE ANILINE MANGANESE AMMONIUM SULFATE (SOLUTION) 1,2-DICHLOROBENZENE HYDROGEN CYANIDE TOLUENE-2,4-DIISOCYANATE NICKEL CHROMIUM DIETHANOLAMINE MALEIC ANHYDRIDE
POUNDS RELEASED
1,649,650 1,597,832 1,523,883 1,511,157 1,468,915 1,380,605 1,370,307 1,154,909 1,136,385 1,094,278 1,053,740 1,026,307
990,902 964,486 953,057 911,353 836,371 832,211 818,206 770,297 691,292 683,998 673,021 636,506 627,170 597,018 579,686 574,666 534,942 492,666 489,132 480,332 480,065 470,922
National Wildlife Fed ration
Page 3
CMA 051981
Toxic Air Pollutants R I ased, 1987 (Sorted in Ord r of Pounds Released)
CHEMICAL NAME
TEREPHTHAUC ACID PHTHAUC ANHYDRIDE URETHANE 1,4-DICHLOROBENZENE 1,4-DIOXANE DIBUTYL PHTHALATE EPICHLOROHYDRIN PYRIDINE 2-NITROPROPANE CATECHOL NICKEL COMPOUNDS MELAMINE ETHYL ACRYLATE ANTHRACENE 4,4'-METHYENEDIANIUNE 4,4*-lSOPROPYUDENEDIPHENOL BUTYL BENZYL PHTHALATE CUMENE HYDROPEROXIDE DIETHYL PHTHALATE TITANIUM TETRACHLORIDE VINYL BROMIDE METHYL ISOCYANATE CADMIUM COMPOUNDS 1,2-DICHLOROETHYLENE ARSENIC COMPOUNDS MERCURY 2,4-D (ACETIC ACID) N,N-DIMETHYLANILINE NITROBENZENE TOLUENE-2,6-DIISOCYANATE 1,1,2,2-TETRACHLOROETHANE P-PHENYLENEDIAMINE BIS(2-ETHYLHEXYL) ADIPATE MOLYBDENUM TRIOXIDE
Natl nal Wildlife Federation
POUNDS RELEASED
443,325 419,751 374,600 341,189 337,514 328,315 310,580 297,938 287,740 272,241 265,436 248,484 239,466 218,011 217,500 216,087 213,701 182,527 163,001 162,968 162,900 148,181 137,428 132,392 130,742 130,579 130,216 129,799 128,419 126,471 126,289 117,230 111,602 109,644
Page 4
CMA 051982
Toxic Air Pollutants Rel ased, 1987 (Sorted in Ord r of Pounds Released)
CHEMICAL NAME
CADMIUM ANTIMONY COMPOUNDS 2,4-DINITROTOLUENE ARSENIC P-CRESOL PHOSGENE DIAMINOTOLUENE (MIXED ISOMERS) 1,2-BUTYLENE OXIDE DICHLOROBENZENE (MIXED ISOMERS) ALLYL CHLORIDE BARIUM BENZOYL CHLORIDE 1,2-DIBROMOETHANE DIBENZOFURAN O-CRESOL COBALT COMPOUNDS 1,3-DICHLOROBENZENE NITROGLYCERIN ASBESTOS (FRIABLE) N-DIOCTYL PHTHALATE COBALT BENZYL CHLORIDE ACROLEIN METHYLENE BROMIDE ANTIMONY MANEB 1,3-DICHLOROPROPYLENE HYDRAZINE 2-NITROPHENOL 2,4-DINITROPHENOL HYDROQUINONE CHLOROACETIC ACID DECABROMODIPHENYL OXIDE CAPTAN
POUNDS RELEASED
101,969 91,124 88,091 88,089 86,466 80,519 79,359 79,264 71,708 68,217 67,828 65,803 63,888 61,729 55,855 50,035 48,893 48,746 48,717 47,970 42,671 40,485 40,399 38,955 36,722 35,930 33,570 33,345 33,149 32,100 31,023 29,893 27,191 26,615
Nati nal Wildlife Federati n
Page 5
CMA 051983
Toxic Air P Mutants Released, 1987 (Sorted in Order of Pounds Released)
CHEMICAL NAME
QUINOLINE METHYL IODIDE BENZOIC TRICHLORIDE O-TOLUIDINE PENTACHLOROPHENOL 2,6-DINITROTOLUENE CHLOROTHALONIL M-CRESOL 4,4'-METHYLENEBIS(N,N-DIMETHYL) DIETHYL SULFATE DICHLOROBROMOMETHANE SELENIUM COMPOUNDS CALCIUM CYANAMIDE SILVER COMPOUNDS SILVER PHOSPHORUS (YELLOW OR WHITE) DIMETHYL SULFATE ACRYLAMIDE ETHYL CHLOROFORMATE TRICHLORFON BENZIDINE PERACETIC ACID VANADIUM (FUME OR DUST) HEPTACHLOR BIS(2-CHLOROETHYL) ETHER CARBARYL THIOUREA BENZOYL PEROXIDE HEXACHLOROETHANE SELENIUM 4-NITROPHENOL BENZAL CHLORIDE BERYLLIUM METHOXYCHLOR
Nati nalWlldlif Fed rati n
POUNDS RELEASED
26,481 26,151 24,010 23,204 23,109 22,222 21,081 20,568 18,173 15,698 14,850 14,061 12,750 11,503 11,362 11,306 10,817 10,789 10,634
9,718 9,300 8,752 8,635 7,286 6,877 6,443 6,270 5,850 5,459 5,022 4,952 4,890 4,447 3,852
Page 6
CMA 051984
Toxic Air Pollutants Rel ased, 1987 (Sorted in Ord r of Pounds Released)
CHEMICAL NAME
O-ANISIDINE HEXACHLORO-1,3-BUTADIENE (invalid no. should be 117817) HEXACHLOROCYCLOPENTADIENE TRIFLURAUN 2,4-DIAMINOTOLUENE CHLORDANE P-CRESIDINE 2-PHENYLPHENOL MERCURY COMPOUNDS 2,4-DICHLOROPHENOL FLUOMETURON ACETAMIDE HEXACHLOROBENZENE NITRILOTR(ACETIC ACID C.l. ACID BLUE 9, DISODIUM SALT 2,4-DIMETHYLPHENOL THORIUM DIOXIDE STYRENE OXIDE CHLOROMETHYL METHYL ETHER 4,6-DINITRO-O-CRESOL QUINONE 3,3'-DICHLOROBENZIDINE 1,1-DIMETHYL HYDRAZINE CHLOROPHENOLS CUPFERRON ALPHA-NAPHTHYLAMINE PARATHION SACCHARIN (MANUFACTURING) PICRIC ACID DICHLORVOS LINDANE 4,4'-OIAMINODIPHENYL ETHER METHYL HYDRAZINE
National Wildlife Federati n
POUNDS RELEASED
3,603 3,580 3,171 3,071 2,849 2,667 2,614 2,528 2,501 2,368 2,321 2,111 1,992 1,804 1,752 1,541 1,432 1,330 1,083 1,069 1,066 1,053 1,007 1,000
933 920 890 858 750 750 741 561 560 523
Page 7
CMA 051985
Toxic Air Pollutants Rel ased, 1987 (Sorted in Order of Pounds Rei ased)
CHEMICAL NAME
POLYCHLORINATED BIPHENYLS (PCBs) BERYLLIUM COMPOUNDS PROPYLENEIMINE SAFROLE 2,4,5-TRICHLOROPHENOL CHLORAMBEN 2,4-DIAMINOANISOLE SULFATE MICHLER'S KETONE 4,4'-METHYLENEBIS(2-CHLORO ANIUNE) CHLOROBENZILATE QUINTOZENE P-NITROSODIPHENYLAMINE 2-CHLOROACETOPHENONE THALLIUM COMPOUNDS PROPOXUR C.I. SOLVENT YELLOW 14 C.I. BASIC GREEN 4 4-AMINOBIPHENYL BIS(CHLOROMETHYL) ETHER NITROGEN MUSTARD 4- AMINOAZOBENZENE N-NITROSODIPHENYLAMINE 2.6- XYUOINE . 2.4.6- TRICHLOROPHENOL ETHYLENE THIOUREA C.l. SOLVENT YELLOW 3 5- NITRO-O-ANISIDINE P-ANISIDINE DICOFOL ETHYLENEIMINE 2,4-DIAMINOANISOLE TETRACHLORVINPHOS PROPANE SULTONE HEXACHLORONAPHTHALENE
POUNDS RELEASED
514 502 500 500 500 500 500 400 300 269 253 250 250 250
46 4 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Nati nal Wildlife Federatl n
Page 8
CMA 051986
T xic Air Pollutants Released, 1987 (Sorted in Order of Pounds Rel ased)
CHEMICAL NAME OCTACHLORONAPHTHALENE C.I. ACID BLUE 9, DIAMMONIUM SALT THALLIUM HYDRAZINE SULFATE Z1NEB POLY BROMINATED BIPHENYLS
TOTALS
POUNDS RELEASED 0 0 0 0 0 0
2,396,915,248
Natl nal Wildlife Federatl n
Pag 9 CMA 051987
Table 3: Toxic Air Pollutants, 1987
sorted alphabetically (EPA, Toxic Release Inventory Data, 1989)
CMA 051988
Toxic Air Pollutants Released, 1987 (Sorted in Alphabetical Order)
CHEMICAL NAME
2,4-0 (ACETIC ACID) ACETALDEHYDE ACETAMIDE ACETONE ACETONITRILE ACROLEIN ACRYLAMIDE ACRYLIC ACID ACRYLONITRILE ALLYL CHLORIDE ALPHA-NAPHTHYLAMINE ALUMINUM (FUME OR DUST) ALUMINUM OXIDE AMINOAZOBENZENE AMINOBIPHENYL AMMONIA AMMONIUM NITRATE (SOLUTION) AMMONIUM SULFATE (SOLUTION) ANIUNE ANTHRACENE ANTIMONY ANTIMONY COMPOUNDS ARSENIC ARSENIC COMPOUNDS ASBESTOS (FRIABLE) BARIUM BARIUM COMPOUNDS BENZAL CHLORIDE BENZENE BENZIDINE BENZOIC TRICHLORIDE BENZOYL CHLORIDE BENZOYL PEROXIDE BENZYL CHLORIDE BERYLLIUM BERYLLIUM COMPOUNDS
TOTAL
130,216 5,205,755
1,992 186,153,611
2,721,212 40,399 10,789
832,211 4,035,384
68,217 890
6,045,198 73,132,776
0 1 233,435,468 8,321,561 579,686 627,170 218,011 36,722 91,124 88,089 130,742 48,717 67,828 964,486 4,890 24,895,833 9,300 24,010 65,803 5,850 40,485 4,447 502
Natl nal Wildlif Federatl n
Page 1
CMA 051989
Toxic Air Pollutants Rel ased, 1987 (Sorted in Alphab ticalOrd r)
CHEMICAL NAME
BIPHENYL BIS(2-CHLOROETHYL) ETHER BIS(2-ETHYLHEXYL) ADIPATE BIS(CHLOROMETHYL) ETHER BROMOMETHANE BUTADIENE BUTYL ACRYLATE BUTYL BENZYL PHTHALATE BUTYLENE OXIDE BUTYRALDEHYDE C.l. ACID BLUE 9, DIAMMONIUM SALT C.l. ACID BLUE 9, DISODIUM SALT C.I. BASIC GREEN 4 C.l. SOLVENT YELLOW 14 C.l. SOLVENT YELLOW 3 CADMIUM CADMIUM COMPOUNDS CALCIUM CYANAMIDE CAPTAN CARBARYL CARBON DISULFIDE CARBON TETRACHLORIDE CARBONYL SULFIDE CATECHOL CHLORAMBENCHLORDANE CHLORINE CHLORINE DIOXIDE CHLOROACETIC ACID CHLOROACETOPHENONE CHLOROBENZENE CHLOROBENZ1LATE CHLOROETHANE CHLOROFORM CHLOROMETHANE CHLOROMETHYL METHYL ETHER
TOTAL
1,523,883 6,877
111,602 1
683,998 9,872,710
636,506 213,701
79,264 1,671,714
0 1,541
2 4 0 101,969 137,428 12,750 26,615 6,443 137,239,693 4,259,720 19,775,085 272,241 500 2,614 103,423,754 12,086,233 29,893 250 3,875,644 269 4,400,509 23,728,300 20,858,189 1,069
Natl nal Wildlife Fed ration
Page 2
CMA 051990
Toxic Air Pollutants Released, 1987 (S rted in Alphabetical Order)
CHEMICAL NAME
CHLOROPHENOLS CHLOROPRENE CHLOROTHALONIL CHROMIUM CHROMIUM COMPOUNDS COBALT COBALT COMPOUNDS COPPER COPPER COMPOUNDS CRESOL (MIXED ISOMERS) CUMENE CUMENE HYDROPEROXIDE CUPFERRON CYANIDE COMPOUNDS CYCLOHEXANE DECABROMODIPHENYL OXIDE DI-(2-ETHYLHEXYL) PHTHALATE DIAMINOANISOLE DIAMINOANISOLE SULFATE DIAMINODIPHENYL ETHER DIAMINOTOLUENE DIAMINOTOLUENE (MIXED ISOMERS) DIBENZOFURAN DIBROMOETHANE DIBUTYL PHTHALATE DICHLOROBENZENE DICHLOROBENZENE DICHLOROBENZENE DICHLOROBENZENE (MIXED ISOMERS) DICHLOROBENZIDINE DICHLOROBROMOMETHANE DICHLOROETHANE DICHLOROETHYLENE DICHLOROMETHANE DICHLOROPHENOL DICHLOROPROPANE
TOTAL
933 1,136,385
21,081 480,332 691,292
42,671 50,035 2,397,474 2,662,047 818,206 3,501,738 182,527
920 1,094,278 10,621,381
27,191 1,597,832
0 500 560 2,667 79,359 61,729 63,888 328,315 574,666 48,893 341,189 71,708 1,007 14,850 5,712,143 132,392 112,252,293 2,321 1,026,307
Natl nal Wildlife Fed rati n
Page 3
CMA 051991
Toxic Air Pollutants Rel ased, 1987 (Sorted in Alphab tical Order)
CHEMICAL NAME____
DICHLOROPROPYLENE OICHLORVOS DICOFOL DIETHANOLAMINE DIETHYL PHTHALATE DIETHYL SULFATE DIMETHYL HYORAZINE DIMETHYL PHTHALATE DIMETHYL SULFATE DIMETHYLPHENOL DINITRO-O-CRESOL DINITROPHENOL DINITROTOLUENE OINITROTOLUENE DIOXANE EPICHLOROHYDRIN ETHOXYETHANOL ETHYL ACRYLATE ETHYL CHLOROFORMATE ETHYLBENZENE ETHYLENE ETHYLENE GLYCOL ETHYLENE OXIDE ETHYLENE THIOUREA ETHYLENEIMINE FLUOMETURON FORMALDEHYDE FREON 113 GLYCOL ETHERS HEPTACHLOR HEXACHLORO-1,3-BUTADIENE HEXACHLOROBENZENE HEXACHLOROCYCLOPENTADIENE HEXACHLOROETHANE HEXACHLORONAPHTHALENE HYDRAZINE
_____
TOTAL
33,570 741 0
480,065 163,001
15,698 1,000
2,113,257 10,817 1,432 1,066 32,100 88,091 22,222
337,514 310,580 2,581,257 239,466
10,634 5,008,405 54,199,221 13,337,401 4,950,571
0 0 2,111 15,026,270 49,061,620 32,865,927 7,286 3,580 1,804 3,071 5,459 0 33,345
Nati nal Wildlif Fed rati n
Page 4
CWA 051992
Toxic Air Pollutants R leased, 1987 (Sorted in Alphabetical Order)
CHEMICAL NAME
HYDRAZINE SULFATE HYDROCHLORIC ACID HYDROGEN CYANIDE HYDROGEN FLUORIDE HYDROQUINONE invalid no. should be 117817 ISOBUTYRALDEHYDE ISOPROPYL ALCOHOL (MANUFACTURING) ISOPROPYUDENEDIPHENOL LEAD LEAD COMPOUNDS LINDANE M-CRESOL M-XYLENE MALEIC ANHYDRIDE MANEB MANGANESE MANGANESE COMPOUNDS MELAMINE MERCURY MERCURY COMPOUNDS METHANOL METHOXYCHLOR METHOXYETHANOL METHYENEDIANIUNE METHYLACRYLATE METHYL ETHYL KETONE METHYL HYDRAZINE METHYL IODIDE METHYL ISOBUTYL KETONE METHYL ISOCYANATE METHYL METHACRYLATE METHYL TERT-BUTYL ETHER METHYLENE BROMIDE METHYLENEBIS(2-CHLORO ANILINE) METHYLENEBIS(N,N-DIMETHYL)
TOTAL
0 50,474,094
534,942 11,793,228
31,023 3,171
1,380,605 14,363,700
216,087 1,154,909
953,057 561
20,568 2,495,507
470,922 35,930
597,018 1,649,650
248,484 130,579
2,368 182,521,041
3,852 8,113,631
217,500 673,021 124,626,050
523 26,151 25,284,541 148,181 3,275,442 2,067,002 38,955
300 18,173
National Wildlife Federation
Page 5
CMA 051993
Toxic Air Pollutants R I ased, 1987 (Sort d in Alphabetical Ord r)
CHEMICAL NAME TOTAL
METHYLENEBIS(PHENYUSOCYANATE) MICHLER'S KETONE MOLYBDENUM TRIOXIDE N,N-DIMETHYLANIUNE N-BUTYL ALCOHOL N-DIOCTYL PHTHALATE N-NITROSODIPHENYLAMINE NAPHTHALENE NICKEL NICKEL COMPOUNDS NITRIC ACID NITRILOTRIACET1C ACID NITRO-O-ANISIDINE NITROBENZENE NITROGEN MUSTARD NITROGLYCERIN NITROPHENOL NITROPHENOL NITROPROPANE O-ANISIDINE O-CRESOL O-TOLUIDINE O-XYLENE OCTACHLORONAPHTHALENE P-ANISIDINE P-CRESIDINE P-CRESOL P-NITROSODIPHENYLAMINE P-PHENYLENEDIAMINE P-XYLENE PARATHION PENTACHLOROPHENOL PERACETIC ACID PHENOL PHENYLPHENOL PHOSGENE
990,902 400
109,644 129,799 27,144,279
47,970 0
3,142,805 489,132 265,436
6,660,433 1,752 0
128,419 0
48,746 33,149
4,952 287,740
3,603 55,855 23,204 2,880,900
0 0 2,528 86,466 250 117,230 7,094,911 858 23,109 8,752 8,513,582 2,501 80,519
National Wildlife Federation
Page 6
CMA 051994
Toxic Air Pollutants Releas d, 1987 (Sorted in Alphab ticai Order)
CHEMICAL NAME
PHOSPHORIC ACID PHOSPHORUS (YELLOW OR WHITE) PHTHAUC ANHYDRIDE PICRIC ACID POLY BROMINATED BIPHENYLS POLYCHLORINATED BIPHENYLS (PCBs) PROPANE SULTONE PROPIONALDEHYDE PROPOXUR PROPYLENE PROPYLENE OXIDE PROPYLENEIMINE PYRIDINE QUINOUNE QUINONE QUINTOZENE SACCHARIN (MANUFACTURING) SAFROLE SEC-BUTYL ALCOHOL SELENIUM SELENIUM COMPOUNDS SILVER SILVER COMPOUNDS SOOIUM HYDROXIDE (SOLUTION) SODIUM SULFATE (SOLUTION) STYRENE STYRENE OXIDE SULFURIC ACID TEREPHTHAUC ACID TERT-BUTYL ALCOHOL TETRACHLOROETHANE TETRACHLOROETHYLENE TETRACHLORVINPHOS THALLIUM THALLIUM COMPOUNDS THIOUREA
TOTAL
1,468,915 11,306
419,751 750 0 514 0
1,053,740 48
37,832,734 3,660,826 500 297,938 26,481 1,053 253 750 500 770,297 5,022 14,061 11,362 11,503 5,484,290 4,435,245
24,694,164 1,083
15,422,225 443,325 911,353 126,289
28,093,496 0 0
250 6,270
National Wildlife Federation
Page 7
CMA 051995
Toxic Air Pollutants Reieas d, 1987 (Sorted in Alphabetical Ord r)
CHEMICAL NAME
THORIUM DIOXIDE TITANIUM TETRACHLORIDE TOLUENE TOLUENE-2,4-DIISOCYANATE TOLUENE-2,6-DIISOCYANATE TOTAL FOR MIXTURES TRICHLORFON TRICHLOROBENZENE TRICHLOROETHANE TRICHLOROETHANE TRICHLOROETHYLENE TRICHLOROPHENOL TRICHLOROPHENOL TRIFLURAUN TRIMETHYLBENZENE URETHANE VANADIUM (FUME OR DUST) VINYLACETATE VINYL BROMIDE VINYL CHLORIDE VINYUDENE CHLORIDE XYLENE (MIXED ISOMERS) XYUDINE ZINC (FUME OR DUST) ZINC COMPOUNDS ZINEB
TOTAL
TOTAL
1,330 162,968 235,686,684 492,666 126,471 4,357,364
9,718 1,370,307 130,932,398 1,690,764 47,509,637
500 0
2,849 2,276,124
374,600 8,635
5,954,126 162,900
1,511,157 836,371
120,120,266 0
2,938,830 3,161,659
0
2,396,915,248
National Wildlife Federation
Page 8 CMA 051996
T Table 4: State Summaries of Toxic Release Inventory Data, 1987 ranked in order of pounds released (EPA, Toxic Release Inventory Data, 1989)
CMA 051997
Summary of Toxic Release inventory Data for Air, 1987
STATE
Texas Louisiana Tennessee Virginia Ohio Michigan Indiana Illinois Georgia North Carolina Alabama New York Utah California Pennsylvania South Carolina Wisconsin Kentucky Missouri Arkansas Washington New Jersey Iowa Florida Alaska West Virginia Minnesota Massachusetts Kansas Connecticut Oklahoma Oregon Mississippi Maryland
POUNDS OF AIR TOXICS RELEASED
229,910,640 134,524,442 132,461,157 131,359,106 122,464,629 106,236,445 103,479,027 103,093,458 94,296,297 92,328,287 90,455,130 85,207,180 76,369,383 72,947,456 71,664,910 61,186,447 46,491,970 43,279,655 43,151,138 42,832,699 39,893,330 38,631,572 36,208,159 35,354,199 31,707,083 31,582,771 29,031,436 27,791,549 24,340,188 23,789,981 20,030,795 19,750,059 18,686,813 18,655,969
POUNDS RELEASED PER PERSON
13.8 29.9 27.6 22.7 11.4 11.6 18.8
8.9 15.4 14.6 22.3 4.8 45.9 2.7 6.0 18.1 9.7 11.6 8.5 18.1 8.9 5.1 12.7 3.0 59.4 16.5 6.9 4.8 9.9 7.5 6.1 7.3 7.1 4.2
POUNDS RELEASED PER SQ. MILE
877.5 3,021.6 3,218.6 3,308.5 2,986.7 1,865.3 2,879.9 1,852.7 1,624.2 1,890.3 1,781.8 1,798.5
930.5 466.7 1,596.5 2,025.8 854.2 1,091.0 625.9 822.5 599.8 5,172.9 647.0 652.9 55.5 1,309.5 365.0 3,552.1 297.6 4,883.0 291.8 205.3 395.6 1,896.5
National Wildlife Federatl n
Page 1
CMA 051998
Summary f Toxic Rei ase Inventory Data for Air, 1987
STATE
Rhode island Arizona Nebraska New Hampshire Puerto Rico Maine Colorado Montana Idaho Delaware Wyoming New Mexico South Dakota North Dakota Vermont Nevada Hawaii Virgin Islands American Samoa
TOTAL
POUNDS OF AIR TOXICS RELEASED
17,170,133 15,031,406 13,698,725 13,086,835 12,012,782 11,624,580
8,911,711 5,032,798 4,066,590 3,181,998 2,835,391 2,501,865 1,908,236 1,333,903 1,320,175 1,226,820
957,778 924,081 896,081
2,396,915,248
POUNDS RELEASED PER PERSON
17.6 4.5 8.6
12.7 3.7 9.9 2.7 6.1 4.1 5.0 5.6 1.7 2.7 2.0 2.4 1.3 0.9 8.4
24.2
9.8
POUNDS RELEASED PER SQ. MILE
16,275.0 132.4 178.7
1,455.2 3,472.9
375.0 86.0 34.6 49.3
1,647.0 29.2 20.6 25.1 19.2 142.4 11.2 149.1
7,000.6 11,637.4
676.5
Nati nal Wildlife Federation
Page 2
CMA 051999
Appendix A:
EPA Form R An Annotated Guide to The Toxic Release Inventory Reporting Form
The annotated Form R is designed to help individuals decipher TRI information, and develop a good picture of what is happening with toxic chemicals at local industrial facilities. Manufacturing facilities handling TRI chemicals must report their annual emissions to U.S. EPA and their designated state agency. This valuable information is available to the public, and communities and individuals can use it to watchdog the activities of local facilities.
Some important issues raised by this information include:
* The accuracy of the data -- Are monitoring systems being used to calculate the emissions estimates? If not, why not?
* The consequences of emissions -- What are the health effects of the toxic chemicals being used at local plants?
* The action being taken -- What types of treatment do the emissions undergo? Are these the best controls available? What steps are being taken to reduce emissions and minimize waste?
For more information and assistance contact:
the EPA Hotline 1-800-535-0202 in Washington D.C. or Alaska (202) 479-2449
Written requests for specific TRI reports can be addressed to:
EPA Title III Reporting center
Attention: TRI Public Inquiry 470 L'Enfant Plaza East Suite 7103 Washington, D.c. 20024
(202) 488-1501
CMA 052000
CMA 052001
1 Ranrt Coda
31 02 03 04 03 0 Of oi 00 10 11
Chemical category and Health and Environmental effects information must be provided if chemical identity is claimed as trade secret.
To gain other environmental and health information on chemical search sources by using the Chemical Abstract number (CAS #)
Waif&x
lb Pound!
a 100 1.000 10.000 100.000
1.000.000 10.000.000 10.000.000 100.000.000 S00.000.000 1 billion
99 m 9.909 99.909 999.900 9.999.999 49.999.999 90,999.999 490.999.999 VAWMdAnfMH^efWweI ; than 1 billion
pe ro*M R
AT III. I 4IMICAL SCblC INbCAMAttCN
HCMlCAfc iCl.NTTTY
| fri*a SHTti
|*ana nn 1.4 >* Aiuit m*tkanut fflrv ia t&u him
i.: Lf*3 a 1 II i i in i i-n (Vf lamaiM ttn J CaI iifnir omi aw fill ifi4
-----------
NM
\/t
| 0*MP4 CIWIIB nf^,-l-TT I--... ... * 1.4
t
MiXTU*< CSM4 CNCNf lOfNTtTY '0 nat eantaiata tjui laattat / *au fia** *orft*ii*a Sn* t.) * _J U L u_ 4 i ii rit.il nr
i. icnvmis am0 usts oa n*s chomicai. at thc eaeurv '& ui su >* i
J.l ,.n Aneuee
t(--t bwnwnn
a.Q ^ryT-
.Qumrnae
f.Q Aa an 1'la.i
1.2 /
, f~| ae a muM
,.Q 22rSJSS*
1.3 OtfWvAia UMI
................
. Q ** a mawbeeneuia am
a.|~~| anenarv ar aew tiae
A. MAXIMUM amount C* TUf C^CMICAC OX T1 AT ANY TTMg OUPtNO TUf C*UNQA YtA*
rrr*
CMA 052002
maac chemical w uid/or oiT-aile r<;utv
id ne irmrenmBiu
C * Baaed an maee Saianc* calculation.. iuoh aa calculation sf me unouni o( the toxic chemical m unuu entering and lami prncaaa equipment.
C * Batid on pubiiahed unutioa factor*, ludi aa mote
matin* foloter quedutY id throuenput of
equipment type
air afiuaaiona fatten)
0 - Baaed on attar upwartea nidi a* engineering ajcuiaaione (e.*;, stamenng Talatiliaaiion or aetudility ant( puOtlehoq mainamanral formulaei or beat engineering judgment, Tbs. eajuid include inplyinf. as. anmaud remeoal efllcaeney to a eaaiireais avan if Ole eempeattwa of itream before treatment etc (tally charectitiaad by ntiatamir fata.
I *- N -viire
MID Storage Only MIO Rena, aa Fuel/rvaei Blending MaO Solidification/3 tabimation MSO [mnneruioB/Thtnnai Treatment M61 Waaueraw Treetnwt (Eceludiae POTW) M8 Other Treatment M71 Underground lajec&ae MT2 Landfill/Diapoaal Surface ImpouBdsnt un Land Treatment MTP Otbw Land Diapoaal MM Other Off-Sice Management MSI Tnaafap to Waete Brener MSS Un
Pip! 1I rvcjnunuec!
Crr-'tl--f
t 1 1 112 imTSi i
U
1 III*2^ a^iil 2 t
*
fc.4 ! III
u lCf#0 1* *** BCywwiH | nh4N Ml *lf IVeliiflDHiMww
i 1 t a Q
1
_____ ___________
I Id 100 pane per million
See artgchcd Table
1.
<edO*g_'tarMgNT Strrvooe ema gaiCgNev
5.*4TC ... irarnstw
J '
JTii<iccugr*Mguwtotmetar'ii*tfin#*tT
e m i pan per bidioa to 1 pert per audios
. Lowes
4.. -'*rTT*rer
44 ji
((tV...R"B<t*
Cti*
<
7 1< no | | | r te *\ Mr f~1 i~^
A * Secerns (inSudmg penaeaalateei
eapam, aaroema
cm
7 It fU
I'M____ \tl r P
f la
7u
Q
p" remwat Set bbee creaalrcmulaattea!d aa follow
W a daaneua (aeueoua L a Liquid eaeia (non*a* jS_e__Solid_ete (including eliadWget and dwi'ied]
7 la i- rr-n
M I. 17 7a \'* 1 1 1 17 U |7
7 to 7 ?04
1-
L1 11
11 J1
7 tU l'" 1 I 1 1
7 tla 71U
l'- |m*
L 1. L 1 LIU
7 14 L 1 l_J
7.1a
i
7U
7H ;.ta 7. tta 7,M
7. T2< T 13a 7 t4
II
7 Id
7M
7 7* | 7 7.
7M
7** 1l| 77*7.10* |7 n |7 T2* |7. ria j7 ite
7 ide 7 He 7 it. 7 ite T ft.
w of the cheaueai in (ha iaaJuent tod C * san d tOe chemical in (he eiBuaj
II
e| 7 Tt
.1 7 H -1 7 V
IJ
nr
7 107
.1 n r7 Uf '1 G G Indicate* whethe
7 1V waste reduction i
*1t 2 Zc7 13# \ !
due to change i production a
change in pollutro
el 7-/C !__ control meatufs.
number treater !tu
1.0 indicate* pnxlu
tion ha* increase
A number leu (ha
1.0 indicate* a dn
n ^rodiic11oi
ML Barreling/ MS 0 ti n lintj
MS - Equipment! Me
MS - Rafenmiaiaes/iedevge of product. MS SuOsattauoa of raw maiunein.
M7 tmuiuied hetseieeping training. in' cootma.
MS . OlOer
CMA 052003
TABIE1 TlMTWTfT CO01S
AIR emissions treatment
AM Rm
EgrSICAWTRgATOPrr
tmBmtJ Ctarilfniian M* 9a*tr Oannaaria* (-- ilaninl) m OBI
m
CHEMICAL IRSATMEftl
CM IlMBl rTMIIwnillM *!> CU "ir--limn ) C3t OmaMbm <33 Cana--a* Mataia Thimmi (w than pH
C41 Cranda On*--an -- Alttena aiwmnw C4X Crnatea OntaM-- Baarnaha--ml CA* Cynatea OBtan -- Othar 0*4-0--1 fhndiif (tettn*in Pbhwi --
CA*
Ca*
CM OtW<
INCINIRATION/THERMAL TREATMENT
F01 Uani* Iniiman Fit Rotary Kite nth U--a* taraaxaan Oat FIS Otter Rotary Kite. FS1 Tnn Star* FA1 Flan* Haatth FAS Muteate Baanh Fll Ftnteiaa* Bn* Ml [nOm-Snd m Fuma/Vanar Ml Prwitttn 0--laa FIS Wat Ain OteSaona F*S Tlatni Ormt/fitananaf FM Othar Inaiaarninw/Tharmtl TraauMM
SQLlPFTCATIOrA>ST4BrL12ATIO,V
G01 Cnai Ptnanaaa linatedtef 5iiimatl SOS Othar Faanaiaatt Proanan (iatittetaf Silinaaaai Sll Aaphaitit Pmaoaaa S3! 1">. --ri. - T--k--------SM Othn taiiilWranan Ptuf
Rf AMarftfaa ** laa ZiUwii |w> than for
R /MHPM.OIM nr lUanaa Oim fathar than fin mntaryj
PAT inmiai -- Air
W> It--
nr IBIWM - Othar
Ml Ante! --lint (othar than for i--uatii/rauaa) Ml hhw Citmmi {scan* than nnwr/nni M* Othar Myncai Tiw.ani
RECQVERY/REUSE
RBI Sanaa an- Foai -- [nhnnnal Kiln
SO*- Sanaa an Fuai -- tehtiaanai Fumaca SO* Sanaa aa Fnai -- Bntiar
SO* Sanaa aa Fuai -- Fuai Uaadiat SOT Sanaa aa Fuai -- Othar
til iaiwah/Oniaai Aataairy -- Bnaah SttU
OkttiUttM
Kll lahfta/Orouf Raton iy -- TWRln
jvapatannn
--
SIS Ma--awOtfaaaaa Raaoin-r -- rnananauan Sl4 Sataanta/Ofiaaiaa Ranavary -- Soirant
SIS SaiaantalOffanMa Saaaaaiy -- Othar SSI Mania Raaaaarr -- Qaassratytia R33 Mania Raaaaarr -- ion Earhanca R39 Mania Raanvary -- Ante Laaahutt S3* Mania Saanaarf -- Raaafaa Ottawa
S3* Mania-Raaaaarr -- Jaiaaht Cztraction
S3S Mania Raaaaarr -- Othar RSS Othar Sanaa ar Raaaaarr
CMA 052004
Appendix B:
State and Federal Contacts for Toxic Release Inventory Data
Using information provided by the National Air Toxics Information Clearinghouse, EPA has compiled the following list of state contacts for TRI data.
For information and assistance at the federal level contact:
the EPA Hotline 1-800-535-0202 in Washington D.C. or Alaska (202) 479-2449
Written requests for specific TRI reports can be addressed to state agencies or:
U.S. EPA Title III Reporting Center Attention: TRI Public inquiry 470 L'Enfant Plaza East Suite 7103 Washington, D.C. 20024
(202) 488-1501
CMA 052005
SCaca Cmticta for Aablnc Air Information
Page
1. Alaska Dept, of Env.
Pouch 0 Juneau, AK 99811 Phone: 907 465-2606
Conservation
2. Alabama Department of Environmental Management State Capitol Montgomery/ AL 36130 Phone: 205 271-7861
3. Arkansas Dept, of Pollution Control
8001 National Drive Little Rock, AR 72209 Phone: 501 562-7444
& Ecology/
Air Division
4. Arizona Dept, of Health Services, 2005 N. Central
Phoenix, AZ 85004 Phone: 602 257-0022
Bur.
of Air Quality Control
5. Maricopa Co. Dept, of Health Ser., Bur. of Air Poll. Control 1845 E. Roosevelet Street Phoenix, AZ 85006
Phone: 602 258-6381
6. Arizona Pinal-Cila Counties Air Quality Control District P.O. Box 1076 Florence, AZ 85232 Phone: 602 868-5801
t
7. Arizona Pima County Air Quality Control District 150 W. Congress Street Tucson, AZ 85701 Phone: 602 792-8686
CMA 052006
Stae* Coocaccs for **< Mr
(Conc'd)
8. California Air Resources Board Box 2815 Sacramento, CA 95812 Phone: 916 322-2990
9. Kern County Air Pollution control District 1601 H Street, suite 250 Bakersfield, CA 933015199 Phone: 805 861-3682
10. Fresno county Air Pollution Control District 1221 Fulton Mall Fresno, CA 93721 Phone: 209 445-3239
11. Stanislaus County Air Pollution Control District 1716 Morgan Road Modesto, CA 95351 Phone: 209 571-6908
12. Amador.County Air Pollution Control District 108 Court Street Jackson, CA 956422379 Phone: 209 223-6406
13. Modoc County Air Pollution control District 202 West 4th Street Alturas, CA 96134 Phone: 916 233-3939
14. Bay Area Air Quality Management District 939 Ellis Street San Francisco, CA 94109 Phone: 415 771-6000
Page
2
CMA 052007
Stata Cmtaeta for Aeblaue Air Infonadon (Cont'd)
Page:
15. South coast Air Quality Management District 9150 Flair Drive El Monte, CA 91731 Phone: 818 572-6200
16. Sacramento Co. Air Pollution Control District 9323 Tech Center, Suite 800 Sacramento, CA 95826 Phone: 916 366-2107
17. Monterey Bay Unified Air Pollution Control District 1164 Monroe Street, #10 Salinas, CA 93906 Phone: 408 443-1135
13. Santa Barbara Co. Air Pollution Control District 5540 Edwill Suite B Santa Barbara, CA 93111 Phone: 805 964-8111
19. San Diego Co. Air Pollution Control District 9150 Chesapeake Drive San Diego, CA 92123 Phone: 619 565-3947
20. Butte Co. Air Pollution Control District 316 Nelson Ave., P.O. Box 1229 orovilie, CA 95965 phone: 916 538-7383
21. Siskiyou County Air Pollution Control District 525 South Foothill Drive Yreka, CA 96097 Phone: 916 842-3906
CMA 052008
Seats Concaces for Aobienc Air IufonaaClon (Conc'd)
Page
22. Colorado Department of Health 4210 E. 11th Avenue Denver , CO 30220 Phone: 303 331-8500
23. Environmental Health Department,
130 South Galena Aspen, CO 81611 Phone: 303 925-2020
city of Aspen
24. El Paso County Health Department
501 N. Foote Colorado Springs, CO 80909 Phone: 303 578-3137
25. Connecticut Dept, of Environmental Protection, Air Compliance Unit
165 Capitol Avenue, Rm.146 Hartford, CT 06106 Phone: 203 566-2690
26. Milford Health Department 2051 Bridgeport Avenue
Milford, CT 06460 Phone: 203 783-3287
27. D.C. Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs 5010 Overlook Avenue, S.W. Washington, DC 200325396 Phone: 202 767-7370
28. Delaware Div. of Environmental
89 Kings Highway, Box 1401 Dover, DE 19903 Phone: 302 736-4791
Control,
Air Resources Section
State Conracta for Aebime Alx Information (Cone'd)
Page: 5
29. Florida Department of Env. 2600 Blair Stone Road Tallahassee, FL 323992400 Phone: 904 488-1344
Reg.,
Bur.
of Air Quality Management
30. Bio-Environmental Services Div., City of Jacksonville 515 W. 6th Street Jacksonville, FL 32206 Phone: 904 630-3210
31. Hillsborough County Environmental Protection Commission 1900 9th Avenue Tampa, FL 32206 phone: 813 272-5960
32. Broward County Environmental Quality Control Board 621 S. Andrews Avenue Ft. Lauderdale, FL 33315 Phone: 305 765-4436
33. Palm Beach County Health Department 901 Evemia Street West Palm Beach, FL 33402 Phone: 305 820-3070
34. Georgia Dept, of Natural Resources, Air Protection Branch 270 Washington Street, S.w. Atlanta, GA 30334 Phone: 404 656-4867
35. Hawaii Dept, of Health, Environmental Permits Branch 645 Halekauwila St., 3rd FI. Honolulu, HX 96813 Phone: 808 548-6410
CMA 052010
Stic* Goncacca for Aablanc Air Infoxeadon (Coat'd)
Page
36. Iowa Department of Natural Resources 900 E. Grand Ave., Wallace Building Des Moines, IA 50309 Phone: 515 281-8690
37. Linn county Health Department Air Pollution Division
751 Center Pt. Road, N.E. Cedar Rapids, IA 52402 Phone: 319 398-3551
38. Idaho Division of Env., Air Quality Bureau 450 w. State Street
Boise, ID 83720 Phone: 208 334-5362
39. Illinois Env. Protection Agency, 2200 Churchill Road, Box 19276 Springfield, IL 62794 Phone: 217 782-2113
Div.
of Air Pollution Control
40. Dept, of Inspections & Permits, City of Evanston
2100 Ridge Avenue Evanston, IL 60204 Phone: 312 866-2952
41. Bedford Park Environmental Quality Control Board P.O. Box 128 Argo, IL
605010128 Phone: 312 458-2975
42. Indiana Department of Environmental Management 105 South Meridian Street Indeanapolis, III
46225 Phone: 317 232-8325
CMA 052011
Scats Contaccs for Asbienc Air Tnf .cion (Cone'd)
Page:
43. Hammond Air Pollution control 5925 Calumet Avenue Hammond, IN 46320 Phone: 219 853-6306
44. Indianapolis Air Pollution Control Division
2700 South Belmont Avenue Indianapolis, IN 46221 Phone: 317 633-5496
45. Vigo County Air Pollution control 201 Cherry street Terre Haute, IN 47807 Phone: 812 238-8433
46. Kansas Department of Health and Env.,
Bldg. 321, Forbes Field Topeka, KS 66620 Phone: 913 862-9360
Bur.
of Air Qual.
& Rad.
Cntrl
47. Topeka-Shawnee County Health Department P.0. Box 118, 1615 West 8th Topeka, KS 66601 Phone: 913 233-8961
48. Kansas City-Wyandotte Co.
619 Ann Avenue Kansas City,. KS 66101 Phone: 913 321-4803
Dept,
of Health;
Air Pollution Control
49. Kentucky Ntrl. Resource & Env. 18 Reilly Road Frankfort, KY 40601 Phone: 502 564-3382
Prot.
Cabinet,
Div.
for Air Quality
CMA 052012
SCata Contacts for iablnC &l Infonadon (Cone* d)
Page
50. Louisiana Dept, of Environmental Quality, Air Quality Division Box 44096 Baton Rouge, LA 70804 Phone: 504 342-1201
51. Massachusetts Dept, of Env. Qual. Eng*# Div. of Air Quality Control One Winter Street, 8th Floor Boston, MA 02108 Phone: 617 292-5630
52. Maryland Dept, of Health & Mental Hygiene, Air Management Admin. 201 w. Preston Street Baltimore, MD 21201 Phone: 301 383-2779
53. Baltimore County Division of Air Pollution control Maryland Avenue & Hellen Road
Tovson, MD 21204 Phone: 301 494-3775
54. Maine Dept, of Env. Protection,
Statehouse Station 17 Augusta, ME 04333 Phone: 207 289-2437
Bur.
of Air Quality Control
55. Michigan Department of Natural Resources, Air Quality Division Box 30028 Lansing, MI 48909 Phone: 517 373-7023
56. Air Pollution Control Division, Wayne Co. Health Department
2211 E. Jefferson Street Detroit, MX 48207 Phone: 313 567-4100
CMA 052013
Scats Concaccs for AablanC Air Tnfnrasi fmi (Conc'd)
Page: 9
57. Minnesota Pollution Control Agency, 520 Lafayette Road, N. St. Paul, MN
55155 Phone: 612 296-7373
Division of Air Quality
58. Missouri Dept, of Natural Resources, Air Pollution Control Program
Box 176 Jefferson City, MO 65102 Phone: 314 751-4817
59. St. Louis county Air Pollution Control 801 South Brentwood Blvd.
Clayton, MO 63105 phone: 314 854-6921
60. Springfield-Greene county Air Pollution Control Authority 227 East Chestnut Expressway Springfield, MO 65802 Phone: 417 864-1662
61. Mississippi Dept, of Natural Resources, 2380 Highway 80 West Jackson, MS 39209 Phone: 601 961-5171
Bureau of Pollution Control
62. Montana Dept, of Health and Env. Sciences, Air Quality Bureau Cogswell Building Helena, OT 59620
Phone: 406 444-3454
63. Missoula Co. Health Dept. 301 w. Alder Missoula, NT 59802
Phone: 406 721-5700
CMA 052014
Stau Contacts for Aablant Alx Infornadon (Cant'd)
Page
64. North Carolina Div. Box 27687 Raleigh, NC 27611 Phone: 919 733-3340
of Env.
Mgmt.,
Air Quality Section
65. Forsyth county Environmental Affairs Department 537 N. Spruce Street Winston-Salem, NC 27101 Phone: 919 727-8060
66. W.N.C. Regional Air Pollution control Agency
P.O. Box 7215 Asheville, NC 28807 Phone; 704 255-5655
67. North Dakota Dept, of Health, Division of Environmental Engineering 1200 Missouri Ave., Bx. 5520, R304 Bismarck, ND 58502-5520 Phone: 701 224-2348
68. Nebraska Dept, of Env. control, Air Pollution Div.
BOX 94877 Lincoln, NE 68509 Phone: 402 471-2186
69. New Hampshire Dept, of Env. Services, Air Resources Div. 64 N. Main street, Box 2033 Concord, NH 03302 Phone: 603 271-1370
70. New Jersey Dept, of Env. Prot.,
CN 027, 401 E. State street Trenton, NJ 08625 phone: 609 292-6704
Bur.
of Air Pollution Control
CMA 052015
Seat* Concaeca for Aabienc *1* Infoaaeion (Cone'd)
Page
71. Hudson Regional Health Commission 313 Harrison Avenue Harrison, NJ 07029 Phone: 201 485-7002
72. New Mexico Env. improvement Div., Air Quality Bureau
Box 968 Santa Fe, NM 87504 Phone: 505 827-0070
73. Nevada Division of Environmental Protection, Air Quality Control
201 s. Fall Street Carson City, NV 89710 Phone: 702 885-5065
74. Air Pollution Control Div., Dist. Health Dept, of Clark Co. 625 shadow Lane Las Vegas, NV 89106 Phone: 702 383-1276
75. New York Dept, of Env.
50 Wolf Road Albany, NY 12233 Phone: 518 457-7688
Conservation,
Div.
of Air Quality
76. Nassau Co. Dept, of Health, 240 Old country Road Mineola, NY 11501 Phone: 516 535-3671
Bur.
of Air Pollution Control
77. Ohio EPA, Division of Air Pollution Control P.0. Box 1049, 1800 Watermark Columbus, OH 43266
phone: 614 481-4310
CMA 052016
Staca Coneaees f r Aatoianc Air Information (Cone'd)
Page: i:
78. Cleveland Div. of Air Pol.
2735 Broadway Avenue Cleveland, OH 44115 Phone: 216 664-3591
Control,
Dept,
of Public Health
79. Montgomery Co. Regional Air Pollution Control Agency Box 972, 451 W. Third Street Dayton, OH 45422 Phone: 513 225-4435
80. Toledo Environmental Services Agency
26 Main Street Toledo, OH 43605 Phone: 419 693-0350
81. Lake County General Health District P.o. Box 490, 105 Main Street Painesville, OH 44077
Phone: 216 357-2543
82. Southwest Ohio Air Pollution Control Agency 2400 Beekman Street
Cincinnati, OH 45214 Phone: 513 251-8777
83. North Ohio Valley Air Authority 814 Adams Street Steubenville, OH 43952 Phone: 614 282-3303
84. Oklahoma Dept, of Health, Air Quality Service BOX 53551, 1000 NZ 10th Street Oklahoma City, OK 73152 Phone: 405 271-5220
CMA 052017
State Contacts for Aabianc Air Iofornaclon (Conc'd)
Page: l:
85. Tulsa City-County Health Dept., Air Quality Control 4616 East 15th Tulsa, OK 74112 Phone: 918 744-1000
86. Oregon Dept, of Env. Quality, Air Quality control Division 811 SW 6th Avenue Portland, OR 97204 Phone: 503 229-6411
87. Lane Regional Air Pollution Authority 225 North 5th, Suite 501 Springfield, OR
97477 phone: 503 726-2514
88. Pennsylvania Dept, of Env. 200 N. Third Street Harrisburg, PA 17120 Phone: 717 787-9702
Resources,
Bur.
of Air Quality Control
89. Philadelphia Dept, of Public Health, Air Management services 500 S. Broad Street, 2nd Floor Philadelphia, PA 19146
Phone: 215 686-7842
90. Allegheny Co. Bureau of Air Pollution Control 301 39th Street Pittsburgh, PA 15201 Phone: 412 578-8111
91. Puerto Rico Environmental Quality Board Box 11488 Santurce, PR 00910
Phone: 809 722-0077
CMA 052018
SCata Contact* for Anblcot Air Infoxandon (Conc'd)
Page: 1
92. Rhode Island Dept, of Env. Mgmt., 75 Davis Street, 204 Cannon Bldg. Providence, Rl
02908 Phone: 401 277-2808
Div.
of Air & Haz.
Materials
93. South Carolina Dept,
2600 Bull Street Columbia, SC 29201 Phone: 803 758-5406
of Health &
Env.
Cntrl,
Bur.
of Air Qual.
cntrl
94. South Dakota Dept, of water & Nat. Res., Office of Air Quality
Foss Building, Room 217 Pierre, SD 57501 Phone: 605 773-3153
95. Tennessee Dept, of Public Health, Div. of Air Pollution control
150 9th Ave. N., Terra Bldg. Nashville, TN 37203 Phone: 615 741-3651
96. Chattanooga-Hamilton Co. Air Pollution Control Bureau 3511 Rossville Blvd. Chattanooga, TN 37407 Phone: 615 867-4321
97. Knox County Dept, of Air Pollution Control 400 Main Avenue, City-Co. Bldg. Knoxville, TN37902 Phone: 615 521-2488
98. Memphis-Shelby Co. Dept, of Health 814 Jefferson Ave. Memphis, TN 38105 Phone: 901 576-7775
CMA 052019
Stat* ConCacU for Aobii Mr InfoxMdon (Conc'd)
Page: l
99. Metro Health Dept., Pollution Control Division 311 23rd Avenue, North Nashville, TN 37203 Phone: 615 327-9313
100. Texas Air Control Board 6330 Highway 290 East
Austin, TX
78723 Phone: 512 451-5711
101. Utah Dept, of Health, Box 2500 Salt Lake City, UT 84110 Phone: 801 533-6108
Bureau of Air Quality
102. Virginia Air Pollution Control Board 9th St. Office Bldg., Rm.801 Richmond, VA 23219 Phone: 804 786-4867
103. Dept, of Conserv. & Cultural Affairs, U.S. Virgin Islands P.O. BOX 4340 Charlotte Amalie, VI 00801 Phone: 809 725-5140
104. Vermont Dept, of Env. Conservation, Air Pollution Control Division
103 S. Main Street, Bldg. 3 South Waterbury, VT* 05676 Phone: 802 244-8731
105. Washington Dept, of Ecology,
Row Six, P.B. -11 Olympia, WA
98504 Phone: 206 459-6711
Office of Haz.
Sub.
& Air Quality Cntrl
CMA 052020
Staca Contact* for AablenC Air Information (Cont'd)
106. Grant County Clean Air Authority P.o. Box 37 Ephrata, WA
98823 Phone- 509 754-2011
107. Olympia Air Pollution Control Authority 120 E. State Ave.
Olympia, WA 98501 Phone: 206 352-4881
108. Puget Sound Air Pollution Control Agency 200 W. Mercer Street #205 Seattle, WA 981193958 Phone: 206 344-7335
109. South West Air Pollution Control Authority 1308 N.E. 134th Street, Suite D Vancouver, WA 98685 Phone: 206 574-3058
110. Wisconsin Dept, of Nat. Box 7921 Madison, wx 53707 Phone: 608 266-7718
Res.,
Bur.
of Air Management
111. West Virginia Air Pollution Control Commission 1558 Washington Street, East Charleston, WV 25311 Phone: 304 348-3286
112. Wyoming Dept, of Env. Quality, Air Quality Division 122 West 25th Street Cheyenne, WY 82002 Phone: 307 777-7391
Pag i 1*
Sourca: National Air Toxica Information Clearinghouaa (NATICH)
CMA 052021
Appendix C:
Known Health and Environmental Effects of TRI Chemicals
EPA did a preliminary search of existing scientific information and put together a matrix of chemicals and their known effects, included here as Appendix C.
An X on the matrix indicates that a chemical had an effect. However, no information is given regarding the severity of the effect, the appropriateness of the study method, or the presence of conflicting test results. Absence of an X may indicate either that there is no concern, that effects were not reported, or that the chemical has not been tested. It is likely that as more tests are completed, more Xs will appear on this matrix.
The categories, and what they mean:
Carcinogenicity - can cause cancer in humans and/or laboratory animals, e.g. benzene which can cause leukemia.
Heritable Genetic and Chromosomal Mutation - can change genes and chromosomes, so that these mutations will be passed to the next generation, e.g. hydrogen fluoride.
Developmental Toxicity - can cause birth defects or miscarriage, e.g. 1,3-butadiene.
Reproductive Toxicity - can damage the ability of men and women to reproduce, e.g. lead.
Acute Toxicity - can cause death from even short exposures, either through the lungs, the mouth or the skin, e.g. phosgene or mustard gas.
Chronic Toxicity - can cause long-term damage other than cancer, like liver, kidney or lung damage, e.g. carbon tetrachloride.
Neurotoxicity - can harm the nervous system by affecting the brain, , spinal cord, or nerves, e.g. mercury.
Environmental Toxicity - can harm wildlife and vegetation when released to water or soil, e.g. cadmium or aluminum.
Bioaccumulation - can enter the bodies of plants and animals and is not easily expelled, thus accumulating over time and repeated exposure, e.g. the pesticide chlordane.
Persistence - does not break down easily, thus persisting and accumulating in the environment, soil, and groundwater, e.g. 1,1,1-trichloroethane.
CMA 052022
rtinn
loirictty Hatrix (Rplefenct database included) August, 1908. Page 1
t AS HUMBER CHEMICAL NAME
*
-? C
i* /o
> S'
cf^' -SX
*>
C?
*7 I
I
S' </
r> t.
a.-
II
/ ** **
p<X
s," 'fJ>n/' *^?
<
c/
<5
<? ,c'o
*?
r/`) t-O /
>4 </- .<\?u
0/
<f* v
<<?
75070 60)55 67641 75056 5196)
Acetaldehyde Acetamide Acetone Acetonitrile ? Acetylaminofluorene
1070?8 79061 79107
1071)1 10900?
Acrolein Acrylamide Acrylic acid Acrylonitrile Aldrin
107051
1344?BI 7(79905
11779) 6009)
Allyl Chloride Aluninua oxide Atuainum (fuae or dual) ? Ami noanthraquinone 4 -Aminoatobeniene
TES*(C1ASS
X z X 7% ? SP
X CS
8? SP
X MEP
X
X Xp
X
X Xp X
cs
i* X s
?A 1 SP
) ? IP
X HAD X AtSO*
? X MEP
1*
)
?o IP
rssxsssss X AIECS
X MA HS01 X MEP X MEP
X A0? X AO? X AO?
X
MEP X X
Hsoa X AtSO* X
HAD X MEP X MEP X RAD X AISO* X
HAD MEP X HS08 MAO AISO* X
X MEP X
X
ATSOX X
X RIECS X MEP X MEP X x use**
K HSOS
HAD AO?
HAD
MEP
X X X X X
KEEP X
HAD M?
MEP
HAD
KEEP
MEP
HAD
X HAD LogP
97671 8??B0
7664417 64845?? 778)70?
4 Aminobiphenyl 1 Amino-?nelhylanthraquinone
Airmonia Amraniu* nitrate (solution) Aimonius sulfate (solution)
675)) 90040 104949 1)479? 1?01?7
Aniline o-Anlsidlne p-AnlsIdine oAnlsIdine hydrochloride Anthracene
7440)60 744038?
Ant laiony
Arsenic Arsenic acid (7778)94) Arsenic disulfide (17044790) Arsenic pentoside (1)0)?8?) Arsenic trichloride (7784)5?) Arsenic trioxlde (1)?75)))
Arsenic tritulflde (1)05)39) Calciua arsenate (7778441) Caiciua arsenite |?715?574) Cupric aceloarsenlte (1)00?0)8)
lead arsenate (7784409) Potassiua arsenate (77844)0)
X CA X p cs
1 )
X X
Xp
cs
cs
X CA X X X X X X X X X X X
) ? AP
1
SP IP
X Also*
X ItTECS
NSOI
RS0B`
X HEED
KEEP
xsn
MSDO RS01
MEP
X AISO*
DEEP
AISO* X ATSO*
REA
AO? K AO? A01 X AOI KEEP X MEP
KEEP X MEP KEEP X KEEP
X HEA
MEP X KEEP MEP HEA
X AtSO*
X HEA
CMA 0 5 2 0 2 4
1ESI (CLASS :i:ssSs::s:s:j3s:<ssssstsssss3SSsissiMnxauaU<s*tMtsi<sx::ssss S3SS3XtStSM>SSSaxSS3XC:C;
Potitiim aruniti (10124502)
lx
Sodiua arsenate (7778410) Sodium arsenite (7784465)
IK |X
Ik aisdh [k aisor
assxss:
HEA HEA
1112214 492808 7440191
98873
Asbestos Auramine Bariue
Bari us carbonate dust (513779) Bariue chloride (10361372) Rental chloride
X CA X CA*
1 A SP B2
X 1*
K MCA X HEA
H KAO
X HEA X HEA
K HEA X RIECS
33210 71412
92873 98077 98884
Sentamide Renter*
Rentidine Benioic trichloride Bemoyl chloride
Xp X X
CA CA cs
t A SP 1 A SP 2B* B2 SP
X AISOR X
X HEEP K DEEP
AISOR
X AISOR
X HEEP X KEEP
X KEEP
X KEEP X HEEP
X AQ2 X A02 X HEEP X HEEP
X HEEP X HEEP
94160 Bemoyl peroxide 100447 Bentyl chloride
7440417
Beryl 1iua Berylliua chloride (7787473) Berylliue fluoride (7787497) Berylliue hydroxide (11127127) Berylliue nitrate (7787355) Berylliue oxide (1104369) Berylliue phosphate (11598157) Berylliue sulfate (11510491) Zinc berylliue silicate (19411471)
92324 73232 74819 106990 112145
Biphenyl Brcaaofora iromome then* 1,1-Butadiene 2(8-Butoxy-ethoxylethanol
141122 71161 78922 73658 85687
Butyl ecrylete n-Butyl alcohol sec-Butyl alcohol tert-Butyl alcohol Butyl bentylphthalate
1068a7 1,2-Butylene oeide
.1
X cs X X X X X X
X Xp
II
!ip | 1* 2A ai
2 B2 82 2A 2A 82 2A
1 2B B2
I III
|k keep
KEEP lx DEEP |X HSD8*|X
X AISOR X AISOR X AISOR X AISOR
KEEP IX
HEEP
X AISOR X AISOR X AISOR
X HSM X HEEP X
X HEEP
X
K HSD0* X HSOB*
X HEEP X HEEP X BEEP
HEEP
X HEEP X HEEP
HEEP
X X X X
HEEP HEEP HEEP HEEP
X HSOB
X AM X AM
II
X HSOB
X AQ2 X A02
IIII I I
X ttfcA
Mtk
I
1 Ionic My Matrix (He fe* once dot abase incUidedl
August, 1988.
/
x A .i? Jf *> o'* <$ O
A?
<
Poije 3
Jk<> tc $ o7> / / // 5
tr V **/ /
,s7 /
** Jr
la /
/
O'
(AS NUMBER CHEMICAL NAME
I II I
IESI(CLASS
*Ar
A /
I7377S 765018? 3844459
'(./wvea
56964?
V0938B ?B3?408
81809 3761533
Butyraldehyde C.l. Acid Blue 9, dlamraonlua salt C.l. Acid due 9, dtsodiua salt C.l. Acid Green 3
C.l. Basic Green 4 C.l. Basic Bed 1 C.l. Disperse Tellew 3 C.l. Food Bed 15 C.l. Food Bed 5
X BIECS X HS0B
X
O'
77 4>
I
/,* 7,<?vlO- '
/s t
/ J
X AO? AO? |K AO?
s asttsts
5118976 847079
97563 178665
C.l. Solvent Orange 7 C.l. Solvent Tellou 14 C.l. Solvent Tellou 3 C.l. Wat Tellou 4
logp
7140439
Csdntua Cadaiua acetate (543908) Cadaium bromide (7789476) Cadelisa chloride (1010B64?) Cadelisa chroaiate Csdalda oxide (1306190) Cadald* sulphate (101743643 Cadaidi sulphide (1306736)
X cs X X X X X X X
?A 1 IP
Bt 81 ?B 1 IP 7B I 71 70
X AIS0K X X AtSOB X
AtSOX X AISOX X KEA X AI SOB
AISDfl X DEEP X AIS0B
X ATSOB
X A0? X AO? X AISDB
1566?? 13)06? 63?5?
75150 56?35
Calclda cyanamlde Cap!an Csrbaryl Carbon disulfide Carbon tetrachloride
Xp
X cs
X XTICS X BS0B*
3 IP X 6 X BEEP X KEEP X BEEP X BEEP
X KEEP X BEEP
X EV
X BEEP X KEEP X BEEP X BEEP X BSOB X BEEP X BEEP X EV X BEEP
70 B? BP
X BEEP X KEEP
X BEEP X KEEP
X HAD
X BAD X BAD s BAD
X BEEP X HAD
X KEEP X BAD
4635B1 170809 133904
57749 76133
Carbonyl sulfide Catechol Chloraafeen
Chlordane Chlorinated fluorocerbon
Xp X
3 fl? IP
X KSOB X BIECS
X AO? X A0?
X nn X KSOB X MKD X BEA X BEA
X BSOB*
X BEA X HEA
7787505 10049044
79118 537274 100907
Chlorine Chlorine dioxide Chtoroacetic acid 7 Chloroacelophenone
Chlorobentene
X USDS X X
X BIECS X KSDB
KSDB X TECS X KtECS
BAD X MAO
X AOt X AO! X BAD X HAD
Section 111 toxicity Matrix (Reference database included)
August, 1960. Page A
CAS HUMBER CHEMICAL HAME
/ 4?
f
/
/'pjy , * *
0/ <3t < /
It I
...\
Jt
*S
\ <? /,<S> ^
* * /u
/$ a' C
V*/*0*-*?
/
IESI(CLASS
:$:S(:SSS:SSSUSSSMtS3ZISSMSttltaSIBU<l>SSIB><UISIUlBSaiSII3S5SSSSISl<l<B*3SSSISSISS(SSSSSBSSSSSB&SSBMM&IS>SS3SSSS;;SSSSSS3:s;SSS::SSS;:SSS;ss
S101S6 Chlorobeniitaie 75001 CM oroe thane
p1 C
X HEEP
X HEEP
X HEEP X HEEP
111444 4/6*1 74071
bic(2-Chloroethyllather Chiorofora Chloroaethane
1 2
cs 24 02 SP C
X AISO* X X HS04 X
X DECS X HSOB
A1S0H X tecs X AISOR
HS00
X HSOI
X AO)
SC7641
107107 104401 176990 1497456
bisIChloroaethyl)ether Chloroaethyl aethyl ether biel2-Chtoro-1-aethylethyl lather Ch1oroprene Chlorothalonil
CA CA p
p
1A
X H1ECS
1 A LP
X RIECS
1 X R1ECS X USDS
X C X HEEP X HEEP X HEEP X DEEP X HSDR*
1 IP
X HEEP X HEEP X HEEP X HEEP
HEfP http
HEA
CU
HfctP
7440471
Chroalia (HI) (Chroaic acid) Aanoniua blchroaate (7709095) AetBoniua chroaate (7740909) Calciua chroaate (11765190) Lilhiue chroaate (14107150) Potassiua bichroaate (7770509) Potaesfua chroaate (7709006) Sintered calciua chroaate Sodiua bichroaata (10540019) Sodiua chroaate (775111) Strontiue chroaate (7709067) line chroaate (11510659)
CA X
1 1
1 1 1
X AfSOR X AISOR X AISOR
X AISM
X A ISM
X AISOR X AISOR
X AISOR
X AQ2 X AQ2
7440444 7440SM
170714 104194 91407
Cobalt Copper p- Creeidine a- Cresol o-Cretol
106441 11I977J
94470 00159 115706
p-Cresol Cresol (aixed ieoaara)
Cueene Cuaene hydroperoxide Cupferron
57175 110677 94757 1161195 7101164
Cyanide compounds Cyclohexane 2,4-0 acid Oecabroaiodiphenyl oxide Diallate
X p CS
21
X p cs
SP
Xp
1 B2
X HEA X HS04
X HSDR
X AO I X AQt X HEA
X RIECS
X
X RIECS X HEEP X HEEP X
X RIECS
X
X RIECS X HEEP
X
X HEED X HSDR* X
X RIECS
HEEP X HEEP X
HEEP HEEP HEED
X
X X X
HEEP HEEP
HEEP HEEP HEED AQ2
X AIS0B
X OUCH X X KEEP
X
X AISOR X AISOR X AISOR X
USDS X DUCD X OUCO X HEEP
HSOB
X X
AISOR X X
A02 X
HEEP X
AISOR AO 2 AQ2
X KEEP
HEEP
Http HE P
CMA 0 5 2 0 2 6
Sff tinn 313 Tonicity Hatrix (Reference database included) August, I9S9. Page 5
-p
CS NUMBER CMEHtCAl HAHE
615056 39156617
101806 95807 75576658
2,6-Diaminoanisole 2,6-Dfaminoantsole sulfate
6,6'-Dlaaii nodi phenyl ether 2,6 - 0 f aatf not o 1 uene 01aminotoluene (mined isomers)
A i7 / c *? :>
*? u?ft t ?
i?
c *
J' i
>
/^ A,><F
j>'
&6?
/ /' t*fjf <-u,,A ,,c
$r<s ^*
<}--i
I I II I
IESI |ASS
e::: i:::ss::bs:si 0 SIX 0888 revs * 0** a s aas s
X X p cs
28 28
SP
X 28
X p cs Xp
28 SP X 6 AP 82 SP X 0
A / a <v
*vw A
A /
("N \ '** tj
Q
r?
/A4,.**
^s*n>
/ <? c4 *
<?
car
OS 3 :ss:csx;::si::: ttes
X HSOB* X HSOO*
:SECi:
w4 Jf
336883 132669 96128 1069J6 176727
Oiatomethane Of bentofur an 1,2-0fbromo-3-ch1oropropane 1,2-Dibromoethane tr 1sl2,3-01bromoprcf>yl Iphosphate
X
XP Xp Xp
cs cs cs
3 IP
28 82 SP
X DWCD X DWCD X DWCD X DWCD
2N 82 SP X c X KEEP X HEEP X RTECS X KEEP
20 02 SP X 6 X HSOO X HSOO
X AQ3 X HEEP
X DWCD X BEEP
86762
95501 561731 106667 75321226
01 butyl phthelate
1,2-Oichlorobentene 1,3-Dlchlorobentene 1,6 - 01chIorobeniene 01 chi orobentene (i|iaed Isomera)
p 20 p
X USDS X
HSOO X RAD
X HS08 X HAD
X ATSDR X HAD
X HEEP X HEEP X HEEP X HAD X HAD X HAD X RAD X HAD X A03 X AQ2 X HAD X HAD X HAD X HAD X HAD
91961 75276
107062 560590
75092
3,3'Diehlorobentidlne 01 ch l or obromoamt hane 1,2-01chioroelhane 1,2-0lchtoroethyiene 01chioromethane
cs p cs p
20 02 SP
c28 82 SP X
X HEEP X HEEP
20 02
X HEEP X AISOR
X EV X KEEP
X HEA
120832 78875
562756 62737 115322
2,6-01chlorophenol 1,2-01thloropropane 1,3-01chloropropy1ene Diehlorvos Oicofol
1666535 111622
66675 117817
86662
Diepoxybutane Diethanolamine Diethyl sulfate Di(2-ethylhexyltphthalete
Diethylphthalate
119906
57167 131113
77781 60117
3,3'-Dlmethoxybeniidfne 1,1-Ofmethyl hydratine Dimethyl phthalate Dimethyl sulfate 6 0imethylaminoatobentene
171697 H,H0(methylanitine
p p
p
cs cs p cs
cs cs cs cs II I
3 28 02
3
28 82 SP X
2A SP X 20 82 SP X
20 02 SP 20 02 SP
2A 02 SP X 20 02 SP
I II I
' X RSM X
X HEEP X HEEP HSOB X TECS
X RIECS
X
X X X
0 X RTECS
6 X AISOX X
AISOR X ATSDR X ATsue
X X
X HEEP
X KEEP X HEEP X HEEP X RIECS
6 X HEEP X HEEP X HEEP X
X RTECS X
|X HSOB |K HSOB |
HEEP
HEEP A02 AQ2
X X X X X
X
A02 X HEEP X
HEEP X X
HEEP X
HEEP A02 HEEP A02 A02
A02
AOl X
HEEP
HEEP HEEP HEEP
X
HEEP EV
EV
X HEEP LogP
052027
U
Section ID loncity Matrix (Reference database included) August, I9U. Rage 6
CAS HUMBER CHEMICAL DAME
///c
Jif
/
/ 2
/ ^ <?
*1
S
b
' 2?C *' . $
//
c<^
*? J
cV
-O 4*
$/
- nT V <
c?
1 I II I
*/
6?
>? *> *c *-
A
/
/# c?
/
ltsi|ClASS
:::::sss: :03:<Z:tSSS3SSSOKSS3IOSStlOBSOS3SOIimZ itiiaatsisoiuts isisoa loss itsssssa sasasiiiSSSB8SSISS S5SKSS.:sc 3SB3ESISS SSSSZSRSS szssssis::
nmi 1,1' -Oiaethylbeniidine
K cs
*P 02 SP
79447 Oiaethylcarbaayl chloride
X cs
2A 02 SP
X RIECS
105679 2,4-Oiaethylphenol
X
5)4521 4,6-Dinitra-o-cresol
X BEEP X HEEP
X
KEEP KEEP
: - =-
N HEEP K HEEP
SI 285 121142 606202 11/fUO 12)911
Oinitrophenol 2,4-Dtnitrotoluene 2,6-0initrotoluene n-Dioctyl phthelate 1,4-Dioaane
ap X
Xp
cs
B2
C
20 2 SP
X USDS X
X
xsoa X RIECS X MSDB
X
KEEP
X HEEP X HEEP X
X KEEP X MEEP X HEEP
X RIECS X MSDB*
AQ2 HEEP
N
M
It
AQ2 HEEP HEEP
X
LogP
KEEP
122667 19)7177 2602462 16071066
106098
1,2-0iphenylhydraiine Direct Heck 10 Direct Hue 6 Direct Iroun 95 Epichlorohydrin
Xp
X
Xp Xp X
cs cs cs
111900 140005 54141) 100414 74051
2(B-Ethoxy'ethoxy)ethanol Ethyl acrylete Ethyl chloroforaate Elhylbentene Ethylene
Xp
107211 75210 96457
151564 10)211
Ethylene glycol Ethylene oxide Ethylene thiourea Ethyleneiaine bis(2-Ethylhexylladipale
X X X Xp
cs cs
2164172 f lucaaeturon 50000 forooldehyde
Np
cs
Glycol ethers 2-Butoayethanol (111762)
o Oiethylene glycol awthyl cther(111771> 2-Ethoxyethanol (110005) 2-HethoHyethanol (109064) 2-Methoxypropanal (107092)
76440 110741 0760)
77474
Heptachlor He ac h 1 orobemene Hexachloro- 1,1-butadiene Meeachlorocyclopentadiene
XP X X
CS
1
a HEA
X HEEP K HEEP
2A SP 2A
X HS00
X HEEP
a HEEP
2A X HEEP
2A 02 SP X o
X HAD X MAD X HAD X HAD
X HAD
2D
X XSOB
X HEEP
X HEEP X HEEP
X RIECS
X HEA X HSOO
X HEA
X A02 X A02
X HSOO
a MSDB
2A 01
X 0 X HAD X HAD X MAD a HAD X HAD
X HAD
2D 02 SP X fi X DEEP X KEEP
X HEEP
*P SP X 6
X XSOB X RIECS X MSDB*
X AO] X AQ2
1 X fi
2A 01 SP * 6
* HSOO
X KEEP * HEEP " HEEP
" 1 , * KEEP X KEEP |
HAD
HEEP HI A
NAD HEEP EV
|1
1 02 IP 2B 02 SP )c
X HEA X
X HEEP X X KEEP X
HEA HEEP
HEEP
X HEA X HEA X DEEP X HEEP X HEA
X ATSDR X AISDR X AISDR X AISDR X AQ2 X AQ2 X LogP * AISDK
X HAD X HAO X RIECS X KAO X HAD X HAO X HAD X HAO X HAD
X HSDR X HSDR X RIECS X HEA
X A02 X *02 X HEA K HIA
X HSDR X HSDR X RIECS X HEEP X HSDR* X A01 X *01 X HEEP X ttfcU
052028
CMA 0 5 2 0 2 9
r t ion iH loMcity Matrix (Reference database included}
August, I9M, Rage 7
/
/,
f/ J-. **/
A **- ^
S<? i?06, -PN* // /
/d* *1 n
/ / /
/ 4?
A -$ *.
^ /
(fc^<.c<*9
J?
/*
<7
CAS XUHOER CHEMICAL NAME
II
A
c
-c* &-
/
ckN
TC /
67721 Henochloroethane
TESt(CLASS |K ]P |
IS
C jlf
. *;1k l HSQB l
HSDB |
l USDS |
1335871
680319 302012 10034932 7647010
Hexachloronaphthatsne Hexame thyIphosphoramide Hydraiine Hydraiine sulfate Hydrochloric acid
N cs N cs K cs
28 9 x c
28 82 9 HP S7
X HS08 X UTECS X KEEP X HI ECS X R1ECS X RSM
/
1* X K
//./:> <?
Z -, -
'5 ^ *r
<r 1 A*
1 />'
/ty ./^
f r
* / f
Ii
A
REEP |X HEEP |
1
REEP X HEEP HEEP X HEEP
74908 7664393
123319 7884 2 67630 BOOS 7
Hydrogen cyanide Hydrogen fluoride Hydroqutnone 1 sobutyreldehyde Isopropyl alcohol 4,4'-Isopropylidenediphenol
N ex*
1*
X At SO* X AIS0R
X A02 X AO?
X c X USDS X HSUS X R1ECS X HSOS *
X REEP X HEEP
X HEEP X HEEP
X RSOH
X HSDB X RSOH
74 39921
lead lead acetate (301042) lead chloride (7758954) lead chromate (7758976) lead nitrate (10099748) lead phosphate (7446277) lead subacetate (1335326)
X V cs
X
X cs X
20 3 2
3
3 82 3 82
X AISpR X K *1 SOX X AIS00
X AISO*
AISO*
X AISO* X XI SDR X HEEP X HEEP X HEX X HEX X XISOR X xisb*
X HEX
58899 108316 2422382
7439965
108781
74 3 99 76
67561 72435 111773
lindane Maleic anhydride Haneb
Manganese Manganese chloride (773015) Manganese dioxide (Mn02) (1313139) Manganese tetroxide (1317357)
Melamine
Mercury Mercury acetate (1600277)
Methanol Melhoxychlor 2(0-Hethoxy)ethanol
H les 1
Vp
3C
11 HEX X 1" REEP X
X
X HEX
X X
X
X ME IP X
HEX * HIECSlX HEX
X
* HEEP X REEP
DEEP
* HEEP * REEP X
HEX X RAO
HEX RSOH
X HEX X (REX
X HAD X HEX X HEX
HEX X OUCH X OWCD X DUCO X
X HEX
X HSDB*
HEEP
X HEEP X HEEP X
AQl X X
HEEP X
AUCO X HEEP X
A01 X HEEP REEP
AUCO X HEEP X
LOOP X HEX X HEEP X MCA
AUCD X HHEtl HEEP X HEEP
96333 1634044
78933 60344
Methyl acrylate Methyl terl-butyl ether Methyl ethyl ketone Methyl hydraiine
I 1 1 I1
X HEEP X HEEP
X KEEP X REEP
X KIP X KEEP
X HEEP X HCA
IP
X DEEP X HEEP
X HEEP X HEEP
X HEEP X HEX
Section IIS toxicity Matrix deference database included) August, 1900. Page 0
CAS NUMBER CHEMICAL NAME
/
/ r Jr
/ /./ /*>/Nf <?J/r
/if /,Vf ^ // /
tf
/ / <f <? f/ /f / /
^ ,o .<*
a. v ?
cf
II I I I
f
f/
/
/
/ o* .
V* > o a* <*
// o //s/ / i'
l
IESI|CIASS
;s:::::s::::::2:sssasts:sstssssssistsisisst3<iKMistsisttt$ssasiBgs3jtsti(i
74804 Methyl iodide
|K ) |CS
l> (C |SP
iBSUSHitiSSiissasSfiss:ssst3ussessst:sss2ssis:;s:sss::ssS5ssss;
11
1 1 |x HSOO*
1
|k ev
100101 6248)9
80626 7495J 101144
Methyl isobutyl ketone Methyl isocyanate Methyl Methacrylate Methylene broMide 4,4'-Hethy(ene bis(2-chloroaniline)
,
CS 2A 02 SP
X HEEP X X HEEP X
X NSOO X HSOB
HEEP X NEEP
NEEP
X NEEP
X HSOO
X HLEP
101611
101668 101779 90940
4,4'-Methylenebis(M,H-diMethyl>-
bcnienaaine
Methylene bisfphenylisocyanate) 4,4'-Methylenedianiline Michler's ketone
P cs
CS
P cs
1 20
SP SP
X NEEP X HSOB
1)11278 S05602 1)4127
91590 91201
Molybdenua trioxide
Mustard gas alpha-Naphthyl aaiine beta-Haphthyl aaine Naphthalene
CA 1
LP X 0
NS C
CA 1 A SP
X KEEP
X 0IECS X HSOB X HSOO X 01 ECS
X NEEP
X HEEP K NEEP X HEEP
7440020
Nickel Nickel aatnonitMi sulfate (15699100) Nickel carbonyl (1)461191) Nickel chloride (7710549) Nickel cyanide (557197) Nickel dust (7440020) Nickel hydroxide (12054407) Nickel nitrate (11110459) Nickel oxide (1)11991) Nickel refinery dust Nickel scfcsulfate Nickel subsulphide (12015722) Nickel sulfate (7706014) Nickel sulfide dust (120)5722)
7697172 1)9119 99892 90951 929)1
Nitric acid Nitrilotriacetic acid 5-Nitro-o-anjsidine Nitrobemene 4 Nitrobiphenyl
18)6755 Nitrofen 51752 Nitrogen Mustard
CA*,CS** 1
CA AP
P CS P CS
1* cs |X cs
1
AP
20 2A
A 02
C
A A C
SP SP LP SP
SP *
X
X NEA X AISOS X A ISDN
X A1SOO X NEA
K AQ2
X NEA X AfSON
X A1SON X NEA
X 0IECS X NSOO*
X HEEP X 0IECS X NEEP
X NEEP X HEEP
X HSOB x
6 * NSOO *
HSOO
X HSOB* * HSOB* X
NSOO * R1ECS|
AD2
A02 1
1
CMA 0 5 2 0 3 0
Section
toxicity Natriii (Reference database included)
August, 1908. Page 9
/ -?
CMA 0 5 2 0 3 1
f AS MUHBC* CHEttfCAl ttAHC
J .f / // //>?
^ f .*v f$
f // / / JT
f of <$ ^ ^
^ if ^
1/ / / / *' </ / * **
Ii l t
I
1IS1JCIASS
ft >, ft *, r
* <i ^
if
f/,r.i*- r/s?* yy A C / / .,
> c* / vr J-
^
* g> 9fc
III
556)0 88 755 554847
Nitroglycerin 2-Nitrophenol ) Nttrophenol
100027 79469
92416) 55185 62759
4 Nitrophenol 2-Mltropropane H-Mi trosodl-n-butylMlne N HitrosodiethylMine N- Hi trosodiiaethylMine
86)06 >56105 621642
7597)9 6849)5
N Hitrosodiphenylamiw p Ml t rosodlphenyl Mine N - R11 rosodi - n-propyl Mi ne H Nitrose-N-ethyturea NNitroso-N-nethylure#
4549400 59892
1654)558 100754
22)41)1
N-Nl trosonethyl vinyl Mine N-MItrosomorpholIne H- Hi trosonorni cot tne N-Nltrosoplpertdine Octethioronaplhal ene
X X X X
Xp Xp
X X X
X X X X
cs cs cs cs
cs cs cs cs cs cs cs cs
| III
|X N5T>B*Ix RSOB I
M2 X M2
IX BEEP
X BEEP
X KtECS X HSOB* X HSOB* X BEEP X BEEP
2t B2 SP
X hSDB B HSOB X BEEP X BEEP
28 2 SP
2* B2 SP X c X HSOB X H508 X RIECS
28 B2 SP X G
X XtitS
) B2 tp
X ATSM
X BEEP X BEEP
2B B2 SP
2B B2 SP X G X BSOB X BSM
28 12 SP X G X HSOB
X XTECS
2B B2 SP X 6
X RtECS
28 SP X 6 X BS0B
X HSOB
2B
28 B2 SP X G
X RIECS X HSOB*
X HSOB*
X M) X 40)
X BEEP
20816120 56)82 87865 79210 108952
Osmiue tetrontde Perethion
Pentachlorophenol Peracetic acid Phenot
X HSOB X X HEA X
X BEEP
X RIECS BSOB X XTECS X BSM BEEP X BEEP X BEA
X XTECS X BSOB X BEEP X BEEP
X M2 X M2 X BEEP X BEEP X BEEP
X BEEP X BEEP X EV
122996 10650) 904)7
75445 7664)82
2-Phenojiyethanol p- Phenyl ertedfMine 2-Phenylphenol Phosgene Phosphoric acid
772)140 85449 88891
1 ))6)6) 1120714
Phosphorous (yellow or white) Phthat <c enhydr ide
Picric acid Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCX's) Propane sol tone
57578 125)86 114261
beta-Proplolactone Propionaldehyde Propoxur
X Cl
X cs
Mr
XG
X BEEP X r
X BEEP X BEEP
X BEEP
X BAB
X BEEP X BEEP
28 B2 2B 82 SP
ri 1
X HSOB X XTECS X BSM
X M2 X 402
X BEEP X HSOB
X BEEP
X 402
X ATSM X ATSOB X ATSM X ATSM
` 1 j XIECS . BSM*
X M2
: 1 i BSOB
X EV
1
Section 111 tonicity Matrix (Reference database included)
August, 1988. Page 10
4
<F
CAS NUMBER CHEMICAL NAME
7 .tF s?
V/// ./ / / V / / yf C
/(V -$? f > ^ <>*
7
7
Jr
jf A? Jb /
i
til
i
i
o 5 ..;
, o' ,o' >,
/jf CtO^ LO* l .<> <Q <? <s 0 J o' a* O'
6'
/
1ES1(CLASS ::sss;:;;8sss::s:sis:0e:88ssssa8ssi8sas8fi8888st5sssss8s
molt Propylene 75569 Propylene oxide
1 1* I**
2A
;sss S8SSS8SS88 8X0 ISSS85S8S :sxs ssssss:s Si SSSSSS sss
|lp |x
6 * HEEP HEEP 1* HEEP HEEP
i| fl ti
iL
It
H
ss = ;;;;;; * HSDO
i - - - -----
-i = - -SSSSSSSaS SSSSS S S3. - - - ; ^
1 HEEP |
HtEP
75558 110861
9122$ 106514
82688
PropyleneiMine Pyridine Ouinoline Ouinone Ouintoiene
X cs X
AP 82 SP AP LP
X HSOS X
X 01ECS X HEEP
X HEEP X HEEP X HEEP
HSDO
X HEEP X HEEP M HEEP X HEEP X HEEP
X A04 X A04 X EV
X HEEP X HEEP
81072 94597 7782492
7440224
Saccharin Salrole Seleniua
Sodiua selenate (1)410010)
Sodiua selenite (10)02188) Silver
X CS X cs
20 C sp' X G X HSDO X HSDB
28 02 SP
X HSDO
X HEA X HEA
X HEA X HEA
X HSOB X HEA
X HEA X OUCO
X AQ2 X A02
11107)2 10042$ 96091
76649)9
100210
Sodiua hydroxide (solution) Styrene Styrene oxide Sulfuric acid lerephthalic acid
7934$ 127184 96)11$ 7440280 62S$$
1,1,2,2-telrachloroethene Ietrach1oroethy1ene Ietrack1orvinphos lhalliua Ihioacetaaide
1)96$1 62S66 1)14201
7$S04$0 10888)
4,4'-Ihiodianiiine Thiourea lhoriua dioxide
litaniua chloride toluene
$84849
91087 95$ )4 6)62)$ 8001)52
Ioluene-2,4-diiaocyanete
Toluene-2,6-diisocyanate o-Toluidine o-loluidine hydrochloride loxaphene
68768 $2606 12082)
Iriaiiquone trichlorfon 1,2,4-Irichlorobentene
X X
Xp Xp X
X
Xp X X
cs
cs
CA
X cs X cs X p cs X p cs
X
X AQ2
20 IP X G X HEEP
X HEEP
X HEEP X HEEP
2A LP
X HSOO X HSDO
X RIECS X HEA
X AQ2
X HSDO*
X HEEP
) c LP 20 02 IP )
,,
X HSD8 X AT SOX X AISDR
20 02 SP K G
X HEA X HEA X
X AISDR X AtSOB
X HEEP
X
X HSDO
AQ2 X X
HEEP X
A02 HEEP HEEP
X HEA X HEA X HEEP
28 28 82 SP
X HSDO X HSDO X HSDO X TECS
X OIEGS X HAD X HAD
X HAD X HAD
28
28 82 SP HS,AP 02 SP 20 02
X HEEP X HEEP X BIECS X HSDO
X HEEP
X HEEP X HEEP X HEEP
X HEA X HSOB X RIECS X HEA X HEA X AQ2 X AQ2 X HEA
IX HSM |
I
lx MSM U RIECSjX HSOB
f IK HAD
x tv
'X |x HAU [
052032
CMA 0 5 2 0 3 3
Srrtion 515 fo*icfty Matrtk (Reference database included) August, 1988. Page 11
*P
r*S NUMBER CHEHfCAl tfAME
/
//*fr> 7*
.jF / /
<JV */ A!*'
/ "/
A ;* <*
-t?
V
*2'
.A
V
/ -<?
(/ A'
/ /f ? * Or
r/ /
<P
l
II I
I
71556 1,1. 1-lrlchloroethane 79005 I.ttrichloroethane
ItSt|CIASS
sf3sssststt:ts:iss:sct:
;tis3ssss:sss:s<! SSISES 13 = 9SSSSS ss: ========== ======
====== =========
I. Id I
1" 1
HSOB I*
HSM
j" HAD I
1* HEA |
79016 95954
88062 1582098
95616
trichloroethylene 2,4,5-Irlchlorophenol 2,4,6 3 r1chiorophenot Irl Mural in
1,2,4 -1rimethylbentene
*p
Xp Xp
j) B2 |LP In I2
UP
lx AISOS X
1 1
In BEEP X
1
At SOB HSOB
X AfSDK X AISM
X HEA
X
X
X HEEP
X
X
51796
74(0622 108054
593602 75014
Urethane Vanadiua (fune or dust) Vinyl acetate Vinyl bromide vinyl chloride
X u6
X |2a 1*2
X HSM X KEEP
X
X It
Atsoe AtSDR|X ATSOR X AISM X AfSDA
75354 Vinylidene chloride 108383 m-Xytene
X
A I LA
lx HAD X HAD X HAD X HAD
lx HSOB
X HEEP X HSOB
X
95476 o-Xylene 106423 p Xylene
|C
lx HEEP X HSOB lx BEEP X KEEP
X HEEP
X X
1330207 Xylene (mlsed isomers)
(x HEEP X HSM
X HEEP
X
/
, <? . 5* o
- .<?
c
/ /* <5
f,r*-
i' 'C?
f^,o* /* v(*v' '
>S> i
vT <0 1
I
g S S ::::::: :::: :::;;:i:sEEzt::
X Aq2
1* A02
11*"
HAD HEA
A02 A02 HEEP A02
X X X X
A02 A02
HEEP M2
X
X HEA
X HEA HEEP
M2 X M2
HEEP HEEP HEEP AQ2
X X X X X
HAD HEEP HEEP HEEP A02
X HEA
X HEA X REA X HEA
87627 7440666
12122677
2,6-XylIdtne Zinc (line or dust)
Zinc oxide (1114132)
Zinc sulfate (7733020) Zirreb
X
X HEA X HEA X HEEP
X HSOB X HEA X HEA X HEA X HEEP
X AQ2 X A02 X HEA
X HEEP X HEEP
X HEEP
* In the HIP/1 ARC categories, listing Is based on Manufacture or refining of this etienleal. ** In the HIP/1ARC categories, listing Is for all other coagMutds of this chenlcsl.
FOOTNOTES TO REVISED TOXICITY MATRIX
1
2A 2B
3
A
AP AQ1 AQ2 AQ3 AQ4
AS ATSDR AWQC B1 B2
C
IARC classification. Sufficient evidence to establish a causal relationship between the agent and human cancer; sufficient human evidence and/or no data, inadequate data, or limited data of carcinogenicity in animals.
IARC classification. Probable evidence of carcinogenicity co humans; at least limited evidence of carcinogenicity in humans.
IARC classification. Probable evidence of carcinogenicity to humans; sufficient evidence in animals and inadequate data in humans.
IARC classification. Chemical could not be classified as co its carcinogenicity in humans; chemicals were listed for carcinogenicity if there was limited evidence of carcinogenicity in animals.
EPA classification*'Human Carcinogen. Sufficient evidence from epidemiologic studies to support a causal association between exposure and cancer.
Animal, positive.
AQUIRE database (Version 1.6/3.0 April 1985, Chemical Information System). Reliability 1 - reliable study.
AQUIRE database (Version 1.6/3.0 April 1985, Chemical Information System). Reliability 2 - generally satisfactory study.
AQUIRE database (Version 1.6/3.0 April 1985, Chemical Information System). Reliability 3 - not reliable study.
AQUIRE database (Version 1.6/3.0 April 1985, Chemical Information System). Reliability 4 abstract of a study or summary of a foreign paper.
Animal, suspected.
Agency for Toxic SubstancesDraftToxicological Profile.
EPA Ambient Water Quality Criteria Document.
EPA classification*'Probable Human Carcinogen. Limited evidence of carcinogenicity in humans from epidemiologic studies.
EPA classification--Probable Human Carcinogen. Sufficient evidence of carcinogenicity in animals, inadequate evidence of carcinogenicity in humans.
EPA classification--Possible Human Carcinogen. Limited evidence of carcinogenicity in animals.
CMA 052034
CA CS
DWCD EV
G HAD HEA HEED HEEP HP HS HSDB
HSDB*
LP
logP
P
RTECS SP
Chemical considered by NTP co be a known carcinogen.
Chemical considered by NTP co be a suspect carcinogen, i.e., may reasonably be ancicipaced co be a carcinogen.
EPA Drinking Water Criteria Document.
ENVIROFATE (Version 1.3/2.0 April 1984, Chemical Information System).
GENETOX (Version 1.3/2.0 August 1984, Chemical Information System).
EPA Health Effects Assessment Document.
EPA Health Effects Assessment Document.
EPA Health and Environmental Effects Document.
EPA Health and Environmental Effects Profile.
Human, positive.
Human, suspected.
Hazardous Substances Databank (Available through TOXNET of the National Library of Medicine).
Hazardous Substances Databank (Available through TOXNET of the National Library of Medicine). Effective dose not specified.
Limited positive; indicates results obtained in Gena*Tox carcinogenicity panel tests show indication of tumor induction but that tests were too limited to be conclusive.
log P Data base (Available through Pomona College and Technical Database Service Inc. 1983, 1985).
Indicates a positive response in at least one animal species in an NTP or NCI bioassay.
RTECS data base (Version 6.5/14.2, Chemical Information System).
Sufficient positive; indicates results obtained in Gene-Tox carcinogenicity panel tests show indication of tumor induction and that sufficient tests have been performed to be conclusive.
CMA 052035
Appendix D: Profiles of the 25 Chemicals Emitted in Largest Quantities
The profiles include the total amount released, the three states with the most significant emissions, and brief toxicological summaries for each of the 25 chemicals emitted in largest quantities according to the EPA Toxic Release Inventory report. The toxicological summaries are derived from several sources including: the Hazardous Substance Data Bank maintained at the National Library of Medicine, EPA's TRI Fact Sheets, the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry's Toxicological Profiles, the Installation Restoration Program's Toxicology Guide, and Casarett and Doull's Toxicology.
CMA 052036
TOLUENE
Over 235 million pounds of toluene were emitted into the air by industries in 1987. Toluene ranked #1 for air emissions in 1987, according to the EPA's Toxic Release Inventory data. The three states releasing the most toluene were North Carolina (2239 million), Michigan (15.74 million), and Illinois (13.70 million pounds).
Toluene is a flammable, colorless liquid. It is used as a solvent in the manufacture of perfumes, medicines, dyes, explosives, detergents, aviation gasoline, and other chemicals. Toluene can cause mutations in living cells and damage developing fetuses. It can also damage the liver, kidney, brain, and bone marrow (resulting in low blood cell count). Acute exposures can irritate the nose, throat, and eyes, cause confusion, headache, slowed reflexes, loss of consciousness, and death.
AMMONIA
Over 233 million pounds of ammonia were emitted into the air by industries in 1987. Ammonia was released into the air in quantities second only to toluene, according to the TR1 report The three states releasing the most ammonia were Louisiana (70.23 million), Alaska (30.18 million), and Arkansas (17.57 million pounds).
Ammonia is used in the manufacture of fertilizers, explosives, and other chemicals. Chronic exposure damages the lungs, possibly causing bronchitis. Acute ammonia exposure irritates the skin, bums the eyes causing temporary or permanent blindness, and causes pulmonary'or laryngeal edema, which may lead to death.
ACETONE
Over 186 million pounds of acetone were emitted into the air by industries in 1987. Acetone ranked 3rd in the TRI report. The three states releasing the most acetone were Tennessee (40.11 million), Texas (17.76 million), and Virginia (14.79 million pounds).
Acetone is a flammable, colorless liquid. It is found in paints, varnishes, and lacquers, and is used as a solvent for cements in the leather and rubber industry. Chronic acetone exposure can damage the skin, liver, and kidneys. Acute exposure can irritate the skin, eyes, nose, and throat, and may cause dizziness, lightheadedness, and loss of consciousness.
METHANOL
Over 182 million pounds of methanol were emitted into the air by industries in 1987. Methanol ranked 4th in the TRI report. The three states releasing the most methanol were Georgia (33.29 million). South Carolina (17.25 million), and Virginia (15.44 million pounds).
CMA 052037
-2-
Methanol is a flammable, colorless liquid used as a solvent and cleaner. Chronic methanol exposure can damage the liver. Expulsion from the body is relatively slow, such that repeated exposures can cause a build up of methanol in the blood and tissue. Acute exposure can irritate the eyes, nose, mouth, and throat, and at high concentrations can cause headaches, nausea, vomiting, dizziness, and death. Breathing the vapor or absorbing the liquid through the skin may cause permanent blindness.
CARBON DISULFIDE
Over 137 million pounds of carbon disulfide were emitted into the air by industries in 1987. Carbon disulfide ranked 5th on the TRI report. The three states releasing the most carbon disulfide were Virginia (49.48 million), Alabama (43.73 million), and Tennessee (2235 million pounds).
Carbon disulfide is a flammable liquid used in the manufacture of viscose rayon, cellophane, carbon tetrachloride, and flotation agents. Chronic exposure can damage developing fetuses, and may cause sperm abnormalities in men and spontaneous abortions in women. Carbon disulfide can cause severe changes in the brain and nervous system, tingling, pain, weakness in the legs, coordination and balance disorders, stomach trouble, and very severe mood, personality, and thought changes including nightmares and poor concentration. Carbon disulfide may also cause increased cholesterol, atherosclerosis, high blood pressure, and heart disease. Acute exposure irritates the eyes, skin, and nose, and causes headaches, nausea, lightheadedness, dizziness, unconsciousness, and death. Mental changes may occur and last for months or years.
1,1,1 TR1CHLOROETHANE
Over 130 million pounds of 1,1,1 trichloroethane (methyl chloroform) were emitted into the air by industries in 1987. It ranked 6th on the TRI report The three states releasing the most 1,1,1 trichloroethane were California (15.42 million), Connecticut (938 million), and Ohio (925 million pounds).
1,1,1 trichloroethane is a colorless liquid used as a cleaning solvent. It can cause mutations in living cells, and may damage the liver, kidneys, and skin. Acute exposures may irritate the skin and eyes, and may cause dizziness, lightbeadedness, unconsciousness, irregular heartbeat, and death.
CMA 052038
-3-
METHYL ETHYL KETONE
Over 124 million pounds of methyl ethyl ketone were emitted into the air by industries in 1987. It ranked 7th on the TRI report. The three states releasing the most methyl ethyl ketone were Michigan (12.41 million), Ohio (11.46 million), and Virginia (7.04 million pounds).
Methyl ethyl ketone is a flammable, colorless liquid used as a solvent and in making plastics, textiles, and paints. Methyl ethyl ketone is a teratogen (an agent which causes birth defects) in animals, and is a suspected teratogen in humans. Repeated exposure, in conjunction with other solvents, can damage the nervous system, causing weakness and numbness in the hands and feet. Acute exposures can burn the skin and eyes, leading to permanent damage. The vapors also can irritate the nose, mouth, and throat, and cause dizziness, lightheadedness, headache, nausea, blurred vision, and loss of consciousness.
XYLENE (MIXED ISOMERS)
Over 120 million pounds of xylene were emitted into the air by industries in 1987. Xylenes ranked 8th on the TRI report The three states releasing the most xylene isomers were Michigan (16.92 million), Ohio (11-25 million), and Illinois (753 million pounds).
Xylenes are flammable liquids used as solvents and in making drugs, dyes, insecticides, and gasoline. Chronic xylene exposure may damage the liver, kidneys, skin, eyes, and bone marrow, as well as developing fetuses. Acute exposures can irritate the eyes, nose, and throat and may cause headache, nausea, vomiting, tiredness, stomach upset dizziness, lightheadedness, loss of consciousness, and death.
DICHLOROMETHANE
Over 112 million pounds of dichloromethane were emitted into the air by industries in 1987. It ranked 9th on the TRI report The three states releasing the most dichloromethane were New York (13.24 million), Illinois (1057 million), and Indiana (1024 million pounds).
Dichloromethane is a clear liquid used as an industrial solvent and a paint stripper. It is also used in certain aerosol and pesticide products and in the manufacture of photographic film. Chronic effects of exposure in animals include changes in the liver and kidney, and cancer. Memory loss was also noted as a chronic exposure effect. Acute dichloromethane exposure results in respiratory tract irritation, sluggishness, intoxication, lightheadedness, nausea, headache, tingling in limbs, unconsciousness, and death.
CMA 052039
-4-
CHLORINE Over 103 million pounds of chlorine were emitted into the air by industries in 1987. It ranked 10th on the TRI report The three states releasing the most chlorine were Utah (6834 million), Georgia (4.61 million), and Michigan (3.92 million pounds). Chlorine is a greenish-yellow gas used in making many solvents, disinfectants, cleaners, and other chemicals. Chronic exposure can damage the teeth and irritate the lungs, causing bronchitis, coughing, and shortness of breath. Acute exposure to chlorine can severely bum the eyes and skin causing permanent damage, and may cause throat irritation, tearing, coughing, nose bleeds, and chest pain, pulmonary edema and death.
ALUMINUM OXIDE Over 73 million pounds of aluminum oxide were emitted into the air by industries in 1987. It ranked 11th on the TRI report. The three states releasing the most aluminum oxide were Texas (1432 million), Washington (10.95 million), and Kentucky (6.90 million pounds). Aluminum oxide is used in chemical reactions and in the manufacture of alloys and cements; it is also found in paints, varnishes, and ceramics. Aluminum oxide appears to irritate and damage the respiratory system. Some researchers believe that it plays a role in a type of brain disease, although aerosols besides those of aluminum oxide may be responsible for documented cases.
ETHYLENE Over 54 million pounds of ethylene were emitted into the air by industries in 1987. Ethylene ranked 12th in the TRI report. The three states releasing the most ethylene were Texas (41.89 million), Louisiana (637 million), and Iowa (1.56 million pounds). Ethylene is a flammable, explosive gas (or liquid at lower temperatures) which is used as a refrigerant and in welding and cutting metals. Exposure to ethylene can cause dizziness, lightheadedness, and loss of consciousness. Contact with liquid ethylene can cause frostbite. Little evidence is available about the chronic effects of ethylene exposure. Ethylene can contribute to low-level ozone pollution.
CMA 052040
-5-
HYDROCHLORIC ACID
Over 50 million pounds of hydrochloric acid were emitted into the air by industries in 1987. It ranked 13th on the TRI report. The three states releasing the most hydrochloric add were Georgia (10.91 million), New York (635 million), and Ohio (4.03 million pounds).
Hydrochloric add is a colorless, corrosive liquid used in metal processing, chemical synthesis, and analytical chemistry. Chronic exposure irritates and damages the skin, teeth, and possibly the lungs. Acute exposure can cause severe bums of the skin and eyes, leading to permanent damage with loss of sight. The inhalation of hydrochloric add vapor irritates the mouth, nose, throat, and lungs, causing coughing, shortness of breath, pulmonary edema, and death.
FREON 113
Over 49 million pounds of Freon 113 were emitted in 1987. It ranked 14tb on the TRI report. The three states releasing the most Freon 113 were California (5.72 million), New York (339 million), and Massachusetts (2.70 million pounds).
Exposure to Freon 113 irritates the eyes, nose, and throat Breathing Freon 113 vapors causes sleepiness, confusion, irregular heartbeat and possibly death. Freon 113 also destroys the ozone layer which serves to shield the Earth from the Sun's harmful ultraviolet radiation. As the ozone layer is depleted, malignant melanomas and other skin cancers are expected to increase as a result of increasing intensity of ultraviolet radiation. Freon 113 is also a major contributor to the greenhouse effect.
TRICHLOROETHYLENE
Over 47 million pounds of trichloroethylene were emitted into the air by industries in 1987. Trichloroethylene ranked 15th in the TRI report The three states releasing the most trichloroethylene were Indiana (5.94 million), Illinois (5.91 million), and New York (332 million pounds).
Trichloroethylene is a colorless liquid used as a solvent for metal degreasing (roughly 80% of US production) and dry cleaning. The chemical is also used in printing inks, paints, lacquers, varnishes, and adhesives. Trichloroethylene is a suspected human carcinogen and teratogen (agent which causes birth defects). Chronic exposure can damage the skin, liver, kidneys, and facial nerves, and cause memory loss, headache, alcohol intolerance, depression, and weakness in the arms and legs. Acute exposure can irritate and damage the skin, eyes, nose, throat, and lungs, and at high levels may cause lightheadedness, dizziness, visual disturbances, nausea, vomiting, irregular heartbeat, unconsciousness, pulmonary edema, and death.
CMA 052041
PROPYLENE
Over 37 million pounds of propylene were emitted into the air by industries in 1987. It ranked 16th on the TRI report. The three states releasing the most propylene were Texas (24.41 million), Louisiana (4.20 million), and Ohio (3.55.million pounds).
Propylene is a highly flammable, colorless gas used in the production of many organic chemicals including resins, plastics, synthetic rubber, and gasoline. Chronic propylene exposure may damage the liver. Acute exposure causes dizziness, loss of consciousness and death. Propylene can contribute to low-level ozone pollution.
GLYCOL ETHERS
Over 32 million pounds of glycol ethers were emitted into the air by industries in 1987. It ranked 17th on the TRI report The three states releasing the most glycol ethers were Michigan (5.24 million), Ohio (4.42 million), and Montana (2.92 million pounds).
Glycol ethers are used in industry as solvents in the manufacture of lacquers, varnishes, resins, printing inks, textile dyes, brake fluid anti-icing additives, and as gasoline additives. They are also found in latex paints and cleaners. Glycol ethers are reproductive toxicants and teratogens in animals, causing infertility and birth defects. Some animal studies suggest they are carcinogens. Acute glycol ether exposure can irritate upper respiratory passages, and the eyes, and may cause drowsiness, vertigo, headache, anorexia, stomach pain, nausea, vomiting, coma, and death.
TETRACHLOROETHYLENE
Over 28 million pounds of tetrachloroethylene were emitted into the air by industries in 1987. It ranked 18th on the TRI report. The three states releasing the most tetrachloroethylene were California (5.85 million), Connecticut (2.88 million), and Iowa (2.74 million pounds).
Tetrachloroethylene is a clear liquid used in dry cleaning (roughly 70%), metal degreasing, and chemical synthesis. Tetrachloroethylene causes liver cancer in animals, and is a suspected human carcinogen. Chronic exposure may damage developing fetuses. Acute exposure to tetrachloroethylene irritates the skin, eyes, nose, mouth, and throat, damages the liver, kidneys, and lungs, and may cause dizziness, headache, sleepiness, confusion, nausea, difficulty in speaking and walking, irregular heartbeat, unconsciousness, pulmonary edema, and death.
CMA 052042
-7-
N-BUTYL ALCOHOL
Over 27 million pounds of n-butyl alcohol were emitted into the air by industries in 1987. It ranked 19th on the TRI list. The three states releasing the most n-butyl alcohol were Texas (4.11 million), Michigan (2-57 million), and Ohio (2-33 million pounds).
N-butyl alcohol is a flammable, colorless liquid used as a solvent for fats, waxes, shellac, resins, gums, and varnish. Chronic exposure to n-butyl alcohol can damage the liver, skin, hearing and sense of balance. Acute exposure can irritate the nose, throat, eyes, and skin, and may cause headaches, dizziness, lightheadedness, and loss of consciousness.
METHYL ISOBUTYL KETONE
Over 25 million pounds of methyl isobutyl ketone were emitted into the air by industries in 1987. It ranked 20th on the TRI report The three states releasing the most aluminum oxide were Georgia (Z55 million), Alabama (2.19 million), and New York (1.81 million pounds).
Methyl isobutyl ketone is used in chemical synthesis and dry cleaning preparations, and as a solvent for lacquers, paints, varnishes, and coatings. Exposure to methyl isobutyl ketone can irritate the eyes, nose, and throat and may cause weakness, headache, nausea, vomiting, dizziness, loss of coordination, stomach pain, insomnia, and liver damage.
BENZENE
Over 24 million pounds of benzene were emitted into the air by industries in 1987. Benzene ranked 21st on the EPA's Toxic Release Inventory report. The three states releasing the most benzene were Texas (6.06 million), Ohio (2.23 million), and Illinois (1.93 million pounds).
Benzene is a flammable, colorless liquid used as an industrial solvent and found in small amounts in gasoline. Benzene is a carcinogen and chronic exposure can cause leukemia. Benzene may also cause birth defects. Long-term or chronic benzene exposure can cause death by damaging the blood-forming organs (aplastic anemia). Acute or severe exposure causes irritation of the eyes, nose, and throat lightheadedness, headache, vomiting, convulsions, coma, and death.
CMA 052043
*8
STYRENE
Over 24 million pounds of styrene were emitted into the air by industries in 1987. It ranked 22nd on the TRI report The three states releasing the most styrene were Texas (4.01 million), Ohio (1.72 million), and Washington (1.72 million pounds).
Styrene is a colorless, oily liquid used in making polystyrene plastics, protective coatings, polyesters, resins, and other chemicals. Chronic exposure to styrene can cause genetic mutations, headaches, numbness, upset stomach, memory and concentration difficulty, trouble with learning, slowed reflexes, and balance disorders, and may damage developing fetuses, and decrease fertility in women. Styrene may also cause lung cancer in animals, and is a possible carcinogen for humans. Acute exposure irritates the eyes, nose, throat, and skin, and can cause dizziness, lightheadedness, loss of consciousness, brain damage, liver damage, and death.
CHLOROFORM
Over 23 million pounds of chloroform were emitted into the air by industries in 1987. It ranked 23rd on the TRI report. The three states releasing the most chloroform were North Carolina (3253 million), Virginia (3.09 million), and Alabama (1.97 million pounds).
Chloroform is a colorless liquid used as a solvent and in making dyes, drugs, and pesticides. Chloroform is a probable carcinogen in humans, and has been shown to cause liver, kidney, and thyroid cancer in animals. There is evidence that chloroform is a teratogen in animals. Chronic chloroform exposure can also damage the skin, liver, kidneys, and nervous system. Acute exposure can irritate and bum the skin, eyes, nose, and throat, and causes dizziness, lightheadedness, headache, confusion, and irregular heartbeat which may lead to death.
CHLOROMETHANE
Over 20 million pounds of chloromethane were emitted into the air by industries in 1987. It ranked 24th on the TRI report The three states releasing the most chloromethane were Illinois (6.66 million), Indiana (6.66 million), and Texas (1.15 million pounds).
Chloromethane is a flammable, colorless gas used as a refrigerant and in the manufacture of other chemicals. Evidence suggests that chloromethane causes cancer in animals. In humans, chloromethane may affect the testes causing decreased production of male hormones and sperm. Chronic chloromethane exposure also can irritate the lungs, damage the liver, kidneys, and blood-forming organs, and interfere with brain function, causing clumsiness, headache, dizziness, poor judgement and memory, slurred
CMA 052044
-9speech, sleep disturbances, and personality changes such as depression and irritability. Acute exposure may damage the liver, kidneys, and eyes, and can cause blurred vision, intoxication, dizziness, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, drowsiness, unconsciousness, convulsions, pulmonary edema, and death.
CARBONYL SULFIDE Over 19 million pounds of carbonyl sulfide were emitted into the air by industries in 1987. It ranked 25th on the TRI report. The three states releasing the most carbonyl sulfide were Tennessee (10.00 million), Mississippi (6.00 million), and Louisiana (2.11 million pounds). Carbonyl sulfide is used as an intermediate in the synthesis of a variety of organic compounds. Exposure to carbonyl sulfide can irritate the eyes and skin, and can cause nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, giddiness, headache, vertigo, amnesia, confusion, sweating, irregular heartbeat, and unconsciousness. Respiratory paralysis may occur, causing death.
CMA 052045
Appendix E:
Summary of Toxic Chemical Releases by State and Chemical
CHEMICAL NAME
1,1 ,t -TRICHLOR OETHANE 1,1,2,2-TETRACHLOROETHANE 1,1,2-TRICHLOflOETHANE 1,1-DIMETHYL HYDRAZINE t ,2,4-TRICHLOROBENZENE 1,2,4-TRIMETHYLBE NZEHE 1,2-BUTYLENE OXIDE 1,2-DIBROMOETHANE t,2-DICHLOROBENZENE 1 ,2DtCHLOROETHANE 1,2-DICHLOROETHYLEHE 1,2-OICHLOROPflOPANE 1,3-BUTADIENE 1,3-DICHLOROBENZENE 1,3-DICHLOROPROPYLENE 1,4-DICHLOROBENZENE 1,4-DIOXANE 2,4,5-TRICHLOROPHENOL 2,4,6-TRICHLOROPHEHOL 2,4-0 (ACETIC ACUH 2,4-DIAMINOANISOLE 2,4-DIAMINOANISOLE SULFATE 2,4-DIAMINOTOLUENE 2,4-DICHLOROPHENOL 2,4-DIMETHYLPHENOL 2,4-DINITROPHENOL 2,4-DINITROTOLUENE 2,6-DINITROTOLUENE 2,6-XYLIDINE 2-CHL0R0ACET0PHEN0HE 2-ETH0XYETHAN0L 2-METHOXYETHANOL 2-NITROPHENOL 2-NITR0PR0PANE 2-PHENYLPHENOL 3,3'-0ICHL0R08ENZIDINE 4,4`-DIAMINODIPHENYL ETHER
National Wildlife Federation
Toxic Reteat a Inventory Data lor Air, 1987
AK
It,000 0 0 0 0
4,204 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ft 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ft 0 0
AL
1,731,759 0 s 0
2,015 34,956
0 0 0 526 0 0 3,400 0 0 0 16,606 0 0 0 0 0 ft 0 56 15,569 0 0
AR
1,124,273 33,000 0 0 4 0 0 16,100 600 600 0 0 260 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 250
0 0 0
000
0 6,140 19,395
0 127
0
000
000
000
000
000
AS AZ CA CO CT
0 2,113,696 15,427,734 1,131,444 9,569,974
0 0 22,377 0 0
0 0 7,321 0 0
0 0 1,000 0 0
0 26,000
500
0
0
0 0 70,566 31,116 0
0000 0
0 0 1,910 0 0
0 12,000 6,903 0 0
0 0 1,652 12,000 15,200
0 0 250 0 0
00000
0 0 7,560 1,050 41,300
0 00 0 0
0 00 0 0
0 000 0
0 ft 27,451 0 600
0 0 0 0 .0
00000
0 0 125,046 Q 0
0 00 0 0
0 0 0 0 ft
0 0 0 0 ft
00000
00000
0 0 ft 0 0
0 0 0 ft 0
0 00 0 0
0 00 0 0 26,990 0 120,600 194,374
000 002 001 0 00 000
0 0 3,150 0 0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 0 0 0
0
DE
151,100 0 0 0
17,357 20,270
0 0 10,664 0 0 0 102,336 9,593 0 15,160 0 0 0 ft 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
FL
1,576,955 0 0 0
18,900 3.360
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 0 0 15 0
00 00 1,386 723 00 00 00 00 00
Page
Toxic Release Inventory Data lor Air, 1987
CMA 0 5 2 0 4 8
CHEMICAL NAME
4,4-ISOPROPYUDENEDIPHENOL 4,4'-METHYENEOIANILIN E 4,4 -METHYLENE8IS(2-CHLORO ANILINE) 4,4'-METHYLENEBIS (N.H-DIMETHYL) 4,*-0iNITRO-O-CRES0L 4-AMIN0A20BENZEHE 4-AMINOBIPH ENYL 4-NITROPHENOL 5-NITHO-O-ANISI DINE ACETALDEHYDE ACETAMIDE ACETONE ACETONITRILE ACROLEIN ACRYLAMIDE ACRYLIC ACID ACRYLONITRILE ALLYL CHLORIDE ALPHA-NAPHTHYLAMINE ALUMINUM (FUME OR DUST) ALUMINUM OXIDE AMMONIA AMMONIUM NITRATE (SOLUTION) AMMONIUM SULFATE (SOLUTldN) ANILINE ANTHRACENE ANTIMONY ANTIMONY COMPOUNDS ARSENIC ARSENIC COMPOUNDS ASBESTOS (FRIABLE) BARIUM BARIUM COMPOUNDS BENZAL CHLORIDE BENZENE BENZIDINE BENZOIC TRICHLORIDE
AK
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 30,152,121 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 25,547 0 0
AL AR
2,450 0 0 0 0 0 0
500 0
52 0
527,955 400 275 504
2,553 257,000
0 0 1,001 255,292 2,075,730 577,500 7,004 5,050 9,411 276 ' too 505 2,250 0 0 3,153 0 525,409 0 0
0 750
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,935,597 15,900 0 0 0 0 250 0 555 171,047 17,555,892 0 0 700 970 25 0 123 750 500 250 250 0 13,297 0 0
AS
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 582,500 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
AZ
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2,349,953 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 250 507 552,500 0 0 0 0 250 14,240 9,770
41,000 0
250 0 0 0 0 0
CA
440 3 0 0
33 0 0 0 0 0 0 4,445,971 250 0 1,537 1,297 1,698 0 0 105,059 1,313,755 7,247,211 5,750 22,978 0 75 1,751 1,152 505 7,452 2,350 0,151 7,015 0 139,172 0 0
CO
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 533,509 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 589,000 171,380 62,689 529,200 250 0 100 500 0 0 0 0 0 250 0 49,965 0 0
CT
0 500
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,750 0 550,953 395 0 500 3,825 5,206 0 0 1,000 15,255 357,032 0 250 12,250 0 0 502 0!
0 550 250 1,342
0 23,300
0 0
DE FL
2,500 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
94,120 0 9 0
1/155 40,550
0 0 0 240,000 159,544 0 0 500 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 500 0 41,519 0 0
54 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
2,520/137 0 0 5
20,007 107,591
0 0 0 173,953 15,400,050 105,000 0 0 42 250 130 1 750 250 0 250 0 415 0 0
National Wildllle Federal I on
Page!
Tonic Reteaia Inventory Data for Alt, (987
CHEMICAL NAME
BENZOYL CHLORIDE BENZOYL PEROXIDE BENZYL CHLORIDE BERYLLIUM BERYLLIUM COMPOUNDS BIPHENYL BIS(2-CHLOROETHYL) ETHER BJS(2ETHYLHEXYL) ADIPATE BIS(CHLQROMETHYL) ETHER BROMOMETHANE BUTYL ACRYLATE BUTYL BENZYL PHTHALATE BUTYRALDEHYDE C.I. ACID BLUE 9, DIAMMOHIUM SALT C.I. ACIO BLUE S, DISOOIUM SALT C.l. BASIC GREEN 4 C.I. SOLVENT YELLOW 14 C.I. SOLVENT YELLOW 3 CADMIUM CADMIUM COMPOUNDS vfRAtiwmWiiNuI vrvintnHniMmttrTtvf CAPTAN CARBARYL CARBON DISULFIDE CARBON TETRACHLORIDE CARBONYL SULFIDE CATECHOL CHLORAMBEN CHLORDANE CHLORINE CHLORINE OIOXIDE CHLOROACETIC ACID CHLOROBENZENE CHLOROBENZILATE CHLOROETHANE CHLOROFORM CHLOROMETHANE
National Wildlife Federation
AK AL
00 00 00 00 00 0 79,232 0O 0 4,400 00 0 (31,000 0 4,009 00 0 9,100 00 00 00 00 00 0 99 09 0e 00 00 0 43,737,000 0 929,374 00 00 00 00 490,902 2,759,049 0 1,799,100 0 294 0 9,891 0 250 0 2,228 150,000 1,976,646 0 4,869
AR
0 0
ft
0 0 0 0
ft
0 103,000
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 90,501 0 0 0 0 1,939,891
ft
121,729 0 0 0
480,419 539,190
0 22,700
0 204,500 725.734 287,000
AS
0 0
ft
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
ft
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,861 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
AZ
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
ft ft ft
0 0 0 0 0 0 290 0 0 0 0 28,472 0 0 0 0 0 1,061 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
CA
12 0 0
500 0 0 0
17,113 0 0
21,737 9,700 0 0 0 0 0 0 501 0 0 57 8
99,491 54,595 29,735
0 0 0 714,060 394,250 250 490 0 128,000 573,864 451,000
CO
0 0 0 0 0 500 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
998
0 0 0 0 0 500 0 0 0 0 48,634 0 0 0 0 0 0 6,200
CT
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,000 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 323 0 0 0 212,990 263 0 0 0 0 . 2,765 0 0 1,000 0 563,148 0 344,000
DE
0 0 0 0 0 18,700 0 0 0 0 1,999 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 33,000 157,900 320,000 0 0 0 59,570 0 0 16,140 0 0 0 0
FL
0 0 0 0 0 32,052 0 0 0 1,850 101,395 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 250 0 80 465 32 0 0 0 0 0 461,041 347,938 0
2
0 0 178,500 0
Page 3
6 > 0 ;g 0
Toxic Release Inventory Data (or Air, 1987
CMR 0 5 2 0 5 0
CHEMICAL NAME
CHLOROMETHYL METHYL ETHER CHLOROPHENOLS CHLOROPRENE CHLOROTHALONIL CHROMIUM CHROMIUM COMPOUNDS COBALT COBALT COMPOUNDS COPPER COPPER COMPOUNDS CRESOL (MIXED ISOMERS) CUMENE CUMENE HYDROPEROXIDE CUPFERRON CYANIDE COMPOUNDS CYCLOHEXANE DECABROMODIPHENYL OXIDE DI-(2-ETHYLHEXYL) PHTHALATE DIAMINOTOLUENE (MIXED ISOMERS) OIBENZOFURAN DIBUTYL PHTHALATE DICHLOROBENZENE (MIXED ISOMERS) DICHLOROBROMOMETHANE OICHLOROMETHANE OICHLORVOS DICOFOL DIETHANOLAMINE DIETHYL PHTHALATE DIETHYL SULFATE DIMETHYL PHTHALATE DIMETHYL SULFATE EPICHLOROHYDRIN ETHYL ACRYLATE ETHYL CHLOROFORMATE ETHYLBENZENE ETHYLENE ETHYLENE GLYCOL
National Wildlife Federation
AK
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 0 0 0 17,070 0 0 0 O 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 13,360 0 0
AL
0 0 0 0 4,070 4,203 0 1,230 14/133 22,409 2,220 94,208 0 0 640 46,622 0 0 0 0,410 0 0 0 1,621,067 0 0 2,100 1 200 2 0 13,760 2,600 0 163,596 60,206 1,362,332
AR
0 0 0 300 9,474 3,260 2,910 0 12,379 1,002 0 10,000 0 0 TOO 2,494 13,700 0 0 920 900 0 0 1,643,291 0 O 290 0 0 19,100 0 1,110 0 0 26,966 179,000 6,152
AS AZ CA
000
000
000
000
0
3,060
11,069
0 290 39,619
0 0 1,290
0 0 900
0 657,290
31,790
0 1,990,490
19,492
0 0 900
0 0 19,416
0 0 77
000
0 913 3,575
0 0 446,020
0 0 1,000
0 19,954 36,810
000
0 0 111
0 0 932
000
0 0 3,690
0 623,770 4,769,902
0 00
0 00
0 0 3,618
004
000
0 120,190
12
0 0 1,433
0 0 350
0 0 1,735
000
0 0 94,563
0 0 155,914
0 148,260 116,049
CO
0 0 0 0 402 290 0 0 798 1/100 0 900 0 0 0 5,910 0 0 0 200 2,000 0 0 412/HI 0 0 290 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2,936 49,330 29,725
CT
0 0 0 0 1,901 4,920 913 94 6,910 18,321 0 0 0 0 3,391 0 0 1,700 0 0 0 0 0 2,003,949 0 0 0 17,000 0 0 0 0 1,500 0 5,110 0 102,906
DE
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2,460 0 290 0 0 7 0 0 77/121 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8,300 3,062 0 5,100 0 750
FL
0 0 900 0 1,000 2S0 0 0 4,499 2,123 3,600 0 0 0 0 1,020,520 290 250 0 0 2,907 0 0 1,099,779 0 0 37 0 0 336/134 0 0 0 0 37,634 0 41,252
Page 4
Toxic Release Inventory Data lor Air, 1907
CHEMICAL NAME
ETHYLENE OXIDE ETHYLENE THIOUREA ETHYLEHEIMINE FLUOMETUROH FORMALDEHYDE FREON 113 GLYCOL ETHERS HEPTACHLOR HEXACHLORO-1,3-BUTAOIENE HEXACHLOROBENZENE HEXACHLOROCYCLOPENTAOIENE HEXACHLOROETHANE HEXACHLORONAPHTHALENE HYDRAZINE HYDRAZINE SULFATE HYDROCHLORIC ACID HYDROGEN CYANIDE HYDROGEN FLUORIOE HYDROQUIHONE Invalid no. thouldba 117117 ISOBUTYRALDEHYDE ISOPROPYL ALCOHOL (MANUFACTURING) LEAD LEAD COMPOUNDS LINDANE M-CRESOL M-XYLENE MALEIC ANHYDRIDE MANEB MANGANESE MANGANESE COMPOUNDS MELAMINE MERCURY MERCURY COMPOUNDS METHANOL METHOXYCHLOR METHYL ACRYLATE
AK
0 0 0 Oj 9,154 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 730,000 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
AL
0 0 0 0 594,619 690,431 303,472 0 0 0 0 0 0 325 0 2,359,703 11,513 46,510 0 0 303,200 15,239 40,230 2,522 0 0 102,767 750 0 14,675 3,204 0 2,411 0 3,571,109 0 12,200
AR
120,070 0 0 0
100,717 2,606,163
40,600 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
30,001 0 0 0
250 0
132,755 3,065 1,550 0 0 3,602 504 0 060 3,000 0 0 _0
3,404,070 0
3,350
National Wildlife Federation
AS AZ
0 10,001 00 00 00 0 03,800 0 1,066,014 0 31,500 00 00 06 00 00 00 00 00 0 62,516 40 0 4,060 00 00 00 0 142,230 0 43,350 0 163,003 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 0 _________ 0 00 0 334,100 00 00
CA
150,700 0 0 0
460,601 5,723,630 1,003,676
0 0 4 0 76 0 500 0 1,073,363 0 50,034 0 2,021 0 799,264
66,466 23,730
250 3,240 75,390 112,402
0 2,375 2,763 7,196
0 0 1,524,264 0 0
CO
763 0 0 0
160,607 034,104 524,466
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 26,526 0 361 0 0 0 257,320 3,294 1,395 0 0 1,256 0 0 6,275 527 0 0 0 682,922 0 0
CT
57,008 0 0 0
60,005 t,38202
71,551 0 0 0 0 0 0
600 0
56,156 0
7,503 0 0 0
252,035 2,840 3,001 0 0 0 2,000 0 2,773 10,750 6,201 0 0
972,490 0
3,078
DE
69,000 0 0 0
5,103 0
196,750 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
31,098 0
2,040 0 o 0 0 0
2,866 0 0 0 0 0 0
2,500 0
750 0
75,375 0 0
FL
27,015 0 0 0
6,800 2,607,349
160,226 0 0 0 0
250 0
1,095 0
45,155 0
35,176 500 0
5,300 60,203
3,606 6,410
0 0 22,494 16,200 00 2,039 6,090 0 0 0 1,904,633 0 0
Page S
CMA 0 5 2 0 5 1
CHEMICAL NAME
METHYL ETHYL KETONE METHYL HYDRAZINE METHYL IODIDE METHYL ISOBUTYL KETONE METHYL ISOCYANATE METHYL METHACRYLATE METHYL TERT-BUTYL ETHER METHYLENE BROMIDE METHYLENEBIS(PNENYLISOCYANATE) MICHLER'S KETONE MOLYBOENUM TRIOXIDE N,N-DIMETHYLANIUNE H-BUTYL ALCOHOL N-DIOCTYL PHTHALATE N-NITROSODIPHENYLAMI HE NAPHTHALENE NICKEL NICKEL COMPOUNDS NITRIC ACID NITRILOTRIACETIC ACID NITROBENZENE NITROGEN MUSTARO NITROGLYCERIN O-ANISIOINE O-CRESOL O-TOLUIOINE O-XYLENE OCTACHLORONAPHTHALENE P-ANISIDINE P-CRESIOINE P-CRESOL P-NITROSODIPHENVLAMINE P-PHENYLENEDIAMINE P-XYLENE PARATHION PENTACHLOROPHENOL PERACETIC ACID
National Wildlife Federation
Toxic Release Inventory Data (or Air, 1987
AK AL AR
0 5,656,712 2,506,546
0 00
0 00
0 2,190,965 346,090
000
0 39,292 17,100
0 10,463
0
000
0 6,162
517
0 00
0 600
0
0 96,900
0
0 212,464
64,563
0 0 250
000
95 112,501
9,551
0 2,426 3,912
0 1,919
0
2 20,265
2,250
0 500
0
000
00 00 00 00 9 91,696 00 00 90 0 500 0 250 00 0 2,130,926 00 0 1,753 00
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
AS AZ CA CO CT DE FL
0 593,516 4,246,644 526,665 722,496 182,377 465,622
0 0 523 0 0 0 0
00 00000
0 23,463 491,757 69,236 173/174 212,000 38,654
0 000000
0
0 181,396
0 156,604
4,425
5,364
0
0 10,034
4,370
0
0
0
0 0 250 0 0 0 0
0 250 960 1,250
13
0
0
90 00000
0 0 750 250 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 1,722 0 0
0 105,316 1,303,314 260,259 177,205
0 417,375
0 0 250 250 0 0 0
0 0 00000
0
0 164,206
5,020
2,000
76,000
900
0
0 11,052
778 8,699 5,350
250
0 2,250 6,607
0 36,615
0 751
0
13,503 613,795
52,667
79,116
1 12,303
0 0 250 0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 1,000 0 0
0 0 0 3,540 0 0 0
0 000000
0 0 310 0 0 220 0
0 0 00000
0
0 69,537
623
0
0
0
0 0 00 000
0 000000
0 000 000
0 0 47,250 0 3,915 0 0
0 0 00 000
00 00000
0
0 59,149
742
0
0
0
0 0 106 0 0 0 0
0 0 1,918 0 0 0 192
0 000000
Page 6
052052
Toxic Releate Inventory Data lor Air, 1987
CHEMICAL NAME
PHENOL PHOSGENE PHOSPHORIC ACIO PHOSPHORUS (YELLOW OR WHITE) PHTHAUC ANHYDRIDE PICRIC ACID POLY BROMMATED BIPHENYLS POLYCHLORINATED BIPHENYLS (PCBa) PROPANE SULTONE PHOPIONALDEHYDE PROPOXUR PROPYLENE PROPYLENE OXIDE PROPYLENEIMINE PYRIDINE QUINOLINE QUIHONE QUINTOZENE SACCHARIN (MANUFACTURING) SAFROLE SEC-BUTYL ALCOHOL SELENIUM SELENIUM COMPOUNDS SILVER SILVER COMPOUNDS SODIUM HYDROXIDE (SOLUTION) SODIUM SULFATE (SOLUTION) STYRENE STYRENE OXIDE SULFURIC ACID TEREPHTHAUCACID TERT-BUTYL ALCOHOL TETRACHLOROETHYLENE TETRACHLOHVINPHOS THALLIUM THALLIUM COMPOUNOS THIOUREA
National Wildlife Federation
AK
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 750 0 0 0 13,000 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
AL
40,071 559
35,010 500 56 0 0 0 0 0 0
1,450 2,750
0 0 1,274 0 0 0 0 11,440 0 0 0 500 109,040 091,010 105,510 0 1,401,919 41,750 2 35,931 0 0 0 500
AR
04,400 0
5,300 1,000
250 0 0 0 0 0 0
30,531 0 0
4,400 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
111,960 500
75,093 0
204,071 0 0
136,533 0 0 0 0
AS
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 311,720 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
AZ
298,320 0
6,351 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
500 0
250 0
311,720 0
695,236 0
230,325 0 0
301,735 0 0 0 0
CA
399,020 0
70050 0
14,075 0 0 0 0 0 0
456,617 669,770
0 0 110 0 0 0 0 120,711 0 9,159 250 0 733,314 23,073 1,476,340 0 347,001 250 10 5,952,650 0 0 0 1,020
CO
0 0 3,SOB 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 107,000 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4,411 513 0,902 0 4073 0 0 399,500 0 0 0 0
CT
41,970 250
5,903 0
500 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
66,092 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
47 36,735
250 29,477
0 64,557
500 0
2,085,929 0 0 0 0
DE
12,213 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
2,700 4,640
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2,001 0 70,035 0 24,245 0 0 113, tOO 0 0 0 0
FL
49,144 0
7,199 0
10,461 0 0 0 0 0 0
500 250
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 10,520 0 0 0 0 31,987 0 1,541,751 0 927,454 0 0 26,199 0 0 0 0
Page J
CMA 0 5 2 0 5 3
CMA 0 5 2 0 5 4
CHEMICAL NAME
THORIUM DIOXIDE TITANIUM TETRACHLORIDE TOLUENE TOLUENE-2,A-DIISOCYANATE TOLUENE-2,6-DtlSOCYANATE TOTAL FOR MIXTURES TRICHLORFON TRICHLOROETHYLENE TRIFLURALIN URETHANE VANADIUM (FUME OR DUST) VINYLACETATE VINYL BROMIDE VINYL CHLORIDE VINYLIDENE CHLORIDE XYLENE (MIXED ISOMERS) ZINC (FUME R DUST) ZINC COMPOUNDS ZINEB
TOTALS
Toxic Release Inventory Data for Air, 1987
AK
0 0 27,829 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 27,371 0 V 0
AL
0 0 3,420,28* 10 SIS 1,570 0 1,781,182 0 0 0 39,845 47,000 0 121,250 2,488,047 79,884 12,487 0
AR
0 0 2,036,991 1,000 0 9,878 0 949,937 900 0 369 0 6,700 0 443,000 2,088,420 7,428 6,110 0
AS AZ CA CO CT DE FL
0 00 6000
0 0 10,100 0 0 11,800 0
0 393,981 3,790,808 908,211 1,609,997 194,804 1,529,298
0 0 102,032 500 900 1 909
0
0 2,528
500
0
0 840
0
750 327,834
67,200
9,900
0 13,001
000 6000
8 72,000 39,099
7,361 391,897
1,180 949,007
0 00 0000
0 0 290 0 0 0 0
0 0 300 8 0 0 0
0 0 93,607 0 900 8,278 0
0000000
0
0 932
0
0 68,803
8,000
0 0 890 0 0 0 0
0 206,297 2,447,692 188,859 388,520 219,867 699,841
0 290 18,986 24,430 12,478
0 7,887
0 135,000
24,937
724 10,035
0 48,411
0 00 0000
31,707,083 90,459,130 42,632,999 898,081 19,031,408 72,947,496 6,911,711 23,769,961 3,181,998 35,354,199
National Wlldllle Federation
Page 8
052055
CHEMICAL NAME
1,1,1 -TRICHLOROETHANE 1,1,2,2-TETRACHLOROETHANE 1,1 ^-TRICHLOROETHANE 1,1-DIMETHYL HYOflAZINE 1,2,4-TRICHLOROBENZENE 1,2,4-TRIMETHYLBENZENE 1,2-BUTYLENE OXIDE 1.2DIBROMOETHANE 1,2-OICHLOROBEHZENE 1,2-DICHLOROETHANE 1,2-DICHLOROETHYLENE 1,2-DICHLOROPHOPANE 1,3-BUTADIENE 1,3-DICHLOROBENZENE 1,3-DICHLOROPROPVLENE 1,4-OICHLOROBENZEHE 1,4-DIOXANE 2,4,5-TRICHLOROPHEHOL 2,4,6-TRICHLOROPHEHOL 2,4-D (ACETIC ACIO) 2,4-DIAMINOANISOLE 2,4-DIAMIHOANISOLE SULFATE 2,4-DIAMiHOTOLUENE 2,4-DICHLOROPHENOL 2,4-DIMETHYLPHENOL 2,4-DINITROPHENOL 2,4-DINITROTOLUENE 2,6-DIHlTROTOLUEHE 2,6-XYUOINE 2-CHLOROACETOPHENOHE 2-ETHOXYETHANOL 2-METHOXYETHANOL 2-NITROPHENOL 2-NITROPROPAHE 2-PHENYLPHENOL 3,3'- DICHLOROBENZIDINE 4,4`-DIAMINODIPHENYL ETHER
National Wildlife Federation
Toxic Releaee Inventory Data lor Air, 1967
GA
1,774,060 0
6,600 0
74,677 19,000
0 0 6 3,440 0 0 634,433 0 0 64 0 0 0 546 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
0 6,626
0 0 0 0 0 0
HI
36,120 0 0 0
27,900 0
600 0
600 0 0
600 0
1,000 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
1A
2,722,632 0
144,200 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6 0
176,000 0 0 0 0 0 0
261 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
00 00 00 00 0 260 00 00 00
ID
90,020 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
0
0 0 0 0 0
0
0 0 0 0 0 0
IL
7,667,741 0
7,491 0 0
63,750 0
290 290,290 179,900
0 0 47,129 2,000 0 760 11,490 0 0 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
IN
7,967,491 0
1,000
o'
0 61,650
2,750 290 290
179,500
0 0 42,110 0 0 260 0 0 0
ft ft
0 0
0 0 0
290
ft
KS
494,674 0 0 0 0
160,600 0 0 0
3,779 9,626
0 200
0 0 4,990 0 0 0 250 0
ft
0 0 0 0 0 0
KY LA
2,429,919 395
9,393 0
10 21,600
0 0 0 344,692 1,037 0 311,514 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
- 530,933 32,271
141,092 0
266 330,411
13,720 7,030 17,756 2,261,696 64,173 266,900 462,236
790 6,270
790 26,475
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 69,946 17,962
MA
3,046,674 0
645,657 0 0 0 0 0
11,350 65,950
0 0 0 0 0 0 750 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
0 00
0 191,000 150,750
0 1,646
0
0 27,000
0
0 694
0
0 600
0
000
0 250
0
00 0 15,026 0 250 00 0 190,600 00 00 00
0 0 9,527 0 69,000 0 0 0
0 9,432 1,157,414
0 0 0 0 0
Page 9
Toxic Release Inventory Date for Air, 1967
cMA 052056
CHEMICAL NAME
4,4'-ISOPROPYLIDENDIPHENOL 4,4'-METHYEN EDIANILINE 4,4'-METHYLENEBIS(2-CHLORO ANILINE) 4,4 '-METHYLENEBIS(N,N-DIMETHVL) 4,6- DIHITRO-O-CRESOL 4-AMINOAZOBENZENE 4-AMINOBIPHENYL 4-N1TROPHENOL 9-NIT RO-O-ANISIDINE ACETALDEHYDE ACETAMIDE ACETONE ACETONITRILE ACROLEIN ACRYLAMIDE ACRYLIC ACID ACRYLONITRILE ALLYL CHLORIDE ALPHA-NAPHTHYLAMINE ALUMINUM (FUME OR OUST) ALUMINUM OXIDE AMMONIA AMMONIUM NITRATE (SOLUTION) AMMONIUM SULFATE (SOLUTION) ANILINE ANTHRACENE ANTIMONY ANTIMONY COMPOUNDS ARSENIC ARSENIC COMPOUNDS ASBESTOS (FRIABLE) BARIUM BARIUM COMPOUNDS BENZAL CHLORIDE BENZENE BENZIDINE BENZOIC TRICHLORIDE
GA
1,000 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
9,403,740 9 0
570 3,903
19 48,829
0 90,104 94,499 2,919494 208,072
299410 0
1,523 392 790 290
2,500 0
910 9,703
0 087,991
0 0
HI IA
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 190490 248,250 0 0 0 0 0 0 149 0 0 0 0 0 40,100 0 0
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,596,840 0 0 0 16,000 0 0 0 1,930 48,660 - 0497,199 39,970 0 0 0 0 9 0 0 0 0 290 0 97,000 0 0
ID
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 290 99,149 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 913,930 0 0 0 0 0 1400 0 0 0 0 900 0 0 0 0
IL
900 0 0
18,173 0 0 0
2400 0 0 0
9,791,130 992,925 0 93 290 900 0 0
1409,913 3,479,993 2,434,110
0 0 27,708 18,492 299 1400 0 1490 1,077 2 2494 0 1,935,539 0 0
IN
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 34,009 0 9,994,912 992,925 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,192,997 3,470,813 2434,110 0 0 0 13,590 991 2,379 190 290 290 0 9,909 0 1,935499 0 0
KS
0 10,945
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 900 0 1,017465 0 0 0 14 4,950 2,150 0 2418 1,140,700 4479,930 1,000 0 7,950 0 290 0 0 0 0 0 290 0 421,989 0 0
KY LA
1,009 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0;
1,929,742 35 0
290 2499 121402
423 0
251,431 9,907,549
797499 0 0 0
1409 299
1,9*9 8
790 1400 2,994 4402
0 952,131
0 0
500 112
0 0 3 0 1 2450 0 499437 0 990,835 90,790 27499 2,943 9,990 232400 806 0 120 3,470,925 70430,933 130,000 0 29,635
1412 791 291 293 290 110 0
52,190 0
1,109,353 0 0
MA
730 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
29,000 0
1427,944 32,134 0 0 909 592 250 0; 900
989,310 392,909
0 44
0 0 0 1,000 7459 0 790 790 1402 0 0 0 0
National Wlldllle Federation
Page 10
Tonic RthiN Inventory Data lor Air, 1967
CHEMICAL NAME
BENZOYL CHLORIOE BENZOYL PEROXIDE BENZYL CHLORIDE BERYLLIUM BERYLLIUM COMPOUNDS BIPHENYL BIS(2-CHLOROETHYL) ETHER BJS(2ETHYLHEXYL) ADIPATE BIS(CHLOROMETHYL) ETHER BROMOMETHANE BUTYL ACRYLATE BUTYL BENZYL PHTHALATE BUTYRALOEHYDE C.L ACID BLUE , DIAMMONIUM SALT C.I. ACID BLUE 0, DISOOIUM SALT C.I. BASIC GREEN 4 C.l. SOLVENT YELLOW 14 C.L SOLVENT YELLOW 3 CADMIUM CADMIUM COMPOUNDS CALCIUM CYANAMIDE CAPTAH CARBARYL CARBON DISULFIDE CARBON TETRACHLORIDE CARBONYL SULFIDE CATECHOL CHLORAMBEN CHLORDANE CHLORINE CHLORINE DIOXIDE CHLOROACETIC ACID CHLOROBENZENE CHLOROBENZILATE CHLOAOETHANE CHLOROFORM CHLOROMETHANE
National Wildlife Federation
GA
290 0
443 0 0
393,509 0
900 0
72,000 0,400 7,017 0 0 0 0 0 0 900 0 6 790 290 3,070
11,900 0 0 0 0
4,010,009 1,014,660
0 0 19 0 1,943,062 39,160
HI IA ID IL IN KS KY LA MA
0 0 0 0 0 500 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 0 900 0 900 500
0
0
0 511
11
00 00
0000000 00
0 0 00 000 00
0
0
0
960
290
900
1,100
36,420
0
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 450 0
0 0 0 290 0 0 0 0 1,616
0000 00000
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 16,200
0 900
0 7,300
72
1,090
97,197
22,377
3,620
0
0
0
4
0 17,390
4,860
0 50,099
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 224,000
000000000
0 0000 00 00
00 00000 00
0000 000 00
0000 00000
0 0 0 290 0 0 0 0 750
0
0 100,250
1,700
0 250 0,650
10
0 0 0 0 0 12,790 0 0 0
0 0 290 790 0 0 0 0 0
060000000
0
0
0 3,504,079 3,964,075 1,901,900
403 4,409,991
0
0
0
0
290
290 404,400
55,721 549,143
0
0 0 0 0 0 132,059 0 2,113,696 0
0 000 000 00
0 0 0 900 0 9 0 0 0
0 0 0 004 0 0 0 0 0
500 470,740
93,299 009,437 000,192
41,340 266,490 1,450,273
2,001
0 0 990,700 0 0 0 220,064 172,500 0
0 0 0 10 0 0 0 260 0
0 0 0 74,000 0 0 1,546 424,926 6,900
000000 000
0
0
0 560,000
0 6,142 2,311 219,706
250
0
0 710,000
15,500
15,900 103,452 402,596 647,036
0
0
0
0 6,669,500 6,669,250 510,667 561,100 793,954
250
Page 11
4
Toxic Releate Inventory Data lor Air, 1967
CMA 0 5 2 0 5 8
CHEMICAL NAME
CHLOflOMETHVL METHYL ETHER CHLOROPHENOLS CHLOROPHENE CHLOROTHALONIL CHROMIUM CHROMIUM COMPOUNDS COBALT COBALT COMPOUNDS COPPER COPPEH COMPOUNDS CRESOL (MIXED ISOMERS) CUMENE CUMENE HYOROPEROXIDE CUPFERRON CYANIDE COMPOUNDS CYCLOHEXANE DECABROMODIPKENYL OXIDE DI-(2-ETHYLHEXYL) PHTHALATE DIAMINOTOLUENE (MIXED ISOMERS) OIBENZOFURAN DIBUTYL PHTHALATE DICHLOROBEHZENE (MIXED ISOMERS) DICHLOROBROMOMETHANE DICHLOROMETHANE DICHLORVOS DICOFOL DIETHANOLAMINE DIETHYL PHTHALATE DIETHYL SULFATE DIMETHYL PHTHALATE DIMETHYL SULFATE EPICHLOROHYDRIN ETHYL ACRYLATE ETHYL CHLOROFORMATE ETHYLBENZENE ETHYLENE ETHYLENE GLYCOL
GA
0 0 0 39 1,500 4,420 500 500 10,029 T.TSO 9,930 39,040 0 0 1,190 27,700 0 71,601 0 1,659 1,390 0 0 4,640,973 0 0 1,994 0 0 0 0 17,370 1,362 0 61,029 0 40,120
HI
0 0 0 0 29 0 0 0 694 0 0 0 0 0 0 32,900 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 16,200 3,050 0
IA
0 0 35,000 0 9,151 1,850 0 0 2,799 33,004 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 500 0 0 99,000 0 0 942,091 0 0 500 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,560,000 57,640
ID IL IN
0 0 0 0 0 7,500 0 0 0 3,500 0 0 0 0 250 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 o 0 0 o!
0 0 1,039
0 0 0 0 15,075 30,164 905 590 34,726 6,957 215,751 152,790 500 0 41,195 139,144 0 110,339 0 4,571 1,000 0 0 10,573,510 0 0 96,950 0 0 59 750 2,172 500 0 76,690 134,700 40,100
0 0 0 0 15,075 18,040 905 500 34,726 149,320 199,751 113,750 0 0 79,455 139,144 0 110,336 0 2,001 114,339 0 3,900 10,245,219 0 0 99,400 16 0 0 0 0 0 0 111,292 133,950 39,873
KS
0 0 0 0 600 12,026 0 23 607 501 1,201 360,500 38,400 0 0 251,400 0 0 0 0 14 0 0 345,362 0 0 9,600 0 0 0 0 460 1,596 0 343,640 309,065 4,763
KY
0 0 625,099 0 3,729 7,021 4 294 4,720 2,7*2 0 49,000 2,098 0 3,623 21 30 0 79,500 0 940 1,750 0 0 1,042,690 0 0 500 0 0 0 0 1,315 19,020 0 164,733 1 96,946 65,619
LA MA
0 0 227,753 0 70,965 39,973 250 500 25 1,001 26,990 264,470 90 0 0 170,915 0 0 1,161 1,071 5,700 1,007 0 342,356 0 0 22,902 0 0 126,992 0 34,237 52,937 0 316,150 6,372,413 1,455,416
0 0 0 0 15,912 3,505 0 1,000 9,105 3,600 0 0 0 0 5,650 0 2 11,497 0 0 250 0 0 2,796,577 0 0 3,700
47,000 955 0 0
44,209 2,000 0 16,000 0
127,066
National Wlldllle Federation
Page 12
Toxic Release Inventory Dili lor Air, 1967
CHEMICAL NAME
ETHYLENE OXIDE ETHYLENE THIOUREA ETHYLENEIMIME FLUOMETURON FORMALDEHYDE FREON 113 GLYCOL ETHERS HEPTACHLOR HEXACHLOR0-1,3-BUTADIENE HEXACHLOROBENZEHE HEXACHLOROCYCLOPENTAOIENE HEXACHLOROETHANE HEXACHLORONAPHTHALENE HYDRAZINE HYDRAZINE SULFATE HYDROCHLORIC ACID HYDROGEN CYANIDE HYDROGEN FLUORIDE HYDROOUINONE Invalid no. thouId ba 117117 ISOBUTYRALDEHYOE ISOPROPYL ALCOHOL (MANUFACTURING) LEAD LEAD COMPOUNDS LINOANE M-CRESOL M-XYLEHE MALEIC ANHYDRIDE MANEB MANGANESE MANGANESE COMPOUNDS MELAMINE MERCURY MERCURY COMPOUNDS METHANOL METHOXYCHLOR METHYLACRYLATE
GA
137,1*7 0 0
500 212,077 4*9,114 M3,*4*
0 0 0 0 0 0 2*0 0 10,012,417 0 1.S00 0 0 0 274,03* 44,371 7,143 4 *00 0
u*s
500 9,900 1,241
0 1,0*4
0 33,241,267
251 1,267
HI IA|
0 0 0 .o 0 0 41,449 0 0 0 0
ft
0 0 0 290 0 0 0 0 0
ft
900 0 0 0
34,000 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
750 0 0
1,250
0 0 0 23,4*5 944,402 344,449 0
ft
0 0 0 0 0
ft
54,149 0
1,290 0 0 0
224,020 2,404 9,324 0 0 0 0 0
11,001 14,066
0 0 0 2,190,655 0 0
ID
900 0 0 0
43,531 144,900
ft ft
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2,010
0 103,500
0 0 0 15,200 290 7,590 250 0 0 0 0 0 1,000 0 0 0 110,000 0 0
X.
24,354 0 0 0
347,416 1,23214 1,647,436
9,900 0 0
590 0 0
249 0
743,394 29
1,534,750 290 0
46,490 940,407
94,033 7,457 0 2,979 2,05*
12,130 0
9,724 2,013
290 250
0 2,877,460
0 500
IN
63,977 0 0 0
379,146 1,224,1*1 1,512,161
0 0 0 0 250 0 0 0 793,104 24 1,537,250 0 0 49,200 542,359 93,326 44,052 0 0
ft
11,630 0
9,949 493,700
0 2 0 2,030,442 0 0
KS
0 0 0 0 93,351 232,414 69,190 0 17* 106 0 421 0 0 0 174,654 0 43,457 0 0
ft
204015 2,497 5,293 0 0
24,379 0 0
250 313
0 0 0 1,055,638 0 0
KY
49,327 0 0 0
346,519 934,393 1071,17*
0 0 0 0
ft
0 1 0 1042034 40 492,733 290
ft
0 190,142
13099 21,1*0
0 9M 217,493 194 33,023 11,376 44,500 1019 1,049
0 1,404,611
0 15,432
LA
763,251 0 0 0
149,720 926,936 446,426
0 1,270
367 0
912 0
1,200 0
990,472 16,02*
4M.367 294 0 0
124,95* 3*009 *7044 0 0
150,721 23,675
0 5,131
M 121,000
1,250 0
9,161,493 0
4,860
MA
13,800 0 0 0
1*0,939 2,707,365
346099 0 0 0 0 0 0
900 0
96,472 0
7,909 0 0 0
100,446 *36
3,446 0 0
9,250 500 0 250 250
91,600 0 0
1,700,354 0
1,500
National Wildlife Federation
Page 13
052059
Toxic Release Inventory Data lor Air, 19S7
052060
CHEMICAL NAME
METHYL ETHYL KETONE METHYL HYDRAZINE METHYL IODIDE METHYL ISOBUTYL KETONE METHYL ISOCYANATE METHYL METHACRYLATE METHYL TERT-BUTYL ETHER METHYLENE BROMIDE METHYLEHEBIS(PHENYUSOCYANATE) MICHLER'S KETONE MOLYBDENUM TRIOXIDE N.N-DIM ETHYLANIUNE N-BUTYL ALCOHOL N-DiOCTYL PHTHALATE N-NITROSODIPHENYLAMINE NAPHTHALENE NICKEL NICKEL COMPOUNDS NITRIC ACID NITRILOTRIACETIC ACID NITROBENZENE NITROGEN MUSTARD NITROGLYCERIN O-ANISIOINE O-CRESOL O-TOLUIDINE O-XYLENE OCTACHLORONAPHTHALENE P-ANISIOINE PCRESIDINE P-CRESOL P-NITROSODIPHENYLAM1NE P-PHENYLENE DIAMINE P-XYLENE PARATHION PENTACHLOROPHENOL PERACETIC ACID
GA
2,398,250 0 0
2,551,739 0
3,319 0 0
4,845 9 0 0
504,584 971 0
28,729 1,050 900
221,990 291 0
0 0 9 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 3,054 0
HI
0 0 0 0 0 0 4,200 0 0 0 0 0 80,325 0 0 6,950 0 0 0 0 0
IA
2397,156 0 0
250,033 0
405 0 0
31,750 0
7,900 0
323,400 0 0
1,000 9,900
0 58,910
0 0
0 0 0 0 20,800 0 0 0 0 0 0 8,500 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
ID
1,545 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
290 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
18,250 900 0 0
IL
8,934,477 0 0
1,328339 0
1,473 10,550
0 158,859
0 0 0 1,050,758 3,128 0 118,470 145,480 5,354 79,839 0 0
IN
6,930,997 0 0
1327,938 143,097 0 26,000 0 155,019 0 250 0
1,049,889 3,124 0
118,400 145,488
21,500 76,939
0 0
KS
1,712,531 0 0
14,952 0
3,087 7,700
0 1300
0 1,000
0 37,847
2,102 0
62,009 250
2,414 4,430
0 0
KV
921,780 0 0
117,280 0
220,851 0 0
291 0
223 0
942,849 250 0
95,014 33*2 12313
84398 0 0
LA
2,954350 0 0
329,522 0
164348 211,104
0 504
0 750
0 233,438
0 0 101,484 3350 790 182303 0 19,058
MA
2391,042 0 0
105,100 0
8,793 0 0
1,790 0 0 0
80,463 14,000
0 1,421 1,000
3380 31355
0 0
00 00 0 8,968 00 0 1,000 00 00 0 279 0 28,898 00 00 0 34,836 00 500 0 0 250
290 0 0 0 0
00000
0
0 1301
162
0
0 250 0 0 0
0 9,198
0 248372
80,146
00000
0 000 0
0 000 0
0 1,000 998 445
0
0 00 0 0
00030
0 0 0 154,835 0
0 250 0 0 0
0 824 250 0 0
500 0 0 188 0
National Wlldlile Federation
Page 14
Toxic Release Inventory Data lor Air, 1967
CHEMICAL NAME
PHENOL PHOSGENE PHOSPHORIC ACID PHOSPHORUS (YELLOW OR WHITE) PHTHALIC ANHYDRIDE PICRIC ACID POLY BROMINATED BIPHENYLS POLYCHLORINATED BIPHENYLS (PCB) PROPANE SULTOHE PROPtONALDEHYDE PRQPOXUR PROPYLENE PROPYLENE OXIOE PROPYLEHEIMINE PYRIDINE QUINOLINE QUINONE QUINTOZEHE SACCHARIN (MANUFACTURING) SAFROLE SEC-BUTYL ALCOHOL SELENIUM SELENIUM COMPOUNDS SILVER SILVER COMPOUNDS SODIUM HYDROXIDE (SOLUTION) SODIUM SULFATE (SOLUTION} STYRENE STYRENE OXIDE SULFURIC ACID TEREPHTHALtC ACID TERT-BUTYL ALCOHOL TETRACHLOROETHYLENE TETRACHLORVINPHOS THALLIUM THALLIUM COMPOUNDS THIOUREA
National Wildlife Federation
GA
4,740 0
45,430 0
2,250 0 0 0 0 0 0
102,550 12,554 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 10,050 250 0 0 1
107,503 547,550 490,713
50 534,046
500 25,500 276,490
0 0 0 0
HI IA
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 34,000 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 250 0 0 0 14,750 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
102,514
1 9,930
0 135
0 0 0 0 0 0 294,190 250 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 250 0 0 0 57,007 250 41,524 0 77,067
0 0 2,745,320 0 0 0 0
ID
0 0 153 250 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 50,000 270,000 24,000 0 206,550 0 0 71,956 0 0 0 0
tL
541,590 0
105,061 0
5,240 0 0 0 0
27,103 0
120,230 06,179
0 0 750 0 0 0 0 1,500 500 0 0 500 43,095 1,779 609,950 0 255,465 250 15,129 2,527,107 0 0 0 4,000
IN
570,505 500
105,132 0
2,040 0 0 0 0
9,303 0
120,990 150.157
0 34,259
250 0 0 0 0
1,000 0 0 0 0
43,095 1,779
72,592 0
255,465 0
4,513 2,506,295
0 0 0 0
KS
449,252 69,360 101,664 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
410,920 100 0 250 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
1,244
250 140,310
0 12,419
0 0 191,510 0 0 0 0
KY
57,633 0
166,560 0
29,996 0 0 0 0
990 0
147,609 67,006 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 33,140 0 500 645 0
117,059 2,031
459,702 0
106,377 0
750 603,304
0 0 0 0
LA
6,036 690
16,527 0
23,700 0 0 0 0
35,090 0
4,209,745 119,025 0 1,304 250 0 0 0 0 307,260 0 0 0 0 239,267 0 674,636 523
1,154,516 0
1,100 425,349
0 0 0 0
MA
12,110 o
10,213 0
1,350 0 0 13 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
600 0 0
040 500 5,727 523 272,923
0 01,690
1,039 0
149,660 0 0 0 0
Page 15
052061
0620&2
CHEMICAL NAME
THORIUM DIOXIDE TITANIUM TETRACHLORIDE TOLUENE TOLUENE-2,6-DIISOCVANATE TOLUENE-2,6-DIISOCYAHATE TOTAL FOR MIXTURES TRICHLORFON TRICHLOROETHYLENE TRIFLURAUN URETHANE VANADIUM (FUME OR OUST) VINYLACETATE VINYL BROMIDE VINYL CHLORIDE VINYUDENE CHLORIDE XYLENE (MIXED ISOMERS) ZINC (FUME OR DUST) ZINC COMPOUNDS ZINE8
TOTALS
Toxic Release inventory Data for Air, 1987
QA
0 7,000 S.4M.S00 31,300 1,521 20,554
0 2,525,425
500 0 0
12,871 0
72,044 0
3,105,042 57,007 ,m 0
HI
0 0 97,000 4,700 250 0 0 0 0 0 0 o'
0 0 0 50,000 0 0 0
IA
0 0 0,107,413 0 0 0,000 0 247,403 250
0
0 30,000
0 250
0 3,089,570
6,497 1,903
0
ID IL IN
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 11,000 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,000 0 352,000 0
0 0 13,099,384 4,237 801 394,395 0 5,917,501 500 0 250 4,934 0 05,502 0,700 7,533,394 2,770 222,703 0
0 500 13,870,304 3,737 381 041,700
0 5,940,007
500 0
250 060
0 0 0 7,520,994 2,776 147,282 0
KS
0 0 2,199,912 750 500 0 1 3,152,073 0 0 1 14,390 0 02 108 1,981,962 2,000 15,404 0
KY
0 0 6,974,130 1,750 2,400 4,744 9,700 494,026 0 0 1,500 90,700 0 90,494 33,200 4,909,458 40,119 40,509 0
LA
0 100 4,804,060 034 534 00,309
0 470,417
0 0 0 217,030 0 299,810 135,000 1,811,133 373,409 3,511 0
MA
0 0 4,000,753 095 126 209,902 0 1,991,987 0 0 0 73,100 0 0 0 544,979 3,512 5,327 0
94,290,297 957,779 38,200,159 4,000,590 103,093,458 103,479,027 24,340,108 43,279,655 134,524,442 27,791,549
National Wildlife Federation
Page 16
CMA 0 5 2 0 6 3
CHEMICAL NAME
1,1,1-TRICHLOflOETHANE 1,1,2,2-TETRACHLOROETHANE 1,1,2-TH ICHLOROETHANE 1,1-DIMETHYL HYORAZINE 1,2,4-TRICHLOftOBEMZENE 1,2,4-TfHMETHYLBENZENE 1,2-BUTYLENE OXIDE 1,2-DIBROMOETHANE 1,2-OICHLOROBENZENE 1,2-DICHLOflOETHANE 1 ,2-DICHLOROETHYLENE 1,2-DICHLOROPROPANE 1,3-BUTADtENE 1,3-DICHLOROBENZENE 1,3-OICHLOROPROPYLENE 1,4-DICHLOROBENZENE 1,4-DIOXANE 2,4,5-TRlCHLOROPHENOL 2,4,6-TRICHLOfiOPHENOL 2,4-0 (ACETIC ACID) 2,4-DIAMINOAHISOLE 2,4-DIAMINOAHISOLE SULFATE 2,4-DIAMINOTOLUENE 2,4-DtCHLOROPHEHOL 2,4-DlMETHYLPHEHOL 2,4-DlNITROPHEMOL 2,4-DINITROTOLUEHE 2,6-OINITROTOLUENE 2,6-XYLIDINE 2-CHLOBOACETOPHE NONE 2-ETHOXYETHANOL 2-METHOXYETHANOL 2-NITROPHENOL 2-NITROPR OPANE 2-PHENYLPHENOL 3,3-DICHLOROBENZIOINE 4,4'-DIAMINODIPHENYL ETHER
National Wildlife Federation
Toxic Release Inventory Data lor Air, 1987
MO
1,460,335 0
21,000 0 0
1,250 0 0 0
29,427 0 0 0 0 0 0
250 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
ME
1,342,434 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Ml
4,939,906 250
199,992 0 0
3.900 49,904
0 0 239,990 0 0 93,472 1,000 900 0 33,915 0 0 750 9 0 0 1,571 0 0 6 0
MN
2,279,479 30,016 29,000 0 0
116,293 72 14 0
6,132 0 0 0 0 0 0 19 0 0
54 0 0 0 9 0 0 0 0
MO
2,671,100 0 0 0 0
4,909 0 0
250 114,700
0 0 0 0 0 900 19 0 0 2,093 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
0 11,199
0 6,149
0 0 0 0
0 92,000 130,000
0 0 0 0 0
250 294,379
9,060 0 0
1,000 3 0
0 920,099
329 0 0 0 0 0
0 54,614 12,290
0 0 0 0 210
MS
150,000 0 0 0 0
96,650 0
900 97 900 0
250 2,720
0 0 0 14,680 0 0 0 6 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
0 2 250 0 0 0 0 0
MT
0 0 0 0 0 75,990 0 0 0 0 0 0 920 0 0 0 0 0 0 900 0 0 9 0 0 0 0 0
NC
4,384,073 0 0 0
191,199 1,000 0 0 0
17,331 0 0
9,643 0 0 0
29,502 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
900 0 0
00 00 0 200 00 00 00 00 00
. NO
59,145 0 0 0 0
10,100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
NE
901,909 0
62 0 0
250 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
00 0 3,255 47 0 00 00 00 00 00
Page 17
Toxic Release Inventory Data (or Ah, 1987
CMA 0 5 2 0 6 4
CHEMICAL NAME
4,4,-ISOPROPYLIDENEDIPHENOL 4,4'-METHYENEDIANILINE 4,4'-METHYLENEBIS(2-CHLORO ANILINE) 4,4 '-METHYLENEBIS(N.N-DIMETHYL) 4,6-DIHITRO-O-CRESOL 4-AMINOAZOBENZENE 4-AMINOBIPHENYL 4-NITBOPHENOL S-NITRO-O-ANISHMNE ACETALDEHYDE ACETAMIDE ACETONE ACETONITRILE ACROLEIN ACRYLAMIDE ACRYLIC ACID ACRYLONITRILE ALLYL CHLORIDE ALPHA-NAPHTHYLAMME ALUMINUM (FUME OR DUST) ALUMINUM OXIDE AMMONIA AMMONIUM NITRATE (SOLUTION) AMMONIUM SULFATE (SOLUTION) ANILINE ANTHRACENE ANTIMONY ANTIMONY COMPOUNDS ARSENIC ARSENIC COMPOUNDS ASBESTOS (FRIABLE) BARIUM BARIUM COMPOUNDS BENZAL CHLORIDE BENZENE BENZIDINE BENZOIC TRICHLORIDE
MD
7,M2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
381,805 2,887 0 0 254 0 0 0 750
1,748,578 3,590,493
0 0 0 500 7,079 500 608 250 0 500 7,105 0 195,000 0 0
ME Ml
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 250 0 810,953 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4,950 189,407 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
500 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
11,023,686 37,993 0 750 4,548 43,489 2/134 0
193,841 1,573,670 1,183,908
500 1 0
4,350 500 750
2,117 250
1,251 13,881
8,247 0
748,917 9,300 0
MN
0 334
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,375,920 0 0 0 92 0 0 0 0 707,168 309,294 0 0 0 120 250 27 128 250 0 19,840 0 0 98,653 0 0
MO
0 103,215
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 37/100 0 2,023,935 18 0 650 8 500 0 0 3,250 364,974 1,652,269 994,929 500 0 735 250 269 0 540 0 250 16,985 0 5,911 0 0
MS
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3,550 0 0 0 500 86,282 0 0 0 2,882,610 58,500 0 0 84,800 250 0 0 0 500 0 0 31 0 231,432 0 0
MT
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2,949,660 58^50 10,000 0 0 0 0 2,900
0 51,000
250 0 0 0
69,340 0 0
NC
0 13,570
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 993,880 0 4,324,671 200 0 500 7,086 9,823 0 500 224,342 1,916,274 7,133,471 1,750 3,592 3.740 1/104 28 500 1,002 1,002 928 261 11,302 0 190,182 0 0
NO
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3,200 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 160,000 60,500 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 20,500 0 0
NE
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 382,571 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3,020 3,814,296 3M.000 116,700 0 0 0 30,900 0 2,680 250 250 250 0 250 0 0
National Wildlife Federation
Page IB
Toxic Release Inventory Dala for Ak, 1987
CHEMICAL NAME
BENZOYL CHLORIDE BENZOYL PEROXIDE BENZYL CHLORIDE BERYLLIUM BERYLLIUM COMPOUNDS BIPHENYL BIS(2-CHLOROETHYL) ETHER BIS(2-ETHYLHEXYL) ADIPATE BISfCHLOROMETHYL) ETHER BROMOMETHAHE BUTYL ACRYLATE BUTYL BENZYL PKTHALATE BUTYRALDEHYDE C.L ACID BLUE 9, DIAMMONIUM SALT C.I. ACID BLUE ft, OISODHJM SALT C.L BASIC GREEN 4 C.I. SOLVENT YELLOW 14 C.I. SOLVENT YELLOW 3 CADMIUM CAOMIUM COMPOUNDS CALCIUM CYANAMIDE CAPTAN CARBARYL CARBON DISULFIDE CARBON TETRACHLORIDE CARBONYL SULFIDE CATECHOL CHIORAMBEN CHLOHDANE CHLORINE CHLORINE DIOXIDE CHLOROACETICACID CHLOROBENZENE CHLOROBENZILATE CHLOROETHANE CHLOROFORM CHLOROMETHANE
National Wildlife Federation
MD
0 0 0
ft
0 500
0 414
0 0 27,29ft 0 0 0 0 0
ft
a 500
0 0 250 250 0 1,954 0 491 0 0 1,109,174 650,250 0 0 0 0 680,000 0
ME
0 0 0 0 0 15,920 0 0 0 0
ft
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 a 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2,293,323 1.513,954 0 0 0 0 940,160 0
Ml
0 0 4,950 0 0 1,000 0 250 0 14,200 1,412 16,301 130,750 0 0 0 0 0 250 0 0 0 0 1,950 157,666 0 0 0 0 3,920,949 166,000 0 119,213 0 154,550 446,394 433.192
MN
ft
0 0 0 0 1,090 0 0
ft a
0 0 0 0 0 0
ft
0 0
ft
0 0 7,100 0 0 0 0 0 171,771 19,250 0 0 0 0 194,700 0
MO
0 0 250 0 250 0 3,435 0 0 11,600 11,500 2,355 0 0 1,000 0 0 0 970 1,040 0 90 750 1,475 63 0 0 0 0 93,492 0 3,000 5,561 0 1,070,000 177,600 533,633
MS
330 0
ft
0 0 1,250 0 0 0 21,300 500 0 0 0
ft
a 4 0
ft
0 9 500 500
0 1,000
9,000,000 0 0
500 20,319 33,964
0 0
0
0 204,896
0
MT
0 0 0 0 0 500 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
ft
0 0 0 10,000 0 0 0 0 750 0 0 0 0 319 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
NC
0 1,750
755 0 0
419,750 0 0 0 29
7,294 9,071 2,900
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 421,907 352,736 4 1,004 0 0 3,538,122 0
ND
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 500 0 0 0 0 15,900 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
HE
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 109 0 0 0 0 0
ft
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 500 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 23,776 0 0 0
ft
0 0 0
Page 19
CMA. 0 5 2 0 6 5
Toxic Release Inventory Data for Air, 1967
CMA 0 5 2 0 6 6
CHEMICAL NAME
CHLOHOMETHYL METHYL ETHER CHLOROPHEHOLS CHLOROPREHE CHLOROTHALONIL CHROMIUM CHROMIUM COMPOUNDS COBALT COBALT COMPOUNDS COPPER COPPER COMPOUNDS CRESOL (MIXED ISOMERS) CUMENE CUMENE HYDROPEROXIDE CUPFERRON CYANIDE COMPOUNDS CYCLOHEXANE DECABROMODIPHEHYL OXIDE OI-(2-ETHYLHEXYL) PHTHALATE DIAMINOTOLUENE (MIXED ISOMERS) OIBENZOFURAN DIBUTYL PHTHALATE OICHLOROBENZENE (MIXED ISOMERS) DICHLOROBROMOMETHANE DICHLOROMETHANE DICHLORVOS DICOFOL DIETHANOLAMINE DIETHYL PHTHALATE DIETHYL SULFATE DIMETHYL PHTHALATE OIMETHYL SULFATE EPICHLOROHYDRIN ETHYL ACRYLATE ETHYL CHLOROFORMATE ETHYLBENZENE ETHYLENE ETHYLENE GLYCOL
National Wildlife Federation
MD
0 0 0 1,792 61,109 63,269 0 1,962 33,614 10,600 0 600 0 0 30,166 3/197 0 440 0 250 20,690 0 0 403,002 0 0 0 0 0 116,230 0 0 1,002 0 19,240 0 110,620
ME
0 0 0 0 24 662 0 0 900 800 0 0 0 0 750 0 0 0 0 0 0 51,742 0 177,900 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 33,597 0 0
Ml
250 0 0 0
14,126 4,672 2,957
250 665,437
3,035 1 300 190 0
2,770 30,742
1/100 22,499
1,000 3,700 3,902
0 0 9,731,042 0 0 32,279 854 0 4 0 7,600 573 0 369,609 79,627 67,898
MN
0 0 Oi 0 7,437 2/176 76 630 Oil 1/110 0 93 0 0 4,000 26,474 0 7,350 0 0 1,800 0 0 1,931,917 0 6 0 0 0 661,737 0 0 2,600 6 236,561 28,740 6,361
MO
0 0 0 0 4,993 4,601 762 500 27,773 16,905 6,958 1,990 0 690 7,900 10,366 0 3,130 0 796 0 3 0 1,920,311 0 0 500 38,750 0 15,230 97 603 19 0 23,009 0 27,336
MS
0 0 0 0 0 254 230 0 250 300 0,160 31,650 0 0 250 131,740 0 327,505 0 750 0 0 0 57,400 0 0 1,400 0 0 0 0 21,792 500 0 21,530 74,600 0
MT
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 21,900 0 30,650 0 0 0 40,254 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3,100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 48,940 95,760 0
NC
0 500
0 0 4,926 98,251 1,880 500 103,276 3,251 195,157 0 0 0 0 97,554 1 278,980 0 547 10,050 0 0 6,937,679 0 0 773 26 0 134,760 0 376 5,396 0 43,416 0 1,759,873
ND
0 0 0 0 0 250 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3,600 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 600 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4,500 2,200 880
NE
0 0 0 0 500 10 0 0 3,009 1,500 0 19,711 0 0 8 0 0 611 0 0 0 0 0 1,705,269 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,630
Page 20
Toxic Release Inventory Data for Air, 198/
CHEMICAL NAME
ETHVLENE OXIDE ETHYLENE THIOUREA ETHYLEHEIMINE FLUOMETURON FORMALDEHYDE FREON 113 GLYCOL ETHERS HEPTACHLOR HEXACHLOHO-1,3-BUTAOtENE HEXACHLOROBENZENE HEXACHLOROCYCLOPENTADIENE HEXACHLOROETHANE HEXACHLOROHAPHTHALEHE HYDRAZINE HYDRAZINE SULFATE HYDROCHLORIC ACID HYDROGEN CYANIDE HYOROGEN FLUORIOE HYDROQUINONE Invalid no. should be 117317 ISOBUTYRALDEHYDE ISOPROPYL ALCOHOL (MANUFACTURING) LEAD LEAD COMPOUNDS LINDANE M-CAESOL M-XYLENE MALEIC ANHYDRIDE MANEB MANGANESE MANGANESE COMPOUNDS MELAMINE MERCURY MERCURY COMPOUNDS METHANOL METHOXYCHLOR METHYL ACRYLATE
MO ME
5,390 0 0 0
3,775 152,816 153,401
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,521,007 0 412,250 0 0 0 101,457 540 14,042
0 0 2,550 437 250 0,702 100,004 0 0 0 475,043 0 0
0 0 0 0 100,007 144,150 450,000 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 103,550 0 500 0 0 0 94,700
0 0 0 0 0 500 0 0 5,000 1,650 1,051 0 1,025,225 0 2,700
Ml 03,825
0 0 0 511,511 1,343,325 5,240,730
1,523,210 0
15,344 500 0 0
342,007 17,003 22,450 0 0 8,200 750 0 10,542 54,045 4,250 0 0
4,643,513 0
500
MN
0 0 0 0 075,551 2,525,305 407,010 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 142,700 19 00,700 0 0 0 02,430 12,445 2,744 0 0 0 000 0 1,530 0 0 7 0 2,274,901 0 4,700
MO
50,350 0 0
1,011 157,804 928,407 2,025,041
0 100
0 0 1,000 0 042 0 100,405 0 21,557 0 0 0 315,504 355,270 92,532 0 0 500 3,340 0 53,204 1,200 500 44 250 2,820,017 0 0
MS
250 0 0 0
77,200 35,000 150,171
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 270,000 0 357,055 0 0 0 250 100 3,053 0 0 257,000 05 0 21 22,150 0 0 0 08,422 0 500
MT NC
0 0 0 0 70,700 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,000 0 405,420 0 0 0 0 103 00,501 0 0 1,500 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 58,250 0 0
35,882 0 0 0
520,233 1,403,007
000,415 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
1,115,087 0
100,844 0 0 0
1,542,425 4,821 12,250 0 250
23,317 0 0
1,251 0,507 1,250 114,249
0 12,460,807
0 2,406
NO
0 0 0 0 500 0 14,000 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,000 0 3,700 0 0 0 253,770 0 20 01 0 0 0 17 0 0 0 0 0 22,506 0 0
NE
126,000 0 0 0
14,127 855,586
77,500 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
0,040 0 0 0 0 0
141,270 538
35,300 0 0 0 0 0
1,045 2,050
0 0 0 250,541 0 0
National Wildlila Federation
Page 21
Toxic flelease Inventory Data lor Air, 1987
CMA 052068
CHEMICAL NAME
METHVL ETHYL KETONE METHYL HYDRAZINE METHYL IODIDE METHYL ISOBUTYL KETONE METHYL ISOCYANATE METHYLMETHACRYLATE METHYL TERT-8UTYL ETHER METHYLENE BROMIDE METHYLENEBISfPHENYUSOCYANATE) MICHLER'S KETONE MOLYBDENUM TRIOXIDE N.N-DIMETHYLANHJNE N-BUTYL ALCOHOL NDIOCTYL PHTHALATE N-NITROSOOIPHENYLAMINE NAPHTHALENE NICKEL NICKEL COMPOUNDS NITRIC ACID NITRILOTRIACETIC ACID NITROBENZENE NITROGEN MUSTARD NITROGLYCERIN O-ANISIDINE O-CRESOL O-TOLUIDINE O-XYLENE OCTACHLORONAPHTHALEHE P-ANISIDINE P-CRESIDINE P-CRESOL P-NITROSODIPHE NYLAMINE P-PHENYLENEDIAMINE P-XYLENE PARATHION PENTACHLOROPHENOL PERACETIC ACID
MO
1,805,779 0 0
214,935 0
MB 0
231 300 o
3,034 0
179,410 0 0
59,900 1,430
23,1*4 17,414
0 0
0 0 0 0 1,930 0 0 0 0 0 0 2,750 0 0 0
ME Ml
22,930 0 0 0 0
198,250 0 0
290
300 0
73,383 0 0 0
230 903 13,933
0 0
12,419,314 0 0
1,373,963 0
119,994 49,309 13,731
9,991 0
20,000 0
2,372,906 14,300 0 46,379 10,991 7,900 33,121 300 0
MN
1,624,299 0 0
293,091 0
172 0 0
290 0 0
290 373,034
0 0 17,910 19,470 230 29,992 0 0
MO
3,031,991 0 0
444,576 0
3,164 5,200
0 431,004
400 0
12,230
1,934,673 0 0
9,452 3,921 6,140 2.SM.232
0 1,200
MS
4,329,241 0 0
604,339 0
300 900
0 0 0 900 0 39,900 .0 0 29,794 230 0 4,000 0 37,800
00 00 00 00 0 2,400 00 00 00 00 00 00 0 2,330 00 00 00
0 790
0
000
0 0 9,949
0 0 1,000
0 11,700 140,790
000
000
000
000
000
000
0 0 247,700
0 0 900
123 308 730
14 0 0
MT NC
0 0 0 7,300 0 0 0 0 0 0 290 0 9,600 Oj 0 24,864 0 134 0 0 0
9,312,564 0 0
293,347 0
4,900 1,330
0 1,000
0 0 0 1,794,139 1,875 0 113,992 2,997 2,011 20,499 0 2,550
00 0 2,531 00 0 500 300 993,393 00 00 00 0 900 00 00 300 1,502,300 00 300 1 00
ND
346,214 0 0 0 0 0 0
13,200 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
500 0 0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
NE
329,307 0 0
212,789 0 0 0 0
1,000 0 0 0
10,439 0 0
100,790 503 0
20,383 0 0
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
National Wildlife Federation
Page 22
Tonic Releate Inventory Data lor Air, 1987
CHEMICAL NAME
PHENOL PHOSGENE PHOSPHORIC ACIO PHOSPHORUS (YELLOW OR WHITE) PHTHAUC ANHYDRIDE PICRIC ACID POLY BROMIHATEO BIPHENYLS POLYCHLORINATED BIPHENYLS (PCBe) PROPANE SULTONE PROPIOHALOEHYOE PROPOXUR PROPYLENE PROPYLENE OXIDE PROPYLENE IMINE PYRIDINE QUINOLINE QIHNONE QUINTOZENE SACCHARIN (MANUFACTURING) SAFROLE SEC-BUTYL ALCOHOL SELENIUM SELENIUM COMPOIINOS SILVER SILVER COMPOUNDS SODIUM HYDROXIDE (SOLUTION) SODIUM SULFATE (SOLUTION) STYRENE STYRENE OXIDE SULFURIC ACID TEREPHTHAUC ACID TERT-BUTYL ALCOHOL TETRACHLOROETHyLENE TETRACHLORVINPHOS THALLIUM THALLIUM COMPOUNDS THIOUREA
MD
7,329 0
1,343 0
9,627 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
1,700 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
7,127 500 0 0 0
32,949 524
212,904 0
301,940 0 0
66,492 0 0 0 0
ME
3,667 0
2,900 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
290 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
10 0 0 0 0 17,900 1,000 92,050 0 267,999 0 0 96,970 0 0 0 0
Ml
233,693 900
90,969 3,400 3,606 0 0 290 0 9 0
76,930 304,902
0 13,250
1,970 0 0 0 0
14,621 0 0 0 0
990,024 279
1,023,709 0
999,432 0
99,003 614,909
0 0 0 0
MN
219,662 0
1,507 0
7,530 0 0 0 0 9 0
160,700 14 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 21 22 0 0 0
17,136 26,000 1,167,792
0 229,613
0 0 186,462 0 0 0 0
MO
29,913 0
9,262 0
2,507 0 0 9 0 0
47 600 11,449
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 13 290 0 0 900 29,647 200 66,263 0 181,514 0 16 229,222 0 0 250 0
MS
2,990 0
500 0 0
900 0 0 0 0 0
201,000 279 0 0 290 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 900 290
27,050 0
17,310 0 0 7 0 0 0 0
MT
2,390 0 0
3,950 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
174,400 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
940 900 250 4,990
0 17,310
0 0 0 0 0 0 0
HC
160,992 0
7,600 290 639 290 0 0 0 0 0 1
4,560 0
121,700 0 0 0 0 0
11,173 250 0 0 250
64,264 113,430 1,439,394
0 496,121 132,630
0 694,260
0 0 0 0
NO
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4,400 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6,200 0 1,100 0 0 32,000 0 0 0 0
NE
0 0 992 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 500 8,424 0 49,800 0 10,437 0 0 162,250 0 0 0 0
National Wildlife Federation
Page 23
CMA 0 5 2 0 6 9
052070
CHEMICAL NAME THORIUM DIOXIDE TITANIUM TETRACHLORIDE TOLUENE TOLUENE-2,4-DIISOCYANATE TOLUENE-2,6-DIISOCYANATE TOTAL FOR MIXTURES TRICHLORFON TRICHLOROETHYLENE TRIFLURAUN URETHANE VANADIUM (FUME OR DUST) VINYL ACETATE VINYL BROMIOE VINYL CHLORIDE VINYLIDENE CHLORIDE XYLENE (MIXEO ISOMERS) ZINC (FUME OR DUST) ZINC COMPOUNDS ZINEB
TOTALS
Tonic fleleaae Inventory Data lor Air, 1967
MD
0 750 000,678 1,600 1,500
40 0
201,735 0 0
500 14,200
0 0 0 026,672 6,074 24,430 0
ME Ml
0 0 296,424 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 201,132 O 750 0
0 250 15,744,734 1,750 1,006 144,703
0 1,030,717
0 0 0 40,606 0 2403 16,530 16,023,360 275,135 367,170 0
MN
O 0 5,153,602 370 500 3,750 0 662,907 0 0 140 0 0 0 0 3,193402 527 505 0
MO
0 0 4,710,657 2,502 1,500 44,470 17 1,716,050 00 0 0 64 6 700 0 7,340,100 07,111 22,655 0
MS
0 6,000 236,500
469 122 70,101
0 6,024
0 0 0 0 0 120,001 0 332,014 0 1,160 0
MT NC
0 0 237,500 0 0 0 0 7,324 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 324,050 0 55,050 0
0 0 22,392,615 36,330 1,642 226,260 0 320,096 0 0 250 56,012 0 0 0 2,340,369 22,468 .74,919 0
NO
0 0 63,000 0 0 0 0 0 0 6 o'
0 0 0 0 200,616 0 0 0
NE
0 0 2423,641 0 250 0 0 255478 0 0 0 6 0 0 0 1473,194 750 64,452 0
10,655,060 11,624,500 106,236,445 29,031,436 43,151,136 16,666,013 5,032,796 92,328,267 1433,903 13,698,725
Hatlonal Wildlife Federation
CMA 0 5 2 0 7 1
CHEMICAL NAME
1,1,1-TRICHLOROETHANE 1,1 ,2,2-TETRACHLOflOETHANE 1,1,2-TRICHLOROETHANE 1,1-OlMETHYL HYDRAZINE 1 ,2,4-TRICHLOflOBEHZENE 1,2,4-TRIMETHYLBEKZENE U-BUTYLENE OXIOE 1,2-DIBROMOETHANE 1,2-OJCHLOROBENZENE 1,2-OICHLOflOETHAHE 1,2-OICHLOAOETHYLENE 1,2-DICHLOROPROPAHE 1,3-BUTADIENE 1,3-DICHLOROBENZENE 1,3-DICHLOROPROPYLEHE 1,4-DICHLOHOBEMZENE 1,4-DIOXANE 2,4,5-TfUCHLOROPHENOL 2,4,6-TRICHLOROPHENOL 2,4-D (ACETIC ACID) 2,4DIAMINOANISOLE 2,4-DIAMIMOAHISOLE SULFATE 2,4-DIAMIHOTOLUENE 2,4-DICHLOROPHENOL 2,4-DIMETHYLPHEMOL 2,4-DIHITROPHEHOL 2,4-DUUTHOTOLUENE 2,6-DINITROTOUJENE 2,6-XYllDtNE 2-CHLORQACETOPHENONE 2-ETHOXYETHANOL 2-METHOXYETHANOL 2-NITROPHENOL 2-NITROPROPANE 2-PHENYLPHENOL 3,3-DICHLOROBENZHMNE 4,4' DIAMINOOIPHENYL ETHER
National Wildlife Federation
Tonic Helene Inventory Data (or Air, 1957
NH
1,103,S31 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
11,750 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
NJ
1,131,132 0
1,000 0
1,000 31,334
0 5,090
101*50 99,052
0 17,374
120 32,400
0 250 250
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 500 0 279 0
0 0 353,900 0 0 0 0 0
0 750 5,552
0 1,000
0 0 100
NM
370,000 0 0 0 0
11,000 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
NV NY OH
0 7,123,409 9,252,405
000
0 113,703
1,244
000
0 457 943,451
0 250 115,472
000
0 500 13,250
0 40,154
1,750
0 120,155
24,350
00 0
0 355,000
0
0 250 542,742
00 0
000
0 0 7,500
0 09,103 10,790
000
000
0 0 439
000
0 0 500
000
000
000
0 93
0
000
000
000 0 100,500 265,293 0 359,504 1,120,620 000 0 0 17,951 000 0 2 502 000
OK
443,540 0
43,050 0 0
19,254 0 0 0
250 0 0
22 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
0 15,735 3,350
0 0 0 0 0
OR
455,995 0 0 0
9,654 0 0
5,940 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 j 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
PA
7,001,575 500 0 0 0
45,245 0
500 30,000 235,502
0 22,953 115,004
0 0 30,535 500 0 0 250 0 0 0 0 0 12,157 0 0
0 5,736
0 0 0 0 0 0
0 19,245 1,394,914
0 0 0 500 0
PR
467,655 0 0 0 0
750 0 0 0
46,310 0 0 0 0 0 0
1,500 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
0 0 17,000 0 0 0 0 0
Page 25
4 Toxic Release Inventory Data for Ale, <987
CMA 0 5 2 0 7 2
CHEMICAL NAME
4,4'-1SOPR OPTLIDENEOIPHENOL 4,4 '-M ETHYENEOIANILINE 4,4'-METHYLENEBIS(2-CHLORO ANILINE) 4,4*-METHYLENEBIS(N,N-DIMETHYL) 4,6-DINITRO-O-CRESOL 4-AMINOAZOBENZENE 4-AMIHOBIPHENYL 4-NITROPHENOL S-HITRO-O-ANISIDINE ACETALDEHYDE ACETAMIDE ACETONE ACETONITRILE ACROLEIN ACRYLAMIDE ACRYLIC ACID ACRYLONITRILE AUYL CHLORIDE ALPHA-NAPHTHYLAMINE ALUMINUM (FUME OR DUST) ALUMINUM OXIDE AMMONIA AMMONIUM NITRATE (SOLUTION) AMMONIUM SULFATE (SOLUTION) ANILINE ANTHRACENE ANTIMONY ANTIMONY COMPOUNDS ARSENIC ARSENIC COMPOUNDS ASBESTOS (FRIABLE) BARIUM BARIUM COMPOUNDS BENZAL CHLORIDE BENZENE BENZIDINE BENZOIC TRICHLORIDE
NH NJ
0 0 0 0 '0 0 0 0 0 0 0 392,597 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3,000 4,850 172,849
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 290 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
7,767 320 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
1,250 1,742 6,183,122 29,490
0 387 8,803 10,173 2,210 390 49,994 285,434 770,949
0 900 17,982 879 1,250 1,998
0 250 1,000 1,690 3,792 900 239,009
0 250
NM
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 00,408 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,440 290 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 19,499 0 0
NV
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 9 239,050 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2,600 75,200
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 6,921 0 1,290 0 0
NY OH
89 30,000
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,400 0 1,110,030 177,660 0 0 0 1,490 1,500 0 109,829 1,808,893 1,783^23 0 1,000 17,487 290 290 20 1,560 900 9,909 9,214 19,311 247 1,411,202 0 3,022
179,777 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
3,200 0
10,922,914 218,000 0 0 161,339 493,492 0 0 408,904
2,930,334 10,212,974
43,700 278
200,670 94,644 2,102 19,410 987 290 8,729 3,248 99,150 0
2,231,125 0
500
OK
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2,960,934 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 902 991,290 847,647 1,790 0 0 0 900 0 128 0 0 0 790 0 1,624 0 0
OR
l
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 o!
0 0 2,919,194 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 290 991,230 847,847 1,790 0 0 87,225 290 0 0 93 0 0 900 0 1,444 0 0
PA
790 0 0 0 0 V 0 0 0 0 0
2,753,420 3,400 0 1,704 6,734 3,144 0 0
474,541 901,650 4,474,149 9,180,940
1,491 900
8,175 1,431
914 252 902 7,990 2,894 2,909
0 1,333,314
0 0
PR
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 992,969 119,800 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 290 126,500 0 0 900 0 0 0 0 250 0 0 0 0 697,765 0
o
National Wildlife Federation
Page 26
Tonic Releaae Inventory Data (or Air, 1947
CHEMICAL NAME
BENZOYL CHLORIDE BENZOYL PEROXIDE BENZYL CHLORIDE BERYLLIUM BERYLLIUM COMPOUNDS BIPHENYL BIS(2-CHLOROETHYL) ETHER BIS(2-ETHYLHEXYL) ADIPATE BIS(CHLORQMETHYL) ETHER BflOMOMETHANE BUTYL ACRYLATE BUTYL BENZYL PHTHALATE BUTYRALOEHYDE C.l. ACtO BLUE 9, DIAMMONIUM SALT C.L ACID BLUE , OISODIUM SALT C.L BASIC GREEN 4 C.L SOLVENT YELLOW 14 C.L SOLVENT YELLOW 3 CADMIUM CADMIUM COMPOUNDS CALCIUM CYANAMJDE CAPTAN CARBARYL CARBON DISULFIOE CARBON TETRACHLORIDE CARBONYL SULFIDE CATECHOL CHLORAMBEH CHLORDANE CHLORINE CHLORINE DIOXIDE CHLOROACETIC ACID CHLOROBENZENE CHLOROBENZIIATE CHLOROETHANE CHLOROFORM CHLOROMETHANE
National Wildlife Federation
NH
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 090,300 040,000 0 0 0 0 02,000 0
NJ
0 0 9,200 0 0 730 0 27,271 0 0 12,752 31,072 0 0 0 2 0 0 1,301 480 0 300 0 12,273 027,515 0 0 0 0 117/111 0 4,912 17,700 0 205,313 219,013 87,050
NM HV NY OH
0
0
3,050
20,500
0
0 1,330
230
0 Oj 93 300
0 0 0 1,300
001 0
0 0 230 9,039
0 000
0
0
1,100
43,530
0000
0 0 12/100 0
0
0 170,595
11,024
0 0 32,300 22,371
0000
0000
0 0 41 300
0 000
0000
0000
0 0 500 302
0 0 4,249 2,732
0 00 0
0 0 0 22,200
0000
0 0 1,050,050 720,144
0
0 41,532
0,000
0 0 0 220,000
0 00 0
0000
0000
500 302,333 313,409 430,797
0
0 132,000
13,000
0 0 2,401 0
0 0 10,090 1,930,197
0 000
0 0 0 331,350
0 0 32,492 119,797
0 0 07,000 403,000
OK
0 250 500
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 50 230 0 0 0 370,000 1,200 0 0 0 0 049,410 0 0 0 0 0 720,006 0
OR
O 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,000 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 049,000 010,400 0 0 0 0 638,400 0
PA
300 230 2,027 300 230 33,747 230 2,733
1 40,079 40,453
2,250 0 0 0 0 0 0
2,110 0,431
0 233 230 377,072 123,932
0 0 0 0 511,720 00,300 0 0,171 0 0,000 150,457 101,753
PR
0 0 3,400 0 0 3,400 0 0 0 7,140 130 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,101,100 0 0 0 0 0 1,753 0 0 0 0 0 16,297 0
Page 27
Toxic Releate Inventory Data lor Air, 1987
CMA 0 5 2 0 7 4
CHEMICAL NAME
CHLOROMETHYL METHVL ETHER CHLOROPHENOLS CHLOROPRENE CHLOROTHALONIL CHROMIUM CHROMIUM COMPOUNDS ' COBALT COBALT COMPOUNDS COPPER COPPER COMPOUNDS CRESOL (MIXED ISOMERS) CUMENE CUMENE HYDROPEROXIDE CUPFERRON CYANIDE COMPOUNDS CYCLOHEXANE DECABROMODIPHENYL OXIDE Dt-(2-ETHYLHEXYL) PHTKALATE DIAMINOTOLUENE (MIXED ISOMERS) OIBENZOFURAN OIBUTYL PHTHALATE DICHLOROBENZENE (MIXED ISOMERS) DICHLOROBROMOMETHANE DICHLOROMETHANE DICHLORVOS D1COFOL DIETHANOLAMINE DIETHYL PHTHALATE DIETHYL SULFATE DIMETHYL PHTHALATE DIMETHYL SULFATE EPICHLOROHYDRIN ETHYL ACRYLATE ETHYL CHLOROFORMATE ETHYLBENZENE ETHYLENE ETHYLENE GLYCOL
NH
0 0 0 0 t,000 250 0 0 250 900 58,840 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,000 0 0 0 0 0 2,989,771
0 0 250 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 500 0 958
NJ
771 0
1,000 0
8,935 1,751
606 1,350 28,783 13,212 8,483 170,381 4,500
0 2,323 84,780 1,044
13,321 0
348 6,480
9,295 1,500 1,481,752
0 0 14,802 2,751 750 83 2,800 38,806 18,858 0 53,808 34,212 9t,814
NM
0 0 0 0 250 1,020 0 420 750 225,559 0 0 0 0 488 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6,888 500 750
HV NY
0 0 0 0 0 0 1,000 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6 0 751 0 0 0 0 0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 12,011 27,237 1,136 5 26,002 5,053 11,350 0 500 0 7,817 328,875 0 3,321 0 250 15,188 0 0 13,24t,268 0 0 1,450 20,000 0 4,441 452 1,178 0 0 28,715 47,000 448,302
OH
0 183 1,500
8 58,841 28,834
1,000 2,745 131,810 15,472 17,880 205,763 110,787
0 5,703 1,680,810 3,950 138,350
0 11,877
502 8,810
0 4,133,667
6 0 41,503 3 1,000 12 500 4,767 8,646 196,446 135,530 371,959
OK
0 0 0 0 8,228 750 0 0 4,352 2,002 1,000 23,401 0 0 250 S6A09 0 40,838 0 0 0 0 0 237,584 0 0 1,400 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 14,500 720 1,001
OR
0 0 0 0 8,202
123 0 0
4,352 1 0 0 0 0 0
2,809 0
40,600 0
49 500
0 0 237,584 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,638 500 0 500 0 1,001
PA
46 0 0
250 51,582 43^74
1,695 2,314 30,620 13,328 4,750 1,019,300 2S0
0 117,000 53,008
586 42,776
0 5,007
750 0 0
6,027,211 0 0
20,563 13,912
1,466 500 502 22
34,094 0
108,349 205,844 257,056
PR
0 0 0 0 0 250 0 0 707 250 0 0 0 0 250 508,877 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,590,510 500 0 500 0 0 0 0 1,000 0 500 100,000 250 4,510
national Wildlife Federation
Page 28
Toxic Release inventory Data lor Air, 1087
CHEMICAL NAME
ETHYLENE OXIDE ETHYLENE THIOUREA ETHYLENE(MINE FLUOMETUROH FORMALDEHYDE FREON 113 GLYCOL ETHERS HEPTACHLOR HEXACHLORO-1,3-BUTADIENE HEXACHLORODENZENE HEXACHLOROCYCLOPENTADIENE HEXACHLOROETHANE HEXACHLOROHAPHTHALEHE HYDRAZINE HYDRAZINE SULFATE HYOROCHLORICACID HYDROGEN CYANIDE HYDROGEN FLUORIDE HYDROOUINONE Invalid no. thouId be 117(17 ISOBUTYRALDEHYDE ISOPROPYL ALCOHOL (MANUFACTURING) LEAD LEAD COMPOUNDS LINDANE M-CHESOL M-XYLENE MALEIC ANHYDRIDE MANEB MANGANESE MANGANESE COMPOUNDS MELAMINE MERCURY MERCURY COMPOUNDS METHANOL METHOXYCHLOR METHYL ACRYLATE
NH NJ
53.000
ft
0 0 (.434 (OS,527 45,070 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3,400 2,100 0 0 0 0 1,007,153 750 20 0 0 250 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 300,041 0 0
437,200 0 0 0
230*275 001,055 045,374
0 0 0 0 500 0 2,075 0 440,207 1,500 10,(76 500 0 500 301,050 15,733 10,200 0 0 0 5,320 500 1,274 1,402 04 500 32 2,146,500 0 7,120
NM
10,073 0 0 0
10,5001 001,031
11*050 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
1,042 0
252 0 0 0
4,000 0
400 0 0
31,000 0 0
250 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
NV NY
0| 0 0 0 0 0 5,430 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 54,755 0 1,000 0 0 0 0 100 0 0 0 0 0 0 10,200 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
30247
0 0 0 242,020 3,300242 000217 0 24 0 1250 0 0 250 0 0257,550 0,500 705,040 22,530 0 0 427210 23230 17,504 0 0 74230 052 0 70202 4,435 0 1,347 500 9,207,105 0 3,710
OH
272,500 0 0
400,712 050,541 4,421,440
0 0 0 0 500 0 44 0 4,030,000 155210 701201 420 0 0 1,174,053 05,243 77,570 0 6,173 0 5,124 0 134,050 55,091 9.034 1,047 0 7255,550 0 28,051
OK
0,000 0 0 0
2,424275 305,309 105,120 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 24,174 0 945,300 0 0 0 00244 040 10250 0 0 571 1,000 0 1200 11,000 0 0 0
2,965,559 0 0
OR
0 0 0 0 2,444,775 496209 02,200 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 41,626 0 12,550 0 0 0 30,370 0 4212 0 0 0 250 0 750 0 250 0 0 2,940,899 0 500
PA
104,170 0 0 0
02210 1,004,494
453,071 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
3,334206 2,120
262,500 0 0 0
412,450 40,104 00,550 0 3250 7,070 11,470 250 40,106 19252 1,250 0 0
2,358,309 0
804
PH
107,491 0 0 0
2,700 1,431,112
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 05,721 0 500 0 0 0 20,144 175 270 0 0 270,000 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 009,141 0 0
National Wildlife Federation
Page 29
052075
Toxic Releaee Inventory Data lor Mr, 1987
GMA 0 5 2 0 7 6
CHEMICAL NAME
METHYL ETHYL KETONE METHYL HYDRAZINE METHYL IODIDE METHYL ISOBUTYL KETONE METHYL ISOCYANATE METHYL METHACRYLATE ' METHYL TERT-BUTYL ETHER METHYLENE BROMIDE METHYLENEBIS(PHENYUSOCYANATE) MICHLER'S KETONE MOLYBDENUM TRIOXIDE N.N-DIMETHYLANILINE N-BUTYL ALCOHOL NDKJCTYL PHTHALATE NNITROSOOIPHENYLAMINE NAPHTHALENE NICKEL NICKEL COMPOUNDS NITRIC ACID NITRILOTRIACETIC ACIO NITROBENZENE NITROGEN MUSTARD NITROGLYCERIN O-ANISKHHE O-CRESOL O-TOLUKMNE O-XYLENE OCTACHLORONAPHTHALENE P-ANISIDINE P-CRESIDINE P-CRESOL P-WTROSODIPH EHYLAMINE P-PHENYLENEOIAMINE P-XYLENE PARATHION PENTACHLOHOPHENOL PERACETIC ACIO
National Wildlife Federation
NH
743,647 0 0
85,114 0
5,000 0 0
1,000 0 0 0
25,659 0 0 0
1,500 0
3,931 0 0
HJ
3,114,479 0 0
1,037,839 0
77,991 lOt,574
169 2,310
0 29,752
695 1,081,647
250 0
37,524 3,298 500
411,999 0
2,000
0 30,172 00 0 304 0 1,697 0 1,680 00 00 00 0 1,500 09 0 134 0 2,250 00 00 0 1,000
NM
11,750 0 0 0 0 0
999 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
499 250 1,120 6,050
0 0
0 0 0 0 17,000 0 0 0 0 0 0 13,000 0 0 0
NV
91,791 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
NY OH
3,038,231 0 0
1,813,936 0
689,010 0 0
1,955 0
900 15,768 973,299
500 0
190,353 5,399 3,509
207,954 0
27,010
11,483,984 0
25,951 1,446,205
0 53,095 33,800
0 1,601
0 1,050
500 2,331,689
3,096 0
331,099 18,105 11,823
416,924 0
500
OK
684,506 0 0
522,194 0 0
5,400 0
23,113 0
250 0
372,091 0 0
3,650 750
1,700 8,885
0 0
OR
683,922 0 0
522,194 0
1,223 0 0
252 0 0 0
94,412 0 0
69,416 500 0
6,535 0 0
PA
4,691,539 0 0
1,287,019 0
357,492 42,534 0 34,990 0 5,775 250
360,906 10 0
256,719 39,543 15,620
403,974 250 0
PR
271,916 0 0
39,340 0
11,500 97,762
0 0 0 0 0 51,960 0 0 0 0 500 3,622 0 0
00 0
000
0 34,347
583
0 17,030
0
0 7,850
250
000
00 0 o' 0 2,000
0 500
0
000
0 0 117,043
0 17,500
0
000
75 0 0
0 6,900
0
0000 0000 00 0 0 0000 0 0 38,094 200,057 00 00 00 0 0 0000 0 0 2,050 0 0000 0000 0 0 4,745 290,000 0000 515 9,330 0 0 0 000
Page XI
Toxic Rotaato Inventory Data lor Ah, 1M7
CHEMICAL NAME
PHENOL PHOSGENE PHOSPHORIC AC PHOSPHORUS (YELLOW OR WHITE) PHTHAUC ANHYDRIDE PICRIC ACID POLY BROMINATED BIPHENYLS POLYCHLORINATED BIPHENYLS (PCBa) PROPANE SULTONE PROPIOHALOEHVDE PROPOXUR PROPYLENE PROPYLENE OXIDE PROPYLENE(MINE PYRIDINE QUINOLINE QUINONE QUINTOZENE SACCHARIN (MANUFACTURING) SAFROLE SECBUTYL ALCOHOL SELENIUM SELENIUM COMPOUNDS SILVER SILVER COMPOUNDS SODIUM HYDROXIDE (SOLUTION} SODIUM SULFATE (SOLUTION} STYRENE STYRENE OXIDE SULFURIC ACIO TEREPHTHAUC ACID TERT-BUTYL ALCOHOL TETRACHLOROETHYLENE TETRACHLORVINPHOS THALLIUM THALLIUM COMPOUNDS THIOUREA
NH
7*10 0
750 e
250 0 0 0 0 0 0
,000 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
32,710 760,000
30,303 0
56,150 0 0
115,597 0 0 0 0
Hi
203,620 73
62,644 0
45,465 0 0 0 0 0
306,050 120,004
500 5,100
0 0 0 0 0 63,075 1,000 0 ,505 575 07,071 2,226
124,543 0
430,355 34
66,001 57,164
0 0 0 0
NM
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 A 0 0 0 0,250 0 0 0 6,000 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 523,650 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
HV
0 0 0 A 0 0 A 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 A 2 0 1,A11 0 1,752 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
NY
275,055 2,411
10,065 0
13,556 A 0 A
120
0,472 25,000
0 47,712
250 0 0 A A
15,204 0
250 700 5,160 401,075 ,631 127,307
A 160,300
5,266 4,117 1,402,247
0 0 0 0
OH
05,012 A
143,121 1,646 13,362 A 0 A A A A
3.S5M3S l,626 0 20,424 10,010 0 0 500 0 10,704 500 0 33 A
132,373 12,210
1,723,661 0
574,014 1,000
14,000 2,173,369
0 0 0 0
OK
536,407 0
3,024 A
250 0 0 0 0 0 0
500 3,000
0 0 0 0 0 A 0 0 0 0 0 A 26,573 13 403,605 0 114,623 0 0 224,440 0 0 0 0
OR
406,367 0
3,424 A
250 0 0
250 A 0 0
250 A 0 0
02 0 0 0 A A A 0 0 0
56,023 1,110,013
221,405 0
122,723 0 0
62,440 0 0 0 0
PA
766,101 0
32,773 0
41,654
0 o 0 0 7,600 0 126,360 11,153 0 0 440 0 250 0 0 2,250 0 0 A 0 7,604 170,705 643,226 0 560,733 750 1,000 546,367 0 0 0 0
PR
0 0 2,000 A 0 0 0 0 0 0
250
0 0 500 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 15,417 500 274 0 0,706 0 0 24 0 0 0 0
National Wildlife Federation
Page 31
052077
CMA 0 5 2 0 7 8
I
CHEMICAL NAME
THORIUM DIOXIDE TITANIUM TETRACHLORIDE TOLUENE TOLUENE-2,4-DIISOCYAHATE TOLUENE-2,8-DIISOCYANATE TOTAL FOR MIXTURES TRICHLORFON TRICHLOROETHYLENE TRIFLURAUN URETHANE VANADIUM (FUME OR DUST) VINYLACETATE VINYL BROMIDE VINYL CHLORIDE VMYUDENE CHLORIDE XYLENE (MIXED ISOMERS) ZINC (FUME OR DUST) ZINC COMPOUNDS ZIHEB
TOTALS
Toxic Release Inventory Data lor Air, 1987
NH
0 0 1,897,388 280 293 169,858 0 283,204 0 0 0 290 0 0 0 371,727 290 48 0
NJ
0 1,475 8,883,981 8,784 1,171 374,493
0 280,987
0 374,100
1,490 154,987
0 180,912 24,220 2,182412
38,383 6418 0
NM
0 0 118,853 0 254 0 0 0 0 0 8 0 0 0 8 7,049 0 0 0
NV
0 0 296,439 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 93400 0 0 0
NV OH
0 0 7408462 3,790 1 247,180 0 3,321470 8 0 0 0 109,200 1,860 600 4496408 39,617 123499 0
0 92,940 10489,184
4489 2,399 30,719
0 2,029,423
0 0 790 123,830 0 32,591 2400 11489481 270,931 243,032 0
OK
0 0 1,786,719 0 0 19,470 0 714,407 0 0 0 0 0 66,997 0 202497 6,700 102,828 0
OR
0 900 1,776489 290 290 17,921
0 842498
0 0 290 2,000 0 0 0 208,443 9,200 128492 0
PA
0 0 8469,419 162,442 41,052 130,746 0 2432401 500 9 983 120,329 0 219400 0 3476,036 707,108 930470 0
PR
0 0 2,169,898 49496 0 7460 0 0 0 0 0 1404 0 0 0 191479 0 0 0
13,068,935 38,831,972 2,901,889 1428420 89407,184 122,484,829 20,030,799 19,790,099 71,664,910 12,012,782
National Wildlife Federation
Page 32
q 4A 0 5 2 0 7 9
CHEMICAL NAME
1,1,1 -TRICHLOROETHANE 1,1 ,2,2-TETRACHLOROETHANE 1,1 ,2-TRICHLOROETHANE 1,1-DIMETHYL HYDRAZINE 1,2,4-TRICHLOROBENZENE 1,2,4-TRIMETHYLBEHZENE 1.2 BUTYLEHE OXIDE 1,2-DIBROMOETHANE 1,2-DICHLOflOBENZENE 1 ,2-DICHLOROETHANE 1,2D4CHLOHOETHYLENE 1,2-DICHLOROPROPANE 1,3-BUTADtCHE 1,3-DICHLOROBENZENE 1,3-DICHLOR OPROPYLENE 1,4-DICHLOROBENZENE 1,4-DIOXAHE 2,4,5-THICHLOflOPHENOL 2,4,6-TRICHLOROf>HEHOL 2,4-D (ACETIC ACID) 2,4-DIAMINOAMSOLE 2,4-DlAMINOANISOLE SULFATE 2,4-DIAMINOTOLUENE 2,4-MCHLOROPHENOL 2,4-OIMETHYLPHENOL 2,4-DINITROPHENOL 2,4-DIHITflOTOLUENE 2,6-DtNITROTOLUENE 2,9-XYUDINE 2-CHLOROACETOPHENOHE 2-ETHOXYETHANOL 2-METHOXYETHANOL 2-NITROPHENOL 2-NITROPROPANE 2PHENYLPHENOL 3,3'-OICHLOR OBENZIOINE 4,4' OIAMINODIPHENYL ETHER
National Wildlife Federation
Toxic Release Inventory Delator Mr, 1987
ni
766,990 0
ft
0 10,34ft
0
ft
0 1,000
soo 0 0 0 ft 0 0
soo 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
ft
0
SC
3,7ft,71ft 0
ft
0 1,000
SOO 1,000
0 4,633 7ft,117
0 0 14,000 0 0 0 IS,420 0 0 0 0 0 2,007 0 ft 0 0 0
ft
S3.S44 53,671
0 0 0 0 0
0 329,720 1,972,633
0 0 1,000 0 0
so
*2,404 0 0
ft
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
ft
0 0 0 ft 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ft 0 0
TN
4,072,939 2,420 0 0 0 0 0 0
ft
297,000 0 0
63,904 0 0 0
44,929 0 0 ft 0 0 0
soft ft
301 0 0
TX
5,330,91 ft 5,100
4,ftft4
ft
4,030 323,70ft
7,919 19,01ft 100,377 593,923 13,120 172220 5,902209
0 23,500 10,450
504 ft 0 1 0 0 ft 0
37ft 3,350 17,600 4,360
UT
1,041,1*3
ft
0 0
ft
10,190 0
ft
ft 0 0 0 0 ft ft 0 0
ft
ft 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
VA
2,722,407 0 0 0
4,032 7,000
0 0 0 321 0 0,000 35 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
ft
0 0 0
00 0
0 17,460 117,91ft
0
7,SOO
73,403
00 0
0 6ft 7,397
00 0
00 0
000
0 ft 0 93,750 00 00 00 00 00 00
V)
129,731 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
ft
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
VT
259,631 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
ft
0 0 0 ft 0 0 ft 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
WA
1,977,196 0
30,000 0 0
41,24ft 0 o 0 0 0 0
9,900 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
900 0 0 0
00 0 16,263 00 00 00 00 00 00
Page 33
Tonic Releate Inventory Data lor Air, 1987
052080
CHEMICAL NAME
4,4 '-ISOPR OPVUDENEDIPHENOL 4,4'METHYENEDIANILINE 4,4'-METHYLENEBIS(2-CHLORO ANIUNE) 4,4'-METHYLENEBIS(N,H-01METHYL) 4,6-DINITRO-O-CRESOL 4-AMINOAZOBEHZENE 4AMINO0IPHENYL 4-NITROPHENOL 5-NITflO-O-ANISIDINE ACETALDEHYDE ACETAMIDE ACETONE ACETONITRILE ACROLEIN ACRYLAMIDE ACRYLIC ACID ACRYLONITRILE ALLVL CHLORIDE ALPHA-NAPHTHYLAMINE ALUMINUM (FUME OR DUST) ALUMINUM OXIDE AMMONIA AMMONIUM NITRATE (SOLUTION) AMMONIUM SULFATE (SOLUTION) ANIUNE ANTHRACENE ANTIMONY ANTIMONY COMPOUNDS ARSENIC ARSENIC COMPOUNDS ASBESTOS (FRIABLE) BARIUM BARIUM COMPOUNDS BENZAL CHLORIDE BENZENE BENZIDINE BENZOIC TRICHLORIDE
Rl
500 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
753,091 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
7,704 0 0
750 0 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
SC
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,164,200 0 5,330,496 0 0 256 4,070 337,002 0 0 0,630 312,767 2,655,016 750 3,500 0,473 520 0 1,002 0,173 500 406 4,043 0 0 236,023 0 0
SD TN TX
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 44,100 0 0 0 6 0 0 0 0 16,247 168,661
0 0 0 250 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 750 0 0
0 0 300 0 0 0 0 2 0 840,612 0 40,117,471 250 0 60 1,130 2,366 0 0 64,300 06,356 7,017,425 0 64,000 4,110 600 464 0 653 1,240 11,644
500 4,054 4,143 253,570
0 20,236
12,010 51,644
0 0 1,030 0 0 0 0 1,476,229 0 17,766,047 269,657 12,666 0 503,465 462,650 9,500 0 160,650 14,323,513 12,401,467 9,750 75,220 60,762 5,065 16,266 5,306 52,656 4,094 1,00^
1,220 566,403
0 6,069,306
0 0
UT VA
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 414,633 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 450 1,706,750 53,046 0 0 0 1,500 0 0 0 6,150 0 0 11,750 0 56,361 0 0
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 11,050 0 14,703,036 0 0 0 49,136 637,772 265 0 4,086 1,767,601 1,620,660 0 0 0 1,706 0 1,426 750 1,026 500 1,200 22,291 0 642,102 0 0
National Wlldllta Federation
VI VT WA
000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 0 35,002 1,471,116 000 000 000 000 ol 0 0 000 000 0 500 26,325 6 6,820 10,952,972 0 6200 2,431,590 0 0 250 0 0 65 000 0 0 72 0 160 250 000 000 001 0 0 540 0 00 0 67 66,000 000 0 0 433,195 000 000
Page 34
T$ 0 ^s 0
CHEMICAL NAME
BENZOYL CHLORIDE BENZOYL PEROXIDE BENZYL CHLORIDE BERYLLIUM BERYLLIUM COMPOUNDS BIPHENYL B1S(2-CHLOROETHYl) ETHER BtS(2-ETHYLHEXYL) ADIPATE BIS(CHLOHOMETHYL) ETHER BROMOMETHANE BUTYL ACRYLATE BUTYL BENZYL PHTHALATE BUTYRALOEHYDE C.L ACID BUIE 0, DIAMMONIUM SALT C.L ACID BLUE 9, DISOOIUM SALT C.I. BASIC GREEN 4 C.L SOLVENT YELLOW 14 C.I. SOLVENT YELLOW 3 CADMIUM CADMIUM COMPOUNDS CALCIUM CVANAMIOE CAPTAN CARBARYL CARBON DISULFIDE CARBON TETRACHLORIDE CARBONYL SULFIDE CATECHOL CHLORAMBEN CHLORDAHE CHLORINE CHLORINE DIOXIDE CHLOROACETICACID CHLOROBENZENE CHLOROBENZILATE CHLOROETHAHE CHLOROFORM CHLOROMETHANE
National WlhtiMe Federation
Toxic Rthiu Inventory Data lor Mr, 1087
Rl
350 0 0
1,947 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
1,800 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
sc
4 0 1,000 0 0 217,990 0 00 0 220,000 0,711 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,000 0 0 0 290 290 900 0 1,000 0 0 398,330 140,781 0 112,487 0 2,194 413,760 131,037
SO TN
0 28,322 00 0 11,032 00 01 900 139,017 0 1,742 0 0,046 00 00 0 8,990 00 0 60,180 00 00 00 00 00 00 0 21 00 00 00 22,395,826 0 890,092 0 10000,000 00 00 0 1,230 3,400 1,193029 0 1,140 0 172 0 24,850 00 0 1,000 0 332,993 0 20,530
TX UT VA
4,089 0
4,708 0
33,873 1,000 80 0
30,000 93,004
1,100 1,177,554
0 8 8 0 0 10,420 0 0 433 2,070 2,027,399 932,147 98,167 0 0 0 2,349,017 70,900 250 919,702 0 435,897 854,850 1,159,674
0 9 0 0 0 1,000 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8 0 0 900 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 88,348,950 0 0 0 0
0
0
0
0 0 0 0 0 08,789 0 2,694 0 0 900 500 800 0 0 0 0 0 284 0 0 0 1,900 49,461,000 2,000 0 270,780 0 0 2,833,099 249,312 17,650 12,754
0 223,920
3,093,250 507,200
VI VT WA
000 00 0 000 000 060 0 0 6,861 000 00 0 00 0 000 000 00 0 00 0 00 0 000 000 000 00 0 004 0 0 250 00 0 00 0 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 0 270 098,782 0 0 958,086 000 00 0 000 000 0 0 1,688,569 00 0
Page 35
Toxic Release Inventory Data lor Air, 1987
052082
CHEMICAL NAME
CHLOROMETHYL METHYL ETHER CHLOROPHENOLS CHLOROP REHE CHLOROTHALONIL CHROMIUM CHROMIUM COMPOUNDS' COBALT COBALT COMPOUNDS COPPER COPPER COMPOUNDS CRESOL (MIXED ISOMERS) CUMENE CUMENE HYDROPEROXIDE CUPFERRON CYANIDE COMPOUNDS CYCLOHEXANE DECABROMODIPHENYL OXIDE Dl-(2-ETHYLHEXYL) PHTHALATE DIAMINOTOLUEHE (MIXED ISOMERS) DIBENZOFURAN DIBUTYL PHTHALATE DICHLOROBENZEHE (MIXED ISOMERS) DICHLOROBROMOMETHANE DICHLOROMETHANE DICHLORVOS DICOFOL DIETHANOLAMINE DIETHYL PHTHALATE DIETHYL SULFATE DIMETHYL PHTHALATE DIMETHYL SULFATE EPICHLOROHYORIN ETHYL ACRYLATE ETHYL CHLOROFORMATE ETHYLBENZENE ETHYLENE ETHYLENE GLYCOL
National Wildlife Federation
HI
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,253 41,500 0 0 0 0 381 12,390 0 740 0 0 0 0 0 157,323 0 O 1,000 0 0 0 0 500 0 0 0 0 2,499
SC
0 0 0 0 27,008 3,380 22 750 58,982 17,558 900 0 0 0 1,000 108,800 750 870 1,420 530 750 250 0 1,042,418 0 0 1,252 500 0 32,650 250 0 25,825 0 43,500 358,584 1,177,707
SD
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 500 0 0 0 40,150 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
TN TX
00
0 250
0 245,544
0 18,500
3,028
27,801
2,022 185,930
0 796
9,448
23,847
15,329 188,451
2,828
19,219
18,173 0
14,449 808,979
297 13,550
0 3,280
140 20,200
48,747 4,685,128
00
53,550
0,580
0 75,778
500 11,201
7,757
1,084
0 1,750
0 8,100
2,531,307 3,027,07*
0 241
00
1,270 105,671
13,043
11,139
3 11,322
1,222
1,410
17 0
2,318
98,973
18,273
28,254
0 3,300
32,704 1,671,963
40,800 41,894,368
1,330,548 2,209,787
UT
0 0 0 0 250 14,450 0 0 84,172 0 1,250 500 0 0 0 129,278 0 1,750 0 1,000 0 0 0 940,000 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 7,500 5,150 750
VA
0 0 0 0 2,355 2,384 250 490 00,038 1,539 7,250 19,581 0 0 500 25,400 2,858 172^83 0 2,815 1,000 0 0 3,907,137 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,307 0 500 0 70,573 130,462 674,308
VI VT WA
0 00
0 00
0 00
0 00
0 3,120 4,212
0 500 1,401
0 00
0 00
0 250 285
0 0 250
0 0 500
0 0 250
00 1
0 0 90
0 0 71
0 0 33,885
000
0 250
0
0 00
0 0 913
0 00
0 00
0 00
0 3,700 1,221,218
0 00
0 00
000
000
0 00
0 0 523,129
0 00
000
0 00
0 00
0 0 33,392
0 0 8,200
0 0 871
Page 38
Toxic Rttaait Inventory Data for Mr, IH7
CHEMICAL NAME
ETHYLENE OXIDE ETHYLENE THIOUREA ETHYLENEIMINE FLUOMETURON FORMALDEHYDE FREON *13 GLYCOL ETHERS HEPTACHLOR HEXACHLORO-1,3-BUTADIENE HEXACHLOflOBENZENE HEXACHLOROCYCLOPENTADIEHE HEXACHLOROETHANE HEXACHLORONAPHTHALEHE HYDRAZINE HYDRAZINE SULFATE HYDROCHLORIC ACID HYDROGEN CYANIDE HYOROGEN FLUORIDE HYDROQUINONE Invalid no. should be 117117 ISOBOTYRALDEHYDE ISOPROPYL ALCOHOL (MANUFACTURING) LEAD LEAD COMPOUNDS UHDANE MCRESOL M-XYLENE MALEIC ANHYDRIDE MANEB MANGANESE MANGANESE COMPOUNDS MELAMINE MERCURY MERCURY COMPOUNDS METHANOL METHOKYCHLOR METHYL ACRYLATE
m SC
34,740 0 0 0
1,001 202,054
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0,031 0 707 0 0 0 1,214 1,021 2S0 0 0 0 0 0 0 30,500 0 0 0 172,223 0 0
140,001 0 0 0
041,702 747,110 1,091,323
0 0 0 0 0 0 500 0 1,141,310 02,023 04,002 0 0 73,700 150450 10,779 22,350
0 2,002
530 7407
0 470 132,000 400
0 341 17,254460
0 16,054
SD
0 0 0 0 00,200 200,747 45,000 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 500 0 0 0 0 123,250 0 0
TN
17460 0 0 0
11443 750430 307,012
1,700 0
147 1471
0 0 002 0 203,712 0 430,432 000 0 6,000 2457400 20400 5405 0 0 02,727 5,601 0 2,250 02,375 0 0 1,244 6,130,214 0 1,600
TX
1,545,555 0
ft
0 1,344442 2409402 1,926,492
0 1,050 1,100
0 1460
0 23,176
0 3460,000
223,000 000407
710 0
070,407 017,773 105450
15,003 0 0
641,707 330,227
500 44,310
5,300 0
1,250 0
0,663,553 1
536,789
UT VA
34<0
ft
0 0 0 245,510 0 0 0 0 0 0
ft
0 0 1430,900 40,000 47470 0 0 0 500 20,425 3,000 0 0 2400 0 0 0 250 0 0 0 16,300 0 0
0,060 0 0 0
210,076 034,043 403,507
0 0 0 0 0
ft
0 0 2470,153
ft
4450 0 0
12,450 035,020
12432 2430
9 0 01400 500 0 3405 507 250 0 0 15,443,267 0 21,500
VI
0 0 0 0 0 0 0
o 0 0 0
ft
0 0 0 2,000 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
ft
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,400 0 0
VT
0 0 0 0 1,135 170,000 3,300 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3,131 0 2,700 0 0 0 120,000 127
ft
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 38,247 0 0
WA
0 0 0 0 50,000 344,406 333,123 0
ft
0 0 0 0 0 0
339431 0
1400,790 0 0 0
40,140 0,400 1,357 0 0 0 0 0 4,460 250 499 0 0
4,179,256 0 0
National Wildlife Federation
Page 37
CMA 0 5 2 0 8 3
Toxic Release Inventory Data tor Air, 1987
CMA 0 5 2 0 8 4
CHEMICAL NAME
METHYL ETHYL KETONE METHYL HYDRAZINE METHYL IODIDE METHYL ISOBUTYL KETONE METHYL ISOCYANATE METHYLMETHACRYLATE METHYL TERT-BUTYl ETHER METHYLENE BROMIDE METHYLENEBIS(PHENYUSOCYANATE) MICHLERS KETONE MOLYBDENUM TRIOXIDE N.N-DIMETHYLANIUHE N-BUTYL ALCOHOL H-DIOCTYL PHTHALATE N-NITROSODIPH ENYLAMINE NAPHTHALEHE NICKEL NICKEL COMPOUNOS NITRIC ACID HITRILOTR(ACETIC ACID NITROBENZENE NITROGEN MUSTARD NITROGLYCERIN O-ANISIDINE OCRESOL O-TOLUIDINE O-XYLENE OCTACHLORONAPHTHALENE P-ANISIOINE P-CRESIOINE P-CRESOL P-NITROSOD1PHENYLAMINE P-PHENYLEHEDIAMIHE P-XYLENE PARATHIOH PENTACHLOROPHENOL PERACETIC ACID
National Wildlife Federation
R1
27,2*5 0 0 0 0
250 0 0 0 0 0 0
25,500 0 0
11,000 750
20,000 2,507 0 0
sc
2,595,652 0 0
495,505 0
10,592 0
2,472 500 0 0 0
593,559 500 0
5,000 2,512 1,750 107,730
0 250
00 0 500 500 0 254 0 0 19,500 00 00 0 250 00 00 00 0 045,000 00 0 1,240 00
SO
128,535 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
500 0 0 0 0 0
TN
2,4*3,094 0 0
1,099,151 0
449,242 0
0,903 10,100
0 0 41,310 453,820 0 0 24,150 17,0*9 2,754 109,000 0 0
TX
4,871,44* 0
500 753,29*
0 272,53* 1,421,079
0 105,920
0 35,530
0 4,110,977
0 0 5*0,114 9,370 30,514 113,707 1 41,051
000
0 72 500
0 2,000
255
0 97 2,400
0 3*1,000 S3275
000
000
00 0
0 0 1,110
000
0 0 50
0 754,000 073,39*
000
0 500
0
000
UT
144,031 0 0
*0,703 0 17 0 0
250 0
4,250 0
1*,797 0 0
3,*10 250
1,000 151,250
0 0
VA
7,048,322 0 0
1,412,304 0
10,300 0 0
552 0 0 0
*30,3*7 500 0
23,399 1,250 0
13,059 0 0
34 14,000 00 00 00
500 41,000 00 00 00 00 00 00
500 33,900 00 00 00
VI
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 151/100 0 0 0
VT
95,909 0 0
01,430 0 0 0 0 0 0 ol
0 22,775
0 0 0 5,750 0 4,004 0 0
WA
3,7*0,351 0 0
215,900 0 0 0 0
250 0 0 0
533/177 2,54* 0
25,043 1,777 250
12,150 0 0
00 00 00 00 0 15,000
0d
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 0 2,013 00
PageM
Tonic RilMn Inventory Data lor Air, 1987
CHEMICAL NAME
PHENOL PHOSGENE PHOSPHOfllCACIO PHOSPHORUS (YELLOW OR WHITE) PHTHALIC ANHYDRIDE PICRIC ACID POLY BROMWATEO BIPHENYLS POLYCHLORINATED BIPHENYLS (PCBa) PROPANE SULTONE PROPIONALDEHVDE PROPOXUR PROPYLENE PROPYLENE OXIDE PROPYLE NEIMINE PYRIDINE QUINOUNE OUINONE GUINTOZENE SACCHARIN (MANUFACTURING) SAFROLE SEC-BUTYL ALCOHOL SELENIUM SELENIUM COMPOUNDS SILVER SILVER COMPOUNOS SODIUM HYDROXIDE (SOLUTION) SODIUM SULFATE (SOLUTION) STYRENE STYRENE OXIDE SULFURIC ACIO TEREPHTHAUC ACID TERT'BUTVL ALCOHOL TETRACHLOROETHYLENE TETRACHLORVINPHOS THALLIUM THALLIUM COMPOUNOS THIOUREA
National Wildlife Federation
Rl
0 0 1,810 800 0 0 0 0 0 0 8 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8,480 0 134,987 0 24,083 O 0 184,494 0 0 0 0
SC
182,002 IS
11,887 to
1,270
ft
0 0 0 392 ft 137,230 39,087 0 0 0 ft 0 0 0 21,328 0 0 0 290 184,439 900 481442 900 313,929 188,700 0 743,401 0 0 0 0
SO
0 0 8 0 8 8
ft
8 0 0 0 0
ft
0 0 soft 0 0 0 8 0 0 8 0 0 1,400 0 37,110 0 250 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
TN TX
152,282 885,904
290 3,903
18,118
72,138
200 0
3,220 182,320
08
00
01
80
310,850 881484
01
1480 24,418,753
4400 1,477478
00
2,434
21,998
0 290
1,050
3
00
08
0 800
69,484
18,597
0 780
2 4,190
0 290
0 1,791
101,829 201,928
2,500 289,090
1444,721 4,013,919
00
321,819 2,981,694
29,909
1
0 479,738
402,639 305,425
00
00
00
0 750
UT
1,000 0
750
ft ft
0 0 8 0 0 0 88,100 0 0 0 8 0 0
ft ft ft
0 0 1,220
0 2,000
128 1,178
0 223,900
0 0 21,000 0 0 0 0
VA
182,096 0
229,496 0
900 8 0 0 0 0 0
73.781 975
ft
12,25ft 0 0
ft ft
0 10,777
0 0 0 0 22,719 49,790 408490 0 382,949 38,900 127,399 120,322 0 0 0 0
VI
0 0 0 0 0 0 8 8 0 ft 0 0 0 0 0 0
ft
0 8 0 0 0 0 0 0 900 0 0 0 1,2(39 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
VT
0 0 790 0 0 8 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
ft
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 900 0 0 0 12,414 0 0 33,170 0 0 0 0
WA
33,888 0
1,000 0 0
ft
0 ft 0 0
ft
82,250 0 0 0
868 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
140,480 199
1,720,722 0
194,986 0 0
10,000 0 0 0 0
Page 39
052085
CMA 0 5 2 0 8 6
CHEMICAL NAME
THORIUM DIOXIDE TITANIUM TETRACHLORIDE TOLUENE TOLUENE-2,4-DKSOCYANATE TOLUENE-2,6-DIISOCYANATE TOTAL FOR MIXTURES TRICHLORFON TRICHLOROETHYLENE TRIFLUflALIN URETHANE VANADIUM (FUME OR DUST) VINYLACETATE VINYL BROMIDE VINYL CHLORIDE VIHYLIDENE CHLORIDE XYLENE (MIXED ISOMERS) ZINC (FUME OR DUST) ZINC COMPOUNDS ZINEB
TOTALS
Toxic fltleiit Inventory Data lor Air, 1987
fll
0 0 12,923,308 soo 0 0 0 434,443 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 133,394 750 785 0
SC
0 250 7,189,570 500 42,375 58,550
0 1,209,673
0 0 0 30,488 0 0 0 2,349,139 183,250 28,047 0
SD TN
0 0 452,344 0 0 0 0 17,828 0 0 0 250 0 0 0 427,656 0 0 0
1,330 17,885 12,887,721
1,581 1,334 5,546
0 2,003,109
0 0 0 830 0 0 0 4,677,681 47,708 31,328 0
TX
0 9,081 9,285,998 22,918 7,949 284,818
0 1,803,918
0 250 2,000 4,743^98
0 294,428
22,282 6,445,289
179,788 272,519
0
UT VA
0 2,700 290,888
0 0 250 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 452,462 34,700 5,150 0
0 0 11,551,235 1,000 500 66,956 0 518,492 0 0 0 6,212
0 0 11,004 3,382,589 89,247 2,715 0
VI
0 0 155,677 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 481,988 0 0 0
VT
0 0 280,515 0 0 0 0 7,180 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 123,988 0 0 0
WA
0 0 2,196,664 27,784 7,141 1,450 1^
478,310 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
1,033,038 17
6,350 0
17,170,133 81,188,447 1,906,236 132,481,157 229,910,640 76,389,363 131,359,106 924,081 1,320,175 39,893,330
National Wltdlile Federation
Page 10
CMA 0 5 2 0 8 7
CHEMICAL NAME
1 ,M -rmCHLOnOETHANE 1,1 ,2,2-TETRACHLOHOETHANE 1,1 4-TRICHL0R0ETHANE 1,1-DIMETHYL HVMAZIHE 1,3,4-TRICHLOHOBENZENE 1,2,4-TRIMETHYLBEHZENE 14-BUTYLENE OXIDE 1,2-DIBROMOETHANE 1,2-DICHLOROBENZENE 1,2-MCHLOROETHANE t,2DICHLOROETHYLENE 1,2-DICHLOflOPBOPANE 1,3-BUTADIEHE t,3-DICHLOROBENZENE 1,3-DICHLOROPROPYLENE 1,4-DICHLOROBENZENE 1,4-DIOXAHE 2,4,5-TRICHLOROPHENOL 2,4,6-TRICHLOROPHENOL 2,4-D (ACETIC ACID) 2,4-DIAMINOANlSOLE 2,4-DIAMINOANISOLE SULFATE 2,4- DIAMINOTOLUEHE 2,4-OICHLOROPHENOL 2,4-DIMETHYLPHENOL 2,4-DIHITHOPHENOL 2,4-DINITROTOLUENE 2,6-DiMITROTOLUENE 2,6-XYUOINE 2-CHLOROACETOPHE NONE 2-ETHOXYETHANOL 2-METHOXYETHANOL 2-NITROPHENOL 2-NITROPROPANE 2-PHENVLPHENOL 3,3`OICHLOROBENZIDINE 4,4DtAMINODIPHENVL ETHER
National Wildlile Federation
Tonic Rolaaae Inventory Data for Air, 1967
Wl
4,725,474 0 0 0 0
106,912 0 0 0 0
24,176 126,600
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
0 60,600 1,056,506
0 250
0 0 0
WV
62,219 O 0 0
2,450 150,636
4,400 6
21,400 736,000
0 0 706,113 3,150 0 270,400 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
0 46,631 16,570
0 0 0 0 0
WV POUNDS RELEASED
30,000 0 0 0 0
115,000 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
250 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
130,632,306 126,269
1,400.764 1,000
1470,307 2476,124
79,264 63466 574466
6,712,143 132,362
1,026,307 9,672,710
46,663 33,570 341,169 337414
500 0
130416 0
500 2,667 2,321 1,432 32,100
66,061 22,222
0 250 2,561,257 6,113431 33,146 267,740 2,501 1,007 560
Page 41
Toxic Release Inventory Data for Air, 1997
CHEMICAL NAME
4,4'-ISOPHOPYL10ENEDIPHENOL 4,4'- M ETHYENEDIANILtNE 4,4'-METHYLENEBIS(2-CHLORO ANILINE) 4,4'-M ETHYLENEBIS(N,N-OIMETHYL) 4,6-DINITRO-O-CRESOL 4-AMINOAZOBENZENE 4-AMINOBIPHENYL 4-NITROPHENOL 5-NITRO-O-ANISIOINE ACETALDEHYDE ACETAMIDE ACETONE ACETONITRILE ACROLEIN ACHYLAMIDE ACRYLIC ACID ACRYLONITRILE ALLYL CHLORIDE ALPHA-NAPHTHYLAMINE ALUMINUM (FUME OR DUST) ALUMINUM OXIDE AMMONIA AMMONIUM NITRATE (SOLUTION) AMMONIUM SULFATE (SOLUTION) ANILINE ANTHRACENE ANTIMONY ANTIMONY COMPOUNDS ARSENIC ARSENIC COMPOUNDS ASBESTOS (FRIABLE) BARIUM BARIUM COMPOUNDS BENZAL CHLORIDE BENZENE BENZIDINE BENZOIC TRICHLORIDE
Wl
1,500 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
2^24,994 0 0 0
1,250 1,910
0 0 599,034 923,999 2,919,923 0 19,500 503 4,139 754 750 1 0 0 110 9,112 0 16,515 0 0
wv
0 107
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 147,079 0 1,001,921 0 0 0 23,300 1,210,539 0 0 4,970 1,144,792 1,437,709 0 0 143,340 3,793 0 5 0 0 0 0 350 0 1,456,013 0 0
WY POUNDS RELEASED
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 500 0 0 0 0 211,290 639,307 29,000 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 9 0 99,732 0 0
210,097 217,500
300 19,173
1,069 0 1
4,952 0
5205,755 1,992
196,153,611 2,721,212 40,399 10,799 032,211 4,035,394 60,217 090 6,045,199
73,132,776 233,435,460
9,321,561 979,999 627,170 210,011 36,722 01,124 09,009 130,742 40,717 57,626 964,490 4,690
24,095,833 9,300
24,010
National Wildlife Federation
Page 42
CMA 0 5 2 0 8 8
CMA 0 5 2 0 8 9
Toxic Releaae Inventory Data lof Air, 1H7
CHEMICAL NAME
BENZOYL CHLORIDE BENZOYL PEROXIDE BENZYL CHLORIDE BERYLLIUM BERYLLIUM COMPOUNDS BIPHENYL BlS{2CHLOROETHYL) ETHER BIS(2ETHYLHEXYL| ADIPATE BIS(CHLOROMETHYL) ETHER BROMOMETHANE BUTYL ACRYLATE BUTYL BENZYL PHTHALATE BUTYRALDEHYDE C.L ACID BLUE , DIAMMONIUM SALT C l ACID BLUE 9, OISODHIM SALT C.I. BASIC GREEN 4 C.I. SOLVENT YELLOW 14 C.L SOLVENT YELLOW 3 CADMIUM CADMIUM COMPOUNDS CALCIUM CYANAMIDE CAPTAN CARBARYL CARBON DISULFIDE CARBON TETRACHLORIDE CARBONYL SULFIDE CATECHOL CHLORAMBEN CHLOROANE CHLORINE CHLORINE DIOXIDE CHLOROACETICACID CHLOROBENZENE CHLOROBENZILATE CHLOROETHANE CHLOROFORM CHLOROMETHANE
National WildIlia Federation
Wl
0 800 290
0 0 1,249 0 0 0 0 2,900 m 0 0 0 0 0 0 ISO 0 0 0 0 98,290 0 0 0 0 0 1,208,122 460,290 0 0 0 0 892,309 172,920
WV
2,999
70,990
1
192 998,039 201,339 192,743
0 0 0 101,263 0 0 192,600 0 0 1,260,329 684,220
WY POUNDS RELEASED
O 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 9,370 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
69,903 9,090
40,499 4,447 902
1,523,861 6,677
111,602 1
663,990 636,906 213,701 1,671,714
0 1,941
2 4 0 101,969 137,428 12,790 26,619 6,443 137,239,693 4256.720 19,779,099 272,241 900 2,614 103,423,794 12206,233 29,093 3,979,644 269 4,400,909 23,728,300 20,656,169
Page 43
Toxic Release Inventory Data for Air, t9B7
CHEMICAL NAME
CH10R0METHYL METHYL ETHER CHLOROPHENOLS CHLOROPRENE CHLOROTHALONIL CHROMIUM CHROMIUM COMPOUNDS , COBALT COBALT COMPOUNDS COPPER COPPER COMPOUNDS CRESOL (MIKED ISOMERS) CUMENE CUMENE HYDROPEROXIDE CUPFERRON CYANIDE COMPOUNDS CYCLOHEXANE DECABROMOOIPHE NYL OXIDE Dl-(2-ETHYLHEXYL) PHTHALATE DlAMINOTOLUENE (MIXEO ISOMERS) DIBENZOFURAN DIBUTYL PHTHALATE DICHLOROBENZENE (MIXED ISOMERS) DICHLOROBROMOMETHANE D1CHLOROMETKANE DICHLORVOS DICOFOL DIETHANOLAMINE DIETHYL PHTHALATE DIETHYL SULFATE DIMETHYL PHTHALATE DIMETHYL SULFATE EPICHLOROHYDRIN ETHYL ACRYLATE ETHYL CHLOROFORMATE ETHYLBENZENE ETHYLENE ETHYLENE GLYCOL
m
0 0 0 0 *,577 23,644 750 0 7,911 *2,050 0 11,363 2,5*7 0 1,065 29,577 0 1,037 0 661 304 0 0 1,524,412 0 0 1,670 0 250 15,250 500 6,400 1,000 0 156,326 0 177,645
WV
0 0 0 0 2,760 2,116 22,146 0 94,313 1,150 3,320 65,000 6,600 0 744,500 62,6*1 0 0 0 3,064 0 750 0 1,494,024 0 0 1,041 0 0 0 209 3,500 9,200 6,825 105,934 119,300 967,619
WV POUNDS RELEASED
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 117,5*6 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 10,341 0 0 0 0 0 ns
0 77,202 56,400
2,200
1,069 933
1,136,365 21,061
460,332 691,292
42,671 50,035 2^97,474 2,662,047 610,206 3,501,736 192,527
920 1,094,279 10,621,381
27,191 1,597,632
79,359 61,729 326,315 71,706 14,850 112,252,293
741 0
460,065 163,001
15,698 2,113^57
10,617 310,560 239,466
10,634 5,006,405 54,199,221 13,337,401
National Wildlife Federation
Page 44
052091
Toxic RImm Inventory Dtti tor Air, 1M7
CHEMICAL NAME
ETHVLENE OXIDE ETHYLENE THIOUREA ETHYLENEtMIHE FLUOMETUROH FORMALDEHYDE FREON 111 GLYCOL ETHERS HEPTACHLOR HEXACHLORO-1,3-BUTADIEHE HEXACHLOROBENZENE HEXACHLOROCYCLOPEHTAOIENE HEXACHLOROETHAKE HEXACHLORONAPHTHALENE HYDRAZINE HYDRAZINE SULFATE HYOROCHLORIC ACID HYDROGEN CYANIDE HYDROGEN FLUORIDE HYDROQUINONE Invalid no. MwuM bo 117117 ISOBUTYRALDEHYDE ISOPROPYL ALCOHOL (MANUFACTURING) LEAD LEAO COMPOUNDS LINDANE M-CRESOL M-XYLENE MALEIC ANHYDRIDE MANEB MANGANESE MANGANESE COMPOUNDS MELAMINE MERCURY MERCURY COMPOUNDS METHANOL METHOXYCHLOR METHYL ACRYLATE
Wl WV
*2.250 0 0 0
754,524 743.SU 1,544,535
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2,745,535 0 5,00* 3,750 0 0 134,Ml 3,027 5,700 0 0 1*3,070 1,000
0 *0,291 12,0*0
551 5 0
3,599,410 3,600 300
114,0*1 0 0 0
194,144 451,250 140,410
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 194,559 5,023 247,522 750 O 5,200 31,520 0,097 0 0 0 70,500 6,000 0 30,70* 1,030 0 3,512 1 5,476,054 0 0
WY POUNDS RELEASED
0 0 0 0 *,120 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,049 0 30,0*3 0 0 0 4,000 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 30,730 0 0
4,950,571 0 0
2,111 1S,02*M0 49,041,520 32,545,027
7M* 3,550 1,004
3.071 0,450
0 33,345
0 00,474,004
034,942 11,793,220
31,023 3,171
1,300,005 14,3*3,700
1,104,909 953,057 Ml 20,0*0
2,400,507 470,022 35,030 507,01*
1,C49,50 240,404 130,570 2,360
102,521,041 3,052
673,021
National Wildlife Federation
o*
Page 45
Toxic Release Inventory Data lor Mr, 1987
CHEMICAL NAME
METHYL ETHYL KETONE METHYL HYDRAZINE METHYL IODIDE METHYL ISOBUTYL KETONE METHYL ISOCYANATE METHYL METHACRYLATE METHYL TERT-BUTYL ETHER METHYLENE BROMIDE METHYLENEBISfPHEHYUSOCYANATE) MICHLER'S KETONE MOLYBDENUM TRIOXIDE N.N-DIMETHYLANHJHE H-BUTYL ALCOHOL N-DKJCTYL PHTHALATE N-NITROSODIPKENYLAMINE NAPHTHALENE NICKEL NICKEL COMPOUNDS NITRIC ACID NITRILOTRIACETIC ACID NITROBENZENE NITROGEN MUSTARD NITROGLYCERIN O-ANISIDIHE O-CRESOL O-TOLUIDIHE O-XYLENE OCTACHLORONAPHTHALENE P-ANISIDINE P-CRESIDINE P-CRESOL P-NITROSODIPHENYLAMINE P-PHENYLENEDIAMINE PXYLENE PARATHIOH PENTACHLOROPHENOL PERACETIC ACID
Wl
4,238,169 0 0
281,478 0
9,020 24,880
0 2,780
0 0 0 944,138 0 0 42,708 8,788 4,219 329,939 0 0
wv
438,679 0 0
214,208 8,084
244,714 0 0 0 0 0
154 288,934
0 0 175,417 3,950 8,800 34,200 0 0
0 0 89 0 54,439 0 0 0 0 0 0 185,730
0
83 0
0 0 0 0 35,100 0 0 0 0 0 0 28,200 0 0 0
WY POUNDS RELEASED
83,000 0 0 0 0
0
2,815 0 0 0 0 0
80,000 0 0
3,200 0 0
33,297 0 0
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
0
0
124,828,080 823
28,151 28,284,541
148,181 3275,442 2,067,002
38,985 990,902
400 109,644 129,799 27,144,279 47,970
0 3,142,808
409,132 288,436 6,880,433
1,782 128,419
0 48,746
3,803 99,455 23204 2,880,900
0 0 228 80,466 290 117,230 7,094,811 888 23,109 6,752
National Wildlife Federation
Page 46
052092
CMA 0 5 2 0 9 3
Toxic Releare Inventory Dale tor Air, 1M7
CHEMICAL NAME
PHENOL PHOSGENE PHOSPHORIC AC10 PHOSPHORUS (YELLOW OR WHITE) PHTHAUC ANHYDRIDE PICRIC ACID POLY BROMINATED BIPHENYLS POLYCHLORINATED BIPHENYLS (PCBa) PROPANE SULTONE PROPIONALOEHYDE PROPOXUR PROPYLENE PROPYLENE OXIDE PROPYLENEIMJNE PYRIDINE QUINOLINE QUINONE QLHNTOZENE SACCHARIN (MANUFACTURING) SAFHOLE SECBUTYL ALCOHOL SELENIUM SELENIUM COMPOUNDS SILVER SILVER COMPOUNDS SODIUM HYDROXIDE (SOLUTION) SODIUM SULFATE (SOLUTION) STYRENE STYRENE OXIDE SULFURIC ACID TEREPHTHAUC ACID TERTBUTYL ALCOHOL TETRACHLOROETHYLENE TETRACHLORVWPHOS THALLIUM THALLIUM COMPOUNDS THIOUREA
National Wlkllila Federation
Wl
331,333 0
81,429 0
2,000 0 0 0 0 0
1,210 33,390
0 0 0 0 0 230 0 300 230 0 0 0 243,132 139,230 339,007 0 373,731 300 0 141,033 0 0 0 0
WV
24,339 1,732 334 0 230 0 0 0 0 0
2,173,230 373,730 0 3,317 2,711 0 0 0 0 23,334 0 0 0 0 3,033 0 373,033 0 43,930 7,730 0 3,300 0 0 0 0
WY POUNDS RELEASED
24,430 0
31,343 O o 0 0 0 0 0 0
137,000 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
10,711 0
300 0
23,773
0 0 0 0 0 0 0
3,313,332 30,319
1,439,913 11,303
419,731 730 9 914 0
1,033,740
43 37,932,734
3,860,328 300
297,933 28,491 1,093 233 730 300
770,297 3,022
14,031 11,332 11,303 3,434,290 4,433243 24,494,134
1233 15,422,223
443,323 911,333 28,093,493
0 0 250 6,270
Page 47
CHEMICAL NAME
THORIUM DIOXIDE TITANIUM TETRACHLORIDE TOLUENE TOLUENE-2,4-DIISOCYANATE TOLUENE-2,4-DIISOCYANATE TOTAL FOR MIXTURES TRiCHLORFON TRICHLOROETHYLENE TRIFLURAUN URETHANE VANADIUM (FUME OR DUST) VINYL ACETATE VINYL BROMIDE VINYL CHLORIDE VINYUDENE CHLORIDE XYLENE (MIXED ISOMERS) ZINC (FUME OR DUST) ZINC COMPOUNDS ZIHEB
TOTALS
Toxic Releaae Inventory Data lor Air, 1987
Wt
0 0 4,708,401 1,900 1,000 814,258 0 1,102,*'% 0 0 0 250 0 0 0 4,715,347 201,779 32,909 0
WV
0 57 2,310,824 14,300 3,640 1,000 0 315,234
0 0 0 44,000 fl!
0 15,000 994,347 27,459
250 0
WY POUNDS RELEASED
0 0 527,011 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 500 0 0 0 394,954 0 0 0
1,330 142,948 235,494,484 492,444 128,471 4,357,344
9,715 47,509,437
2^49 374,400
0,835 5,954,124
142,900 1,511,157
534,371 120,f20,246
2,938,830 3,181,459
0
44,491,970 31,992,771 2,435,391
2,394,915,248
National Wildlife Federation
Page 48
CMA 0 5 2 0 9 4