Document g2ONYjL6a82MED3m2NpDO4Nza

MILITARY SPECIFICATION 24385F AQUEOUS FILM FORMING FOAM (AFFF) CONCENTRATE -- NAVY RESPONSE ISSUE: The current military specification for firefighting foams mandates the use of fluorinated chemicals that are harmful to military personnel and the environment. New technologies are available that avoid these risks, but the specification has not been updated to allow their use. What must be done to correct this situation? Original Military Specification Issued in the 1970's. , - /Formatted/ponteo'lcl COMMENT: Essentially correct; AFFF was first introduced into the Navy in 1970 (original MILSPEC (MIL-F-23905) was published on 01 Nov 1963 and was replaced with MIL-F-24385 on 21 Nov 1969). Current Military Specification for firefighting foam dated August, 1994 (F Version) COMMENT: Correct. Requires all Products on the Qualified Products List (QPL) to contain fluorinated chemicals, which was the state of the art in the 1960's. COMMENT: The current AFFF MILSPEC is specific for film forming agents, which provides rapid extinguishment (i.e., creates a vapor barrier at the fuel/foam surface interface and also limits fuel transport through the foam blanket) and explicitly specifies the use of a fluorosurfactant to enable film formation. To date no Fluorine Free Foam (F3)-feam product has demonstrated the ability to extinguish flammable liquid pool fires as quickly as required byAFFF under the MIL-F-24385F specification for AFFF.sfcmebfek The Specification does not allow for newer alternative technologies that are safer and less expensive COMMENT: Alternative Class B (flammable liquid) foaming agent technologies have not been able to provide the requisite safety margins that are inherent to MILSPEC AFFF. COMMENT (SAFETY): The principle DoD safety concerns relate to limiting personnel exposure to large unconfined fires, which may include ordnance, flight crew rescue, and limiting damage (both primary and secondary) to vital Fleet assets. COMMENT (COST): The supply system priceeest for the current MILSPEC AFFF concentrates provided to the Fleet is approximately $63.00/5 gallon pail. The cost to DoD is actually less. Additionally, the cost of MILSPEC AFFF concentrate is very low in comparison to the vital assets, which they are expected to protect. Also, the MILSPEC requirement that vendor products be compatible with one another allows for greater competition among the qualified vendors and allows DoD to award contracts for MILSPEC AFFF based on best value. This compatibility is also essential to fleet logistics. Specific problems with current specification: o The fluorinated chemicals used in current Military Specification are: Environmentally Persistent Bio accumulative Toxic 1 US00006485 COMMENT: All AFFF (both MILSPEC AFFF and UL 162 commercial AFFF) products contain fluorosurfactants, which are environmentally persistent as a class. Perfluorooctane Sulfonate (PFOS) is a specific class used in the original MILSPEC AFFF formulation, but its use was discontinued in the early 2000's by the U.S. EPA due to the PBT combination. o Fluorinated foams will remain in the environment for centuries, no biodegradation COMMENT: AFFF "concentrate" typically contains 2% fluorosurfactant, 2-5% hydrocarbon surfactant, and 15-20% solvents. The rest of the formulation is water (78-81%). This means that 98% of AFFF "concentrate" is biodegradable. NOTE: The DoD does not introduce AFFF "concentrate" into the environment. What is introduced into the environment are AFFF "solutions" Type 6 (94% water and 6% AFFF concentrate) and Type 3 (97% water and 3% AFFF concentrate). Therefore, considering the true amount of water and organic material (fluorosurfactant/hydrocarbon surfactant/solvents) present results in a finding that the AFFF solution introduced into the environment is 99.9% biodegradable. That said, considering 50 years of legacy emissions and any additional AFFF introduction there is a valid concern since there is no straightforward treatment approach once fluorosurfactants have been dispersed into the environment. The DoD Strategic Environmental R&D program (SERDP) has funded several research programs to characterize the types and occurrence of fluorosurfactant contamination and to develop remediation technology remedies. o The 2015 USEPA Voluntary Stewardship Program targets: Elimination (99.9%) of Toxic Fluorosurfactants 2015 Compliance Date All Current QPL Products must be re-qualified to Comply Military Firefighters cannot conduct live training with Fluorinated Foams due to the safety and environmental concerns. The resulting lack of live fire training affects preparedness COMMENT: Perfluorooctanioc Acid (PFOA), sometimes called "C8", is not present in MILSPEC AFFF's, but in some cases, the fluorochemical surfactants in AFFF can degrade into PFOA in the environment. The key factor for this to occur is the presence of an eight-carbon fluorinated "tail" on the surfactant molecule, which is biologically accumulative. The non-PFOS fluorosurfactants currently used in AFFF have used a fluorosurfactant, synthesized by telomerization (a polymerization process producing extremely short chains) that predominately have a six-carbon tail, which cannot form PFOA. The current U.S. EPA PFOA Stewardship Program has established a goal to eliminate PFOA, PFOA precursors, and related higher homologue chemicals from emissions and products including AFFF by end of 2015. In short, current MILSPEC AFFF products do not contain PFOS, and will not contain significant materials capable of degrading into PFOA, but they do contain fluorochemicals, which are environmentally persistent. COMMENT (RECENTLY QUALIFIEDCEBTWEP MILSPEC AFFF): The most recent MILSPEC AFFF product approvedcertified by NAVSEA has been the first MILSPEC AFFF product to meet both the U.S. EPA PFOA Stewardship Program requirements and all of the requirements stipulated within the MIL-F-24385F specificationperformance standard. COMMENT (MILITARY TRAINING): Due to environmental concerns, military firefighting training facilities use propane fires, which eliminates the use of Class A (combustible solid), pooled Class B (flammable liquid), and Class C (electrical) fuel sources. As a result, there is no need to use AFFFaetu-af 2 US00006486 firefighting agents arc not used during firefighting training evolutions., which includes AFFF. Water only or water with a foam simulant is used. This does not impact firefighting training effectiveness since the goal is to provide the students with firefighting equipment familiarization and to focus on proper firefighting doctrine (tactics & procedures). Additionally, all foam manufacturers market a foam simulant that is recommended for training. This helps to limit the induction of foaming agents into municipal water treatment plants which can affect their operation. o Military Specification foam is the most expensive of all firefighting foams Fluorine is the most expensive ingredient Military Specification foam requires the greatest level of fluorine *__ Military Specification foam is the most environmentally persistent of all foams * COMMENT (COST) - The cost of MILSPEC AFFF has been previously addressed. I understand that there are newer technologies available that avoid these problems, but those products are not allowed under the outdated specification: Formatted: : o ' 1/ k :: " Formatted: Indent: Left: 0.75", No bullets or numbering Formatted: : o ' 1/ COMMENT - Though the specification has not been updated since 1994, the performance requirements within it are not outdated. The inherent risk, especially on flight decks, where aircraft movement, fueling, and weapons loading all occur in very close proximity, warrants the rapid extinguishing times that the MILSPEC requires. ,, - \ Formatted: Font: 12 p t __________________ J C '~ (F o r m ^ ] Formatted: Font i 2 pt ) Re-Flealing Fluorine Free Firefighting Foam o 100% Biodegradable o More effective in fighting fires, extinguishes more rapidly and requires less reapplication than fluorinated foams o Globally Approved to all current International Standards UL, FM, ICAO, EN, ULC, SSL, Among others Fluorine Free foam does not expose Military Personnel to dangerous PBT Chemicals Lack of fluorine allows live exercises that improve readiness Because of lack of fluorine, cost is significantly less Sample list of Current Customers: o Statoil Norway o ConocoPhillips o British Petroleum o All Australian Airports o Copenhagen, Frankfurt, Dubai, Manchester Airports a. Enbridge b. Flint Hills Refinery c. Alert Disaster Control COMMENT: NRL is well aware of the Solberg (formally 3-M Australia) Re-HealingTM foam products, which are non-fluorinated foam with polysaccharide thickeners, which are designed to have mechanical properties to compensate for the lack of film formation. Under a previous Cooperative Agreement with 3 M Australia and with the current Non-Disclosure Agreement between NRL and Amerex Corporation, NRL has been conducting fire testing and laboratory studies to help further investigate the potential possibilities for developing a fluorine-free product that could meet the MILSPEC AFFF fire performance requirementsperformance standard. Although the Solberg products are superior to other F3 foams tested at NRL, they still fail to meet the MIL-F-24385F 28 ft2fire performance test at full strength. Since 3 US00006487 the productswe have not been successful at the 28 ft2fire performance test at full strength, NRL haswe have not pursued additional test requirements that include the 28 ft2Vi strength testing, 28 ft2testing (full and Vi strength) with aged concentrate, 28 ft2testing (full and Vi strength) with aged solutions, 28 ft2 testing for cross-compatibility, 28 ft2quintuple test or the requisite 50 ft2fire performance test. Jn addition, the AFFF MILSPEC has several other key requirements that must be considered, including compatibility among vendors, dry chemical compatibility, burn back, viscosity, etc. Integration and compatibility with existing installed AFFF systems and equipment will also be a factor. , - -[ Formatted: Font: Not Bold, No underline COMMENT: Although Solberg has been somewhat successful in the commercial market, the western foreign Navies, USCG military vessels, and the FAA still relies on MILSPEC AFFF and requires their use for Class B (flammable liquid) fire applications. What can be done to modify the specification to allow fluorine alternatives? COMMENT: The first priority for DoD is to ensure that all MILSPEC AFFF products meet the current U.S. ERA W 3Ar5Lew 3^h4f^44^ram ~fe|+ii~Fem efltSr~4fi~3lliLiefi~te4h45~ef^^ (EC) Steering Group is pursuing an OSD study to analyze the cost/benefit of removing PFOA/PFOS Aqueous Film Forming Foam (AFFF) formulations from DoD stocks and supply systems. Finally, Tthe DON research community will continue to investigate the potential "best valued" options to include Fluorinated AFFF, either Fluorine-Free Foams,, or a Fluorine-Free AFFF that may include the development of a new class of siliconebased surfaetants^, which would eliminate the need for any f luorosurfactants in future AFFF products. 4 US00006488