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Are
any barrels of Inipol EAP 22 from the Exxon Valdez Oil
Spill cleanup days stored here? If so hoping they have
them roped off... so no one rubs up against them & gets
'melted' skin like an electrician did once. And
labeled with skull and cross-bones for poison.
Even to move a barrel, workers need chemical retardant suits
& respirators. Be sure to mark any spills with
caution/warning signs should any occur.
How
well-ventilated is a storage unit or building?
Some longshoremen
during
their moving of the inipol barrels only got a 'whiff' of the
chemicals, but on a recurring basis that could be enough to
get the 2-butoxyethanol in one's system.
We
are talking about an extremely potent mixture of chemicals ...
with a
poison of
not just 1% as pesticides often have, but 12% by weight of 2-butoxyethanol
... which causes blood damage (hemolysis) per animal test data
- (source: inipol EAP 22 MSDS).
You
have a 'tired-all-the-time' feeling that neither rest nor
vitamins ever remedy: hemolytic
anemia... the body's premature destruction of its own red
blood cells.
This low red blood cell count is the tell tale sign that
health damage has occurred... no matter what develops later,
this is an early signal. You
won't have enough red blood cells taking oxygen to your cells.
Who
were the
truckers in
August 1989 and the 1990 work season? Did they ever have
to handle barrels of inipol EAP 22? Or smell the fumes
of 2-butoxythanol?
Then
the question, how
to properly dispose of inipol EAP 22?
MSDS
specifically warns against putting it down the sewers or in
any waterways. |