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EPA prescribes pest product packaging

Concentrated chemicals sold in small, plastic, non-refillable containers are most affected. But label changes will be mandated for all products of all sizes.

Pw 9152 Weed B Gon Max

The Environmental Protection Agency's new pesticide container standards have packaging implications for a range of marketers of farm, lawn, garden and home herbicides and insecticides, depending on market niche, company size, and current packaging practices.

Perhaps the most notable thing about the final rule is what it doesn't require: that manufacturers of diluted and even many concentrated home and garden products—like those sold at Home Depot, Costco, and Wal-Mart—upgrade their packaging.

The EPA had proposed in 1999 that those products be in plastic and paper packaging that meets the Department of Transportation's Level III packaging standards for hazardous materials. Numerous companies protested that proposal arguing that those products posed little danger to the environment. In the final rule, the EPA backed off.

Rich Martinez, chief environmental officer, Scotts Miracle-Gro Co., says only four SKUs in his company's wide product assortment may be subject to the Level III requirement. The packages for those products will have to be tested, and if found wanting, they will have to be upgraded.

The DOT Level III standards address areas such as compatibility, closures, venting, and filling limits. They also prescribe performance standards and related tests that packaging must meet, including drop, leak-proof ability, hydrostatic pressure, stacking, and vibration tests.

But Martinez notes that labels for all the company's products will have to be changed.

 

Changes are wide-ranging

The EPA rule establishes packaging integrity and labeling standards for refillable and non-refillable rigid plastic and steel containers, plastic and paper bags, and aerosol cans. Non-refillable plastic containers in one- and two-gallon sizes—the kind that hold products such as Monsanto's Roundup and Ortho's Weed-B-Gon (pictured)—are heavily used by marketers of lawn and garden, household, and to a lesser extent turf and vegetation control products.

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