ECAR Fact Sheet for District of Columbia
Brake
Fluid

Regulations
Self-Audit Checklist
Best Management Practices
Contacts
Related ECAR Fact Sheets
Other Relevant Resources
BACK
to VIRTUAL TOUR
The
following fact sheet was prepared by the ECAR Center staff. Once
prepared, each ECAR Center fact sheet undergoes a review process
with the applicable state environmental agency(ies). You can check
on the status of the review process here.
Please read the disclaimer on the status page. While we have tried
to present a summary of the essential information on this topic,
you should be aware that other items, such as local regulations,
may apply to you.
What You Need to Know
Brake fluids
are not inherently hazardous, but if they contain certain additives,
or if they have become contaminated with brake cleaner or other
solvents, they can fall under the hazardous waste rules.
How can you
tell if the brake fluid in your yard is hazardous? You can
send a sample to a laboratory. That will cost you a testing
fee. But if it is non-hazardous and you can document that
fact, you can save the costs of managing it as a hazardous waste.
You can also avoid the lab fee and simply assume it is hazardous.
This fact sheet
will tell you:
- How to determine if a specific sample of brake fluid
is hazardous.
- What you need to do to manage hazardous wastes in compliance
with the rules.
Regulations
The U.S. Department
of Transportation issues specifications for the three main kinds
of brake fluid in use by the automotive and trucking industry: DOT-3,
DOT-4 and DOT-5. DOT-3 and DOT-4 are glycol-based fluids and DOT-5
is silicon-based. Depending on the additives used, brake fluid may
or may not be hazardous. Even if brake fluid started out as non-hazardous,
it can become hazardous if it is contaminated with brake cleaner
or other solvents.
Brake fluid
is not crude oil-based and should not be added to and managed with
used oil. For management and disposal/recycle of used brake fluid,
you have two choices:
- Have a sample of the used brake fluid analyzed by a
laboratory to find out if it is hazardous. If it is non-hazardous,
it can be shipped off-site for disposal by a licensed hauler.
If it is hazardous, then special hazardous waste rules apply.
- Assume that the brake fluid is hazardous and manage
and dispose/recycle it as such. This approach avoids laboratory
testing costs.
Links to
the Regulations. Use
the following links to view the regulations pertaining to hazardous
waste determinations and management.
District
of Columbia's Hazardous Waste Management Requirements: Copies of the DC Hazardous Waste
Management Regulations are available from the Department for a small
fee to cover the cost of copying. For more information, contact
the Hazardous Waste Division at 202-535-2290.
Federal EPA Standards Applicable
to Generators of Hazardous Waste
Self-Audit
Checklist
When an inspector
comes to your facility, there are certain things he or she checks
to see if you are in compliance with environmental regulations.
It makes good sense for you to perform a "self-audit"
and catch and correct problems before they result in penalties.
Also, there are some compliance incentives associated with self-audits
(see Audit Policy Page).
Use the following
list to audit your used brake fluid management procedures.
- Used brake fluid is potentially a hazardous waste.
Verify
that brake fluid was properly managed and disposed/recycled as
hazardous waste or that a hazardous waste determination was made
that indicates it is a non-hazardous waste.
Best
Management Practices (BMPs)
Most regulations
tell you what you have to do to be in compliance, but they don't
explain how to do it. That's where "best management practices"
come into play. BMPs are proven methods that help you to get into
compliance and stay there. The following BMPs are recommended for
brake fluid storage areas and management procedures.
- Brake fluid is not crude oil-based, and therefore it
should not be added to used oil.
- Collect brake fluid in a dedicated DOT-approved, clearly
and properly labeled drum specifically for brake fluids.
- Identify a waste management company that will recycle
it.
- Don't put brake fluid into your used oil container.
- Don't pour brake fluid down any drain or on the ground.
- Don't spray brake cleaner around brake fluid.
Contacts
- For more information, contact the District of Columbia
Department of Health, Hazardous Waste Division at
(202)
535-2270.
- For reportable spills or leaks, call the DC Emergency
Management Agency's 24-hour communications hotline at 202-727-6161,
or the non-emergency number at 202-673-3331. If a spill requires contact
to a federal agency, the person required to give the notice would,
at the same time, be required to give telephonic notice to the
DC Emergency Management Agency and the Department of Health, Hazardous
Waste Division.
- To report an environmental incident or complaint, contact
the Environmental
Health Administration.
Related
ECAR Fact Sheets
- Hazardous Waste
Other
Relevant Resources
None.
BACK
to VIRTUAL TOUR
|