Chemical of concern definition

Chemical of concern means any regulated substance detected in contamination from the LUST site that is evaluated for potential impacts to public health and the environment.
Chemical of concern means a Candidate Chemical that has been designated as a Chemical of Concern under section 69503.5(b)(2)(B).
Chemical of concern means a chemical identified as a Chemical of Concern under

Examples of Chemical of concern in a sentence

  • Chemical of concern: Di(2-ethylhexyl) phthlate (DEHP) used in the Salter Labs Parker product line.

  • The chemical hazard index was 0.23 (less than 1) indicating no unacceptable hazard.COC – Chemical of concern.

  • Fractionation is recommended only for Tier 2B evaluation.**: Chemical of concern for leaded gasoline.

  • Note: This application is signed by undersigned authorized agent of the Applicant(s) on behalf of the Applicant(s) and its, owners, partners, directors, officers and employees Must be signed by the owner, principal, partner, executive officer or equivalent (within 60 days of the proposed effective date).

  • However, the development should occur with a balanced manner, because the key development areas are interrelated.


More Definitions of Chemical of concern

Chemical of concern means a chemical that is listed by the Department on either
Chemical of concern means any element or compound identified on the following lists:
Chemical of concern means a chemical appearing on any of the
Chemical of concern means a chemical identifiedCandidate Chemical that has
Chemical of concern means a chemical designated as such according to section 3(d).
Chemical of concern means any regulated substance detected in contamination from the LUST site.
Chemical of concern means a chemical appearing on any of the lists included in the department of environmental conservation division of materials management program policy on household cleansing product information disclosure publsihed on June sixth, two thousand eighteen pursuant to article thirty-five of this chapter and 6 NYCRR part 659, or as deisngated by the commissioner, in consultation with the commissioner of health.