Call the folks where you live to see how they want it packaged. Each facility will probably have it's own way that works best for them. As Maris said, it's not that big of a deal. I used to work for a company that contracted w/ OSHA and the EPA, and was part of a team that was responsible for revising the Permissible Exposure Limits to Dangerous and Hazardous Chemicals and Materials in The Workplace. Whew, I haven't written all that out in ages.
We surveyed 5,000 businesses in the U.S. to gather data, correlated it, and presented it to Congress, where it was approved and put into law. It's probably time to do another one, although the chemicals and materials have stayed about the same over time. We presented the data anonymously, but I know exactly who the big polluters are in this country. Not surprisingly, much of it comes from the mining industry, power generation, and the military, all of which are exempt from following OSHA safety rules, but are not exempt from Federal rules that require them to clean things up when they destroy them w/ toxic stuff.
Sorta late at that point! The reality is that my tax dollars, and yours if you live in the U.S., go to pay the military to contaminate the earth, then we pay them again to clean it back up. Or at least pretend that they are cleaning it back up.