sselkind
Member
- Joined
- May 29, 2006
- Messages
- 5
- Format
- 35mm RF
The regulations require the shipper (the party that offers the package) to know whether a given shipment is regulated and, if so, to follow appropriate packaging and shipping procedures, including the application of required markings and or labels, the use of special shipping papers when required, and so on. These procedures can become very restrictive for products that are very dangerous in transportation and less so for products that are hazardous but pose a lesser danger. And of course there are chemicals which are not regulated at all. Under the law, the burden of knowing which is which falls on the person who offers the package to the carrier -- i.e., the company or private individual who puts the chemical in a package and tenders it to the carrier. It's a complex business - but very serious if you consider the consequences of a concealed acid leaking on a package handler or other incidents that could occur. The main point is: If you don't know whether a chemical is regulated, don't send it; you could hurt someone (or worse) and you could be fined.