Plastic Pallets: From Fire Hazard to Toxic Platform?

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Tue Apr 14, 2009 10:36am EDT

ALEXANDRIA, Va., April 14 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- When plastic pallets were
first introduced to the market, they created a fire hazard which led insurance
companies and fire regulators to require a two-class upgrade for warehouse
sprinkler systems in plants using plastic pallets. Some plastic pallet
manufacturers have added the chemical fire retardant deca-bromine to the
petroleum-based polymer pallets. According to a lifecycle analysis by
Intelligent Global Pooling Systems (iGPS) who purchases its pallets from
Schoeller Arca System, its deca-bromine infused plastic pallets contain as
much as 3.4 pounds of the chemical; that volume is necessary for the company
to advertise its pallets as equivalent to wood pallets which are the benchmark
for pallet fire safety.  

Penta-bromine has long been banned as dangerous to health and the environment;
bans on octa-bromine soon followed. Deca-bromine was originally thought to be
safer than penta- or octa-bromines because deca-bromine is a heavy compound
and toxicity decreases as the number of bromines increase. But according to a
lengthy, scholarly article published by the American Chemical Society, many
researchers and environmental groups began to believe that in the environment,
deca-bromine can decompose into its more toxic derivatives (octa or penta). Of
even more concern, researchers believe the chemical tends to "bleed" so flame
retardancy is lost and the toxins can leach.  

"Both treated and non-treated plastic pallets remain in the supply chain, and
there is no way to easily recognize which pallets contain deca-bromine from
those that are a two-class upgrade fire hazard," warns Bruce Scholnick,
president of the National Wooden Pallet and Container Association.  "Some may
have a UL marking to indicate they contain fire retardant chemicals, but
forklift drivers moving stacks of pallets or employees on the loading dock are
unlikely to identify high fire risk plastic pallets from their deca-bromine
treated counterparts."

As a result of the grave concerns surrounding deca-bromine by researchers,
environmental groups and fire fighters (who come into contact with the
chemical in its gaseous form), lawmakers are beginning to ban the use of
deca-bromine. The states of Maine and Washington have already passed
legislation and ten other states have introduced bills that would ban the
dangerous chemical. Various countries around the world have also banned
deca-bromine in the electronic, furniture, toy and clothing industries.
Officials may be unaware that deca-bromine is being used in these quantities
in plastic pallets.

Flame retardants are showing up in some very unlikely places.  In a report
issued in early April 2009 by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration (NOAA), flame retardants are now in all U.S. coastal waters and
the Great Lakes in increasing concentrations.  "Based on data from NOAA's
Mussel Watch Program, which has been monitoring coastal water contaminants for
24 years, the nationwide survey found that New York's Hudson Raritan Estuary
had the highest overall concentrations of PBDEs [fire retardant], both in
sediments and shellfish. Individual sites with the highest PBDE measurements
were found in shellfish taken from Anaheim Bay, Calif., and four sites in the
Hudson Raritan Estuary."  In a NOAA press release, John H. Dunnigan, NOAA
assistant administrator of the National Ocean Service said: "Scientific
evidence strongly documents that these contaminants impact the food web and
action is needed to reduce the threats posed to aquatic resources and human
health."

These flame retardants have also been found in mothers' breast milk.  When the
Environmental Working Group (EWG) conducted a study similar to one done in
Sweden, they found that PBDEs were in the breast milk of U.S. women at levels
much higher than those found in European women, and more than 50 times higher
than the average of those in the Swedish study. 

The Clean Production Action (CPA) group with the Computer Take-Back Campaign
surveyed dust swiped from computers with brominated flame retardants and found
"neurotoxic chemicals on every computer sampled." CPA says PBDEs and related
compounds are turning up "up and down the food chain, in sediments, beluga
whales, seals, bird eggs, and human milk, serum and adipose issue."  

There are effective alternatives to deca-bromine, but according to a
University of Massachusetts examination, the cost of bromine flame retardants
is far less expensive than their alternatives. "Typically, non-halogen flame
retardants cost in the $3.00/lb range whereas the price of bromine is roughly
$1.10/lb. Since bromine is a more efficient flame retardant than most
nonhalogen systems, less is required for a bromine system to meet [the
Underwriters Laboratory vertical ignition test baseline]."

What Deca-Bromine Use Means to the Supply Chain

For decades, the wood pallet has been, and remains, the benchmark for fire
safety. Plastic pallets require the infusion of substantial amounts of
potentially harmful chemicals to reach the same fire safety level. 

Some in the grocery industry have begun to favor plastic pallets, but the fact
that studies indicate products with the chemical can leach deca-bromine
renders them potentially unsafe for food products.

As retailers learn about the risks surrounding pallets containing
deca-bromine, those that have been moving toward using plastic pallets as a
display platform may reconsider that use. The fire hazard posed in non-fire
retardant pallets may make them similarly unusable for that purpose.

"We recognize that alternative materials each have their place, and
competition breeds innovation and quality improvements," said Scholnick.  "But
if new technologies prove to be harmful or risky, it needs to be excluded from
use. There are alternative fire retardants.  Let's face it, they may be more
expensive, but what price does one put on human health and our environment?"

Wood pallets are a byproduct using wood that is strong and durable, but
discarded by furniture and home builders for cosmetic purposes. More than 1.2
billion wood pallets are in service each day in the United States. When these
wood pallets can no longer be repaired to a standard that ensures protection
of the goods being shipped and safety of workers handling the load, the
pallets are recycled into new products such as landscape mulch, animal
bedding, boiler fuel, firewood and wood stove pellets. The nails from ground
pallet chips are removed through a variety of collection technologies and sold
as scrap metal to be used again - from cradle to grave wood pallets are the
sustainable choice for those in the supply chain who are concerned about
preserving our environment by using natural products like wood.

Contact: Bruce Scholnick, President and CEO at 703-519-6104 for more
information.


SOURCE  National Wooden Pallet and Container Association

Bruce Scholnick, President and CEO of National Wooden Pallet and Container
Association, +1-703-519-6104
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