with all ingredients listed as hazardous...
& only one claiming to be biodegradable per Exxon's statement http://www.valdezhousing.com/inipol/pages/exxon_theory.htm
(& maybe they mean 2-butoxyethanol is biodegradable at 194 degrees F
- the temperature the product is supposed to be applied at
- which it wouldn't often be... so then what?)
& not much known about the phosphate,
which ... not very much seems to be known about trilaureth-4-phosphate
"OP's of this size will not be very soluble at all. *[C12H25(OC2H4)3O]3PO
And once you heat the inipol EAP 22 to near boiling point...
its vapors, says a chemist, would be enormous..."
and the company/manufacturer has a disclaimer on the last page:
..."information provided in the MSDS for Inipol EAP 22 relates only to the specific product designated and may not be valid where such product is used in combination with any other materials or in any process. (Oil? Hmmm)
Further, since the conditions and methods of use are beyond the control of Atofina Chemicals, Atofina Chemicals expressly disclaims any and all liability as to any results obtained or arising from any use of the product or reliance on such information."
... just don't understand
why Valdez and Alaska
would ever allow this to used ever again in our waters...
& that we would do what we could to ban it from EPA's approved use...
NOTE, EPA has not been very helpful, http://www.valdezhousing.com/inipol/pages/epa_tech_bulletin.htm
All that can fairly be done for those who have worked with this poison
is to find them and help them,
and & log what happens to them over their life-time
& have the records public.