{"id":7246,"date":"2006-08-01T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2006-08-01T00:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/insulation.org\/io\/articles\/product-stewardship-the-refractory-ceramic-fiber-industrys-voluntary-workplace-protection-program\/"},"modified":"2006-08-01T00:00:00","modified_gmt":"2006-08-01T00:00:00","slug":"product-stewardship-the-refractory-ceramic-fiber-industrys-voluntary-workplace-protection-program","status":"publish","type":"articles","link":"https:\/\/insulation.org\/io\/articles\/product-stewardship-the-refractory-ceramic-fiber-industrys-voluntary-workplace-protection-program\/","title":{"rendered":"Product Stewardship: The Refractory Ceramic Fiber Industry&rsquo;s Voluntary Workplace Protection Program"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>Beginning in the mid 1970s, individuals within the regulated  community, and even within the federal government, began advocating the use of  negotiated rulemaking as a more efficient, sensible alternative to the  traditional &ldquo;notice and comment&rdquo; procedures typically followed by federal  agencies in the development of regulations. In the 1980s, the Environmental  Protection Agency (EPA) and the Occupational Safety and Health Administration  (OSHA) began using a negotiated process as an aid to the development of certain  regulations. By 1990, Congress formally endorsed negotiated rulemaking with the  passage of the federal Negotiated Rulemaking Act, under the strong support of  the Clinton Administration. Advocates of negotiated rulemaking tend to identify  two primary benefits: reduced time to final rulemaking and a decrease in  litigation over pending regulations. It is in this context that leading U.S.  manufacturers in the refractory ceramic fiber (RCF) industry formed the  Refractory Ceramic Fibers Coalition (RCFC), focused on workplace exposures to  airborne fiber.<\/p>\n<h5>Background<\/h5>\n<p>Before discussing the RCF industry&rsquo;s voluntary workplace protection  program, it is useful to provide some background on the industry and the health  issues associated with workplace exposure to RCFs. RCFs are advanced fibrous  insulation materials used in various industrial, automotive, aerospace, and  military applications requiring low weight and high heat resistance. RCFs are  members of a group of materials commonly referred to as synthetic vitreous  fibers (SVFs), a family of products that includes fiberglass (home insulation),  rock wool, slag wool, and specialty high-temperature industrial fibers. RCFs  are produced by melting and fiberizing a mixture of alumina (Al203) and silica  (Si203). The combination of low density, low volumetric heat capacity and low  thermal conductivity make this a valuable insulating material, particularly for  high-temperature industrial applications. Invented in the 1940s, RCF sales grew  substantially in the 1970s during the energy crises. RCFs now account for  approximately one to two percent of the total SVF market in the United States.<\/p>\n<p>RCFs contain individual fibers having a length weighted  geometric mean diameter of less than 3 mm (respirable to humans); therefore,  there is a potential risk associated with workplace exposures to airborne  fibers. In the early 1990s, laboratory studies indicated that RCFs could cause  cancer in animals exposed at doses hundreds of times higher than current  average occupational workplace exposures. These studies are subject to  extensive scientific debate, due to evidence of flaws in the study design. In  contrast to animal studies, epidemiological investigations of persons actually  exposed to RCF in the workplace for long periods of time did not show  significant adverse health effects associated with RCF exposure. Nevertheless,  the animal studies suggested that exposure to extremely high levels of RCF may  pose some risk; therefore, RCF producers decided to take action to manage the  potential human health risks and not to wait for more definitive scientific  results or regulatory action.<\/p>\n<h5>Product Stewardship<\/h5>\n<p>The RCFC was formed in the late 1980s. The coalition and its  member companies (Thermal Ceramics, Unifrax Corporation, and Vesuvius USA)  account for more than ninety-five percent of all RCF currently produced in the  United States. In 1991, the RCFC implemented a comprehensive, multifaceted  Product Stewardship Program (PSP), designed to assist RCF manufacturers and end  users in the evaluation, control, and reduction of workplace exposures to  airborne fiber. The RCF PSP encompasses the entire &ldquo;cradle-to-grave&rdquo; life cycle  of RCF-containing products, from primary manufacture, processing, and use  through the ultimate disposal of RCF-containing materials.<\/p>\n<p>The objective of the PSP for RCF was to help employees  better manage the risk associated with workplace exposure to airborne RCFs. The  PSP established and communicated proper material handling practices,  engineering control technologies, personal protective equipment  recommendations, regulatory information, and information pertaining to  workplace exposure assessments. The PSP for RCF consists of the following seven  key elements:<\/p>\n<h6>Health effects research:<\/h6>\n<p>This element includes epidemiological studies on worker  cohorts, animal studies, and studies designed to learn more about fiber  dosimetry&mdash;the relationships between exposure concentration, deposition in the  deep lung, clearance of retained fibers, and possible biological effects. The  information gained as part of this research is useful in conducting  quantitative risk analyses.<\/p>\n<h6>Exposure assessments:<\/h6>\n<p>This element encompasses studies designed to estimate the  exposed cohort (approximately 30,000 workers in the United States, and the same  number in Europe) and to assess (qualitatively or semi-quantitatively) possible  life-cycle exposure to various RCF-containing products. Based on this exposure  &ldquo;screening&rdquo; analysis, products or product applications are identified and  flagged for further quantitative analysis and executive review. The objective  is to evaluate potential control options and, if these appear unsatisfactory,  product substitutes.<\/p>\n<h6>Study of workplace controls:<\/h6>\n<p>This element (in concert with workplace monitoring) includes  studies designed to identify and evaluate ways to reduce exposure (including  engineering controls, workplace practices, and, for some jobs, use of personal  protective equipment). Controls evaluated as part of this program element  included use of general and local exhaust ventilation (LEV), baghouses,  humidity control, isolation of high-exposure jobs, reengineering of dusty jobs,  and development of improved work practices.<\/p>\n<h6>Workplace monitoring:<\/h6>\n<p>This element involves monitoring of task length average  (TLA) and time-weighted average (TWA) fiber concentrations at facilities  operated by RCF producers (termed &ldquo;internal samples&rdquo;) and their customers  (termed &ldquo;external samples&rdquo;). The objectives are to identify high-exposure jobs,  characterize exposure by industrial segment, detect time trends in occupational  exposure, and use this information for benchmarking purposes. The study of  workplace controls and workplace monitoring enabled the industry to examine the  feasibility of meeting various occupational exposure limits (OELs). The  industry adopted a series of progressively more stringent recommended exposure  guidelines (REGs) based on monitoring results and demonstrated feasibility.<\/p>\n<h6>Product research:<\/h6>\n<p>This element includes reach initiatives designed to find  ways to reduce potential exposure through product design (e.g., encapsulation),  fiber dimension, and the development of high-temperature fibers that are less  biopersistent. <\/p>\n<h6>Special studies:<\/h6>\n<p>This catchall category covers relevant projects that did not  fit neatly into the elements listed above. Included in this category were  studies to measure stack emissions, possible substitutes, and waste generation  rates. Among other things, these studies were designed to anticipate regulatory  needs and provide relevant information to decision makers. <\/p>\n<h6>Communications:<\/h6>\n<p>This element includes the use of various media to  communicate the results of the PSP to employees, customers, unions, and  government regulators. The industry developed videotapes, comic books (written  in various languages), consumer telephone &ldquo;hot lines&rdquo; to provide time-critical  information, material safety data sheets (MSDS), and (later) information posted  on Internet sites maintained by the RCF producers, RCFC, and the European  Ceramic Fibres Industry Association (ECFIA). A key part of the communications  program was a customer outreach program. RCF producers helped form user groups  (e.g., the RCF Vacuum Formers Association) to share relevant stewardship  information. Another key component of the communications program was the  decision to publish all scientific information in the peer-reviewed literature.<\/p>\n<h5>PSP 2002&mdash;Workplace Monitoring<\/h5>\n<p>On February 11, 2002, the RCFC member companies entered into  a voluntary workplace protection agreement with OSHA. This program, entitled  PSP 2002, is a highly acclaimed, multi-faceted strategic risk management  initiative designed specifically to reduce workplace exposures to airborne  RCFs. PSP 2002 has been developed for use wherever RCF is manufactured,  fabricated, installed, or removed, as well as in other occupational settings  where workers have potential exposure to airborne RCF. RCFC reports its  progress on the implementation of PSP&nbsp;2002 to OSHA annually. Although  there are no reporting provisions for non-RCFC member companies, all RCF users  were encouraged to adopt the key elements of PSP 2002. OSHA made a special  point to commend RCFC for its commitment to assisting its industrial customers  with managing workplace exposures to RCF. In a letter to RCFC dated February  11, 2002, the assistant secretary of labor for occupational safety and health,  John Henshaw, commented, &ldquo;OSHA believes that the commitment RCFC has made in  developing the Program form an important step towards further improving worker  protection. The 0.5 fiber\/cc exposure guideline recommended in the Program, the  specific engineering controls and work practices detailed in the Program, and  the recognition that respiratory protection is appropriate in certain  operations, will help reduce exposures of the workers who handle RCF products  daily.&rdquo; <\/p>\n<p>Workplace industrial hygiene sampling is conducted using a  stratified random sampling plan (SRSP) with stated data quality objectives  (DQO). The purposes are to: 1) identify differences in workplace exposures  among workers in different functional job categories (FJCs), 2) track time  trends in average workplace concentrations, 3) learn if there are systematic  differences between exposures of workers employed in identical FJCs by RCF  producers compared to those employed by customers, 4) develop &ldquo;before and  after&rdquo; snapshots to evaluate the effectiveness of intervention and monitoring,  and 5) investigate whether there are systematic differences among customers in  different industrial sectors. Because one major purpose of these samples is to  track exposure changes over time, the data are referred to as historical  baseline samples. All industrial hygiene workplace exposure monitoring for RCF  is performed by industrial hygienists employed by RCFC member companies  following the strict protocol outlined within a Quality Assurance Project Plan  (QAPP). Sample collection and laboratory analysis is performed following the  National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) Method 7400  (NIOSH, 1989).<\/p>\n<p>In addition to samples included as part of the SRSP, other  samples, termed special emphasis samples (SES), are collected. These include  personal monitoring samples, area samples, use of various analytical techniques  (e.g., transmission electron microscopy, phase contrast microscopy, scanning  electron microscopy) or Tyndall beam technology designed to better understand  emission points and design engineered controls (dust collection). Special  emphasis sample data are not pooled with historical baseline sample data for  developing exposure estimates. <\/p>\n<p>In 2005, RCFC member companies met all deliverables  identified under PSP 2002. RCF workplace concentrations decreased in customer  facilities by 28.5 percent, while remaining approximately the same (up four  percent) for RCF manufacturers. The numbers of samples collected in 2005  actually exceeded the goals of PSP 2002 in each corresponding category, with  overages of four percent for internal samples, sixteen percent for external  &ldquo;customer&rdquo; samples, and thirty-six percent for special emphasis samples.  Overall, weighted average airborne fiber concentrations have decreased substantially  since 1990 (the inception of PSP for RCF). <\/p>\n<p>In summary, 2005 was another successful year for PSP 2002 as  all deliverables were provided and weighted average exposures remained  approximately the same for RCF producers or decreased for customers. Looking  ahead as the PSP 2002 program enters its fifth and final year, the RCFC is in  the process of preparing a proposal for OSHA, NIOSH, and the EPA for the  continuation of PSP for RCF. The industry intends to continue the PSP and look  for ways to enhance its impact on reducing workplace exposures to airborne  fiber.<\/p>\n<h5>Conclusion<\/h5>\n<p>Product stewardship for RCF has a 15-year proven track  record of success. This comprehensive risk management strategy has given birth  to new control technologies, modified handling practices, new fiber  chemistries, a better understanding of workplace exposures to airborne fiber,  and scientific discoveries that advance our understanding of the potential  biological impacts of fiber exposure. Certainly, PSP for RCF can best be  described as a work in progress, as future developments help us understand how  to minimize the potential risks associated with workplace exposures to airborne  RCF.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Beginning in the mid 1970s, individuals within the regulated community, and even within the federal government, began advocating the use of negotiated rulemaking as a more efficient, sensible alternative to the traditional &ldquo;notice and comment&rdquo; procedures typically followed by federal agencies in the development of regulations. In the 1980s, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":[148],"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[292,289,41,21,32,28],"class_list":["post-7246","articles","type-articles","status-publish","hentry","category-refractory","category-personnel-protection","category-process-control","category-business-managment","category-health-and-safety","category-energy-savings","author-dean-e-venturin-ph-d"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v24.0 (Yoast SEO v24.6) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/wordpress\/plugins\/seo\/ -->\n<title>Product Stewardship: The Refractory Ceramic Fiber Industry&rsquo;s Voluntary Workplace Protection Program - Insulation Outlook Magazine<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/insulation.org\/io\/articles\/product-stewardship-the-refractory-ceramic-fiber-industrys-voluntary-workplace-protection-program\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Product Stewardship: The Refractory Ceramic Fiber Industry&rsquo;s Voluntary Workplace Protection Program\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Beginning in the mid 1970s, individuals within the regulated community, and even within the federal government, began advocating the use of negotiated rulemaking as a more efficient, sensible alternative to the traditional &ldquo;notice and comment&rdquo; procedures typically followed by federal agencies in the development of regulations. 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