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2. Introduction. 1993 - Request for emergency rulemaking to reduce hexavalent chrome PEL2003 Federal Appeals Court ruled that OSHA must produce new rule according to specified timetable (Oct 04, Jan 06; no specific PEL) Oct. 2004 Draft rule released for public comment, PEL of 1.0 ug/m3 proposedFeb. 2006 Promulgation of final rule.
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1. 1 Preparing for the OSHA Hexavalent Chrome Rule in an Aerospace Company Michael Dwyer
The Boeing Company
2006 Air Force Corrosion Conference
March 14, 2006
2. 2 Introduction 1993 - Request for emergency rulemaking to reduce hexavalent chrome PEL
2003 – Federal Appeals Court ruled that OSHA must produce new rule according to specified timetable (Oct 04, Jan 06; no specific PEL)
Oct. 2004 – Draft rule released for public comment, PEL of 1.0 ug/m3 proposed
Feb. 2006 – Promulgation of final rule
3. 3 Exposure limit-5 ug/m3
Aerospace painting limit-25 ug/m3
Increased air monitoring
Regulated area requirement
Engineering and work practice controls
Respiratory protection
Medical surveillance
4. 4 Chrome Use in Aerospace Corrosion-inhibiting primers containing CrVI are used on the majority all aluminum and steel aircraft parts
Approximately 75% of the structural parts of some airplanes are painted with a CrVI primer
5. 5 Current State Many aerospace companies use state-of-the-art control measures:
Engineering Controls
Spray paint systems (such as electrostatic spray guns and HVLP) which minimize overspray
Dry-filter paint booths with optimal ventilation
PPE – Respiratory Protection
Required for all CrVI spray painting operations
Full-face and half-face, air-supplied or air-purifying
Hood-type airline respirators
6. 6 Key Concerns Technical feasibility of controls
Applicability of studies used for setting standards
Financial impact to key suppliers and self
Reduced productivity due to controls
Attainability of PEL
-Health Impacts
-Tech impacts
-
-Health Impacts
-Tech impacts
-
7. 7 Chromate Substitution Few substitutes for hexavalent chrome are available
Boeing has not identified a drop in replacement for chromate primer
High priority programs continue to investigate chemical processes free from chromates:
primers
detackifier
sealants
conversion coatings
8. 8 Strategy Establish cross functional teams
Create analysis processes used across enterprise
Identify and fill data gaps
Estimate costs and integrate into future budgets (capital and expense)
Develop comments in response to OSHA comment period
Create implementation plans based on PEL scenarios
Implement “feasible” changes to materials and processes to reduce exposures and reduce standard impact
9. 9
10. 10 Primary Processes Impacted Spray application of primer coatings
Spray application of chromic acid (Alodine)
De-painting previously primed surfaces
Chrome anodize
Chrome plating
Welding
11. 11 Exposure Assessment Aerospace processes that could exceed the OSHA PEL:
Spray painting primers
Major sanding or grinding on primed surfaces
Paint booth filter change operations
Aerospace processes that are probably below the OSHA PEL:
General assembly or fabrication work
Drilling and filling
Background factory air
Spray application of chromic acid
Welding
Tank line chemical adds
12. 12 Identifying Potentially Affected Population by Site
13. 13 Key Elements of Cost Model per Employee Annual cost for above PEL
PPE
Lost productivity
Medical
IH evaluations
Equipment maintenance One time cost for above PEL
Change rooms
Engineering feasibility studies
Engineering controls
Implementation of Regulated Areas
One time cost for all exposed
Training
Initial exposure assessment
14. 14 Cost Estimate Approach
15. 15 Eliminate bldg. #Eliminate bldg. #
16. 16 Key Findings Significant initial and ongoing monitoring impact
Spray applications, sanding, and grinding created highest exposures
Costs were much higher than OSHA estimates – recurring costs were very high, capital not the major cost driver
Aerospace painting variance for engineering controls appropriate
17. 17 Key Findings (continued) Some exposures can be eliminated by feasible process changes
Cost estimating tools require modifications for small/large populations and process variation
Material and process changes with customer and supplier involvement are critical
Cannot over-communicate to internal and external stakeholders
Create alliances