Transportation of Dangerous Goods Act, 1992 | |
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Parliament of Canada | |
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Citation | S.C. 1992, c. 34 |
Royal assent | June 23, 1992 |
Status: In force |
The Transportation of Dangerous Goods Act, 1992 (French: Loi de 1992 sur le transport des marchandises dangereuses) is a Canadian federal statute. Introduced in the 34th Canadian Parliament, and receiving royal assent on June 23, 1992, the act regulates the transportation of dangerous goods in the country.
The TGDA has an "Offences and Punishments" passage in which are detailed liabilities "on indictment to imprisonment for a term not exceeding two years", and that "Proceedings by way of summary conviction may be instituted at any time within, but not later than, five years after the day on which the subject matter of the proceedings arose." The TGDA falls under the control of the Minister of Transport.[1]
The Hazardous Waste Manifest form is mandated by the TDGA.[2]
Dangerous Goods Safety Marks
Class 1, Explosives
Class 1 placards all have an orange background.
- Class 1.1, 1.2, 1.3
- Class 1.4
- Class 1.5
- Class 1.6
All placards under class 1 have a placeholder for the product's compatibility group letter. Class 1.1, 1.2, and 1.3 bear a black exploding bomb symbol and have placeholders for the product's division.
Class 2, Gases
Class 2 placards all bear various symbols and background colours.
- Class 2.1
- Class 2.2
- Class 2.3
- Oxidizing gases
Class 2.1, Flammable Gases, bears a black or white flame symbol on a red background. Class 2.2, Non-flammable and Non-toxic Gases, bears a black or white gas cylinder symbol on a green background. Class 2.3, Toxic Gases, bears a black skull and crossbones symbol on a white background.
When anhydrous ammonia (UN 1005) is transported, the container must display (in addition to the existing Class 2.3 placard and UN number) a special placard with the product name and the words "inhalation hazard" (French: dangereux par inhalation).
If a product is an oxidizing gas, a yellow placard with black text and a flaming 'O' symbol must be displayed.
Class 3, Flammable liquids
The Class 3 placard bears a black or white flame symbol on a red background.
- Class 3
Class 4, Flammable solids
Class 4 placards all bear flame symbols with various backgrounds.
- Class 4.1
- Class 4.2
- Class 4.3
Class 4.1, Flammable Solids, has a black symbol with a vertically-striped red and white background. Class 4.2, Substances Liable to Spontaneous Combustion, has a black symbol with the upper half of the placard having a white background and the lower half with a red background. Class 4.3, Water-reactive Substances, has a black or white symbol with a blue background.
Class 5, Oxidizing substances and organic peroxides
Class 5 placards all bear various symbols and background colours.
- Class 5.1
- Class 5.2
Class 5.1, Oxidizing Substances, bears a black flaming 'O' symbol on a yellow background. Class 5.2, Organic Peroxides, bears a black or white flame symbol with the upper half of the placard having a red background and the lower half with a yellow background.
Class 6, Toxic and infectious substances
Class 6 placards all bear various symbols on a white background.
- Class 6.1
- Class 6.2 placard
- Class 6.2 label
Class 7, Radioactive materials
- Class 7 placard
- Class 7 label
- Class 7, Category I
- Class 7, Category II
- Class 7, Category III
Class 8, Corrosives
- Class 8
Class 9, Miscellaneous products
- Class 9
- Lithium batteries
Other placards & signs
- Danger placard
- Fumigation sign
References
- ↑ "Transportation of Dangerous Goods Act, 1992". Statutes of Canada. Government of Canada (Justice Laws Website). c.34. 1992.
- ↑ Users' Guide for the Hazardous Waste Manifest (Transportation of Dangerous Goods Act). Transport Canada. 1985.