Lighting Waste Disposal
Both lighting upgrades and routine maintenance entail the removal of lamps and ballasts from the system. These lamps and ballasts must be disposed of according to state and Federal regulations; if they conflict, then the stricter regulations must be obeyed. Mercury-containing fluorescent and high-intensity discharge (HID) lamps and PCB-containing ballasts are two types of potentially hazardous waste.
Lamps
All fluorescent and HID lamps have mercury content. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) regulates mercury disposal under the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA). Because the cost of testing the lamps may be prohibitive, it is generally wise to consider all lamps being disposed of as hazardous waste. As hazardous waste, lamps must either be recycled or disposed of in hazardous waste landfills as opposed to municipal solid waste landfills. They cannot be incinerated.
Small generators are exempt from RCRA regulations. Small generators are companies that generate less than 100 kilograms of hazardous waste per month; in terms of lamps only, this is about 300-350 4 ft. T12 lamps or 400-450 4 ft. T8 lamps per month.
The cost of recycling a 4 ft. fluorescent lamp can be about $0.50-0.75/lamp vs. about $0.25-$0.50 for landfill disposal (as of 1995, source: EPA Green Lights); usually, recycling does not make the initial cost of a lighting upgrade unprofitable. When fluorescent lamps are recycled, the waste is crushed, then separated into phosphor powder, recovered mercury, metal and glass that are eventually put to reuse.
In recent years, the major lamp manufacturers have introduced a number of low-mercury fluorescent and HID lamps (example: Philips’ Alto fluorescent lamp) that are designed to pass EPA tests, allowing them to be disposed of in municipal solid waste landfills. Check with the state hazardous waste agency or agencies having jurisdiction to see if the lamps can be disposed of as solid waste.
In addition, both the U.S. EPA and the states have been relaxing their regulations regarding the disposal of fluorescent and HID lamps. Again, check with the applicable state hazardous waste agency or agencies to determine the specific requirements for handling, storage, transportation and disposal of mercury-containing lamps.
Also, for more information, contact the EPA’s Hazardous Waste Hotline at (800) 424-9346.
Ballasts
Ballasts manufactured and distributed in the United States prior to 1979 contain polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), which is a hazardous material. Since many magnetic ballasts can enjoy a service life of 25 years or longer, many of these ballasts are still in existence. If a ballast label is marked “NO PCBs,” then it is not a PCB ballast; if there is no such marking, then the ballast is assumed to contain PCB fluid. Handling and disposal instructions for ballasts with PCBs can be found on this EPA web page: www.epa.gov/
Light Guides ©2016 inter.Light, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Disclaimer