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Hosted Services Tapped to Manage Data on Chemicals

Manufacturers replace paper safety info sheets with online systems

October 3, 2005 12:00 PM ET

Computerworld - An emerging class of hosted services is designed to make it easier for manufacturing companies to manage the material safety data sheets (MSDS) required for each of the chemicals used in their products.
Last week, 3E Co., a Carlsbad, Calif.-based provider of Web-based chemical management services, launched Version 2.0 of its 3E Online offering. The upgraded service allows users to more quickly search for MSDS information across multiple sites, and it makes it easier for manufacturers to verify their compliance with international standards regulating the use of chemicals, according to 3E.
Due to make a similar announcement next week is Actio Corp., a Hampton, N.H.-based application service provider that offers a portfolio of chemical management services. Enhancements to Actio's MSDS Vault service include new features for handling preliminary screening of chemicals, inventory management and chemical tracking.
"The primary return on such services is compliance assurance," said Jeet Radia, assistant vice president in charge of environmental issues at McWane Inc., a maker of cast-iron pipes and fittings in Birmingham, Ala.
Regulatory Requirements
Like other manufacturers, McWane is required to maintain detailed MSDSs listing the physical attributes, toxicity and health effects of each of the chemicals used in its products, as well as its procedures for disposing of them.

How It Works
Online MSDS services:
  • Customers hand over a complete inventory of all the chemicals used in their products to their service providers.
  • The associated data sheets are sometimes sourced directly from chemical makers by application service providers, which then manage and maintain the data for users.
  • Other service providers require customers to scan their MSDS information into the online system they're using.
  • The data is required under the Occupational Safety and Health Administration's Hazardous Communication Standard and is designed to give employees and emergency workers information on the proper handling of chemicals.
    Until recently, McWane maintained 10,000 MSDSs across its 25 facilities using a paper-based approach that made the information difficult to access and even harder to update. The process was cumbersome and imprecise, said Radia, adding that the data sheets lacked a consistent format and often were illegible.
    McWane signed up for a managed MSDS service with Safetec LLC in Vancouver, Wash., about six months ago. Under the arrangement, Safetec is scanning all of McWane's MSDSs into a more organized online system that makes it easier to retrieve information, Radia said.
    The improved access has also allowed the company to tie its enterprise environmental management system to the MSDS data to allow for quicker chemical compliance checks during the manufacturing process.
    Behr Process Corp. in


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