ez COD Recycling Service (5-gallon mail-back)

ez COD Recycling Service (5-gallon mail-back)

Product Number: 2895405

Available
Price: Contact Us
Talk to an Expert

Hazardous Materials

Contains mercury. Dispose of according to local, state and federal regulations.

Contains mercury. Dispose of according to local, state and federal regulations.
The ez CODTM Recycling Service is designed to provide Hach COD customers in the United States* with an inexpensive, reliable, easy to manage, safe and environmentally friendly disposal and recycling service for used COD vials.
Service includes mail-back transportation, documentation and disposal. Choose a container size that is consistent with your COD waste output and allowable waste retention periods. 5 gallon container holds approximately 400 16 mm COD vials or 650 13 mm TNTplus vials. (Maximum total weight of 25 lbs.)

* NOT to be used for disposal of mercury-free COD products (COD2 and Manganese III). Bucket must contain mercury-based COD products to qualify. Available only to customers in the 48 contiguous United States - not for Alaska or Hawaii.

The following states do not allow the mail-back service and require the disposed COD vials to be picked up:

AR, CA, IL, MA, ME, MI, MN, NH, RI

If you are located in one of the above states or have SQG/LQG status, utilize the pick-up option (Item 2895405P) or consider the 20 gal bucket.

Note: Small quantity generators (SQG) and large quantity generators (LQG) are not eligible for the 5 gallon mail-back service and must purchase a bucket
that will be picked up. SQG and LQG customers that purchase this item are subject to an additional fee.

Applications:

  • Industrial Wastewater
  • Municipal Water

Benefits

Low Cost

One-Stop Shopping

Hassle-Free

Environmentally Friendly

Please Note: Very small quantity generators of hazardous waste are not required by federal EPA to obtain an EPA ID number or submit a notification form but may be subject to state-specific reporting requirements. All generators should consult with their state agencies to clarify the specific reporting requirements for that state.

Loading