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Waste Characterization must be Correct

An Alberta case, Wainwright v. GM Pearson, has reinforced the duties of care owed by waste generators and handlers to everyone down the chain, including those who ultimately dispose of its waste.

This case involved drums of lacquer dust, characterized by the generators as solid, non-hazardous but flammable, and sent from the US to Canada for incineration. The dust passed through three brokers to a municipal waste incinerator, where it caused a substantial fire. Liability for the fire was ultimately placed on the two Canadian waste brokers.

The generator escaped liability, because it had selected a specialized waste broker, accurately characterized the waste and clearly communicated that characterization:

Having provided all this information to its broker, the generator had met its duty of care. At that point, its duty to all subsequent handlers devolved to [the broker] to pass on the same information to the next waste industry participant.

Unfortunately, a “notoriously disorganized” employee failed to do just that. The flammable lacquer dust was labelled non-hazardous “sawdust”; the waste profiles were not forwarded to the next broker and the result was a million-dollar fire. Fortunately, no one was hurt.

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