International Code for the Construction & Equipment of Ships Carrying Dangerous Chemicals in Bulk-December 2005 Deadline for Manufacturers of Affected Products, 70861-70862 [05-23234]
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 225 / Wednesday, November 23, 2005 / Notices
required to contact Mrs. Giselle Hersh,
Division of Workplace Programs, 1
Choke Cherry Road, Room 2–1042,
Rockville, MD 20857, 240–276–2605
(telephone) or by e-mail to
Giselle.Hersh@samhsa.hhs.gov.
Substantive program information and
a roster of Board members may be
obtained by accessing the SAMHSA
workplace Web site (https://
workplace.samhsa.gov) or
communicating with the contact whose
name and telephone number are listed
below. The transcript for the open
session will be available on the
SAMHSA workplace Web site as soon as
possible after the meeting.
Committee Name: Substance Abuse
and Mental Health Services
Administration Drug Testing Advisory
Board.
Meeting Date: December 13–14, 2005.
Place: SAMHSA Building, Sugarloaf
Conference Room, 1 Choke Cherry Road,
Rockville, Maryland 20850.
Type: Open: December 13, 2005; 8:30
a.m.–10:30 a.m.
Closed: December 13, 2005; 10:30
a.m.–4:30 p.m.
Closed: December 14, 2005; 8:30 a.m.–
Noon.
Contact: Donna M. Bush, Ph.D.,
Executive Secretary, 1 Choke Cherry
Road, Room 2–1033, Rockville,
Maryland 20857, 240–276–2600
(telephone) and 240–276–2610 (fax), email: Donna.Bush@samhsa.hhs.gov.
Dated: November 17, 2005.
Robert E. Stephenson,
Acting Committee Management Officer,
Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services
Administration.
[FR Doc. 05–23155 Filed 11–22–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4162–20–P
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
Coast Guard
[USCG–2005–23024]
International Code for the Construction
& Equipment of Ships Carrying
Dangerous Chemicals in Bulk—
December 2005 Deadline for
Manufacturers of Affected Products
Coast Guard, DHS.
Notice.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
SUMMARY: The Coast Guard notifies
manufacturers that there is a December
31, 2005 deadline to supply missing
safety or pollution data for the revised
International Code for the Construction
& Equipment of Ships Carrying
Dangerous Chemicals in Bulk, which
VerDate Aug<31>2005
17:33 Nov 22, 2005
Jkt 208001
will affect the bulk shipment of certain
products on most international voyages.
DATES: The International Maritime
Organization should receive missing
data no later than December 31, 2005.
ADDRESSES: Missing data can be
delivered to the following address:
GESAMP/EHS, International Maritime
Organization, 4 Albert Embankment,
London SE1 7SR, United Kingdom. You
may submit comments identified by
Coast Guard docket number USCG–
2005–23024 to the Docket Management
Facility at the U.S. Department of
Transportation. To avoid duplication,
please use only one of the following
methods:
(1) Web Site: https://dms.dot.gov.
(2) Mail: Docket Management Facility,
U.S. Department of Transportation, 400
Seventh Street, SW., Washington, DC
20590–0001.
(3) Fax: 202–493–2251.
(4) Delivery: Room PL–401 on the
Plaza level of the Nassif Building, 400
Seventh Street, SW., Washington, DC,
between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday
through Friday, except Federal holidays.
The telephone number is 202–366–
9329.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: If
you have questions on this notice, call
Mr. Tom Felleisen, Hazardous Materials
Standards Division (G–MSO–3), Coast
Guard, telephone 202–267–0086. If you
have questions on viewing or submitting
material to the docket, call Renee V.
Wright, Program Manager, Docket
Operations, telephone 202–493–0402.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Request for Comments
All comments received will be posted,
without change, to https://dms.dot.gov
and will include any personal
information you have provided. We
have an agreement with the Department
of Transportation (DOT) to use the
Docket Management Facility. Please see
DOT’s ‘‘Privacy Act’’ paragraph below.
Submitting comments: If you submit a
comment, please include your name and
address, identify the docket number for
this notice (USCG–2005–23024) and
give the reason for each comment. You
may submit your comments by
electronic means, mail, fax, or delivery
to the Docket Management Facility at
the address under ADDRESSES; but
please submit your comments by only
one means. If you submit them by mail
or delivery, submit them in an unbound
format, no larger than 81⁄2 by 11 inches,
suitable for copying and electronic
filing. If you submit them by mail and
would like to know that they reached
the Facility, please enclose a stamped,
self-addressed postcard or envelope. We
PO 00000
Frm 00080
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
70861
will consider all comments received
during the comment period.
Viewing comments and documents:
To view comments, go to https://
dms.dot.gov at any time, click on
‘‘Simple Search,’’ enter the last five
digits of the docket number for this
rulemaking, and click on ‘‘Search.’’ You
may also visit the Docket Management
Facility in room PL–401 on the Plaza
level of the Nassif Building, 400
Seventh Street, SW., Washington, DC,
between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday
through Friday, except Federal holidays.
Privacy Act: Anyone can search the
electronic form of all comments
received into any of our dockets by the
name of the individual submitting the
comment (or signing the comment, if
submitted on behalf of an association,
business, labor union, etc.). You may
review the Department of
Transportation’s Privacy Act Statement
in the Federal Register published on
April 11, 2000 (65 FR 19477), or you
may visit https://dms.dot.gov.
Background and Purpose
The International Maritime
Organization’s (IMO) Maritime Safety
Committee adopted the revised
International Code for the Construction
& Equipment of Ships Carrying
Dangerous Chemicals in Bulk (IBC
Code) last year. Over 120 products were
omitted from either Chapter 17 or 18 of
the IBC Code due to missing safety and
or pollution data. The 41st session of
the Joint Group of Experts on the
Scientific Aspects of Marine
Environmental Protection working
group on the Evaluation of the Hazards
of Harmful Substances Carried by Ships
and the most recent session of the
working group on the Evaluation of
Safety and Pollution Hazards updated
this list. IMO will exclude these
products from the revised IBC Code
unless it receives the missing data by
December 31, 2005. If these products are
excluded, shippers will be unable to
carry them in bulk after January 1, 2007
on most international voyages.
Therefore, the manufacturers of these
products should supply the missing
safety and or pollution data to the IMO
GESAMP/EHS Secretariat (see
ADDRESSES) by December 31, 2005.
This notice of an IMO action does not
mean that the Coast Guard will
necessarily be implementing the IMO
action on all international shipments.
Implementation of IMO actions would
be the subject of a future rulemaking
under a distinct docket.
The affected products are:
1. Acetochlor
2. Alkaryl polyethers (C9–C20)
3. Alkenyl (C11+) amide
E:\FR\FM\23NON1.SGM
23NON1
70862
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 225 / Wednesday, November 23, 2005 / Notices
4. Alkyl(C8+)amine, Alkenyl (C12+)
acid ester mixture
5. Aluminium chloride (30% or less)/
Hydrochloric acid (20% or less)
solution
6. 2-(2-Aminoethoxy) ethanol
7. 2-Amino-2-hydroxymethyl-1,3propanediol solution (40% or less)
8. Ammonium bisulphite solution (70%
or less)
9. Ammonium thiocyanate (25% or
less)/Ammonium thiosulphate (20%
or less) solution
10. Benzyl chloride
11. N,N-bis(2-hydroxyethyl) oleamide
12. Brake fluid base mix: Poly(2–
8)alkylene (C2–C3) glycols/
Polyalkylene (C2–C10)
13. glycols monoalkyl (C1–C4) ethers
and their borate esters
14. Butene oligomer
15. Butyl stearate
16. Calcium alkyl (C9) phenol sulphide/
Polyolefin phosphorosulphide
mixture
17. Calcium long-chain alkaryl
sulphonate (C11–C50)
18. Calcium long-chain alkyl phenolic
amine (C8–C40)
19. Calcium nitrate/Magnesium nitrate/
Potassium chloride solution
20. Calcium nitrate solutions (50% or
less)
21. Camphor oil
22. Caramel solutions
23. Carbolic oil
24. Cashew nut shell oil (untreated)
25. Chlorinated paraffins (C14-C17)
(with 50% chlorine or more, and less
than 1% C13 or shorter chains)
26. Coal tar
27. Coal tar naphtha solvent
28. Coal tar pitch (molten)
29. Cobalt naphthenate in solvent
naphtha
30. Coconut oil fatty acid methyl ester
31. Creosote (coal tar)
32. Creosote (wood)
33. Cresylic acid, sodium salt solution
34. Decyl acetate
35. 1,6-Dichlorohexane
36. 2,4-Dichlorophenoxyacetic acid,
triisopropanolamine salt solution
37. 1,3-Dichloropropane
38. Diethylene glycol diethyl ether
39. Diethylene glycol phthalate
40. Diglycidyl ether of bisphenol
41. 1,4-Dihydro-9,10dihydroxyanthracene, disodium salt
solution
42. Diisononyl adipate
43. Dinonyl phthalate
44. Diphenylamine, reaction product
with 2,2,4-Trimethylpentene
45. Diphenylmethane diisocyanate
46. Ditridecyl adipate
47. Ditridecyl phthalate
48. Dodecenylsuccinic acid,
dipotassium salt solution
VerDate Aug<31>2005
17:33 Nov 22, 2005
Jkt 208001
49. Dodecylamine/Tetradecylamine
mixture
50. Dodecyl diphenyl ether
disulphonate solution
51. Ethyl amyl ketone
52. N-Ethylbutylamine
53. Ethyl butyrate
54. Ethylene glycol methyl butyl ether
55. Ethylene-Vinyl acetate copolymer
(emulsion)
56. o-Ethylphenol
57. Ethyl propionate
58. Ferric
hydroxyethylethylenediaminetriacetic
acid, trisodium salt solution
59. Fish solubles (water-based fish meal
extract)
60. Fluorosilicic acid (20–30%) in water
solution
61. Fumaric adduct of rosin, water
dispersion
62. Glycerine (83%),
Dioxanedimethanol (17%) mixture
63. Glycerol polyalkoxylate
64. Icosa (oxypropane-2,3-diyl)s
65. Isopropylamine (70% or less)
66. Latex, ammonia (1% or less),
inhibited
67. Latex: Carboxylated styreneButadiene copolymer; StyreneButadiene rubber
68. Ligninsulphonic acid, sodium salt
solution
69. Long-chain alkaryl sulphonic acid
(C16–C60)
70. Long-chain polyetheramine in alkyl
(C2–C4) benzenes
71. Long-chain polyetheramine in
aromatic solvent
72. Magnesium long-chain alkaryl
sulphonate (C11–C50)
73. Methyl heptyl ketone
74. 3-Methyl-3-methoxybutyl acetate
75. Naphthenic Acids
76. Nitroethane, 1-Nitropropane (each
15% or more) mixture
77. o- or p-Nitrotoluenes
78. Nonyl acetate
79. Octyl decyl adipate
80. Oleylamine
81. Palm kernel acid oil
82. Palm oil fatty acid methyl ester
83. Pentaethylenehexamine
84. Phosphate esters, alkyl (C12–C14)
amine
85. Poly(2–8)alkylene glycol
monoalkyl(C1–C6) ether
86. Poly(2–8)alkylene glycol monoalkyl
(C1–C6) ether acetate
87. Polyalkylene oxide polyol
88. Polybutene
89. Polyether (molecular weight 2000+)
90. Polyethylene polyamines
91. Polyglycerin, sodium salt solution
(containing less than 3% sodium
hydroxide)
92. Polyglycerol
93. Polyolefin amide alkeneamine/
molybdenum oxysulphide mixture
PO 00000
Frm 00081
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
94. Polyolefin amide alkeneamine
polyol
95. Polyolefin aminoester salts (mw
2000+)
96. Poly(5+)propylene
97. Poly(tetramethylene ether) glycol
(mw 600–3000)
98. Potassium chloride solution (10% or
more)
99. Potassium salt of polyolefin acid
100. n-Propyl chloride
101. Propylene-Butylene copolymer
102. Propylene dimer
103. Pyrolysis gasoline
104. Rosin soap (disproportionated)
solution
105. Sodium alkyl (C14–C17)
sulphonates (60–65% solution)
106. Sodium aluminate solution
107. Sodium petroleum sulphonate
108. Sodium tartrates/Sodium
succinates solution
109. Sulpho hydrocarbon long chain
(C18+) alkylamine mixture
110. Sulphurized polyolefinamide
alkene (C28–C250) amine
111. Tall oil (crude and distilled)
112. Tall oil fatty acid (resin acids less
than 20%)
113. Tall oil fatty acid, barium salt
114. Tall oil soap (disproportionated)
solution
115. Tallow fatty acid
116. Trimethylhexamethylenediamine
(2,2,4- and 2,4,4-isomers)
117. Trimethylhexamethylene
diisocyanate (2,2,4-and 2,4,4-isomers)
118. Trimethylolpropane polyethoxylate
119. Trimethyl phosphite
120. Urea/Ammonium mono- and
dihydrogen phosphate/Potassium
chloride solution
121. Urea formaldehyde resin solution
122. White spirit, low (15–20%)
aromatic
Dated: November 17, 2005.
Howard L. Hime,
Acting Director of Standards, Marine, Safety,
Security, and Environmental Protection, U.S.
Coast Guard.
[FR Doc. 05–23234 Filed 11–22–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–15–P
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
Coast Guard
[USCG–2005–22837]
Nationwide Automatic Identification
System (NAIS); Preparation of
Programmatic Environmental Impact
Statement
U.S. Coast Guard (USCG or
Coast Guard), Department of Homeland
Security (DHS).
ACTION: Notice of intent; notice of public
meeting; request for comments.
AGENCY:
E:\FR\FM\23NON1.SGM
23NON1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 70, Number 225 (Wednesday, November 23, 2005)]
[Notices]
[Pages 70861-70862]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 05-23234]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY
Coast Guard
[USCG-2005-23024]
International Code for the Construction & Equipment of Ships
Carrying Dangerous Chemicals in Bulk--December 2005 Deadline for
Manufacturers of Affected Products
AGENCY: Coast Guard, DHS.
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Coast Guard notifies manufacturers that there is a
December 31, 2005 deadline to supply missing safety or pollution data
for the revised International Code for the Construction & Equipment of
Ships Carrying Dangerous Chemicals in Bulk, which will affect the bulk
shipment of certain products on most international voyages.
DATES: The International Maritime Organization should receive missing
data no later than December 31, 2005.
ADDRESSES: Missing data can be delivered to the following address:
GESAMP/EHS, International Maritime Organization, 4 Albert Embankment,
London SE1 7SR, United Kingdom. You may submit comments identified by
Coast Guard docket number USCG-2005-23024 to the Docket Management
Facility at the U.S. Department of Transportation. To avoid
duplication, please use only one of the following methods:
(1) Web Site: https://dms.dot.gov.
(2) Mail: Docket Management Facility, U.S. Department of
Transportation, 400 Seventh Street, SW., Washington, DC 20590-0001.
(3) Fax: 202-493-2251.
(4) Delivery: Room PL-401 on the Plaza level of the Nassif
Building, 400 Seventh Street, SW., Washington, DC, between 9 a.m. and 5
p.m., Monday through Friday, except Federal holidays. The telephone
number is 202-366-9329.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: If you have questions on this notice,
call Mr. Tom Felleisen, Hazardous Materials Standards Division (G-MSO-
3), Coast Guard, telephone 202-267-0086. If you have questions on
viewing or submitting material to the docket, call Renee V. Wright,
Program Manager, Docket Operations, telephone 202-493-0402.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Request for Comments
All comments received will be posted, without change, to https://
dms.dot.gov and will include any personal information you have
provided. We have an agreement with the Department of Transportation
(DOT) to use the Docket Management Facility. Please see DOT's ``Privacy
Act'' paragraph below.
Submitting comments: If you submit a comment, please include your
name and address, identify the docket number for this notice (USCG-
2005-23024) and give the reason for each comment. You may submit your
comments by electronic means, mail, fax, or delivery to the Docket
Management Facility at the address under ADDRESSES; but please submit
your comments by only one means. If you submit them by mail or
delivery, submit them in an unbound format, no larger than 8\1/2\ by 11
inches, suitable for copying and electronic filing. If you submit them
by mail and would like to know that they reached the Facility, please
enclose a stamped, self-addressed postcard or envelope. We will
consider all comments received during the comment period.
Viewing comments and documents: To view comments, go to https://
dms.dot.gov at any time, click on ``Simple Search,'' enter the last
five digits of the docket number for this rulemaking, and click on
``Search.'' You may also visit the Docket Management Facility in room
PL-401 on the Plaza level of the Nassif Building, 400 Seventh Street,
SW., Washington, DC, between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday through Friday,
except Federal holidays.
Privacy Act: Anyone can search the electronic form of all comments
received into any of our dockets by the name of the individual
submitting the comment (or signing the comment, if submitted on behalf
of an association, business, labor union, etc.). You may review the
Department of Transportation's Privacy Act Statement in the Federal
Register published on April 11, 2000 (65 FR 19477), or you may visit
https://dms.dot.gov.
Background and Purpose
The International Maritime Organization's (IMO) Maritime Safety
Committee adopted the revised International Code for the Construction &
Equipment of Ships Carrying Dangerous Chemicals in Bulk (IBC Code) last
year. Over 120 products were omitted from either Chapter 17 or 18 of
the IBC Code due to missing safety and or pollution data. The 41st
session of the Joint Group of Experts on the Scientific Aspects of
Marine Environmental Protection working group on the Evaluation of the
Hazards of Harmful Substances Carried by Ships and the most recent
session of the working group on the Evaluation of Safety and Pollution
Hazards updated this list. IMO will exclude these products from the
revised IBC Code unless it receives the missing data by December 31,
2005. If these products are excluded, shippers will be unable to carry
them in bulk after January 1, 2007 on most international voyages.
Therefore, the manufacturers of these products should supply the
missing safety and or pollution data to the IMO GESAMP/EHS Secretariat
(see ADDRESSES) by December 31, 2005.
This notice of an IMO action does not mean that the Coast Guard
will necessarily be implementing the IMO action on all international
shipments. Implementation of IMO actions would be the subject of a
future rulemaking under a distinct docket.
The affected products are:
1. Acetochlor
2. Alkaryl polyethers (C9-C20)
3. Alkenyl (C11+) amide
[[Page 70862]]
4. Alkyl(C8+)amine, Alkenyl (C12+) acid ester mixture
5. Aluminium chloride (30% or less)/Hydrochloric acid (20% or less)
solution
6. 2-(2-Aminoethoxy) ethanol
7. 2-Amino-2-hydroxymethyl-1,3-propanediol solution (40% or less)
8. Ammonium bisulphite solution (70% or less)
9. Ammonium thiocyanate (25% or less)/Ammonium thiosulphate (20% or
less) solution
10. Benzyl chloride
11. N,N-bis(2-hydroxyethyl) oleamide
12. Brake fluid base mix: Poly(2-8)alkylene (C2-C3) glycols/
Polyalkylene (C2-C10)
13. glycols monoalkyl (C1-C4) ethers and their borate esters
14. Butene oligomer
15. Butyl stearate
16. Calcium alkyl (C9) phenol sulphide/Polyolefin phosphorosulphide
mixture
17. Calcium long-chain alkaryl sulphonate (C11-C50)
18. Calcium long-chain alkyl phenolic amine (C8-C40)
19. Calcium nitrate/Magnesium nitrate/Potassium chloride solution
20. Calcium nitrate solutions (50% or less)
21. Camphor oil
22. Caramel solutions
23. Carbolic oil
24. Cashew nut shell oil (untreated)
25. Chlorinated paraffins (C14-C17) (with 50% chlorine or more, and
less than 1% C13 or shorter chains)
26. Coal tar
27. Coal tar naphtha solvent
28. Coal tar pitch (molten)
29. Cobalt naphthenate in solvent naphtha
30. Coconut oil fatty acid methyl ester
31. Creosote (coal tar)
32. Creosote (wood)
33. Cresylic acid, sodium salt solution
34. Decyl acetate
35. 1,6-Dichlorohexane
36. 2,4-Dichlorophenoxyacetic acid, triisopropanolamine salt solution
37. 1,3-Dichloropropane
38. Diethylene glycol diethyl ether
39. Diethylene glycol phthalate
40. Diglycidyl ether of bisphenol
41. 1,4-Dihydro-9,10-dihydroxyanthracene, disodium salt solution
42. Diisononyl adipate
43. Dinonyl phthalate
44. Diphenylamine, reaction product with 2,2,4-Trimethylpentene
45. Diphenylmethane diisocyanate
46. Ditridecyl adipate
47. Ditridecyl phthalate
48. Dodecenylsuccinic acid, dipotassium salt solution
49. Dodecylamine/Tetradecylamine mixture
50. Dodecyl diphenyl ether disulphonate solution
51. Ethyl amyl ketone
52. N-Ethylbutylamine
53. Ethyl butyrate
54. Ethylene glycol methyl butyl ether
55. Ethylene-Vinyl acetate copolymer (emulsion)
56. o-Ethylphenol
57. Ethyl propionate
58. Ferric hydroxyethylethylenediaminetriacetic acid, trisodium salt
solution
59. Fish solubles (water-based fish meal extract)
60. Fluorosilicic acid (20-30%) in water solution
61. Fumaric adduct of rosin, water dispersion
62. Glycerine (83%), Dioxanedimethanol (17%) mixture
63. Glycerol polyalkoxylate
64. Icosa (oxypropane-2,3-diyl)s
65. Isopropylamine (70% or less)
66. Latex, ammonia (1% or less), inhibited
67. Latex: Carboxylated styrene-Butadiene copolymer; Styrene-Butadiene
rubber
68. Ligninsulphonic acid, sodium salt solution
69. Long-chain alkaryl sulphonic acid (C16-C60)
70. Long-chain polyetheramine in alkyl (C2-C4) benzenes
71. Long-chain polyetheramine in aromatic solvent
72. Magnesium long-chain alkaryl sulphonate (C11-C50)
73. Methyl heptyl ketone
74. 3-Methyl-3-methoxybutyl acetate
75. Naphthenic Acids
76. Nitroethane, 1-Nitropropane (each 15% or more) mixture
77. o- or p-Nitrotoluenes
78. Nonyl acetate
79. Octyl decyl adipate
80. Oleylamine
81. Palm kernel acid oil
82. Palm oil fatty acid methyl ester
83. Pentaethylenehexamine
84. Phosphate esters, alkyl (C12-C14) amine
85. Poly(2-8)alkylene glycol monoalkyl(C1-C6) ether
86. Poly(2-8)alkylene glycol monoalkyl (C1-C6) ether acetate
87. Polyalkylene oxide polyol
88. Polybutene
89. Polyether (molecular weight 2000+)
90. Polyethylene polyamines
91. Polyglycerin, sodium salt solution (containing less than 3% sodium
hydroxide)
92. Polyglycerol
93. Polyolefin amide alkeneamine/molybdenum oxysulphide mixture
94. Polyolefin amide alkeneamine polyol
95. Polyolefin aminoester salts (mw 2000+)
96. Poly(5+)propylene
97. Poly(tetramethylene ether) glycol (mw 600-3000)
98. Potassium chloride solution (10% or more)
99. Potassium salt of polyolefin acid
100. n-Propyl chloride
101. Propylene-Butylene copolymer
102. Propylene dimer
103. Pyrolysis gasoline
104. Rosin soap (disproportionated) solution
105. Sodium alkyl (C14-C17) sulphonates (60-65% solution)
106. Sodium aluminate solution
107. Sodium petroleum sulphonate
108. Sodium tartrates/Sodium succinates solution
109. Sulpho hydrocarbon long chain (C18+) alkylamine mixture
110. Sulphurized polyolefinamide alkene (C28-C250) amine
111. Tall oil (crude and distilled)
112. Tall oil fatty acid (resin acids less than 20%)
113. Tall oil fatty acid, barium salt
114. Tall oil soap (disproportionated) solution
115. Tallow fatty acid
116. Trimethylhexamethylenediamine (2,2,4- and 2,4,4-isomers)
117. Trimethylhexamethylene diisocyanate (2,2,4-and 2,4,4-isomers)
118. Trimethylolpropane polyethoxylate
119. Trimethyl phosphite
120. Urea/Ammonium mono- and dihydrogen phosphate/Potassium chloride
solution
121. Urea formaldehyde resin solution
122. White spirit, low (15-20%) aromatic
Dated: November 17, 2005.
Howard L. Hime,
Acting Director of Standards, Marine, Safety, Security, and
Environmental Protection, U.S. Coast Guard.
[FR Doc. 05-23234 Filed 11-22-05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910-15-P