
Episode 61 - Hazard Communication Trade Secrets
The Occupational Safety Leadership Podcast
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Show Notes
Episode 61 explains how OSHA’s Hazard Communication Standard (29 CFR 1910.1200) handles trade secrets, especially when manufacturers withhold the exact chemical identity of a substance. Dr. Ayers focuses on what employers must know, what manufacturers must disclose, and how safety leaders can protect workers even when full chemical identities are not provided.
🔐 What a Trade Secret Is Under HazComA chemical manufacturer may claim a trade secret when:
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Revealing the exact chemical identity would harm their competitive position
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The chemical identity is proprietary, confidential, or part of a unique formulation
However — and this is the core message of the episode — trade secret status does NOT allow a manufacturer to hide the hazards.
📘 What Must Still Be DisclosedEven when the chemical identity is withheld, the manufacturer must still provide:
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All hazard classifications (carcinogen, mutagen, reproductive toxicant, etc.)
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All hazard statements
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All exposure controls and PPE requirements
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All physical and chemical properties relevant to safety
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All toxicological information
In other words, workers must still know how the chemical can hurt them and how to protect themselves.
🧪 How Trade Secrets Appear on SDSsDr. Ayers explains how SDSs typically indicate trade secrets:
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“Trade secret” listed in Section 3 (Composition/Ingredients)
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A generic chemical name (e.g., “proprietary solvent blend”)
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Concentration ranges instead of exact percentages
But the SDS must still include every hazard associated with the ingredient.
🚨 When Manufacturers MUST Reveal the IdentityThere are specific situations where the manufacturer must disclose the exact chemical identity:
1. Medical EmergenciesIf a treating physician or nurse needs the identity to provide medical care, the manufacturer must disclose it immediately.
2. Non‑Emergency Medical RequestsA health professional may request the identity for:
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Diagnosis
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Treatment
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Exposure monitoring
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Epidemiological studies
The manufacturer may require a confidentiality agreement, but they cannot refuse the request.
3. OSHA RequestsIf OSHA asks for the identity during an inspection or investigation, the manufacturer must provide it.
⚠️ Common Misunderstandings Addressed in the EpisodeDr. Ayers clears up several misconceptions:
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Myth: “If it’s a trade secret, we don’t need an SDS.” Reality: SDS is still required.
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Myth: “Trade secret chemicals are less hazardous.” Reality: Some of the most hazardous chemicals are proprietary blends.
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Myth: “We can’t protect workers without the exact chemical name.” Reality: Hazards and controls must still be fully disclosed.
Safety leaders must:
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Ensure SDSs for trade secret chemicals are still complete
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Train workers on hazards even when identities are withheld
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Know how to request chemical identities in emergencies
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Maintain confidentiality when receiving trade secret information
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Ensure medical providers understand their right to request identities
The episode emphasizes that worker protection never takes a back seat to confidentiality.