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Please be aware that this old REACH registration data factsheet is no longer maintained; it remains frozen as of 19th May 2023.

The new ECHA CHEM database has been released by ECHA, and it now contains all REACH registration data. There are more details on the transition of ECHA's published data to ECHA CHEM here.

Diss Factsheets

Administrative data

Hazard for aquatic organisms

Freshwater

Hazard assessment conclusion:
PNEC aqua (freshwater)
PNEC value:
0.003 mg/L
Assessment factor:
1 000
Extrapolation method:
assessment factor
PNEC freshwater (intermittent releases):
0.027 mg/L

Marine water

Hazard assessment conclusion:
PNEC aqua (marine water)
PNEC value:
0 mg/L
Assessment factor:
10 000
Extrapolation method:
assessment factor
PNEC marine water (intermittent releases):
0.003 mg/L

STP

Hazard assessment conclusion:
PNEC STP
PNEC value:
4.11 mg/L
Assessment factor:
10
Extrapolation method:
assessment factor

Sediment (freshwater)

Hazard assessment conclusion:
PNEC sediment (freshwater)
PNEC value:
270 mg/kg sediment dw
Assessment factor:
1 000
Extrapolation method:
equilibrium partitioning method

Sediment (marine water)

Hazard assessment conclusion:
PNEC sediment (marine water)
PNEC value:
27 mg/kg sediment dw
Assessment factor:
10 000
Extrapolation method:
equilibrium partitioning method

Hazard for air

Air

Hazard assessment conclusion:
no hazard identified

Hazard for terrestrial organisms

Soil

Hazard assessment conclusion:
PNEC soil
PNEC value:
54 mg/kg soil dw
Assessment factor:
1 000
Extrapolation method:
equilibrium partitioning method

Hazard for predators

Secondary poisoning

Hazard assessment conclusion:
insufficient hazard data available (further information necessary)

Additional information

Conclusion on classification

Conclusion on environmental classification

According to Article 13 of Regulation (EC) No. 1907/2006”General Requirements for Generation of Information on Intrinsic Properties of substances”, Information on intrinsic properties of substances may be generated by means other than tests e.g. from information from structurally related substances (grouping or read-across), provided that conditions set out in Annex XI are met.


Degradation

Biodegradation: readily biodegradable: 79.5% of Glycerides, C12-18 (even numbered) di- and tri- (OECD 301B) (read across)

 

Bioaccumulation

Expert statement: Bioaccumulation is assume to be low.


Aquatic acute toxicity

 

Fish

96 h, LL50 (Brachydanio rerio): > 2.7 mg/L, (read across)


Aquatic invertebrates

48 h, EL50 (Daphnia magna): 5.6 mg/L, (read across)

 

Aquatic algae

72 h, ErL50 (Scenedesmus subspicatus): 13 mg/L, (read across)


CLP:

Based on the data above, Glycerides, C12-18, mono-, di- and tri- (CAS 91052-53-8) is considered to be rapidly degradable. Based on read-across data available (Glycerides, C12-18, mono- and di- CAS: 91052-49-2), low toxicity level was observed for fish (LL50 > 2,7 mg/L), for aquatic invertebrate (ErL50 = 5.6 mg/L) and aquatic algae (ErL50 = 13 mg/L).  Therefore,Glycerides, C12-18, mono-, di- and tri- (CAS 91052-53-8) does not need to be classified and labelled as environmental hazardous according to the Regulation (EC) No 1272/2008 and the Regulation (EU) No 286/2011 (2nd ATP).