BILL NUMBER: AB 686	AMENDED
	BILL TEXT

	AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY  MARCH 19, 2013

INTRODUCED BY   Assembly Member Quirk

                        FEBRUARY 21, 2013

   An act to amend Section  25143.2   25201.17
 of the Health and Safety Code, relating to hazardous waste.


	LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST


   AB 686, as amended, Quirk. Hazardous waste:  recyclable
materials.   pharmaceutical cogeneration activities.
 
    (1) Existing law requires hazardous waste facilities, including,
but not limited to, treatment facilities, to operate under hazardous
waste facilities permits or other grants of authorization issued by
the Department of Toxic Substances Control. Existing law exempts
pharmaceutical neutralization activities from certain requirements of
the hazardous waste control laws and certain regulations adopted
pursuant to that law if specified conditions are met with regard to
the pharmaceutical manufacturing or process development activities,
including the management of air emissions and wastes generated as a
result of those activities. A violation of the hazardous waste
control laws is a crime.  
   This bill would exempt from the hazardous waste control law, and
all of the regulations adopted pursuant to that law, pharmaceutical
cogeneration activities and the cogeneration fuel components, as
defined, if specified conditions are met with regard to certain
federal regulations and other requirements for facility construction
and if the owner or operator of the facility engaged in that activity
complies with certain requirements concerning emergency-related
training, providing notifications, development of a fuel analysis
plan, and maintenance of records. The bill would require the air
emissions and wastes generated as a result of those activities to be
managed, as specified. Since a violation of the requirements imposed
by the bill upon the owner or operator of a facility engaged in
pharmaceutical cogeneration activities would be a crime, the bill
would impose a state-mandated local program by creating new crimes.
 
   (2) The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse
local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the
state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that
reimbursement.  
   This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this
act for a specified reason.  
   Under existing law, recyclable materials are subject to the
requirements of the Hazardous Waste Control Law, except as specified.
 
   This bill would make technical, nonsubstantive changes to that
provision. 
   Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee:  no
  yes  . State-mandated local program:  no
  yes  .


THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:

   SECTION   1.    Section 25201.17 of the
  Health and Safety Code   is amended to read:

   25201.17.  (a) For purposes of this section, the following terms
have the following meanings: 
   (1) (A) "Cogeneration fuel component" means a material generated
by pharmaceutical manufacturing or pharmaceutical process development
activities that meets all of the following conditions:  
   (i) The material would otherwise be defined as waste or hazardous
waste pursuant to this chapter.  
   (ii) The materials meet all the physical, viscosity, and
constituent specifications for comparable fuel or syngas fuel under
paragraph (1) or (2) of subsection (a) of Section 261.38 of Title 40
of the Code of Federal Regulations.  
   (iii) The material meets all other criteria in Section 261.38 of
Title 40 of the Code of Federal Regulations that exclude comparable
and syngas fuels from being classified as a solid waste for purposes
of Subpart A (commencing with Section 261.1) of Part 261 of
Subchapter 1 of Chapter 1 of Title 40 of the Code of Federal
Regulations.  
   (B) "Cogeneration fuel component" does not include a material that
would otherwise be considered hazardous waste because of the
presence of dioxins or furans.  
   (2) "Pharmaceutical cogeneration activities" means a
pharmaceutical manufacturing facility's onsite utilization of
specified manufacturing byproducts to generate steam and electricity
to support the facility's pharmaceutical manufacturing process. 

   (1) 
    (3)  "Pharmaceutical manufacturing or pharmaceutical
process development activities" means activities conducted in North
American Industry Classification System Code subgroups 325411 and
325412, to the extent they meet either of the following:
   (A) Research, development, and production activities conducted in
relation to an investigational new drug application or new drug
application as set forth in Part 312 (commencing with Section 312.1)
of, and Part 314 (commencing with Section 314.1) of, Subchapter D of
Chapter 1 of Title 21 of the Code of Federal Regulations, that is
filed with the United States Food and Drug Administration, or
research and development activities conducted to support the future
filing of an investigational new drug application or new drug
application, or research, development, and production activities that
are conducted in relation to a filing with a corresponding
governmental authority in the European Union, Japan, or Canada that
imposes similar requirements.
   (B) The production of a pharmaceutical product, including starting
materials, intermediates, and active pharmaceutical intermediates.

   (2) 
    (4)  "Pharmaceutical neutralization activities" means
the deactivation of a material generated by, or used in,
pharmaceutical manufacturing or pharmaceutical process development
activities through the addition of a reagent, including, but not
limited to, a caustic, before management of the material as a
hazardous waste subject to this chapter. 
   (5) "Syngas fuel" means synthethesis gas fuel, as specified in
paragraph (2) of Subsection (a) of Section 261.38 of Title 40 of the
Code of Federal Regulations. 
   (b) Pharmaceutical neutralization activities are exempt from any
requirement imposed pursuant to this chapter, including any
regulation adopted pursuant to this chapter, that relates to
generators, tanks, and tank systems, and the requirement to obtain a
hazardous waste facilities permit or other grant of authorization
from the department, except as otherwise provided in subdivision (c),
if all of the following conditions are met:
   (1) A permit is not required to conduct neutralization under the
federal act pursuant to Section 264.1(g)(5) of Title 40 of the Code
of Federal Regulations.
   (2) The pharmaceutical manufacturing or pharmaceutical process
development activities are conducted in accordance with the United
States Food and Drug Administration's current good manufacturing
practices, as set forth in Part 210 (commencing with Section 210.1)
of, and Part 211 (commencing with Section 211.1) of, Subchapter C of
Chapter 1 of Title 21 of the Code of Federal Regulations.
   (3) The pharmaceutical neutralization activity occurs within a
unit that meets the standards of a totally enclosed treatment
facility, as defined in Section 260.10 of Title 40 of the Code of
Federal Regulations and Section 66260.10 of Title 22 of the
California Code of Regulations, that is physically connected to the
reactor or vessel where the material being neutralized is created.
   (4) The pharmaceutical neutralization activity is integral to the
manufacturing process and occurs within the manufacturing process
area and prior to the transfer of the material to a dedicated
hazardous waste storage or treatment unit.
   (5) If the pharmaceutical neutralization activity occurs at
greater than 15 pounds per square inch gauge pressure, it shall occur
within a unit that meets applicable American Society of Mechanical
Engineers (ASME) standards for pressure rated vessels, including the
ASME requirements for automatic pressure relief in the event of a
system failure, including pressure relief valves, burst discs, or
equivalent devices.
   (6) The pharmaceutical neutralization activities do not raise the
temperature of the hazardous wastes to within 10 degrees Celsius of
the boiling point or cause the release of hazardous gaseous
emissions, using either constituent-specific concentration limits or
calculations.
   (7) The temperature of any unit 100 gallons or larger is
automatically monitored, the unit is fitted with a high-temperature
alarm system, and, for closed systems, the adding and mixing of
in-process and neutralizing solutions are manually controlled.
   (8) The pharmaceutical neutralization activity occurs within a
facility that has design or engineering features, including, but not
limited to, trenches, sumps, berming, sloping, or diking, designed to
contain all liquid spills from pharmaceutical manufacturing process
and neutralization units.
   (c) An owner or operator of a pharmaceutical neutralization unit
exempt under this section shall comply with all of the following
requirements:
   (1) The owner or operator shall successfully complete a program of
classroom instruction or on-the-job training that includes, at a
minimum, instruction for responding effectively to emergencies by
familiarizing personnel with emergency procedures, emergency
equipment, and emergency systems, including, where applicable,
procedures for using, inspecting, repairing, and replacing facility
emergency and monitoring equipment, communications, or alarm systems.

   (2) Within 10 days of commencing initial operation of the unit, or
within any other time period that may be required by the CUPA, the
owner or operator shall notify the CUPA of the commencement of the
operation of the unit under the exemption made pursuant to this
section. A CUPA is authorized to, and is required to, implement the
requirements specified in this section. If the owner or operator is
not under the jurisdiction of a CUPA, the notice shall be sent to the
officer of the agency authorized, pursuant to subdivision (e) of
Section 25404.3, to implement and enforce the requirements of this
chapter listed in paragraph (2) of subdivision (c) of Section 25404.
   (3) The owner or operator shall establish and maintain
documentation to substantiate its compliance with all of the
requirements and conditions of this section, and shall make the
documentation available for inspection upon request of the department
or the CUPA. 
   (d) Pharmaceutical cogeneration activities and the cogeneration
fuel components are exempt from the requirements imposed pursuant to
this chapter and the regulations adopted pursuant to this chapter,
including, but not limited to, the requirements imposed on
generators, tanks, and tank systems, and the requirement to obtain a
hazardous waste treatment permit or other grant of authorization from
the department, except as otherwise provided in subsection (b) of
Section 261.38 of Title 40 of the Code of Federal Regulations, if all
of the following conditions are met:  
   (1) The pharmaceutical cogeneration activities meet the comparable
fuel specifications or syngas fuel specification in Section 261.38
of Title 40 of the Code of Federal Regulations and are conducted in
accordance with all conditions specified in that section.  
   (2) The pharmaceutical manufacturing or pharmaceutical process
development activities are conducted in accordance with the United
States Food and Drug Administration's current good manufacturing
practices, as set forth in Part 210 (commencing with Section 210.1)
of, and Part 211 (commencing with Section 211.1) of, Subchapter C of
Chapter 1 of Title 21 of the Code of Federal Regulations.  
   (3) The pharmaceutical cogeneration activity occurs within a
facility that has design or engineering features, including, but not
limited to, trenches, sumps, berming, sloping, or diking that are
designed to contain all liquid spills from pharmaceutical
manufacturing process and cogeneration units.  
   (e) (1) An owner or operator of a facility engaged in
pharmaceutical cogeneration activities exempt pursuant to this
section shall comply with all of the following requirements,
consistent with the requirements specified in Section 261.38 of Title
40 of the Code of Federal Regulations:  
   (A) The owner or operator of a facility engaged in pharmaceutical
cogeneration activities shall successfully complete a program of
classroom instruction or on-the-job training that includes, at a
minimum, instruction for responding effectively to emergencies by
familiarizing personnel with emergency procedures, emergency
equipment, and emergency systems, including, if applicable,
procedures for using, inspecting, repairing, and replacing facility
emergency and monitoring equipment, communications, or alarm systems.
 
   (B) The owner or operator of a facility engaged in pharmaceutical
cogeneration activities submits a one-time notice, except as
otherwise required by state law or Section 261.38 of Title 40 of the
Code of Federal Regulations, to the CUPA in whose jurisdiction the
exclusion is being claimed and where the excluded fuel will be used,
certifying compliance with the conditions of the exclusion. 

   (C) The owner or operator of a facility engaged in pharmaceutical
cogeneration activities publishes in a major newspaper of general
circulation local to the site where the activities take place, prior
to the commencement of those activities, a notice entitled
"Notification of Burning a Fuel Excluded Under the Resource
Conservation and Recovery Act" and containing a brief, general
description of the process generating the cogeneration fuel
components.  
   (D) The owner or operator of a facility engaged in pharmaceutical
cogeneration activities develops and follows a written fuel analysis
plan that describes the procedures for sampling and analysis of the
cogeneration fuel component, in accordance with the requirements of
paragraph (4) of subsection (b) of Section 261.38 of Title 40 of the
Code of Federal Regulations.  
   (E) The owner or operator of a facility engaged in pharmaceutical
cogeneration activities maintains all records required by this
chapter for a period of three years.  
   (2) The requirements of paragraph (1) do not modify any of the
requirements specified in Section 261.38 of Title 40 of the Code of
Federal Regulations with regard to qualifying for the exclusion from
being classified as a solid waste pursuant to that regulation. 

   (d) 
    (f)  Notwithstanding any other provision of law, all air
emissions from a pharmaceutical neutralization unit  or 
 generated as a result of any pharmaceutical cogeneration
activity  shall be managed in accordance with the requirements
of the local air pollution control district or air quality management
district. 
   (e) 
    (g)  All wastes generated as a result of pharmaceutical
neutralization activities  or pharmaceutical cogeneration
activities  shall be managed as hazardous wastes in accordance
with all applicable requirements of this chapter.
   SEC. 2.    No reimbursement is required by this act
pursuant to Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California
Constitution because the only costs that may be incurred by a local
agency or school district will be incurred because this act creates a
new crime or infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or
changes the penalty for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of
Section 17556 of the Government Code, or changes the definition of a
crime within the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIII B of the
California Constitution.  
  SECTION 1.    Section 25143.2 of the Health and
Safety Code is amended to read:
   25143.2.  (a) Recyclable materials are subject to this chapter and
the regulations adopted by the department to implement this chapter
that apply to hazardous wastes, unless the department issues a
variance pursuant to Section 25143, or except as provided otherwise
in subdivision (b), (c), or (d) or in the regulations adopted by the
department pursuant to Sections 25150 and 25151.
   (b) Except as otherwise provided in subdivisions (e), (f), and
(g), recyclable material that is managed in accordance with Section
25143.9 and is or will be recycled by one or more of the following
methods shall be excluded from classification as a waste:
   (1) Used or reused as an ingredient in an industrial process to
make a product if the material is not being reclaimed.
   (2) Used or reused as a safe and effective substitute for
commercial products if the material is not being reclaimed.
   (3) Returned to the original process from which the material was
generated, without first being reclaimed, if the material is returned
as a substitute for raw material feedstock, and the process uses raw
materials as principal feedstocks.
   (c) Except as otherwise provided in subdivision (e), recyclable
material may be recycled at a facility that is not authorized by the
department pursuant to the applicable hazardous waste facilities
permit requirements of Article 9 (commencing with Section 25200) if
either of the following requirements is met:
   (1) The material is a petroleum refinery waste containing oil that
is converted into petroleum coke at the same facility where the
waste was generated unless the resulting coke product would be
identified as a hazardous waste under this chapter.
   (2) The material meets all of the following conditions:
   (A) The material is recycled and used at the same facility where
the material was generated.
   (B) The material is recycled within the applicable generator
accumulation time limits specified in Section 25123.3 and the
regulations adopted by the department pursuant to paragraph (1) of
subdivision (b) of Section 25123.3.
   (C) The material is managed in accordance with all applicable
requirements for generators of hazardous wastes under this chapter
and regulations adopted by the department.
   (d) Except as otherwise provided in subdivisions (e), (f), (g),
and (h), recyclable material that meets the definition of a non-RCRA
hazardous waste in Section 25117.9, is managed in accordance with
Section 25143.9, and meets or will meet one or more of the following
requirements is excluded from classification as a waste:
   (1) The material can be shown to be recycled and used at the site
where the material was generated.
   (2) The material qualifies as one or more of the following:
   (A) The material is a product that has been processed from a
hazardous waste, or has been handled, at a facility authorized by the
department pursuant to the facility permit requirements of Article 9
(commencing with Section 25200) to process or handle the material,
if the product meets both of the following conditions:
   (i) The product does not contain constituents, other than those
for which the material is being recycled, that render the material
hazardous under regulations adopted pursuant to Sections 25140 and
25141.
   (ii) The product is used, or distributed or sold for use, in a
manner for which the product is commonly used.
   (B) The material is a petroleum refinery waste containing oil that
is converted into petroleum coke at the same facility where the
waste was generated, unless the resulting coke product would be
identified as a hazardous waste under this chapter.
   (C) The material is oily waste, used oil, or spent nonhalogenated
solvent that is managed by the owner or operator of a refinery that
is processing primarily crude oil and is not subject to permit
requirements for the recycling of used oil, or by a public utility,
or by a corporate subsidiary, corporate parent, or subsidiary of the
same corporate parent of the refinery or public utility, and meets
all of the following requirements:
   (i) The material is either burned in an industrial boiler, an
industrial furnace, an incinerator, or a utility boiler that is in
compliance with all applicable federal and state laws, or is
recombined with normal process streams to produce a fuel or other
refined petroleum product.
   (ii) The material is managed at the site where it was generated;
managed at another site owned or operated by the generator, a
corporate subsidiary of the generator, a subsidiary of the same
entity of which the generator is a subsidiary, or the corporate
parent of the generator; or, if the material is generated in the
course of oil or gas exploration or production, managed by an
unrelated refinery receiving the waste through a common pipeline.
   (iii) The material does not contain constituents, other than those
for which the material is being recycled, that render the material
hazardous under regulations adopted pursuant to Sections 25140 and
25141, unless the material is an oil-bearing material or recovered
oil that is managed in accordance with subdivisions (b) and (c) of
Section 25144 or unless the material is used oil removed from
equipment, vehicles, or engines used primarily at the refinery where
it is to be used to produce fuels or other refined petroleum products
and the used oil is managed in accordance with Section 279.22 of
Title 40 of the Code of Federal Regulations prior to insertion into
the refining process.
   (D) The material is a fuel that is transferred to, and processed
into, a fuel or other refined petroleum product at a petroleum
refinery, as defined in paragraph (4) of subdivision (a) of Section
25144, and meets one of the following requirements:
   (i) The fuel has been removed from a fuel tank and is contaminated
with water or nonhazardous debris, of not more than 2 percent by
weight, including, but not limited to, rust or sand.
   (ii) The fuel has been unintentionally mixed with an unused
petroleum product.
   (3) The material is transported between locations operated by the
same person who generated the material, if the material is recycled
at the last location operated by that person and all of the
conditions of clauses (i) to (vi), inclusive, of subparagraph (A) of
paragraph (4) are met. If requested by the department or by any
official authorized to enforce this section pursuant to subdivision
(a) of Section 25180, a person handling material subject to this
paragraph, within 15 days from the date of receipt of the request,
shall supply documentation to show that the requirements of this
paragraph have been satisfied.
   (4) (A) The material is transferred between locations operated by
the same person who generated the material, if the material is to be
recycled at an authorized offsite hazardous waste facility and if all
of the following conditions are met:
   (i) The material is transferred by employees of that person in
vehicles under the control of that person or by a registered
hazardous waste hauler under contract to that person.
   (ii) The material is not handled at an interim location.
   (iii) The material is not held at a publicly accessible interim
location for more than four hours unless required by other provisions
of law.
   (iv) The material is managed in compliance with this chapter and
the regulations adopted pursuant to this chapter prior to the initial
transportation of the material and after the receipt of the material
at the last location operated by that person. Upon receipt of the
material at the last location operated by that person, the material
shall be deemed to have been generated at that location.
   (v) All of the following information is maintained in an operating
log at the last location operated by that person and kept for at
least three years after receipt of the material at that location:
   (I) The name and address of each generator location contributing
material to each shipment received.
   (II) The quantity and type of material contributed by each
generator to each shipment of material.
   (III) The destination and intended disposition of all material
shipped offsite or received.
   (IV) The date of each shipment received or sent offsite.
   (vi) If requested by the department, or by any law enforcement
official, a person handling material subject to this paragraph,
within 15 days from the date of receipt of the request, shall supply
documentation to show that the requirements of this paragraph have
been satisfied.
   (B) For purposes of paragraph (3) and subparagraph (A) of this
paragraph, "person" also includes corporate subsidiary, corporate
parent, or subsidiary of the same corporate parent.
   (C) Persons that are a corporate subsidiary, corporate parent, or
subsidiary of the same corporate parent, and that manage recyclable
materials under paragraph (3) or subparagraph (A) of this paragraph,
are jointly and severally liable for any activities excluded from
regulation pursuant to this section.
   (5) The material is used or reused as an ingredient in an
industrial process to make a product if the material meets all of the
following requirements:
   (A) The material is not a wastewater that meets all of the
following criteria:
   (i) The wastewater is a non-RCRA hazardous waste.
   (ii) The wastewater contains more than 75 parts per million of
total petroleum hydrocarbons, as determined by use of United States
Environmental Protection Agency Method 1664, Revision A for Silica
Gel Treated N-Hexane Extractable Material.
   (iii) The wastewater has been transported offsite to a facility,
that is not a publicly owned treatment works, a facility owned by the
generator, or a corporate subsidiary, corporate parent, or a
subsidiary of the same corporate parent of the generator.
   (B) Discharges into the air from the treatment of the material by
the procedures specified in subparagraph (C) do not contain
constituents that are hazardous wastes pursuant to the regulations of
the department and are in compliance with applicable air pollution
control laws.
   (C) The material is not being treated except by one or more of the
following procedures:
   (i) Filtering.
   (ii) Screening.
   (iii) Sorting.
   (iv) Sieving.
   (v) Grinding.
   (vi) Physical or gravity separation without the addition of
external heat or any chemicals.
   (vii) pH adjustment.
   (viii) Viscosity adjustment.
   (6) The material is used or reused as a safe and effective
substitute for commercial products, if the material meets all of the
following requirements:
   (A) The material is not a wastewater that meets all of the
following criteria:
   (i) The wastewater is a non-RCRA hazardous waste.
   (ii) The wastewater contains more than 75 parts per million of
total petroleum hydrocarbons, as determined by use of United States
Environmental Protection Agency Method 1664, Revision A for Silica
Gel Treated N-Hexane Extractable Material.
   (iii) The wastewater has been transported offsite to a facility
that is not a publicly owned treatment works, or a facility owned by
the generator, or a corporate subsidiary, corporate parent, or a
subsidiary of the same corporate parent of the generator.
   (B) Any discharges to air from the treatment of the material by
the procedures specified in subparagraph (C) do not
                          contain constituents that are hazardous
wastes pursuant to the regulations of the department and the
discharges are in compliance with applicable air pollution control
laws.
   (C) The material is not being treated, except by one or more of
the following procedures:
   (i) Filtering.
   (ii) Screening.
   (iii) Sorting.
   (iv) Sieving.
   (v) Grinding.
   (vi) Physical or gravity separation without the addition of
external heat or any chemicals.
   (vii) pH adjustment.
   (viii) Viscosity adjustment.
   (7) The material is a chlorofluorocarbon or
hydrochlorofluorocarbon compound or a combination of
chlorofluorocarbon or hydrochlorofluorocarbon compounds, is being
reused or recycled, and is used in heat transfer equipment,
including, but not limited to, mobile air-conditioning systems,
mobile refrigeration, and commercial and industrial air-conditioning
and refrigeration systems, used in fire extinguishing products, or
contained within foam products.
   (e) Notwithstanding subdivisions (b), (c), and (d), all of the
following recyclable materials are hazardous wastes and are subject
to full regulation under this chapter, even if the recycling involves
use, reuse, or return to the original process as described in
subdivision (b), and even if the recycling involves activities or
materials described in subdivisions (c) and (d):
   (1) Materials that are a RCRA hazardous waste, as defined in
Section 25120.2, are used in a manner constituting disposal, or are
used to produce products that are applied to the land, including, but
not limited to, materials used to produce a fertilizer, soil
amendment, agricultural mineral, or an auxiliary soil and plant
substance.
   (2) Materials that are a non-RCRA hazardous waste, as defined in
Section 25117.9, and are used in a manner constituting disposal or
used to produce products that are applied to the land as a
fertilizer, soil amendment, agricultural mineral, or an auxiliary
soil and plant substance. The department may adopt regulations to
exclude materials from regulation pursuant to this paragraph.
   (3) Materials burned for energy recovery, used to produce a fuel,
or contained in fuels, except materials exempted under paragraph (1)
of subdivision (c) or excluded under subparagraph (B), (C), or (D) of
paragraph (2) of subdivision (d).
   (4) Materials accumulated speculatively.
   (5) Materials determined to be inherently wastelike pursuant to
regulations adopted by the department.
   (6) Used or spent etchants, stripping solutions, and plating
solutions that are transported to an offsite facility operated by a
person other than the generator and either of the following applies:
   (A) The etchants or solutions are no longer fit for their
originally purchased or manufactured purpose.
   (B) If the etchants or solutions are reused, the generator and the
user cannot document that they are used for their originally
purchased or manufactured purpose without prior treatment.
   (7) Used oil, as defined in paragraph (1) of subdivision (a) of
Section 25250.1, unless one of the following applies:
   (A) The used oil is managed in accordance with the applicable
requirements of Part 279 (commencing with 279.1) of Title 40 of the
Code of Federal Regulations and is excluded under any of the
following:
    (i) Subparagraph (B) or (C) of paragraph (2) of subdivision (d).
   (ii) Paragraph (4) of subdivision (d).
   (iii) Subdivision (b) of Section 25250.1.
   (iv) Section 25250.3.
   (B) The used oil is used or reused on the site where it was
generated or is excluded under paragraph (3) of subdivision (d), is
managed in accordance with the applicable requirements of Part 279
(commencing with Section 279.1) of Title 40 of the Code of Federal
Regulations, and is not any of the following:
   (i) Used in a manner constituting disposal or used to produce a
product that is applied to land.
   (ii) Burned for energy recovery or used to produce a fuel unless
the used oil is excluded under subparagraph (B) or (C) of paragraph
(2) of subdivision (d).
   (iii) Accumulated speculatively.
   (iv) Determined to be inherently wastelike pursuant to regulations
adopted by the department.
   (f) (1) A person who manages a recyclable material under a claim
that the material qualifies for exclusion or exemption pursuant to
this section shall provide, upon request, to the department, the
California Environmental Protection Agency, or local agency or
official authorized to bring an action as provided in Section 25180,
all of the following information:
   (A) The name, street and mailing address, and telephone number of
the owner or operator of the facility that manages the material.
   (B) Information related to the management by that person of the
material requested by the department, the California Environmental
Protection Agency, or the authorized local agency or official.
   (2) A person claiming an exclusion or an exemption pursuant to
this section shall maintain adequate records to demonstrate to the
satisfaction of the requesting agency or official that there is a
known market or disposition for the material, and that the
requirements of an exemption or exclusion claimed pursuant to this
section are met.
   (3) For purposes of determining that the conditions for exclusion
from classification as a waste pursuant to this section are met, a
person, facility, site, or vehicle engaged in the management of a
material under a claim that the material is excluded from
classification as a waste pursuant to this section is subject to
Section 25185.
   (g) For purposes of Chapter 6.8 (commencing with Section 25300),
recyclable materials excluded from classification as a waste pursuant
to this section are not excluded from the definition of hazardous
substances in subdivision (g) of Section 25316.
   (h) Used oil that fails to qualify for exclusion pursuant to
subdivision (d) solely because the used oil is a RCRA hazardous waste
may be managed pursuant to subdivision (d) if the used oil is also
managed in accordance with the applicable requirements of Part 279
(commencing with Section 279.1) of Title 40 of the Code of Federal
Regulations.