HomeMy WebLinkAboutLetter #088 Jane MillerFACT SHEET
I NDIANA D EPARTMENT OF E NVIRONMENTAL M ANAGEMENT
Benzene
Office of Land Quality
(317) 232-3215 • (800) 451-6027 www.idem.IN.gov 100 N. Senate Ave., Indianapolis, IN 46204
IDEM Fact Sheet
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Benzene
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Benzene
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Description
Benzene is a common and widely used chemical that gets into our air, water and soil. Benzene comes from
products like crude oil, gasoline and tobacco smoke. Industries use benzene to make plastics, clothing fibers,
rubber, grease, dyes, detergents, drugs, pesticides and other chemicals. It’s a colorless liquid with a sweet odor;
and evaporates quickly.
IDEM’s Role and Responsibility
• The mission of the Indiana Department of Environmental Management (IDEM) is to implement federal
and state law to protect human health and the environment while allowing the environmentally sound
operations of industrial, agricultural, commercial, and governmental activities vital to a prosperous
economy.
• IDEM’s Office of Water Quality enforces the federal limit on how much benzene is allowed in our public
drinking water supplies.
• IDEM’s Office of Air Quality regulates the amount of benzene that businesses can release into the
outdoor air.
• IDEM’s Office of Land Quality (OLQ) regulates benzene disposal and the potential cleanup of benzene
leaks and spills.
• IDEM OLQ provides cleanup recommendations for benzene and other petroleum-related chemicals
based on potential health effects (see below).
• IDEM OLQ works with the United States Environmental Protection Agency (U.S. EPA) to make sure that
people are following the rules for benzene storage, disposal and cleanup, and that they collect
groundwater samples when they are cleaning up benzene.
Potential Sources
• Every day we are exposed to a small amount of benzene from products we use and from the air we
breathe.
o The most common ways we are exposed to benzene in outdoor air is by putting gasoline in our
vehicles, from vehicle exhaust, from smoking or from businesses that use benzene.
• Because benzene is in so many products (tobacco smoke, glues, paints, furniture wax, detergents and
stored gasoline), it’s also found in our indoor air.
• Due to improper disposal or spills at gas stations or businesses with leaking underground storage tanks,
benzene can move through the soil and mix with groundwater, contaminating the water that people
use.
• Benzene can evaporate from soil and groundwater into a gas or vapor, which then can enter buildings by
traveling through soil or cracks in bedrock or concrete, as well as along or inside sewer lines.
o The movement of underground gas or vapor into a building is referred to as vapor intrusion.
• Because so many everyday items contain benzene, it can be hard to tell if benzene in indoor air is from
those products or from an underground source.
IDEM Fact Sheet
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Routes of Exposure and Potential Health Effects
• You can be exposed to benzene in three different ways:
o Drinking water that contains benzene;
o Breathing air that contains benzene gas or vapor; and,
o Skin contact from handling gasoline or other products that contain benzene.
• The U.S. EPA has determined that benzene causes cancer in humans.
• Potential health effects from benzene depend on how much, how long, how often, and in what way(s)
you are exposed.
• Young children, the elderly, and people with on-going health concerns may be more at risk for negative
health effects.
• Breathing and/or drinking high levels of benzene can cause health effects other than cancer. Please
contact the Center for Disease Control’s (CDC) Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR)
for additional information on benzene’s potential health impacts, or visit their website (see below).
Reduce Exposure
There are things you may be able to do to reduce your exposure to benzene:
• If you use a private well for your home water supply, have the water tested regularly to make sure it is
safe to drink. While IDEM does not regulate private water wells, information is available on testing and
health-based recommendations (see below).
• Follow the manufacturer’s label instructions when you use and get rid of products containing benzene.
• When pumping gasoline, avoid breathing in the fumes. Use or handle gasoline in well ventilated areas
and do not store gasoline inside your home.
• Don’t smoke in your home, in enclosed areas, or near children.
Additional Resources
• For more information on benzene, please visit the ATSDR website
at http://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/substances/toxsubstance.asp?toxid=14
• Alternatively, you can call the CDC-INFO line for ATSDR’s information on benzene: 800-232-4636 (M-F
8a-8p Eastern in English or Spanish) or TTY 888-232-6348.
• For more information on vapor intrusion please visit IDEM’s website
at http://www.in.gov/idem/cleanups/2357.htm
• While private wells are not regulated by IDEM, here are health-based
recommendations: https://in.gov/idem/cleanwater/2452.htm
• Visit the Indiana State Department of Health’s Environmental Public Health Division’s Indoor Air Quality
program for more information on indoor air at https://www.in.gov/isdh/24347.htm
• For questions and concerns about benzene contamination or environmental cleanup, contact IDEM’s
Office of Land Quality at (317) 232-3215 or (800) 451-6027, ext. 2-3215.
• To report an accidental release or spill, call IDEM’s 24-Hour Spill Line at (888) 233-7745 (toll free).
Energy Policy Act
Public Record Summary Information
On Underground Storage Tanks (USTs)
Public Record Posted Date: 01/01/2022
General Information
Total Number of UST Facilities: 4,069
Total Number of USTs: 13,235
Summary Information for On-Site Inspections
Number of UST Facilities Inspected: 1035
Inspection Period Dates: 10/01/2020 – 09/30/2021
Percent Compliance (Combined Measure): 77.45%
Note: Tank, facility, and on-site inspection information is based on Indiana
inspection data. On-site inspections measure compliance with state regulations.
Summary Information for Releases
Number of Confirmed Releases: 130
Release Reporting Period Dates: 10/01/2020– 9/30/2021
Summary Information for Release Sources and Causes
Source Cause
Spill Overfill Phys/Mech
Damage
Corrosion Install
Problems
Other Unknown
# % # % # % # % # % # % # % # %
Tank 89 69 1 50 1 50 3 38 3 75 0 0 3 30 78 75
Piping 13 10 0 0 0 0 3 38 1 25 0 0 1 10 8 8
Dispenser 11 8 0 0 0 0 2 24 0 0 0 0 1 10 8 8
STP 8 6 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 10 7 6
Delivery
Problem
5 4 1 50 1 50 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 3
Other 3 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 30 0 0
Unknown 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 10 0 0
Totals 130 100 2 2 2 2 8 6 4 3 0 0 10 7 104 80
# = number, % = percent of total number
Note: Release, source and cause information is based on information provided
by UST owners and their agents. Source and cause data were collected using
information documented in the IDEM ULCERS Database. Multiple “Sources”
and/or “Causes” may have been assigned one incident number. These totals are
based on the information provided at the time of the release report.
Other Sources of Records are Available from the IDEM:
Office of Records Management (Former Known as IDEM File Room)
Indiana Government Center North, Room 1201
100 North Senate Avenue, MC 50-07
Indianapolis, Indiana 46204-2251
Telephone: 317/234-0965; Fax: 317/232-8659
http://www.in.gov/idem/legal/2336.htm
ULCERs Database: Same location as Office of Records Management
above
Enforcement Database: http://www.in.gov/apps/idem/oe/idem_oe_order
Virtual File Cabinet: http://vfc.idem.in.gov
UST Report: https://www.in.gov/idem/tanks/files/
LUST Web Page: http://www.in.gov/idem/tanks/2332.htm
(Site Specific LUST Information)