MassDEP Mercury Information (2024)

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  • This page, MassDEP Mercury Information, is offered by
  • Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection

Use this Guide to learn about mercury, understand its environmental and health effects, safely manage products and wastes that contain it, and find out what Massachusetts and other states in the region are doing to reduce mercury exposure.

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Table of Contents

Mercury is Everywhere

Mercury is a naturally occurring metallic element that is toxic to people and wildlife. It is found in many common items at home, school and work, including:

  • Thermometers
  • Fluorescent bulbs
  • Thermostats
  • Some topical disinfectants, older medications, nasal sprays, ointments, and contact lens solutions.
  • Certain bleaches, detergents, stain removers, and soaps.
  • Batteries, latex paint, and pesticides made before 1990;
  • Button batteries found in watches, calculators, hearing aids, and electronics;
  • Pilot lights in gas appliances; and
  • Switches in certain automatic shut-off irons, car trunks, fire alarms, and septic tanks.

Mercury won't harm you if it stays inside an item. But when a product containing it is broken, thrown in the trash, or poured down the drain, mercury cycles through the environment, polluting air and water, and accumulating in fish.

You and your family can be exposed to mercury by breathing its fumes, eating contaminated fish, or touching spilled mercury. Follow these tips to protect yourself and the environment:

  • Avoid putting mercury-containing products in the trash or down the drain. Many communities have household hazardous waste collection events or sites where you can safely dispose of these items.
  • Never touch spilled mercury. Keep people and pets away and open windows to ventilate the area. Don't sweep or vacuum spilled mercury up!
  • Check product labels. Buy mercury-free alternatives whenever they are available.
  • Be aware of fish consumption advisories. Eating fish contaminated with mercury can harm you and your family.

Environmental Effects of Mercury

Mercury can be found at low levels almost everywhere, but the burning of coal and trash have greatly increased its levels in the environment.

The environmental impacts of mercury can be local, or carried across whole regions or entire continents by the wind.

In lakes, ponds, and the ocean, mercury can be transformed by natural processes into a more toxic form called methylmercury, which enters the food chain when small organisms absorb it.

  • Fish. Small fish eat contaminated plankton and algae, then in turn are eaten by larger fish. Mercury accumulates and becomes concentrated in the predatory fish at levels of up to a million times higher than in the water they live in.
  • Other wildlife. For fish-eating creatures such as eagles, osprey, loons, turtles, mink and otters, mercury in the diet can cause weight loss, disrupt reproduction, and lead to early death.
  • A long-term problem. Once in the environment, mercury persists for a long time and never degrades into a harmless substance.

Because mercury persists for so long, it takes many years for mercury levels in fish to drop significantly. It is important to be aware of and follow fish consumption advisories.

Additional Resources for Environmental Effects of Mercury

Health Effects of Mercury

There are several different forms of mercury. Some are more dangerous than others, but all are toxic.

Depending on type and amount, exposure to mercury can damage a person's nervous system, brain, kidneys, liver, and immune system.

  • Methylmercury is extremely poisonous and can damage the brain even at low levels. People may be exposed to this type of mercury by eating contaminated fish.
  • Elemental mercury, the silvery liquid found in some thermometers and switches, is most dangerous when inhaled and needs to be handled with care.

Children are most sensitive to mercury exposure, which can irreversibly damage their developing brains and nervous systems.

Women who are pregnant or may become pregnant need to be careful, too, since exposure can happen in the womb if they eat contaminated fish.

Additional Resources for Health Effects of Mercury

Handling Mercury Safely

866-9MERCURY For tips on how to dispose of mercury products safely and responsibly, call toll-free: 866-963-7287

Learn how to safely manage products and wastes that contain mercury at home, school, and work.

See Key Actions below to use an interactive map or search by location to find nearby collection and recycling sites.

See Additional Resources below to learn more about safe management and disposal of fluorescent bulbs, proper cleanup of broken bulbs and elemental mercury spills, and more.

Additional Resources for Handling Mercury Safely

Open PDF file, 31.02 KB, Guidance: Cleaning Up Spills of Elemental Mercury (English, PDF 31.02 KB)

Open PDF file, 27.68 KB, Guidance: Cleaning Up Broken Compact Fluorescent Light Bulbs (CFLs) (English, PDF 27.68 KB)

Open PDF file, 31.25 KB, Guidance: Cleaning Up Broken Fluorescent Light Bulbs (English, PDF 31.25 KB)

(English, PDF 25.47 KB)

Open PDF file, 92.5 KB, Advisory: Drum-Style Fluorescent Lamp Crushers (English, PDF 92.5 KB)

Open PDF file, 3.05 MB, Recovering Mercury Devices from Appliances (English, PDF 3.05 MB)

Mercury Management Act

Signed into law in 2006, amended most recently in 2014, and embodied in M.G.L. Chapter 21H, Sections 6A-6N, the Mercury Management Act:

  • Bans the sale of specific products containing mercury;
  • Requires some manufacturers to notify the state of products with mercury content;
  • Directs schools and state government to stop purchasing mercury-containing items;
  • Requires end-of-life recycling for certain mercury-added products;
  • Establishes a program for removing mercury switches from vehicles; and
  • Prohibits disposal of mercury in trash and wastewater.

See the law and answers to common questions about its mercury product disposal ban provisions in Additional Resources below.

Additional Resources for Mercury Management Act

Open PDF file, 55.25 KB, FAQ on Mercury-Containing Product Disposal Ban (English, PDF 55.25 KB)

MassDEP Regulations & Policies

Consistent with Mercury Management Act requirements, MassDEP has implemented regulations that:

  • Limit the sale and disposal of mercury-containing products,
  • Promote their safe management and recycling, and
  • Reduce environmental exposures to mercury.

Even before the 2006 law took effect, MassDEP required power plants to reduce mercury emissions and municipal waste combustion facilities to separate mercury-containing items from the loads of trash sent to them for disposal.

The agency has also issued policies and guidance to help regulated businesses and facilities comply with these rules.

See Additional Resources below to learn more.

Additional Resources for MassDEP Regulations & Policies

Open file, 310 CMR 7.29: Mercury Emissions Standards for Power Plants

Open file, 310 CMR 75.00: Mercury-Added Product Regulations

Open file, 310 CMR 76.00: Mercury-Added Product Disposal Ban

Industry Reporting & Compliance

MassDEP reporting and certification requirements prevent mercury releases to the environment by ensuring proper end-of-life management of products that contain mercury.

Under the Mercury Management Act, the agency requires:

  • Manufacturers, recyclers, and shredders of vehicles to certify that they are managing vehicle switches and other mercury-containing wastes properly, and
  • Manufacturers of certain mercury-containing products to submit for each product sold in Massachusetts:
    (1) a notification to the Interstate Mercury Education and Recycling Clearinghouse (IMERC), and
    (2) a labeling plan, collection and recycling plan, and annual compliance certification to MassDEP.

Under other statutory authority, MassDEP requires:

  • Dental practices and clinics to certify that they are managing and recycling dental amalgam wastes properly, and
  • Municipal Waste Combustors to develop and implement plans for diverting mercury-containing products from the waste loads they accept for disposal.

See Key Actions below to learn more.

Key Actions for Industry Reporting & Compliance

Additional Resources for Industry Reporting & Compliance

Open PDF file, 97.24 KB, List of Mercury-Added Lamp Manufacturers Registered to Sell Lamps in Massachusetts, June 2023 (English, PDF 97.24 KB)

Fish Monitoring & Advisories

MassDEP monitors contaminant levels in the edible tissues of freshwater fish and the Department of Public Health (DPH) issues advisories on eating fish taken from bodies of water across the state.

A fish consumption advisory:

  • Warns either the general population or a specific group of people - pregnant and nursing women, or children under the age of seven, for example - not to eat fish or to limit how much they eat.
  • Is based on a conservative estimate of how much fish a person can likely eat without experiencing any adverse health effects.
  • Addresses one or more certain species of fish taken from a specific local body of water by sport and subsistence fishermen.

Read advisories carefully. Even fish you buy from a store or market can contain mercury. Be sure to buy only from reputable sellers and ask ask about the origin of their catches.

See Key Actions and Additional Resources below for more information.

Key Actions for Fish Monitoring & Advisories

MassDEP Fish Mercury Research Data Portal DPH Fish Consumption Advisories

Additional Resources for Fish Monitoring & Advisories

Open PDF file, 58.95 KB, Fish Testing Request Form (English, PDF 58.95 KB)

Regional Initiatives

Massachusetts is not alone in sounding the alarm about mercury and taking concrete steps to reduce its presence in the environment.

At least 40 states, including all six in New England, have found fish with elevated levels of mercury in their lakes and ponds.

Massachusetts, other Northeastern states, and eastern Canadian provinces together have developed and are implementing a regional action plan to reduce mercury in products and the environment.

Specifically, these jurisdictions have:

  • Phased out mercury use in certain products, such as batteries,
  • Imposed more stringent limits on industrial discharges and emissions, and
  • Spurred the development of better pollution control technologies.

As a result, there have been significant reductions in mercury emitted to the air and discharged to streams and lakes over the last couple of decades.

Massachusetts also was a founding member of the Interstate Mercury Education and Reduction Clearinghouse (IMERC), launched in 2001 to provide:

  • Ongoing technical and program assistance to states that have enacted mercury education and reduction legislation, and
  • A single point of contact for industry and the public to learn about mercury-added products and member states' mercury programs.

Massachusetts is one of 13 IMERC member states. The others are Connecticut, Louisiana, Maine, Michigan, Minnesota, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Rhode Island, Vermont, and Washington.

See Additional Resources below to learn more.

Additional Resources for Regional Initiatives

Open PDF file, 343.14 KB, Massachusetts Zero Mercury Strategy (English, PDF 343.14 KB)

Open PDF file, 47.83 KB, New England Governors/Eastern Canadian Premiers Mercury Action Plan (English, PDF 47.83 KB)

MassDEP Mercury Information (2024)

FAQs

MassDEP Mercury Information? ›

Consistent with Mercury Management Act requirements, MassDEP has implemented regulations that: Limit the sale and disposal of mercury-containing products, Promote their safe management and recycling, and. Reduce environmental exposures to mercury.

How do you dispose of mercury at home? ›

Find your nearest household hazardous waste disposal facility (external site). Intact (not broken) household equipment containing mercury can also be taken to the local household hazardous waste facility. Ensure it is protected from breakages and is clearly labelled.

What will dissolve mercury? ›

8) Mercury is dissolved by all acids, which is to say by sulfuric acid, nitric acid, acid from sea salt; it also dissolves in vinegar and in acids made from plants: but for that to happen its chemical structure must be altered.

What happens if you pour mercury down the drain? ›

Never pour mercury down a drain.

The mercury can become lodged in the “p” traps and may continue to vaporize into the room. Mercury can also pollute septic tanks or wastewater-treatment plants.

How do you get rid of mercury fast? ›

A diet rich in various nutrients and vitamins has been shown to promote mercury elimination from the body. Some of these nutrients include selenium, glutathione, and vitamins, including vitamins C and E. Besides, green algae called chlorella is also helpful in removing mercury from the body.

How do you clean up a small amount of mercury? ›

Sprinkle sulfur powder over the contaminated area and rub it gently all over the surface and into the cracks with a paper towel. Sulfur powder binds with mercury. Use a paper towel dampened with water followed by wiping with another damp paper towel to clean up the sulfur and mercury.

What not to do with mercury? ›

Never use a broom to clean up mercury. It will break the mercury into smaller droplets and spread them. Never pour mercury down a drain. It may lodge in the plumbing and cause future problems during plumbing repairs.

How do you dispose of mercury from a broken thermometer? ›

Store the mercury in a secure place, preferably away from occupied areas, and contact a licensed hazardous waste vendor for disposal. Further information is also available regarding the disposal of other household hazardous waste.

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