Wood preservation facilities, ammoniacal copper zinc arsenate: chapter C-13


13. References

  1. Final Report, Summary of the Results from the Final Audits of the SOP-TRDImplementation Program for the Canadian Wood Preservation Industry, Prepared for Environment Canada, TRD Assessment/Implementation Working Group Manufacturers/Treaters, Steering Committee, Wood Preservation Strategic Options Process and Wood Preservation Canada by FRIDO Consulting, G.E. Brudermann, M.Sc.F and D.E. Konasewich, PhD, P.Eng., April 10, 2007.
  2. Wood Preservation Canada / Préservation du bois Canada. 2013. Personal communication between Henry Walthert, CAE Executive Director and Alain Gingras, Environment Canada.
  3. Canadian Standards Association. CAN/CSA O80 SERIES-08. National Standard of Canada: Wood Preservation. Rexdale (ON): Available from:
  4. Health Canada. Bilingual labelling lexicon.
  5. Health Canada. 2012. Guidelines for Canadian Drinking Water Quality. - Summary Table.
  6. Spear, P.A. and R.C. Pierce. 1979. Copper in the Aquatic Environment: Chemistry, Distribution and Toxicology. Ottawa (ON): National Research Council of Canada, Associate Committee on Scientific Criteria for Environmental Quality.
  7. Gerencher, E. and D.E. Konasewich. 1986. Assessment of Arsenic (III) Presence in CCA Facility Yard Soils and Drainage Waters. Prepared for the Environmental Protection Service, Pacific and Yukon Region, West Vancouver, BC.
  8. International Joint Commission (IJC). Recommendations of the International Joint Commission (IJC) to the governments of Canada and the United States, Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement, 1978 (Review 2007).
  9. Todd, A.S. and C.Y. Timbie. 1983. Industrial Hygiene Surveys of Occupational Exposure to Wood Preservation Chemicals. Cincinnati (OH): U.S. Report of Health and Human Services, National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health.
  10. Health Canada. 2011. Pesticide Label Amendments for Commercial Class Products Containing ACZA, Attachment I.
  11. American Conference of Governmental and Industrial Hygienists (ACGIH). 2011. Threshold Limit Values and Biological Exposure Indices. Cincinnati (OH). Available from: http://www.acgih.org/home.htm
  12. Health Canada, Pest Management Regulatory Agency, Re-evaluation Decision RVD2011-06, Heavy Duty Wood Preservatives: Creosote, Pentachlorophenol, Chromated Copper Arsenate (CCA) and Ammoniacal Copper Zinc Arsenate (ACZA), 22 June 2011, ISSN: 1925-1025.
  13. Western Wood Preservers Institute. 2011. Best Management Practices for the Use of Treated Wood in Aquatic and Wetland Environments.
  14. Aquatic Ecosystem Objectives Committee. 1986. 1985 Annual Report to the Great Lakes Science Advisory Board of the International Joint Commission. Windsor (ON): IJC Regional Office.

Page details

Date modified: