Advisory Guidance:
Emergency Response Involving
Ethanol and Gasoline Fuel Mixtures
The Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA) is alerting emergency responders to new and revised proper shippin names and identification numbers (ID) that may be used on shipping papers for fuel mixtures composed of ethanol (or "ethyl alcohol") and gasoline in various concentrations. The proper shipping names and IDs are added to the ERG2008.
The following chart is provided as guidance in identifying proper shipping names and identification numbers for Ethanol, Gasoline, and gasoline/ethanol fuel blends. Voluntary compliance began January 28, 2008.
| Proper Shipping Name and ID |
Ethanol Concentrations |
| Gasohol, NA 1203 |
E1 thru E10 |
| Gasoline, UN 1203 |
E1 thru E10 |
| Ethanol and gasoline mixture, UN 3475 |
E11 thru E99 |
| Denatured alcohol, NA 1987 |
E95 thru E99 |
| Alcohols, n.o.s, UN 1987 |
E95 thru E99 |
| Ethanol or Ethyl alcohol, UN 1170 |
E100 |
"[muliple images showing "revised new and revised proper shipping names and identification numbers (ID) that may be used on shipping papers for fuel mixtures composed of ethanol (or "ethyl alcohol") and gasoline in various concentrations" is available on page 1 of the PDF linked at the right]"
"[image showing a "Safety Alert Banner" is available on page 1 of the PDF linked at the right]"
U.S. Department
of Transportation
Pipeline and
Hazardous Materials
Safety Administration
"[image showing a "2008 Emergency Response Guidebook" is available on page 2 of the PDF linked at the right]"
Fires involving ethanol/gasoline mixtures containing more than 10% ethanol, such as E85, should be treated differently than traditional gasoline fires because these mixtures are polar/water-miscible flammable liquids (they mix readily with water) and degrade the effectiveness of non alcohol-resistant fire-fighting foam.
For this reason, PHMSA recommends First Responders refer to Guide 127 of the 2008 Emergency Response Guidebook (ER2008) when responding to incidents involving fuel mixtures known to contain or potentially containing more than 10% alcohol. Guide 127 specifies the use of alcohol-resistant foam.
The International Association of Fire Chiefs (IAFC) recommends the use of alcohol-resistant, aqueous film-forming foam (AR-AFFF) or alcohol-resistant film-forming fluoroprotein foam (AR-FFFP) in application rates* as follows:
| Fuel Mixture |
Foam Application Rate* |
| Gas |
0.1 |
| Ethanol Spill (not in depth) |
0.2 |
| Ethanol Fire (in depth) |
0.3 |
*Application rate expressed in gallons per minute of unexpanded foam solution flow
divided by the fire area. (gpm/ft2) |
Gasohol, E10, fires may be extinguished using conventional aqueous film-forming foam (AFFF) or AR-AFFF but increased application rates may be necessary especially for prolonged burn back resistance.
Denatured ethyl alcohol fires, E95, can only be extinguished with AR type foams. All other type of foams or water additives are ineffective as the foam blanket is destroyed when it strikes the fuel surface.
AR type foams must be applied to ethyl alcohol fires using type II gentle application techniques. Direct application to the fuel surface will likely be ineffective unless fuel depth is very shallow.
For additional information regarding ethanol and gasoline mixtures
or the HMR contact: Hazmat Information Center:1-800-467-4922
or E-mail: infocntr@dot.gov