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Spill Containment

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Collapsible Spill Trays

Small, portable containment option. Features exterior corner prayer welds with reinforced top corners, ensuring a leak proof product and maximizing the spill capacity of the low-profile sidewall. Standard trays are made with 22 oz. PVC, combining top-of-the-line chemical resistance and durability. The trays fold up easily for efficient storage and transport.

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Large L-Bracket Berms

L-Bracket Spill Containment Berms provide space saving portable secondary containment in huge variety of sizes. A versatile berm for many applications.
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Soft Sided Foam Berms

Key Features:
  • Capture leaks and spills from vehicles, oily equipment, tanks, and drums.

  • Soft foam sidewall easily compresses for convenient loading and off-loading.

  • Choose from several standard sizes to meet your spill containment needs - custom sizes also available.

  • Low, 4-inch sidewall contains spills - keeps plant floors and soil free from contamination.  (2" and 6" wall height also available)

Compliance:
  • Meets SPCC and EPA Container Storage Regulation 40 CFR 264.175 Spill Containment Regulations.

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Large Frac Berms

Specifically engineered to offer secondary containment in the oil field. Storage tanks, drilling fluids, drums, oily equipment. Affordable berm for large coverage areas.

 

Keep Calm and Drill on!

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L-Bracket Berms

Industry standard L-bracket berms are durable, dependable, and proven. Sidewalls are held in place by an aluminum bracket that can be oriented towards or away from the sump. They are available in a wide range of standard sizes, and fold flat for easy shipping, storage, and transportation. The L-Bracket Berm is the perfect low-cost solution to your flexible containment needs.

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Custom Containment

Whether it's smaller items like five-gallon buckets or an entire frac site, we have spill containment  products to make sure that you are in compliance with EPA, SPCC, and other regulations and best-practices.  For spill containment for larger containers, tanks, and IBCs, we have something to offer.
Spill Containment

The Difference in Containment

Spill Containment

When there’s a spill, your first priority is to stop it from spreading. By quickly containing a spill, you can reduce the spill to a smaller area. That means it will take less time to clean.

Best practice is to have a spill response plan in place that deals with your specific spill requirments.   It helps to have access to absorbent socks, booms, non-absorbent dikes or even drainage sumps designed to collect spilled liquids. 

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Secondary Containment

Drums, totes and tanks are primary containers. Containers like these generally work well for containing liquid contents. If the contents are hazardous, and they can fail, the EPA requires them to have secondary containment.

The EPA doesn’t specify exactly what secondary containment must look like.  However, EPA is clear about what containment needs to do: If the primary container fails, the secondary containment device/structure must be able to hold the entire volume that could spill.

- Rail car liners - roll off container liners - dump liners

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