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IATA posts Addendum for 2021 DGR
2021-02-03T06:00:00Z
On January 1, 2021, the International Air Transport Association (IATA) posted the first Addendum to the 62nd edition of their Dangerous Goods Regulations (DGR).
The Addendum, which makes amendments and corrections to the 62nd edition of the IATA DGR became effective on January 1, 2021.
A summary of the changes from the 16-page Addendum includes:
- Amended section 2.8.2 State Variations, Refer to CAG-13 when shipping explosives into Canada.
- Amendments and deletions to several operator variations in Section 2.8.4, including FedEx.
- Renumbered subsections for Section 2.
- Added “3.9.2.5.5 COVID-19 vaccines containing GMOs or GMMOs, including those in clinical trials, are not subject to these Regulations.” to section 3.9.2.5 Genetically Modified Micro-Organisms (GMMOs) or Genetically Modified Organisms (GMOs) Added additional special provisions to both lithium ion and metal batteries contained in or packed with equipment UN3481 and UN3491.
- Revised special provisions: A46 and A99; Added special provision A220.
- Amended subsection 6.0.1.3 references.
- Replaced the word “attached” with “associated” in section 8.
- Updated the date from 2008 to 2018 in section 10.
- Added additional explanation of the codes for lithium batteries RBI, RBM, RLI, RLM to Appendix B.2.2.4.
- Updated contact information in Appendixes D.1, D.2 and F.3.
Requirements
Most airlines require the IATA DGR to be used when transporting dangerous goods by air. The Addendum is also required to be referenced as it makes several changes to the DGR and can affect your dangerous goods shipment.
It’s a good idea to print a copy of the Addendum and keep it with your IATA DGR so that you always have the changes close by.