Wash. Admin. Code § 314-55-104 - Cannabis processor license extraction requirements
(1) Processors are limited to the methods,
equipment, solvents, gases, and mediums detailed in this section when creating
cannabis extracts.
(2) Processors
may use the hydrocarbons N-butane, isobutane, propane, or heptane. These
solvents must be of at least 99 percent purity and a processor must use them in
a professional grade closed loop extraction system designed to recover the
solvents, work in an environment with proper ventilation, controlling all
sources of ignition where a flammable atmosphere is or may be
present.
(3) Processors may use a
professional grade closed loop CO2 gas extraction system
where every vessel is rated to a minimum of 600 pounds per square inch. The
CO2 must be of at least 99 percent purity.
(4) Closed loop systems for hydrocarbon or
CO2 extraction systems must be commercially manufactured
and bear a permanently affixed and visible serial number.
(5) Certification from a licensed engineer
must be provided to the LCB for professional grade closed loop systems used by
processors to certify that the system was commercially manufactured, safe for
its intended use, and built to codes of recognized and generally accepted good
engineering practices, such as:
(a) The
American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME);
(b) American National Standards Institute
(ANSI);
(c) Underwriters
Laboratories (UL); or
(d) The
American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM).
(6) The certification document must contain
the signature and stamp of a professional engineer and the serial number of the
extraction unit being certified.
(7) Professional grade closed loop systems,
and other equipment used must be approved for specific use or the technical
report must be approved by the state building code officials prior to use per
WAC 51-54A-3800.
(8) Professional closed loop systems, other
equipment used, the extraction operation, and facilities must be approved for
their use by the local fire code official and meet any required fire, safety,
and building code requirements specified in:
(a) Title 296 WAC;
(c) National Fire Protection Association
(NFPA) standards;
(d) International
Building Code (IBC);
(e)
International Fire Code (IFC); and
(f) Other applicable standards including
following all applicable fire, safety, and building codes in processing and the
handling and storage of the solvent or gas.
(9) Processors may use heat, screens,
presses, steam distillation, ice water, and other methods without employing
solvents or gases to create kief, hashish, bubble hash, or infused dairy
butter, or oils or fats derived from natural sources, and other
extracts.
(10) Under WAC
314-55-077, infused dairy butter
and oils or fats derived from natural sources may be used to prepare infused
edible products, but they may not be prepared as stand-alone edible products
for sale.
(11) Processors may use
food grade glycerin, ethanol, and propylene glycol solvents to create extracts.
All ethanol must be removed from the extract in a manner to recapture the
solvent and ensure that it is not vented into the atmosphere.
(12) Processors creating cannabis extracts
must develop standard operating procedures, good manufacturing practices, and a
training plan prior to producing extracts for the marketplace. Any person using
solvents or gases in a closed looped system to create cannabis extracts must be
fully trained on how to use the system, have direct access to applicable
material safety data sheets and handle and store the solvents and gases
safely.
(13) Parts per million for
one gram of finished extract cannot exceed residual solvent or gas levels
provided in WAC
314-55-102.
Notes
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