Dangerous Goods Regulation ((better)) May 2026
Let’s be clear: DG regulations are not bureaucratic red tape. They are the thin blue line between modern commerce and catastrophe. Most people think "dangerous goods" means a truck with a radioactive trefoil or a barrel of oozing green sludge. The reality is far more mundane—and far more terrifying.
Until then, we rely on the DGR manual, the dangerous goods officer, and the courage of the loadmaster. If you are reading this as a shipper, a warehouse manager, or a small business owner, here is my plea: dangerous goods regulation
I call this the "Ostrich Syndrome." A warehouse worker sees a box that used to contain batteries. They think, "It's just the outer packaging. I don't need the sticker." Or a small business owner ships a phone via overnight mail, wraps it in bubble wrap, and drops it in a FedEx box. They don't declare the battery because "it's only a small one." Let’s be clear: DG regulations are not bureaucratic