What the WEL Transition Means for Timber Businesses
Australia is replacing Workplace Exposure Standards with harmonised Workplace Exposure Limits by 1 December 2026. For timber businesses, this transition delivers two critical substance reductions that will affect every operation from sawmills to furniture manufacturers. Wood dust (inhalable fraction) drops from 1 to 0.5 mg/m3 — a 50 per cent reduction that directly impacts the adequacy of local exhaust ventilation systems across the entire timber sector. Formaldehyde drops from 1 to 0.3 ppm — a 70 per cent reduction affecting every business that processes MDF, plywood, particle board, or any product bonded with urea-formaldehyde or phenol-formaldehyde adhesives. These reductions are legally binding and will apply to all timber businesses in every Australian jurisdiction simultaneously on the commencement date. PCBUs that are currently operating at or near the existing exposure standards will find themselves non-compliant on 1 December 2026 unless they upgrade controls before that date. The transition period should be used for baseline monitoring, control upgrades, and verification monitoring — not for waiting and hoping.
Wood Dust WEL: Practical Implications
The 50 per cent reduction in the wood dust WEL will challenge many timber operations because air monitoring data consistently shows that even workshops with basic dust extraction often exceed the current 1 mg/m3 standard during peak production periods. Achieving sustained compliance with 0.5 mg/m3 will require a systematic assessment of every dust-generating process, not merely a general upgrade of the extraction system. Start by conducting personal air monitoring during representative production tasks — table sawing, thicknessing, routing, sanding, and assembly — to identify which processes generate the highest exposure levels. Compare results against the incoming 0.5 mg/m3 WEL. For processes that exceed the new limit, evaluate whether the existing LEV hood design, capture velocity, and duct routing are adequate or need modification. Common deficiencies include LEV hoods positioned too far from the dust source, insufficient capture velocity at the machine, duct systems with excessive static pressure loss from long runs and sharp bends, and fan capacity that is marginal for the number of machines connected. For many workshops, selective upgrades to specific machine hoods and duct sections will achieve compliance more cost-effectively than a complete system replacement.