PrintingSWMS

UV Lamp Maintenance SWMS

UV lamp maintenance in printing facilities involves direct exposure to UV radiation, residual ozone and formaldehyde, high-voltage electrical components, and surfaces at temperatures exceeding 400 degrees Celsius. Lamp replacement, reflector cleaning, and power supply servicing require workers to access areas of the press that are normally enclosed and shielded during operation. The WEL reductions for formaldehyde to 0.3 ppm and ozone to 0.05 ppm arriving in December 2026 mean that even residual concentrations present during maintenance activities will require atmospheric verification before and during work. This SWMS template covers UV lamp inspection, replacement, reflector cleaning, and power supply maintenance with controls mapped to applicable codes of practice.

Legal Requirements

regulation

WHS Regulation 2025 Part 7.1 — Hazardous Chemicals; Part 5.2 — Plant; Part 4.5 — Electrical

hrcw category

Hazardous chemical exposure, work near energised electrical installations

code of practice

Managing Risks of Hazardous Chemicals; Managing Electrical Risks in the Workplace (binding July 2026)

section 26a binding

Yes — Both codes binding July 2026. Non-compliance is admissible as evidence of breach.

Hazards

HazardConsequenceLikelihood
UV radiation exposure from unshielded lamps during inspection and replacementPhotokeratitis (arc eye), UV skin burns, long-term skin cancer riskPossible
Ozone and formaldehyde inhalation from residual atmospheric contaminationRespiratory irritation, pulmonary oedema, chronic respiratory diseasePossible
Electrical shock from high-voltage UV lamp power suppliesElectrocution, cardiac arrest, electrical burnsUnlikely
Thermal burns from lamp assemblies and reflectors at operating temperatureSecond and third degree burnsPossible
Mercury exposure from broken UV lamps containing mercury vapourAcute mercury poisoning, chronic neurological damageUnlikely

Controls (Hierarchy of Controls)

Allow UV lamp assemblies to cool to below 60 degrees Celsius before commencing maintenance — verify with infrared thermometer
Conduct atmospheric monitoring for ozone and formaldehyde before entering UV curing enclosures
Implement lockout-tagout on UV lamp power supplies before any maintenance work begins
Provide UV-blocking safety glasses (AS/NZS 1337.1) and long-sleeved clothing for UV protection
Use mercury spill kits and documented mercury clean-up procedures for broken lamp incidents
Ensure adequate ventilation of UV curing enclosures during and after maintenance work
Restrict UV lamp maintenance to trained personnel with documented electrical competency

Recent Prosecutions

UV radiation workplace exposure — Victoria$165,000

A worker sustained severe UV burns to exposed skin and photokeratitis after a UV curing system was operated with a defective shutter mechanism that allowed radiation exposure during a press stoppage. The employer had not maintained the shutter interlock system.

2023WorkSafe Victoria Prosecution Database

What Your SWMS Must Include

Cool-down period and temperature verification procedure before maintenance commences
Atmospheric monitoring requirements for ozone and formaldehyde in UV curing enclosures
LOTO procedure specific to UV lamp power supplies including stored energy discharge
Mercury spill response procedure for broken lamp incidents
UV protection PPE requirements — UV-blocking eyewear, long-sleeved clothing

Related SWMS

Press OperationCleaning Press ComponentsSolvent Handling

Need a compliant UV Lamp Maintenance SWMS?

Our WHS consultants develop UV lamp maintenance SWMS with ozone and formaldehyde controls mapped to the incoming WEL and electrical safety requirements.

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