Why Manufacturing Faces Multi-Substance WEL Challenges
The December 2026 transition from Workplace Exposure Standards to Workplace Exposure Limits will affect manufacturing across multiple substance categories simultaneously. Unlike industries that face one or two critical substance changes, most manufacturing businesses will need to address three or more substances with significant WEL reductions. Styrene drops from 50 to 20 ppm — a 60 per cent reduction affecting plastics, fibreglass, and rubber manufacturing. Isocyanates tighten from 0.02 to 0.005 mg/m³ — a 75 per cent reduction affecting foam manufacturing, spray painting, and polyurethane processing. Formaldehyde reduces from 1 to 0.3 ppm — a 70 per cent reduction affecting resin manufacturing, plywood, and textile finishing. Wood dust falls from 1 to 0.5 mg/m³ — a 50 per cent reduction affecting furniture, joinery, and timber products. Manganese drops from 1 to 0.02 mg/m³ — a 98 per cent reduction affecting any manufacturer with welding operations. The breadth of these changes means that a single manufacturing facility may need to upgrade ventilation, implement RPE programs, and establish health surveillance for multiple substances at once.
Prioritising Your Substance List
With multiple substances facing WEL reductions, manufacturers must prioritise which substances to address first. The prioritisation should be based on three factors: the margin of exceedance above the incoming WEL, the severity of the health effects associated with the substance, and the number of workers exposed. A substance where current exposure is ten times the incoming WEL demands more urgent action than one where current exposure is twice the incoming WEL. Carcinogenic and sensitising substances such as formaldehyde, isocyanates, and wood dust should be prioritised over irritant substances because the health consequences of continued overexposure are irreversible. Substances with large exposed workforces create greater total health burden than those affecting a few workers. Baseline exposure monitoring is essential to establish where your facility stands against the incoming WELs. Without monitoring data, prioritisation is guesswork. Engage an occupational hygienist to conduct personal exposure monitoring for every substance relevant to your operations and use the results to build a prioritised transition plan.
Engineering Control Strategies Across Substance Types
Different substance types require different engineering control strategies. For solvent vapours such as styrene, the primary controls are enclosed processes, local exhaust ventilation at open vessels and handling points, and substitution with lower-toxicity alternatives where product requirements permit. For particulate hazards such as wood dust and metal fume, on-tool extraction, downdraft benches, enclosed cutting and machining operations, and dust collection systems with appropriate filtration are the primary controls. For isocyanates in spray painting, compliant spray booths with adequate airflow, supplied-air respiratory protection, and product substitution to water-based or low-isocyanate alternatives form the control strategy. For formaldehyde, process enclosure, local ventilation at emission sources, and product reformulation to reduce formaldehyde content or substitute formaldehyde-free alternatives are the priority measures. Each control type has procurement and installation lead times ranging from weeks for RPE programs to months for custom ventilation systems. Manufacturers should begin specifying and procuring controls now to avoid the supplier bottleneck that will develop as December 2026 approaches.