Four WEL Changes That Affect Every Printing Business
The replacement of Workplace Exposure Standards with harmonised Workplace Exposure Limits by December 2026 will affect Australian printing businesses more than most other manufacturing sectors because four of the substances undergoing significant reductions are used daily in printing operations. Isopropyl alcohol is reducing from 400 to 200 ppm, affecting every offset printer using IPA-based dampening systems. Styrene is reducing from 50 to 20 ppm, impacting screen printing and flexographic operations using styrene-based inks. Formaldehyde is reducing from 1 to 0.3 ppm, and ozone is reducing from 0.1 to 0.05 ppm — both of which are generated as by-products of UV curing processes now standard across most printing technologies. The cumulative effect of these four changes means that printing businesses face a broader WEL compliance challenge than many other industries. PCBUs who wait until the December 2026 commencement date to begin compliance work will find that ventilation upgrades, process changes, and monitoring system installations all have lead times measured in months, not weeks.
Baseline Air Monitoring: Where to Start
The first step in WEL transition planning is establishing current exposure levels through baseline air monitoring across all printing operations. Personal exposure monitoring using calibrated sampling pumps and appropriate collection media should be conducted for each substance during representative production conditions, including worst-case scenarios such as press wash-ups, ink changes, and UV curing of heavy coverage jobs. Static area monitoring using real-time photoionisation detectors provides supplementary data on spatial exposure patterns across the print facility. Monitoring should cover all work areas including press rooms, ink mixing areas, screen printing workshops, finishing departments, and UV curing zones. Results should be compared against both the current Workplace Exposure Standards and the incoming Workplace Exposure Limits to identify which operations will exceed the new limits. This comparison creates a prioritised action list that focuses engineering and administrative controls on the operations with the largest compliance gaps. Printing businesses should engage an occupational hygienist to design and conduct the baseline monitoring program to ensure results are defensible and representative.