Welding in auto body workshops involves MIG, spot, and occasionally gas welding on panels that are coated, galvanised, or painted, generating toxic metal fumes containing zinc, manganese, and chromium compounds. The confined workshop environment concentrates fume exposure far more rapidly than open-air welding operations. Welding fume is now classified as IARC Group 1 carcinogenic to humans, and welding fume exposure limits were tightened in November 2025. This template covers all auto body welding operations with controls mapped to the binding Welding Processes Code of Practice effective 1 July 2026.
WHS Regulation 2025 Part 7.1 — Hazardous Chemicals; Part 4.4 — Hot Work
Hot work near flammable materials
Welding Processes (binding 1 July 2026 under Section 26A)
Yes — Welding Processes code binding July 2026. Non-compliance is a standalone offence.
| Hazard | Consequence | Likelihood |
|---|---|---|
| Welding fume inhalation from coated and galvanised panels | Metal fume fever, lung cancer (IARC Group 1), manganism | Likely |
| Fire from welding sparks contacting flammable materials | Workshop fire, burns, property damage | Possible |
| UV radiation from welding arc | Arc eye (photokeratitis), skin burns, long-term skin cancer risk | Likely |
| Electric shock from faulty welding equipment | Electrocution, cardiac arrest | Unlikely |
| Burns from hot metal and spatter | Thermal burns to skin and through clothing | Likely |
Worker suffered metal fume fever after MIG welding galvanised panels without fume extraction or RPE. Workshop had no welding fume controls despite daily welding operations.
2024 — SafeWork NSW Prosecution Database
Our WHS consultants develop welding SWMS with fume extraction specifications and controls mapped to the binding Welding Processes code.
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