Asbestos exposure causes mesothelioma, asbestosis, and lung cancer with a latency period of 20 to 50 years — diseases that are incurable and almost always fatal. Australia banned asbestos in 2003 but it remains present in any building constructed or refurbished before that date. The WHS Regulation 2025 classifies work involving asbestos as high risk construction work, and all removal must be performed by Class A or Class B licensed removalists. This template maps controls to the binding Asbestos Management and Removal Codes of Practice effective 1 July 2026.
WHS Regulation 2025 Part 8.5 — Asbestos; Part 4.4 — HRCW
Work involving asbestos
How to Manage and Control Asbestos in the Workplace + How to Safely Remove Asbestos (both binding 1 July 2026 under Section 26A)
Yes — effective 1 July 2026. Non-compliance is admissible as evidence of breach.
Class A licence (friable asbestos), Class B licence (non-friable/bonded asbestos >10 m²)
| Hazard | Consequence | Likelihood |
|---|---|---|
| Inhalation of airborne asbestos fibres during removal | Mesothelioma (fatal, 20-50 year latency) | Likely |
| Uncontrolled asbestos fibre release from damaged containment | Widespread contamination, multiple worker and public exposure | Possible |
| Cross-contamination of clean areas via clothing, tools, or equipment | Secondary exposure of unprotected workers and occupants | Possible |
| Asbestos-containing material disturbance during unexpected encounter | Uncontrolled fibre release, worker inhalation | Possible |
| Heat stress from working in full containment with RPE | Heat exhaustion, collapse, impaired judgement | Likely |
Unlicensed operators removed asbestos without containment, air monitoring, or clearance certification. Workers and adjacent building occupants exposed to airborne fibres.
2024 — Safe Work Australia Asbestos Enforcement Action Reports
Our WHS consultants develop asbestos removal SWMS with containment designs and air monitoring plans that satisfy regulator expectations and licensing requirements.
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