Auto Body

WHS Management for Marine Coating

Control antifouling chemical exposure, confined space painting risks, and large-surface isocyanate hazards in marine repair.

Marine coating operations expose workers to a unique combination of hazardous chemicals including copper-based antifouling paints, two-pack polyurethane topcoats containing isocyanates, and epoxy primers that cause skin sensitisation. Work frequently occurs inside confined hull spaces, below-deck compartments, and enclosed engine rooms where ventilation is severely limited and atmospheric hazards concentrate rapidly. Surface preparation involves blasting and grinding operations that generate respirable dust containing old paint residues, fibreglass particles, and potentially lead from legacy coatings. A dedicated WHS management system ensures marine coating operations meet WHS Regulation 2025 requirements across all phases from preparation through to final topcoat application.

Key Hazards

Isocyanate exposure from two-pack marine topcoat applicationAntifouling paint chemicals (copper compounds, organotin residues)Confined space atmospheric hazards in hull and below-deck areasRespirable dust from blasting and grinding legacy coatingsEpoxy resin sensitisation causing occupational dermatitisFalls from height on scaffolding and cradles around vessel hulls

Regulatory Requirements

HRCW Categories

Confined space entry, work at height, work in contaminated atmosphere

Section 26A Codes (binding 1 July 2026)
Spray Painting and Powder CoatingConfined SpacesManaging Risks of Hazardous Chemicals in the Workplace

SWMS Required

Spray Booth OperationTwo Pack ApplicationConfined Space VehicleGrinding Sanding

Related Sectors

Spray PaintingTruck Fleet WorkshopPanel Beating

Need Help with Marine Coating WHS?

We help marine coating operators develop compliant WHS systems covering confined space painting, antifouling chemical management, and isocyanate exposure controls.

Contact Us