8th February, 2024
Asbestos is in thousands of buildings in the UK. It was a popular building product 20+ years ago. But it's deadly. Since older buildings are more likely to be demolished, asbestos is a deadly risk in demolition work.
Even though asbestos is banned in the UK, it can still be found in hundreds of thousands of buildings. Because asbestos wasn't banned until 1999, and before then, it was pretty popular in UK construction.
sources say that there are about 6 million tonnes of asbestos, spread across approximately 1.5 million buildings—the most asbestos per capita in Europe.
Asbestos is a problem in demolition work because demolition work can release deadly asbestos fibres.
During demolition work, building materials are disturbed. Cut, crushed, knocked down and demolished. Exactly the type of work that releases asbestos fibres.
You might just see dust and particles, but that dust can kill you if it contains asbestos. Not right away. But years or decades later.
No other case highlights the risk of asbestos exposure during demolition quite like the World Trade Centre attacks and consequential Twin Towers collapse in New York on September 11th 2001.
Today, many years on from the attack that killed thousands, the death toll continues to rise. Why? Because, among the many toxic fumes and dust that filled the air of New York when the towers collapsed, were fibres from the hundreds of tons of asbestos-containing materials used in the construction of the towers.
While the dust contained many other toxins, is certainly no secret that asbestos fibres can cause fatal lung cancers and diseases. Although the diseases can take decades to develop, symptoms are already showing for many first responders.
When we first wrote this blog post, according to an article by CNN, 176 firefighters, 136 police officers and 15 FBI agents had already died as a result of illnesses caused by the toxins they inhaled in their work at the attack sites. Now, 20+ years after the collapse, that figure is over 3,000. And while asbestos isn't to blame for all of these deaths, hundreds of people have confirmed Asbestosis from World Trade Center exposure, and over 1,000 have died from lung and respiratory disease. In the coming decades, this figure is likely to rise further.
The World Trade Center Health Registry estimates that over 470,000 people were exposed to asbestos as a result of the unplanned collapse. This includes survivors, rescue workers, others in New York on 9/11 and those involved in the recovery and clean up.
Given that asbestos-related diseases usually take 20-50 years to first show symptoms, we can expect a large number of asbestos-related illnesses to develop over future decades from the Trade Centre collapse.
This highlights on a huge scale, the damage that can be done if demolition work is not planned to take into account the risk of asbestos exposure.
Of course, the demolition of the Twin Towers was not planned. There was no risk assessment, no safe systems of work, and no licensed contractor removing asbestos under control measures to minimise the risk of exposure.
This does, however, show the need to plan the demolition of buildings, to consider the risk of asbestos exposure during demolition, and importantly, to minimise the risk.
You also can't see asbestos fibres. Dust containing asbestos looks just like other kinds of dust. Materials containing asbestos look just like other building materials.
And that's another reason asbestos is so deadly - you might not know it is there!
In the UK, asbestos was once a popular building material. It was cheap, readily available and had great insulating properties. At its peak, asbestos was present in thousands of construction products. It was used heavily in the construction of buildings from the 1950s to the 1980s.
Following research into the dangers of asbestos, regulations began to tighten around its importation and use. Eventually, all asbestos was banned in the UK in 1999.
But, many buildings in the UK were built before the ban. So asbestos-containing materials remain within the fabric of buildings.
Asbestos might be sprayed onto steel for fire and heat protection. It can be found in partitions and cladding. It's in cement products and loose insulation. In textured coatings and paints. It can even be found in bath panels and toilet seats.
During demolition building materials are disturbed. Materials are cut, bashed, hit, and pulled apart. And it's during the disturbance that the risk from asbestos occurs. Once asbestos-containing materials are damaged, asbestos fibres become airborne and can be inhaled.
Those tiny asbestos fibres get released as dust, and you breathe them in. And other people in the area might breathe them in. And if you're not careful, you might carry some of that deadly dust home on your clothes and hair for your family too.
And that can be fatal.
Asbestos exposure causes serious health problems. The four main diseases caused by asbestos are mesothelioma (fatal), lung cancer (mostly fatal), asbestosis (sometimes fatal, always debilitating) and diffuse pleural thickening (debilitating).
To put the risk of asbestos exposure into context, there are around 5,000 deaths caused by asbestos exposure each year in the UK. That's more than the number of people killed on the roads.
Unlike other safety hazards, you don't know immediately if you are exposed to asbestos. If you cut yourself, you know about it right away. If you breathe in asbestos fibres, you might not find out for over 20 years. Those who die today were most likely to have been exposed decades ago. Those that are exposed today are not likely to develop asbestos-related diseases for 10+ years from now.
By the time the disease develops, it cannot be reversed and is painful, slow and nearly always fatal.
So how can demolition workers stay protected from deadly asbestos fibres?
Prevention is the only way to protect your future self.
You need to know what materials contain asbestos and take the right precautions. But remember, you can't see asbestos. You can't know what materials contain asbestos just by looking at it.
Because asbestos can't be detected easily just by looking for it, you need an asbestos survey. Testing materials at a laboratory will tell you if they contain asbestos fibres.
Asbestos surveys are a legal requirement. Before demolition work is undertaken it is important to undertake a 'refurbishment and demolition asbestos survey'. This type of asbestos survey will sample materials to determine if asbestos is present, the type and whether licensed removal or unlicensed removal should be undertaken.
There are two types of asbestos surveys, so it is important to make sure you have the right one carried out. The refurbishment and demolition survey is the most thorough survey. It is intrusive and samples are taken to find any asbestos materials present in the work area.
The refurbishment and demolition asbestos survey report will allow a safe system of work to be planned to safely remove the asbestos-containing materials identified, with controls to minimise the release of asbestos fibres and prevent exposure.
Asbestos removal work will involve:
Most higher-risk work with asbestos must use a licensed contractor, and the HSE must also be notified.
Download the free asbestos toolbox talk to use as a regular reminder of the risks of asbestos in demolition.
This article was written by Emma at HASpod. Emma has over 10 years experience in health and safety and BSc (Hons) Construction Management. She is NEBOSH qualified and Tech IOSH.
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Asbestos Awareness CourseThere are two types of asbestos survey, the management asbestos survey, and the refurbishment and demolition asbestos survey. A building may require one type, or both, depending on the use of the building and the work planned.
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