Asbestos identification on residential renos
Asbestos identification on residential renovations. Full process guide: presumption rule, competent persons, NATA sampling, and removal licensing.
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The full guide on asbestos identification for residential renovations is at:
Asbestos identification: residential renovations guide
That article covers the complete process including:
- When identification is required (pre-1990 trigger, disturbance rule)
- The two compliant paths under WHS Regulation 422: competent person survey or presumption rule
- Common ACM locations by building element (fibro cladding, eaves, vinyl floors, pipe lagging)
- Bulk sampling procedure and NATA-accredited laboratory requirements
- Documentation minimum for residential sites
- Removal licensing thresholds (Class A vs Class B) and clearance certificate requirements
- Common compliance holds that attract stop-work notices
Quick summary
Any residential building built or renovated before 1990 is likely to contain asbestos-containing materials (ACMs). Before disturbing any suspect material you must either have a competent person identify ACMs, or assume all suspect materials contain asbestos and manage them accordingly. Sampling must go to a NATA-accredited laboratory. Removal over 10 m2 of non-friable ACM requires a Class B licence; any friable asbestos requires Class A.
The full process, worked through step by step, is at Asbestos identification: residential renovations guide.
References
Related
- Asbestos removal pathways, what happens after identification is complete
- SWMS: when is one required, asbestos disturbance is high-risk construction work
- High-risk construction work list, where asbestos disturbance sits in the HRCW definition
- ACM, plain-English definition of asbestos-containing material
- Friable asbestos, definition and distinction from non-friable (bonded) asbestos