- Commission a UXO desk study before excavation on sites with potential wartime bombing history
- Brief all excavation operatives on what UXO looks like and what to do if found
- Stop all work immediately if a suspected UXO item is uncovered during excavation
- Evacuate the area to a safe distance and prevent anyone from approaching the find
- Call the police on 999 who will arrange for military EOD specialists to attend
- Engage a UXO specialist to provide on-site watching brief during excavation in high-risk areas
- Carry out magnetometer surveys where the desk study identifies elevated UXO risk
- Include UXO emergency procedures in the site emergency plan and construction phase plan
- Mark the location of any suspected UXO find clearly and maintain the exclusion zone
- Record all UXO-related information and specialist reports in the project health and safety file
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- DON'T excavate on former military or heavily bombed sites without a UXO risk assessment
- DON'T touch, move, or attempt to identify a suspected UXO item found during excavation
- DON'T assume UXO is only found at depth — items can be at or near the surface
- DON'T re-enter the exclusion zone around a suspected UXO until EOD specialists clear it
- DON'T dismiss unusual metallic objects found during excavation without proper assessment
- DON'T use mechanical excavation in high-risk UXO areas without specialist watching brief
- DON'T rely on the desk study alone — brief operatives to remain vigilant during all digging
- DON'T continue excavation near a suspected find until the all-clear is given by specialists
- DON'T handle corroded metal objects that could be degraded ordnance components
- DON'T ignore the UXO risk assessment because the site is in an urban or developed area
See also: Excavation Safety Awareness | Ground Conditions Assessment
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