- Wear a calibrated personal H2S gas monitor at all times on wastewater treatment works.
- Know which areas on the works are most likely to produce H2S emissions.
- Evacuate the area immediately if your gas monitor alarm activates at any level.
- Check wind direction before starting work — position yourself upwind of known sources.
- Follow confined space entry procedures for all tanks, wet wells, and enclosed areas.
- Ensure fixed H2S detection systems are operational before working in monitored areas.
- Brief all workers on H2S hazards, symptoms, and the emergency response procedure.
- Keep breathing apparatus available and tested for emergency rescue at H2S risk locations.
- Monitor weather conditions — calm, warm days increase the risk of gas accumulation.
- Report any smell of rotten eggs, even faint, to your supervisor for investigation.
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- DON'T enter wastewater sites without a personal H2S gas monitor on your person.
- DON'T rely on your sense of smell to detect H2S — it fails at dangerous concentrations.
- DON'T ignore gas monitor alarms — evacuate immediately and report to your supervisor.
- DON'T work downwind of known H2S sources such as inlet works or sludge storage.
- DON'T enter confined spaces on treatment works without a full entry permit and gas testing.
- DON'T work near fixed detectors that are offline or showing fault conditions.
- DON'T attempt to rescue an unconscious person from an H2S atmosphere without BA.
- DON'T assume outdoor areas are safe — H2S accumulates against walls and in sheltered spots.
- DON'T dismiss a faint rotten egg smell — it may indicate a dangerous nearby concentration.
- DON'T use uncalibrated gas monitors — out-of-date calibration gives false readings.
See also: Wastewater Treatment Works Safety Awareness | Atmospheric Monitoring & Gas Testing
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