ASB/General/TBT-ASB-004

Asbestos Management Plans

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Asbestos Management Plans

Toolbox Talk Record

Ref: TBT-ASB-004  |  Issue: 1  |  Date: March 2026
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What?

  • An asbestos management plan is the document that sets out how asbestos-containing materials in a building will be managed safely.
  • The duty to manage asbestos falls on the person responsible for maintaining non-domestic premises under Regulation 4 of the CAR 2012.
  • The plan is based on an asbestos survey that identifies the location, type, condition, and risk assessment of all ACMs in the building.
  • The plan must describe how ACMs will be monitored, maintained, repaired, encapsulated, or removed based on their condition and risk.
  • Anyone who may disturb ACMs during their work, including contractors, must be informed of the locations and condition before starting.
  • The asbestos register is part of the plan and must be available to all persons working on or maintaining the building.
  • ACMs in good condition and unlikely to be disturbed can be safely managed in place — removal is not always necessary.
  • Re-inspection at regular intervals monitors the condition of ACMs and identifies any deterioration requiring action.
  • The plan must include emergency procedures for accidental disturbance or damage to known ACMs in the building.
  • All workers entering buildings with known ACMs must receive asbestos awareness training before starting their activities.

Why?

Legal dutyRegulation 4 of CAR 2012 places a legal duty on building managers to identify and manage asbestos — failure is a criminal offence.
Protect workersContractors entering buildings without being informed of ACM locations disturb asbestos unknowingly — the plan prevents this.
Monitor conditionACMs in good condition today can deteriorate over time — regular re-inspection catches changes before fibres are released.
Do Don't
  • Ensure the building has a current asbestos survey identifying all ACMs present.
  • Prepare a management plan describing how each ACM will be managed going forward.
  • Make the asbestos register available to everyone working on the building.
  • Inform all contractors of ACM locations before they start any work in the building.
  • Re-inspect ACMs at the intervals specified in the management plan.
  • Label known ACMs where appropriate to warn workers of their presence.
  • Provide asbestos awareness training to everyone who may encounter ACMs.
  • Include emergency procedures in the plan for accidental ACM disturbance.
  • Review and update the plan when ACMs are removed, encapsulated, or conditions change.
  • Cooperate with the duty holder by following the management plan requirements.
  • DON'T occupy or maintain buildings without a current asbestos management plan.
  • DON'T rely on old surveys — ensure the asbestos survey is current and comprehensive.
  • DON'T restrict access to the asbestos register — it must be available to all workers.
  • DON'T allow contractors to start work without informing them of ACM locations.
  • DON'T skip re-inspections — ACM condition can deteriorate without visible warning.
  • DON'T assume unmarked materials are safe — check the register before disturbing anything.
  • DON'T allow workers into buildings with ACMs without asbestos awareness training.
  • DON'T ignore accidental ACM damage — follow the emergency procedure immediately.
  • DON'T treat the management plan as a static document — update it when conditions change.
  • DON'T remove ACMs in good condition unnecessarily — managing in place is often safest.

See also: Asbestos Awareness | Asbestos Types and Where Found

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