CSP/General/TBT-CSP-003

Atmospheric Monitoring and Gas Testing

Confined SpacesGeneralAtmospheric Monitoring and Gas Testing

All Categories/Confined Spaces/General/Atmospheric Monitoring and Gas Testing

Atmospheric Monitoring and Gas Testing

Toolbox Talk Record

Ref: TBT-CSP-003  |  Issue: 1  |  Date: March 2026
PresenterProject
LocationDate

What?

  • Atmospheric monitoring is the process of testing air quality before and during confined space entry to detect invisible hazards.
  • A multi-gas detector typically monitors oxygen levels, flammable gases (LEL), carbon monoxide, and hydrogen sulphide simultaneously.
  • Normal oxygen concentration is 20.9% — below 19.5% is oxygen-deficient and above 23.5% is oxygen-enriched, both dangerous.
  • Flammable gas readings above 10% of the lower explosive limit require immediate evacuation and investigation.
  • Gas monitors must be calibrated at the manufacturer's specified intervals and bump-tested before every shift.
  • Pre-entry testing must be carried out from outside the confined space using extension probes at multiple levels.
  • Continuous monitoring must be maintained throughout the entire duration of the entry, not just at the start.
  • Gas conditions can change rapidly due to disturbance of sludge, chemical reactions, or changes in ventilation.
  • Only trained persons may interpret gas readings and make decisions about safe entry based on the results.
  • The gas monitoring results must be recorded on the confined space entry permit as evidence of safe conditions.

Why?

Invisible killersToxic gases and oxygen depletion are invisible and odourless — gas monitors are the only way to detect them.
Conditions changeAn atmosphere that tested safe at entry can become lethal within minutes — continuous monitoring catches rapid deterioration.
Correct calibrationAn uncalibrated gas monitor gives false readings that provide dangerous false reassurance — bump testing is essential every shift.
Do Don't
  • Bump-test your gas monitor against known gas concentrations before every shift.
  • Test the atmosphere at multiple levels before entry using an extension sampling probe.
  • Check oxygen is between 19.5% and 23.5% before permitting confined space entry.
  • Evacuate immediately if flammable gas readings exceed 10% of the lower explosive limit.
  • Maintain continuous atmospheric monitoring throughout the duration of every entry.
  • Record all gas test results on the confined space entry permit before authorising entry.
  • Ensure your gas monitor is within its calibration date and serviced at required intervals.
  • Understand the alarm set points on your monitor and what each alarm level means.
  • Re-test the atmosphere after any interruption, disturbance, or change in ventilation.
  • Keep the gas monitor on your person, not left at the entry point during entry.
  • DON'T enter any confined space without testing the atmosphere with a calibrated monitor.
  • DON'T test from only one position — sample at high, mid, and low levels in the space.
  • DON'T enter if oxygen readings are outside the 19.5% to 23.5% safe range.
  • DON'T ignore flammable gas readings — even low levels indicate a hazard that may increase.
  • DON'T rely on pre-entry testing alone — conditions change and need continuous monitoring.
  • DON'T issue an entry permit without documenting the gas test results on the permit form.
  • DON'T use a gas monitor that is overdue for calibration or has failed its bump test.
  • DON'T dismiss an alarm as a false positive — evacuate first, then investigate from outside.
  • DON'T assume the atmosphere is still safe after a break — re-test before re-entering.
  • DON'T leave your gas monitor at the entrance — wear it on your person throughout entry.

See also: Confined Space Awareness | Confined Space Entry Procedures

RAMS Builder

Generate professional Risk Assessment and Method Statements in minutes. 10 document formats, site-specific content, instant Word download.

Learn More