CSP/Specific Spaces/TBT-CSP-013
Pipe and Culvert Entry
Confined Spaces › Specific Spaces › Pipe and Culvert Entry
Pipe and Culvert Entry
Toolbox Talk Record
Ref: TBT-CSP-013 | Issue: 1 | Date: March 2026
| Presenter | Project | ||
| Location | Date |
What?
- Entry into pipes and culverts is a confined space operation under the Confined Spaces Regulations 1997.
- Pipes and culverts restrict movement severely — crawling or stooping is often the only way to progress.
- Atmospheric hazards include oxygen depletion, methane, hydrogen sulphide, and carbon dioxide accumulation.
- Water levels in culverts can rise rapidly during rainfall upstream, flooding the space without warning.
- Rescue from a long pipe or culvert is extremely difficult due to the restricted diameter and distance.
- A standby person must be stationed at the entry point with communication to the entrant at all times.
- Forced ventilation using flexible ducting must supply fresh air to the furthest point of entry.
- The entrant should wear a harness with a retrieval line where the pipe geometry allows it.
- Lighting must be intrinsically safe where flammable gas may be present in the pipe or culvert.
- The distance an entrant may travel from the entry point must be defined and limited by the rescue plan.
Why?
| Extreme confinement | Pipes and culverts offer the most restricted confined spaces — movement, rescue, and ventilation are severely limited. |
| Flooding risk | Upstream rainfall can flood a culvert in minutes, trapping and drowning anyone inside. |
| Rescue difficulty | Extracting a casualty from a narrow pipe over a long distance is one of the most challenging rescue scenarios. |
| Do | Don't |
|
See also: Confined Space Entry Procedures | Emergency Rescue Plans |
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