COS/Specific Substances/TBT-COS-017
Hydrogen Sulphide (H2S) in Sewers
COSHH & Hazardous Substances › Specific Substances › Hydrogen Sulphide (H2S) in Sewers
Hydrogen Sulphide (H2S) in Sewers
Toolbox Talk Record
Ref: TBT-COS-017 | Issue: 1 | Date: March 2026
| Presenter | Project | ||
| Location | Date |
What?
- Hydrogen sulphide (H2S) is a highly toxic gas produced by bacterial decomposition of organic matter in sewers.
- At low concentrations it smells of rotten eggs, but at higher levels it paralyses the sense of smell.
- The workplace exposure limit is just 5 ppm for short-term exposure and 1 ppm for long-term exposure.
- Concentrations above 100 ppm can cause loss of consciousness within minutes; above 500 ppm is rapidly fatal.
- H2S is heavier than air and accumulates at the bottom of manholes, wet wells, and sewer chambers.
- Disturbance of sewer sediment, warm weather, and low-flow conditions all increase H2S generation.
- Continuous personal gas monitors with audible alarms are mandatory for all sewer entry operations.
- H2S is also flammable at concentrations between 4.3% and 46% by volume in air.
- Rescue of an H2S casualty in a sewer requires breathing apparatus — entry without BA is suicidal.
- The Confined Spaces Regulations 1997 and COSHH 2002 both apply to work in sewers with H2S risk.
Why?
| Rapid lethality | H2S kills faster than almost any other industrial gas — a single breath at high concentration causes immediate collapse. |
| Smell deception | Workers cannot rely on smell to detect dangerous levels — H2S paralyses the olfactory nerve above 100 ppm. |
| Rescue danger | Attempting rescue without BA in an H2S atmosphere turns rescuers into additional casualties within seconds. |
| Do | Don't |
|
See also: Atmospheric Monitoring and Gas Testing | Confined Space Entry Procedures |
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