DUS/General/TBT-DUS-014
Hardwood Dust Exposure
Dust & Silica › General › Hardwood Dust Exposure
Hardwood Dust Exposure
Toolbox Talk Record
Ref: TBT-DUS-014 | Issue: 1 | Date: March 2026
| Presenter | Project | ||
| Location | Date |
What?
- Hardwood dust is classified as a Group 1 carcinogen, confirmed to cause nasal adenocarcinoma in humans.
- Common construction hardwoods include oak, beech, ash, iroko, and sapele used in joinery and flooring.
- The UK workplace exposure limit for hardwood dust is 3 mg/m³ over an 8-hour time-weighted average.
- Sawing, routing, sanding, and planing hardwood generates fine dust that penetrates deep into the lungs.
- Some tropical hardwoods including iroko and western red cedar also cause occupational asthma and dermatitis.
- On-tool extraction connected to an H-class vacuum is the minimum control for all hardwood machining.
- Local exhaust ventilation (LEV) systems in workshops must be examined and tested every 14 months.
- Health surveillance including lung function testing and nasal checks is required for regular hardwood workers.
- Mixed hardwood and softwood dust is treated as hardwood dust for exposure limit purposes.
- COSHH 2002 requires employers to prevent or adequately control worker exposure to hardwood dust.
Why?
| Nasal cancer | Hardwood dust is a proven cause of nasal cancer — the risk increases with duration and intensity of exposure. |
| Respiratory disease | Chronic exposure causes occupational asthma, rhinitis, and reduced lung function that may be irreversible. |
| Legal duty | COSHH 2002 requires hardwood dust exposure to be prevented or controlled to below the WEL of 3 mg/m³. |
| Do | Don't |
|
See also: Wood Dust Exposure | On-Tool Extraction Systems |
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