WWT/General/TBT-WWT-001

Wastewater Treatment Works Safety Awareness

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Wastewater Treatment Works Safety Awareness

Toolbox Talk Record

Ref: TBT-WWT-001  |  Issue: 1  |  Date: March 2026
PresenterProject
LocationDate

What?

  • Wastewater treatment works present unique hazards including toxic gases, biological risks, and drowning in process tanks.
  • Hydrogen sulphide gas is present at many treatment works — it is heavier than air, toxic, and deadens the sense of smell.
  • Biological hazards from raw sewage include leptospirosis, hepatitis, and gastroenteritis from bacterial and viral contamination.
  • Process tanks, channels, and wet wells contain deep water with no visible means of escape if a person falls in.
  • Confined space entry procedures apply to many areas on treatment works including tanks, chambers, and enclosed structures.
  • Chemical dosing areas use corrosive and toxic substances that require specific COSHH controls and emergency procedures.
  • Rotating equipment such as pumps, screens, and scrapers can trap, entangle, and amputate if not properly isolated.
  • Treatment works are often operational during construction — live process areas must be respected and separated from work zones.
  • The smell of a treatment works can mask dangerous gas concentrations — always rely on gas monitors, not your nose.
  • All workers on treatment works must receive a site-specific induction covering the unique hazards of that particular facility.

Why?

Prevent drowningDeep tanks with sheer walls and no handholds are a drowning hazard — edge protection and PFDs save lives.
Toxic gas riskHydrogen sulphide kills rapidly and deadens your sense of smell — you cannot detect dangerous levels without a gas monitor.
Biological exposureContact with raw sewage causes serious illness — hygiene measures and vaccination protect your health.
Do Don't
  • Attend the site-specific induction covering all hazards at this treatment works.
  • Carry and monitor a personal gas detector at all times on the treatment works.
  • Maintain edge protection around all open tanks, channels, and wet wells.
  • Wear PFDs when working within two metres of open water or process tanks.
  • Follow LOTO procedures before working near any rotating or mechanical equipment.
  • Wash hands thoroughly with antibacterial soap before eating, drinking, or smoking.
  • Cover all cuts and wounds with waterproof plasters before starting work.
  • Follow confined space entry procedures for all tanks, chambers, and enclosed areas.
  • Know the location of emergency showers, eyewash stations, and rescue equipment.
  • Report any feeling of illness, nausea, or skin irritation to your supervisor immediately.
  • DON'T enter treatment works areas without completing the site-specific induction.
  • DON'T rely on your sense of smell to detect gas — hydrogen sulphide deadens it rapidly.
  • DON'T remove or bypass edge protection around tanks, channels, or wet wells.
  • DON'T work near open water without a personal flotation device as required.
  • DON'T approach rotating equipment until it is confirmed isolated and locked out.
  • DON'T eat, drink, or smoke without washing hands with antibacterial soap first.
  • DON'T enter treatment works with open, uncovered cuts or wounds on your skin.
  • DON'T enter any enclosed space on a treatment works without a confined space permit.
  • DON'T ignore gas monitor alarms — evacuate the area immediately and report.
  • DON'T assume treatment works are clean environments — biological hazards are everywhere.

See also: Hydrogen Sulphide (H2S) on WwTW | Process Safety on Treatment Works

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