In this toolbox meeting we focus on hazardous substances and what they are, where you can encounter them and where they can crop up. In brief:
An ancient scientist (Paracelsus) once said: all things are poison, only the dose makes it poisonous. By this he meant that, for example, if you drink lots of water – probably around 8-10 litres – this could kill you; while you would only need to ingest a few grams or even a few nanograms of other substances (which are therefore much more poisonous). So the dose means the quantity you ingest.
You can recognize a hazardous substance by:
In sequence from left to right:
Where are the hazard symbols located?
The supplier of the product, by law, is obliged to prepare an MSDS for a substance or mixture if the product is classified as hazardous in accordance with the guidelines.
Where is this information located?
H and P statements
Aside from a pictogram, much packaging also contains H and P statements.
The explanation of the H statements can easily be found in the ‘stoffencheckapp’ [substance check app]. See at the bottom of this toolbox under Tips.
Key H statements:
What you must do when working with hazardous substances
If there is no WIC:
Immediately report this to your supervisor. In fact, you may not work with a hazardous substance when insufficient information is available.
Discuss the following topics with each other:
For more information, download the Stoffencheck app [hazardous substances app]. This app is available in the app store. Search the Stoffencheck app! This app is an initiative of the Dutch Labour Inspectorate and the FNV Trade Union and provides information about working with certain substances and the associated risks.
Also check out the Heijmans toolboxes for additional toolboxes on Hazardous substances.
Hazardous substances and their environmental impact
There are materials we no longer use as building materials because of their adverse impact on health and the environment. For example, asbestos is hazardous to humans as well as animals and its use has been prohibited in the Netherlands since 2001. When we use a circular building approach, this also means that we use healthier materials to build with and that we reduce the adverse impact on the environment, animals, residents and of course our own employees.
For a complete overview of the current impact of a product on the environment, we can produce a lifecycle analysis (LCA) of the products used. In this analysis we produce and overview of the raw materials used and the entire production cycle is reviewed (in other words, from, for example, mining up to the raw material’s inclusion in the product) in order to determine the environmental impact. This is expressed in kg of CO2 emitted by factories and transport, fertilisation in agriculture, acidification of water and soil, as well as toxic substances that end up in water and have an impact on people.
Within the construction industry, these lists with impacts are converted into environmental cost indicators (MKI) and building performance indicators (MPG). Heijmans is actively focused on reducing the value of these indicators. Developing and creating a healthy living environment is not only our goal. Clients and government increasingly ask for and demand more from environmental score-based management.
Scan de volgende code met de app om deze toolbox te bekijken.