Woodside advises that workers at the Pluto LNG Project near Karratha have not been
exposed to asbestos, despite some claims to the contrary.
Compressed fiber gaskets removed from the packaging of equipment
imported from the United Kingdom, which were suspected by workers
to have contained asbestos, have been confirmed not to contain
asbestos. An independent National Association of Testing
Authorities approved laboratory confirmed the gaskets did not
contain asbestos. Yesterday the workers who handled the gaskets
were advised that they have not been exposed to asbestos.
In a separate case, some other gaskets used in the packaging of
equipment from overseas have been identified as being made of
compressed asbestos fiber. These gaskets have not been disturbed,
the areas have been quarantined and an investigation has been
initiated in accordance with Woodside's standard safety and
consultation processes. A licensed asbestos removal contractor is
reviewing the remainder of the site, to identify and safely remove
all compressed asbestos fibre gaskets. An industrial hygienist is
continuing air monitoring and sampling of the potentially affected
areas with no concerns identified to date.
Both the Australian Manufacturing Workers Union and
Construction, Forestry, Mining and Energy Union requested and were
granted access to visit the site and continue to be provided with
briefings on the project's response to the issue.