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Labelling of Workplace Hazardous Chemicals

Purpose of Labels

Labels provide immediate visual identification of:

  • Chemical hazards (using pictograms)
  • Severity of hazards (signal words)
  • Basic safety precautions
  • Supplier information

[!important] Labels Save Lives Labels are the first line of communication about chemical hazards. Never use unlabelled chemicals.

GHS Labelling System

Australia has adopted the Globally Harmonized System (GHS) for chemical classification and labelling.

Benefits:

  • Consistent worldwide
  • Standardized pictograms
  • Clear hazard communication
  • Easier to understand

Who Must Label?

Manufacturers and importers must label hazardous chemicals before first supply.

Suppliers must ensure labels maintained during supply.

PCBUs must ensure labels remain legible on chemicals at workplace.

GHS Label Elements

1. Product Identifier

Chemical name that allows the chemical to be identified.

Must match:

  • Name on Safety Data Sheet
  • Name in chemical register

Example: "Acetone" or "2-Propanone"

2. Signal Word

Indicates severity of hazard:

DANGER - More severe hazards

WARNING - Less severe hazards

Only one signal word used (DANGER takes precedence if multiple hazards).

3. Hazard Pictograms

Standardized symbols in red diamond borders:

Health Hazards:

  • ☠️ Skull and Crossbones - Acute toxicity (fatal/toxic)
  • ⚠️ Exclamation Mark - Irritant, skin sensitizer, acute toxicity (harmful)
  • ⚕️ Health Hazard - Respiratory sensitizer, carcinogen, reproductive toxicity, specific organ toxicity, aspiration hazard
  • Corrosion - Skin corrosion, serious eye damage

Physical Hazards:

  • 🔥 Flame - Flammable (gases, liquids, solids, aerosols)
  • 💥 Exploding Bomb - Explosives, self-reactive, organic peroxides
  • Flame Over Circle - Oxidizing (gases, liquids, solids)
  • 🧪 Gas Cylinder - Gases under pressure
  • ⚠️ Corrosion - Corrosive to metals

Environmental Hazards:

  • 🐟 Environment - Aquatic toxicity

4. Hazard Statements

Standardized phrases describing hazards:

Physical hazards:

  • H220: Extremely flammable gas
  • H225: Highly flammable liquid and vapor
  • H228: Flammable solid

Health hazards:

  • H301: Toxic if swallowed
  • H315: Causes skin irritation
  • H317: May cause allergic skin reaction
  • H318: Causes serious eye damage
  • H334: May cause allergy or asthma symptoms if inhaled
  • H350: May cause cancer
  • H373: May cause damage to organs through prolonged or repeated exposure

Environmental hazards:

  • H400: Very toxic to aquatic life
  • H410: Very toxic to aquatic life with long lasting effects

5. Precautionary Statements

Standardized advice on:

Prevention:

  • P210: Keep away from heat, hot surfaces, sparks, open flames. No smoking.
  • P261: Avoid breathing dust/fume/gas/mist/vapors/spray
  • P280: Wear protective gloves/protective clothing/eye protection/face protection

Response:

  • P301+P310: IF SWALLOWED: Immediately call POISON CENTER/doctor
  • P302+P352: IF ON SKIN: Wash with plenty of water
  • P304+P340: IF INHALED: Remove person to fresh air and keep comfortable for breathing
  • P305+P351+P338: IF IN EYES: Rinse cautiously with water for several minutes. Remove contact lenses if present and easy to do. Continue rinsing.

Storage:

  • P403: Store in well-ventilated place
  • P405: Store locked up

Disposal:

  • P501: Dispose of contents/container in accordance with regulations

6. Supplier Identification

Must include:

  • Name of manufacturer/importer/supplier
  • Street address (Australian address)
  • Telephone number

Decanted/Transferred Chemicals

When chemical transferred from original container:

MUST label new container with:

  • Product identifier (chemical name)
  • Appropriate pictograms
  • Signal word
  • Hazard statements
  • Supplier details (or reference to original container/SDS)

Exception: If chemical used immediately and container not left unattended, labelling is not required.

[!warning] Never Use Unlabelled Containers If container not labelled or label damaged/illegible, do not use chemical until properly labelled. Could be wrong chemical or unknown hazard.

Small Containers

For containers too small for full label:

Minimum requirements:

  • Product identifier
  • Pictograms
  • Signal word
  • Reference to SDS (e.g., "See SDS for full information")
  • Name, Australian address and business telephone number of manufacturer/importer
  • Name, Australian address and business telephone number of manufacturer/importer

Research Chemicals and Samples for Analysis

  • Must be labelled in English with at least the product identifier and a hazard pictogram or hazard statement.

Multiple Layers of Packaging

  • Inner Container: Must have full GHS labelling (e.g., bottle inside a box).
  • Outer Container: May be labelled according to ADG Code (transport) requirements or GHS.
  • Principle: Ensuring the immediate container used by the worker conveys the safety information.

Label Maintenance

PCBUs must ensure:

  • Labels remain legible
  • Labels not removed or defaced
  • Labels replaced if damaged
  • Decanted chemicals properly labelled

Good practice:

  • Regular inspection of containers
  • Replace damaged labels immediately
  • Laminate labels exposed to weather/chemicals
  • Use waterproof markers for temporary labels

Workplace Labels vs Supplier Labels

Supplier Label:

  • GHS format (full 6 elements)
  • On original containers
  • Prepared by manufacturer/importer

Workplace Label:

  • For decanted/transferred chemicals
  • May be simplified (if used immediately)
  • Prepared by PCBU/workers
  • Must still convey essential hazard information

Prohibited Labelling

Must NOT:

  • Use misleading labels
  • Label in way that contradicts or detracts from GHS requirements
  • Suggest chemical safe when it's hazardous

Training Workers

Workers must be trained to:

  • Understand GHS label elements
  • Recognize pictograms
  • Interpret hazard and precautionary statements
  • Know what to do if label damaged/missing
  • Understand importance of labelling decanted chemicals

Practical Construction Examples

Example 1: Two-Pack Epoxy

Supplier Label on Original Container:

DANGER

Product: Epoxy Resin Component A

Pictograms: [Health Hazard] [Exclamation Mark]

Hazard Statements:
H317: May cause allergic skin reaction
H319: Causes serious eye irritation

Precautionary Statements:
P280: Wear protective gloves/eye protection
P302+P352: IF ON SKIN: Wash with plenty of water
P305+P351+P338: IF IN EYES: Rinse cautiously with water for several minutes

Supplier: XYZ Coatings Pty Ltd
Address: 123 Industry Rd, Sydney NSW 2000
Phone: (02) 1234 5678

Workplace Action:

  • Keep original containers labelled
  • If mixing into smaller container for immediate use, minimum label: "Epoxy Resin - See SDS"
  • If storing mixed epoxy, full label required

Example 2: Solvent Transferred to Spray Bottle

Original Container: Acetone (flammable liquid)

Workplace Label on Spray Bottle:

WARNING

ACETONE

[Flame Pictogram] [Exclamation Mark]

H225: Highly flammable liquid and vapor
H319: Causes serious eye irritation

Keep away from heat/sparks/open flames
Wear eye protection
See SDS in site office

Date decanted: 15/03/2025

Example 3: Concrete Cleaning Acid

Original Container: Hydrochloric acid solution

Construction Site Issue: Label damaged by weather, illegible.

Action:

  1. Do not use (cannot confirm chemical or concentration)
  2. Check SDS for product identifier
  3. Create new label matching SDS information
  4. Apply to container
  5. OR transfer to new, properly labelled container
  6. OR dispose and purchase new

Common Labelling Mistakes

❌ Using food/drink containers for chemicals Never use drink bottles, food containers for chemicals (risk of accidental ingestion).

❌ "Mystery containers" Unlabelled containers with unknown contents (dispose safely or have tested/identified).

❌ Handwritten labels without hazard info "Cleaner" written on bottle - what are the hazards? Not sufficient.

✓ Proper workplace label: Product name + pictograms + key hazard statements minimum.

❌ Removing labels Scraping off damaged label and not replacing it.

✓ Replace immediately: If label damaged, replace before chemical used again.

❌ Decanting without labelling Pouring chemical into unmarked container "for quick use."

✓ Label immediately: Even temporary containers must be labelled.

Integration with SDS

Labels and SDS work together:

Label:

  • Quick visual reference
  • On container
  • Key hazards only

SDS:

  • Detailed information
  • All 16 sections
  • Used for risk assessment, training, emergencies

Cross-reference:

  • Label directs to SDS
  • SDS Section 2 matches label hazard information
  • Both use same product identifier

See Safety Data Sheets.

Regulatory Compliance

Inspectors check:

  • All hazardous chemicals properly labelled
  • Labels legible and complete
  • Decanted chemicals labelled
  • Workers understand labels

Non-compliance:

  • Improvement notices
  • Prohibition notices (for immediate risk)
  • Penalties

Summary

Proper labelling ensures:

  • Immediate hazard recognition
  • Correct chemical identification
  • Appropriate precautions taken
  • Emergency responders have information
  • Compliance with WHS regulations

Key principles:

  • All hazardous chemicals must be labelled
  • Use GHS format
  • Keep labels legible
  • Label decanted chemicals
  • Train workers to understand labels
  • Never use unlabelled chemicals