UKATA Asbestos Awareness course
Our UKATA Asbestos Awareness course supports organisations to meet legal duties under the Control of Asbestos Regulations 2012 by raising employees’ awareness of asbestos risks. It ensures staff can recognise potential hazards, reducing the chance of accidental exposure.
Approved by the UK Asbestos Training Association (UKATA), this online course meets recognised standards for asbestos awareness training, giving employers confidence that training is high-quality, up-to-date, and aligned with industry expectations and Health and Safety Executive guidance.
This UKATA course that we are offering for sale, is sold under licence from Tetra Consulting who is the UKATA approved Member (MEMB/217), and this company Praxis42 are not a UKATA Member for this classification of training, UKATA Asbestos Awareness.
Want to find out more information on our UKATA Asbestos Awareness course?

UKATA Asbestos Awareness course
£30
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Benefits of UKATA Asbestos Awareness course
- Improves confidence in managing asbestos-related risks across your organisation through real-life case studies, regulatory guidance, and practical emergency procedures.
- Enables your organisation to deliver essential asbestos awareness training to employees at scale, supporting ongoing compliance with the Control of Asbestos Regulations 2012.
- Developed and delivered by qualified health and safety professionals with extensive experience in asbestos awareness and workplace risk management.
- UKATA-approved content ensures your employees receive accurate, up-to-date training in line with recognised industry standards and Health and Safety Executive guidance.
- Interactive, online training to keep participants engaged throughout.
- Multiple choice quizzes so participants can check their understanding as they go.
- Summaries at the end of each section to enhance understanding.
UKATA accreditation
Our Asbestos Awareness course is UKATA accredited, providing assurance that it meets the high standards set by the UK Asbestos Training Association. UKATA accreditation is widely recognised across industries and confirms that the course is aligned with the requirements of the Control of Asbestos Regulations 2012.
UKATA set strict criteria for membership and course delivery, ensuring that our training is accurate, up to date, and delivered by competent professionals.
The course is also SCORM compliant, which means it can be integrated as part of your existing LMS or used as part of our SHINE learning management system.
By the end of the UKATA Asbestos Awareness online course, participants will be able to:
- Understand the nature and properties of asbestos, and its health impacts.
- Recognise the types, uses, and likely locations of asbestos.
- Understand how to mitigate asbestos-related risks.
- Carry out work activities safely, ensuring no risk to themselves or others.
- Understand key aspects of asbestos regulations and how they integrate with wider health and safety legislation.
- Follow correct procedures when encountering potential asbestos-related hazards.
1. What is asbestos?
- The history of asbestos and how it was mined and used in the past.
- How asbestos became widely used in the twentieth century, and when health concerns began to arise before phasing out led to a full UK ban.
2. Where is asbestos from?
- The countries where asbestos was mined in the past and where it is still mined today.
3. The properties of asbestos
- The unique properties that have meant asbestos was considered a valuable material, and the wide range of products made from asbestos.
4. Types of asbestos
- A look at the properties of the three common types of asbestos and where they are still found today.
5. Asbestos and the human body
- The ways in which asbestos fibres can be released into the air, and how they can enter the human body.
- The health effects of asbestos and which occupations and individuals are at greatest risk.
- The potentially fatal diseases caused by asbestos exposure, with symptoms of each condition, treatment options to improve quality of life, and how to reduce the risk of developing asbestos-related diseases following asbestos exposure.
- Statistics to show how widespread asbestos-related health conditions are.
6. Asbestos exposure limits
- Emphasising that there is no safe level of asbestos exposure, but how the amount and duration of exposure affect the risk of developing asbestos-related diseases.
- The factors that can increase someone’s risk of developing asbestos-related conditions including genetics, smoking history, pre-existing lung conditions, and immune system function.
7. Latency periods
- How asbestos-related diseases have different latency periods and how long these are.
- Health and Safety Executive mortality data for mesothelioma, lung cancer, and asbestosis.
8. Case study
- Looking at how a particular individual became exposed to asbestos and how the failure to take safety precautions meant he developed mesothelioma, an aggressive cancer. This case study highlights the silent damage asbestos can cause.
9. Where asbestos containing materials (ACMs) are found today
- The types of buildings, vehicles and products where ACMs may be contained despite its ban in 1999.
- How asbestos was widely used in construction, industrial and commercial applications in the past.
10. Friability
- What ‘friability’ means and how it is a key factor in determining the danger of ACMs.
- Examples of friable and non-friable ACMs.
- Looking at the logical sequencing of ACMs, ordered from high to low risk based on friability, and where each type of ACM is found.
11. Use of asbestos for insulation
- Why asbestos was used to insulate boilers, heating pipes and as loose fill.
- Where you might find asbestos in these areas and what to do/not to do.
12. Further examples of ACM locations
- Looking at all the locations in a residential home where ACMs might be found.
- A brief overview of the time period of using various ACMs. For example, Artex was used until the end of 1999.
13. How to identify the presence of asbestos at a worksite
Looking at:
- What an asbestos register is and why it is important.
- Why asbestos surveys are essential and the two types of survey under the Control of Asbestos Regulations 2012.
- What an asbestos management plan (AMP) is, and what an effective AMP should contain.
14. Emergency procedures
- Examples of emergency procedures provided by UKATA.
15. Assessing whether commercial premises contain asbestos
- The four reasonable steps to take when identifying ACMs in commercial premises.
- Emphasising that the absence of a warning sign does not guarantee an asbestos-free material.
16. What to do in the event of disturbance or exposure
- The critical steps to take if asbestos is disturbed or you are exposed.
17. When to report an asbestos incident
- When an asbestos incident must be reported under the Reporting of Injuries, Diseases and Dangerous Occurrences Regulations 2013 (RIDDOR).
- How the types of incidents that must be reported under RIDDOR are most likely to occur.
18. Regulations relating to asbestos
Looking at the regulations that protect workers and the public from asbestos exposure and why they are important, including:
- Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974
- Construction (Design and Management) Regulations 2015
- Control of Asbestos Regulations 2012
- Asbestos Prohibition Regulations 1985
- Control of Asbestos at Work Regulations 2002
- Control of Asbestos Regulations 2006
19. Responsibilities of duty holders
- Who duty holders are under Regulation 4 of the Control of Asbestos Regulations 2012 and what their responsibilities are.
- Emphasising that the focus is on managing asbestos safely rather than removing it.
- How the Health and Safety Executive’s Approved Code of Practice helps duty holders to understand and carry out their responsibilities.
20. The duties of other ‘responsible persons’
- Who other ‘responsible persons’ are in relation to asbestos and what their responsibilities are under the law.
21. Employers’ duties
- What an employer’s duties are under Regulation 5 of the Control of Asbestos Regulations 2012.
- How Regulation 6 places a legal duty on employers to assess the hazard and risk posed by asbestos before any work begins, the purpose of the risk assessment and what it must consider.
22. Overview of asbestos at work categories: LW, NNLW and NLW
- Under the Control of Asbestos Regulations 2012 asbestos work is divided into three categories based on the level of risk: licensed work (LW), notifiable non-licensed work (NNLW) and non-licensed work (NLW).
- Looking at examples of the types of work that fall under each category and what action must be taken.
At the end of the UKATA Asbestos Awareness course there are 15 multiple choice questions to answer, and the pass mark is 80%.
Certificate
If you complete the UKATA Asbestos Awareness training on SHINE, you will receive a certificate on successful completion of the course, which is downloadable as a PDF file.
Who should take this course?
UKATA Asbestos Awareness training online is for anyone who may encounter asbestos-containing materials during their work, including electricians, plumbers, joiners, decorators, heating engineers, maintenance staff, facilities managers, site supervisors, surveyors, architects, building inspectors, and anyone planning or overseeing work in buildings that may contain asbestos.
The course is also suitable for duty holders and those responsible for health and safety management who need to understand their legal responsibilities under the Control of Asbestos Regulations 2012.
How is it delivered?
The UKATA Asbestos Awareness course is delivered online or through a computer network to each trainee at their desktop, laptop or mobile device. We can also provide the course to be integrated into a SCORM compliant LMS. Training can be completed at the employee’s own pace by “bookmarking” and recording progress and returning to the training later.
Course duration
The UKATA Asbestos Awareness online course takes approximately 1.5-2 hours to complete.
How do I know if my organisation needs to provide asbestos awareness training?
If your employees are likely to come across asbestos-containing materials during their work, whether in construction, maintenance, refurbishment, or surveying, then asbestos awareness training is a legal requirement under Regulation 10 of the Control of Asbestos Regulations 2012.
How often do employees need a UKATA asbestos awareness refresher?
There is no fixed legal renewal period, but the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) recommends that asbestos awareness training be refreshed annually to ensure knowledge remains up to date and relevant to current working conditions.
Is this course sufficient for working with or removing asbestos?
No, this UKATA Asbestos Awareness eLearning course is for awareness only. It does not qualify participants to work with or remove asbestos. Additional training is required for notifiable non-licensed or licensed asbestos work.
What happens if an employee fails the assessment?
If someone doesn’t pass the final assessment, they can review the course material and retake the test. This helps reinforce learning and ensures full understanding before certification is awarded.
UKATA Asbestos Awareness training – Download course information
