The mandatory standard for portable aerosol fire extinguishers came into effect on 22 December 1999 and was last amended 1 January 2005. It covers specific materials and construction, design, charge, performance, testing, labelling and instruction requirements for portable aerosol fire extinguishers.
Under the mandatory standard, a portable aerosol fire extinguisher releases chemicals from a spray can in a rapid stream to extinguish a small fire. The portable aerosol fire extinguisher is usually hand-held, typically red in colour and non-rechargeable, allowing for once-only use before discarding.
The main hazard caused by an aerosol fire extinguisher is a failure to operate or perform satisfactorily when there is a fire. This can lead to the user suffering serious burns.
The mandatory standard for portable aerosol fire extinguishers is based on the Australian New Zealand AS/NZS 4353:1995.
AS/NZS 4353:1995 is a voluntary standard except for those sections specifically called up by the mandatory standard. You must consult the mandatory standard for these details.
For complete information about all mandatory requirements for portable aerosol fire extinguishers you must read Consumer Protection Notice No. 9 of 2004, which outlines mandatory aspects of the standard.
This mandatory standard came into effect on 1 January 2005.
Does this mandatory standard apply to your business?
Under the ACL supply includes:
in relation to goods - (including re-supply) by way of sale, exchange, lease, hire or hire-purchase and
in relation to services - provide, grant of confer.
This mandatory standard applies to anyone in the business of supplying fire extinguishers, including:
manufacturers
importers
distributors
retailers
hirers.
To allow for staggered implementation, there are some cases where a mandatory standard or ban prescribes different compliance dates for the manufacturing, importing and supply of a product. Manufacturers, importers and distributors should check for this detail in the mandatory standard before embarking on production, importation or distribution of these goods.
Supplying portable aerosol fire extinguishers that don't comply with the mandatory standard can make you liable for heavy fines and product recalls. For more details view Penalties and consequences.
The requirements noted below are key requirements only. They may help to give suppliers a general idea of the detail they must look up in the mandatory standard. This information may also assist consumers when they are purchasing portable aerosol fire extinguishers.
While we provide some advice on this page to help you understand aspects of the standard, suppliers must not rely on this information as a complete guide to compliance.
While the mandatory standard includes some features you can visually check, it also specifies testing to ensure portable aerosol fire extinguishers meet requirements for materials and construction design, performance test requirements and identification colours. Suppliers need to organise this testing through specialist laboratories with the right skills, experience and equipment: