More than 25 years after asbestos was banned in the UK, the material continues to cause around 5,000 deaths annually, according to new findings from Shield Services Group. Experts say the ongoing dangers linked to asbestos exposure are still not fully recognised.
- 5,000 UK deaths every year are linked to asbestos. More than road traffic fatalities
- 1.5 million buildings still contain asbestos, including around 80% of schools
- The Health and Safety Executive reports 20+ tradespeople die each week from past exposure
With around 5,000 deaths annually, asbestos remains the leading cause of work-related fatalities in Great Britain, surpassing many other widely publicised health and safety risks. Despite this, the material remains widespread, embedded in an estimated 1.5 million buildings nationwide.
The danger is not confined to ageing industrial sites or large demolition projects. In reality, the greatest risk often lies in everyday environments – schools, offices, homes and in routine maintenance work where asbestos-containing materials are unknowingly disturbed.
Schools present one of the starkest examples. Around 80% of UK schools are believed to contain asbestos, raising ongoing concerns about long-term exposure risks for staff, contractors, and pupils.
Meanwhile, tradespeople continue to pay the price. According to the Health and Safety Executive, more than 20 workers every week die from diseases caused by past exposure.
For Shield Services Group, the data points to a critical issue: inconsistent standards across the industry, particularly when it comes to smaller-scale work.
Luke House, Chairman of
Shield Services Group, said: “The numbers should be a wake-up call. Five thousand deaths a year isn’t a legacy issue as it’s happening right now.
“What’s most concerning is where the risk still exists. It’s not just on major demolition sites, it’s in everyday buildings and smaller jobs where asbestos is often overlooked or underestimated. That’s where people are being exposed.
“If the industry is serious about reducing these figures, we need to treat every job, no matter how small, with the same level of care, control, and accountability.”
Alongside this, the company is embedding social value into its operations, ensuring that asbestos removal also contributes to local employment, training, and community outcomes.