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Hydrogen sulfide (H₂S) exposure risks in Manitoba

Date posted: 2026-01-19

Overview

Manitoba has seen recent serious incidents involving worker exposures to hydrogen sulfide (H₂S). H₂S is a flammable, highly toxic gas with a characteristic rotten‑egg odour at low concentrations. H₂S is produced when organic matter decomposes in the absence of oxygen, which can occur in both industrial and non-industrial settings.

Common locations where H₂S may be present include:

  • Oil and gas worksites.
  • Wastewater treatment plants.
  • Commercial and residential plumbing systems.
  • Sewers, septic systems and manure storage.
  • Farms and agricultural storage, including hay, silage and compost.
  • Any confined or low‑lying area where organic material is decomposing.

H₂S is heavier than air, allowing it to settle and accumulate in pits, trenches, crawlspaces, sumps, basements and other depressions—even outdoors.

Recent Manitoba incidents

Two recent serious incidents illustrate the unpredictable ways H₂S can accumulate and be released.

  1. Outdoor construction incident – Decomposing hay bales

Workers moving decomposing hay bales disturbed an area where H₂S had developed beneath the bales. When the bales were shifted, the trapped gas was suddenly released, exposing workers to harmful concentrations, despite being outdoors.

Key takeaway:
H₂S can build up in sheltered, low‑lying pockets, even in open-air environments, whenever decomposing organic material is present.

  1. Residential plumbing incident – Plugged sewer line

At a residential plumbing worksite, a worker poured two different drain clearing chemicals into a plugged sewer drain. The chemicals produced an exothermic reaction that released an H₂S pocket from the drain. The reaction exposed the worker to a high concentration of H₂S.

Key takeaway:
Routine plumbing tasks can become high‑risk when blockages in sewer systems may cause H₂S pockets to form.

Health effects

H₂S exposure symptoms depend on concentration and duration:

H₂S exposure level in parts per million (ppm)

Potential signs or health effects

Greater than 1 ppm

Smell of rotten eggs.

20-50 ppm

Irritation of eyes, nose or throat.

100-150 ppm

Severe irritation of eyes, nose or throat, loss of smell. Exposure over a period of eight hours or more may be fatal.

200-300 ppm

Headaches and drowsiness. Exposure for hours may cause lungs to fill with fluid.

300-500 ppm

May cause unconsciousness and death in one to four hours.

500-700 ppm

One hour at this level may be fatal.

> 700 ppm

May be immediately fatal.

 

Critical safety points

  • Use direct‑reading air monitoring equipment capable of detecting H₂S, especially when opening, disturbing or working near potentially decomposing organic material or sewer systems.
  • Recognize that H₂S can accumulate in unexpected places, including outdoor low‑lying zones, covered areas, tanks, pits and blocked sewer systems.
  • Treat sudden releases from agricultural, plumbing and wastewater systems as potential high‑risk events.
  • Ensure workers are trained on symptoms, monitoring, emergency procedures and rescue protocols.

Prevention measures

As per Part 36 of the Workplace Safety and Health Regulation (WSH Regulation), workers should be trained on safe work procedures, including the hazards of H2S, and direct reading monitoring. Workers should be educated on the sources of H2S, the risks and symptoms associated with H2S and the actions to take if H2S is encountered.

As per Part 19.2 of the WSH Regulation, the fire hazard from H2S shall be assessed, safe work procedures must be developed and implemented and workers educated and trained.

As per Part 35.3 of the WSH Regulation, educate and train workers on the hazardous product (H2S) that they may encounter, the Safety Data Sheet information, procedures for working with the hazardous product and procedures to be followed in case of an emergency involving the hazardous product.

As per Part 2.7(1) of the WSH Regulation, an employer must immediately notify Workplace Safety and Health when there is an uncontrolled release of a hazardous substance (H2S).

Part 9 of the WSH Regulation requires workplaces to establish procedures for when workers are working alone.

As per Part 6 of the WSH Regulation, employers providing workers with SCBA shall provide workers with training and education on using it as well as ensuring it is sufficiently charged and has a minimum of 30 minutes of air. 

If you have questions about this topic, contact the SAFE Work Manitoba division.






About the WCB

The Workers Compensation Board of Manitoba serves workers and employers through a no-fault insurance system integral to the Manitoba economy. Funded collectively by employers, the WCB promotes safe and healthy workplaces, facilitates recovery and return to work, delivers compassionate and supportive compensation services to workers and employers, and ensures responsible stewardship of Manitoba's workers' compensation system.