Baseline Data Required for AS 1851-2012
Name: Brett Dundules
Position: Technical Officer
Organisation Fire Protection Association Australia
• Brief History of AS 1851-2012• Introduction of Baseline Data• Misinterpretation & Queensland Regulation 54• Clause 1.8 Current and Potential Future Definition • Verification of a routine service activity result• System Baseline Data & AS 1851-2012 Baseline Data• Approved Design• Who is responsible for providing Baseline Data?• Where can a building owner obtain Baseline Data?
Introduction
AS 1851-2012 - History
Development History – AS 1851
• 2002; consolidate the existing 16 separate maintenance standards relating to fire protection systems and equipment into one common document...
• 2005; consolidated standard released…
• 2006; Amendment 1 – minor changes…
• 2008; Amendment 2 – 50 + significant changes…
• 2011; After abandoning Amendment 3 – new draft standard released for public comment…
Development History – AS 1851
Instead of developing Amendment 3, the Standards committee determined that a new edition was required.
The reasons being:
• The need for regulatory acceptance• Major structural changes required to simplify tables• The need for overhauling every section table• Clearer definitions and examples were required• Improved readability and comprehension was desired• Clearer outcomes for building owners and managers was needed
AS1851-2012 Published in December 2012
Key changes in AS 1851- 2012
• Name Change
From: 2005 – Maintenance of Fire Protection Systems and Equipment
To: 2012 – Routine Service of Fire Protection Systems and Equipment• A thorough overhaul of the general requirements of Section 1 to remove administrative
requirements and avoid regulatory conflict• Several new appendices have been included to expand on Section 1 content, such as,
baseline data and systems interface testing• Easier for the responsible entity and service provider to implement the Standard
Consolidation of sections Consistency across sections Less duplication
Key changes in AS 1851- 2012
• Sections 6 to 10 in the 2005 edition covering fire detection, alarms, sound systems and intercom systems have been combined in a new Section 6 with the previous Section 8 (Fire alarm monitoring) being removed in this revised document
• Refinement of the routine service technical requirements in light of field experience and studies.
• Two normative appendices have been included on:
Battery load testing Detector sensitivity testing
• A new Section 5 has been included covering water storage tanks for fire protection systems to address a new design standard AS 2304
• No mandatory weekly requirements
Key changes in AS 1851- 2012
From task focus...
Inspect, test, preventive maintenance, survey
Key changes in AS 1851- 2012
To frequency focus...
Monthly, 6-Monthly, Yearly...
AS 1851-2012 - Baseline Data
AS 1851-2012 BASELINE DATA
• ‘Baseline Data’ introduced in the 2012 version of AS 1851
• AS 1851-2012 Clause 1.8 states:
“Baseline data is necessary to establish the performance benchmark of the fire protection system or equipment”.
• This definition appears to be new
However, it has been an inherent requirement in routine service & maintenance legislation for many years. For example:
Victorian Building Regulations 1994 Reg. 11.4 - condition of occupancy permit….the level of performance and the frequency and type of maintenance required to enable the essential service to fulfil its purpose.
AS 1851-2012 BASELINE DATA
• How can an essential service be deemed fit for purpose if its performance cannot be verified? – It cannot!
• How can performance be verified? With Baseline Data!
• Standards Australia committee FP-001 tried to assist users of AS 1851-2012 by providing ‘informative’ examples of what baseline data could be
• Examples were either ignorantly or purposely misinterpreted
AS 1851-2012 BASELINE DATA
• Major problems and complaints voiced in Queensland
• Queensland Building Fire Safety Regulation 2008 – Regulation 54
Occupier must ensure repair or corrective action is carried out within 1 month
• Cases of contractors stating that the lack of baseline data requires corrective action
• Quotes of up to $40,000 to reinstall systems so that they can be routinely serviced
• This is not the intent of Baseline Data
AS 1851-2012 BASELINE DATA
• Possible revision of the Clause 1.8 Baseline Data by FP-001
• Baseline Data may be required to verify the result of a routine service activity required by an applicable service schedule.Baseline Data required by this Standard is limited to that:a) necessary to verify a routine service activity result; andb) prescribed by the regulations, codes or standards that applied to the approved design.Irrespective of the availability of baseline data the routine service activity shall be carried out and the result recorded and reported. Where required baseline data is available, the routine service result shall be verified against it. Where required baseline data is unavailable, its unavailability shall be recorded and reported as a non-conformance. The supply and generation of baseline data is beyond the scope of this Standard.
Note: This possible Baseline Data definition has not been finalised, voted upon or published by SA.
AS 1851-2012 BASELINE DATA
• Verifying a routine service activity result
• What does Verify mean??
• Macquarie Dictionary Definition:
Verify – to prove something to be true, as by evidence or testimony; confirm or substantiate
to ascertain the truth or correctness of, especially by examination or comparison
AS 1851-2012 BASELINE DATA
• Verifying a routine service activity result• FPA Australia considers FP-001’s proposed revision to mean:
Where a routine service item requires a test result (evidence) to be obtained and compared to ascertain the correctness of system performance, then you must have:
BASELINE DATA• However, if the routine service item doesn’t require a test result to be obtained for comparison
– then AS 1851-2012 does not require Baseline Data to be obtained for those service items, and
• If the approved design did not require Baseline Data performance benchmark (e.g. sprinkler duty point) - then there is no requirement to retrospectively obtain it.
AS 1851-2012 BASELINE DATA
• System Baseline Data:• includes all design, all installation & all commission documentation used to construct a
system in accordance with the approved design.
• It includes, but is not limited to:
system layout drawings, system specifications, equipment datasheets, hazard classes,
system interface diagrams, duty points, cause and effect charts, completion certificates
pipe layouts, device type, sections, details, elevations, commissioningtest results,
block plans, water supply details, reports and consents, alternative solutions, and so on………….EVERYTHING.
AS 1851-2012 BASELINE DATA
• AS 1851-2012 Baseline Data:
• Only required where a routine service item requires a test result (evidence) to be obtained and compared to ascertain the correctness of system performance
• AS 1851-2012 Baseline Data is only a small part of System Baseline Data.
• It includes, but is not limited to:
System interface diagrams, duty points, block plans, cause and effect charts, fire and smoke wall plans, exhaust flow rates, etc
AS 1851-2012 BASELINE DATA
• Example of Baseline Data
AS 1851-2012 BASELINE DATA
• No intention to require additional works!
• AS 1851-2012 Clause 1.9:
– “Absent elements or components of a system or systems that were not required as part of an approved design to a Standard that is now superseded need not be retrofitted and the related routine service activity shall not be considered a defect or non-conformance if not able to be performed”.
– That is; an element or component not required by the approved design means that the routine service item is not applicable
• If an item is part of the Approved Design, but not installed = inform Building Owner
AS 1851-2012 BASELINE DATA
• Approved Design & Routine Service Items
• The system design as approved by the relevant Building Surveyor or Building Certifier
• Approved Design may include variations to NCC & AS, reports and consents by statutory authorities or Performance Solutions
• Do all routine service items in AS 1851-2012 need to carried out?
No simple ‘Yes or No’ answer
Relates only to Approved Design
Equipment is part of the Approved Design = required to be serviced
Equipment is not part of the Approved Design = not required to be serviced
AS 1851-2012 BASELINE DATA
• Approved Design & Routine Service Items!
• If the approved design did not require a Baseline Data performance benchmark (e.g. sprinkler duty point)
Then there is no requirement to retrospectively obtain it
Carry out the test and record the results
As there is no Baseline required for comparison, the test result should be recorded as a ‘PASS’
In this case FPA Australia recommends using the first available recorded test result
AS 1851-2012 BASELINE DATA
• Approved Design & Routine Service Items
continued from previous slide:
Should future test results vary significantly from the first available recorded test result –inform the Building Owner.
Building Owner is not required to investigate – as approved design did not require a Baseline Data performance benchmark for comparison.
• The reason for the service provider to inform the Building Owner is carry out their ‘Duty of Care’.
AS 1851-2012 BASELINE DATA
• What if you do not have AS 1851-2012 Baseline Data? • When the routine service item requires Baseline Data - however, none is available Some service providers do not carry out the routine service What benefit does this provide? None
• FPA Australia recommends carrying out the routine service
• Without Baseline Data, the result should be recorded as a ‘FAIL’, as there is a failure to verify that it achieves the result required by the approved design
• However, the test results will provide some indication of system performance• A competent person will have an ‘idea’ if the system is significantly bad• The building owner shall be informed of the failure
AS 1851-2012 BASELINE DATA
• Who is responsible for providing Baseline Data? • Newer Building Stock Owner is responsible for providing Baseline Data to the service provider
System designers and installers are being required to provide system Baseline Data to owners at the completion of installation
This requirement is increasing as newer versions of BCA referenced Australian Standards are published
• Older Building Stock Owner is responsible for providing Baseline Data to the service provider
Less likely that approved design standards required designers and installers to provide Baseline Data to owner
AS 1851-2012 BASELINE DATA
• Where can a Building Owner obtain Baseline Data?
• If the approved design required Baseline Data for comparison, then:1. Search all on-site system data2. Search all off-site system data (held by the owner, owner’s agent)3. Search Council records of the system design (Note: this may, if nothing else, provide you details of
the year of installation)4. Contact the relevant local fire brigade to determine if they have any records for the system5. Contact previous owner & agent for system details6. If known, contact the design consultant and installing contractor to determine if they have any records
of the system7. If no system baseline data is available, attempt to reverse engineer to the design standards
applicable at the time of installation (if known)
FPA Australia – Good Practice Guide‘Baseline Data for Fire Protection Systems’
• A GPG is currently being written by FPA Australia’s:
• Technical Advisory Committee TAC/1 and Technical Department
It is contingent on amendment 1 of AS 1851-2012
Amendment 1 possibly published in July 2016
• The guide provides:
More detailed information on this presentation
A table of AS 1851-2012 routine service items that FPA Australia considers Baseline Data is required for – only if required by the approved design
A chronological list of fire protection system installation codes and standards
AS 1851-2012 Can now be adopted in Victoria – Reg. 1205A
• New regulation 1205A - Date of effect: 26 April 2016 (i.e. NOW!)
• Post 1994 approved buildings – occupancy permit
Allows AS 1851-2012 to be used where AS 1851-2005 or similar previous versions are a condition of the occupancy permit or maintenance determination
Owners may change to AS 1851-2012 immediately without approval, cost or notification
Notification of change to be included in Annual ESM Report - regulation 1209(da)
• Pre 1994 approved buildings – no change
No change - Owner could previously maintain to AS 1851-2012 and can continue to do so
QUESTIONSBrett Dundules – Fire Protection Association Australia
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