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Every building construction project across America always used insulation products. That included fixed structures like homes, schools, offices and factories as well as mobile vehicles such as cars, trucks, ships and aircraft. Insulation served two purposes. One was to keep heat in and the cold out. The second was insulating areas for acoustic control and fireproofing.

Fact-Checked and Updated by: Laura Wright

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Asbestos and Insulation

For most of the twentieth century, American builders relied on asbestos-containing materials (ACM) for all insulation requirements. This choice proved to be a mistake that turned deadly.

Asbestos was thermally inert meaning it doesn’t transfer heat or cold well. Asbestos was also fireproof, and these properties let asbestos serve both roles of heat and fire control. As well, asbestos was chemically stable and didn’t react when blended with other substances.

Asbestos wouldn’t conduct electricity making it ideal for insulating electric wires and cables. Then asbestos was non-corrosive, widely available, and inexpensive.

It’s no wonder asbestos became a favorite building material. That was until the mid-1980s when the worst kept secret leaked out. For decades, asbestos manufacturers and suppliers were well aware of long-term health hazards resulting from asbestos exposure. Even government officials were warned about asbestos health risks but failed to act.

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Insulation manufacturing was a massive industry with significant money at stake. So, unscrupulous asbestos product makers refused to disclose the deadly effects airborne asbestos fibers caused.

Many people in the asbestos supply and end-user chain also knew how workers like insulation installers faced health risks from asbestos exposure. All were complicit in conspiring to endanger the lives of those working with asbestos insulation products and other ACM.

Insulation Products Containing Asbestos Materials

From the early 1900s until the 1980s, asbestos products comprised almost all insulation products used in the United States. Then the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) banned asbestos in insulation products.

There were four main types or applications of ACM insulation. They included:

  • Loose-fill asbestos insulation: These were the most commonly used ACM insulation products. Loose-fill materials regulated temperatures, keeping things warming in the winter and cooler in the summer. Loose fill was the choice for building floors, walls, and attics. Thirty million American homes built before the 1980s contain asbestos insulation.
  • Rigid block insulation: These ACM insulation products were purchased in bulk stock then cut and fit in place. Rigid asbestos insulation created foundation walls and steel structures. Block ACM was popular in shipbuilding as it served for heat, fire and acoustic control.
  • Insulation wrappings: Thousands of miles of American pipes remain wrapped in insulation made from asbestos. Pipe wrappings were in every ship built in the U.S. as well as factories, power plants and oil refineries. Pipe wrap insulation was flexible and often came as air-cell asbestos material covered in asbestos paper
  • Spray-on insulation: Asbestos materials blended well with other chemical products. Asbestos was mixed with bonding agents and sprayed onto surfaces under high pressure. This technique was ideal for irregular surfaces like steel beams and ship hulls. Most spray-on asbestos insulation contained 80 to 85 percent asbestos fibers.

Asbestos Insulation Products and Mesothelioma

Mesothelioma is a deadly form of cancer that starts in the lining of the lungs or other organs. The cause of these tumors is long-term asbestos exposure.

Any time asbestos insulation products were disturbed, they shed microscopic fibers filling the air. Workers who inhaled asbestos fibers had these tiny shards embed in their lung lining which is called the mesothelium.

Every worker who manufactured, installed or maintained insulation products containing asbestos materials experienced high health risks for inhaling airborne asbestos particles. Once ACM insulation was in place, covered up and left alone, it was relatively harmless. Handling or later disturbing asbestos insulation presented the health danger and the chance of developing mesothelioma.

Asbestos fibers permanently attached to their mesothelium and created scar tissue. There was a 10 to 50 year latency period, but eventually, the mass turns to tumors and the fatal disease called mesothelioma.

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Compensation for Mesothelioma Victims

Later-stage, aggressive mesothelioma is not treatable. The only just recourse is compensating mesothelioma victims by taking legal action against negligent asbestos insulation material suppliers.

Mesothelioma victims may be able to collect compensation for medical expenses, income loss, and punitive damages. Families can apply on behalf of mesothelioma victims or file an asbestos lawsuit for wrongful death claims.

Laura WrightWritten by:

Lead Editor

Laura Wright is a journalist and content strategist with more than 16 years of professional experience. She attended college at the University of Florida, graduating magna cum laude with a bachelor’s degree in journalism in 2008. Her writing has been featured in The Gainesville Sun and other regional publications throughout Florida.

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