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Grenfell: ‘No recollection’ that BRE followed up on ‘inaccurate’ LABC certificate for Kingspan K15

Stephen Howard

A BRE director does not recall the organisation following up on a “wholly inaccurate” certificate issued by Herefordshire LABC that gave automatic acceptance for cladding systems employing Kingspan’s combustible K15 insulation on buildings over 18m in height.

Stephen Howard, director of fire testing and certification at BRE, was asked during yesterday’s Grenfell Tower Inquiry hearing (1 March) about a 2009 email exchange in which John Raybould told Howard and his BRE colleagues Sarah Colwell and Tony Baker: “I have managed to get an LABC certificate from Hertfordshire [sic] that says the Kingspan K15 insulation can be used in a mixture of insulation thickness, masonry or steel-framed substrates, a min cavity gap of 50mm with a range of rainscreen claddings…Also note that this appears to give automatic acceptance for [systems] over 18m.”

The certificate said that K15, a quantity of which was used in the refurbishment of Grenfell Tower, had been tested in accordance with BS8414-1 and a pair of BS 476 tests. It read: “From the results, it can be considered as a material of limited combustibility and meets the criteria for Class 0 classification for surface spread of flame.”

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