Who Counts as Competent for Panel and Ceiling Integrity Surveys in Operational Food Sites?
Panel wall and ceiling systems in food factories and cold chain facilities sit inside the legal duty to maintain premises in a condition that supports safe operations and hygienic production. Condition surveys in these areas often become relied-upon evidence for decisions about continued use, remedial works, access restrictions, cleaning regimes, and risk controls. That reliance raises the question of competence: who has the capability to inspect, interpret findings, and produce a report that a dutyholder can credibly use?
UK health and safety law frames competence through capability for the task. The Management of Health and Safety at Work Regulations 1999 require an employer to appoint one or more competent persons to assist in complying with health and safety duties [1]. Health and Safety Executive guidance on getting competent help reflects the same principle, focusing on skills, knowledge and experience relevant to the work being undertaken [2]. Where survey activity includes opening up, enabling works, or other activity that falls within construction work, the Construction (Design and Management) Regulations 2015 use a similar capability test. Regulation 8 requires that anyone appointed to a project has the skills, knowledge and experience, and where the appointee is an organisation, organisational capability also applies [3]. These duties apply to the act of surveying as well as the works that follow.
Food hygiene law creates an additional driver for competence because condition surveys frequently address contamination pathways and cleanability. Regulation (EC) No 852/2004 requires that food premises are kept clean and maintained in good repair and condition [4]. When a panel wall or ceiling survey is used to justify that the structure remains suitable for hygienic production, the person conducting the inspection needs experience that covers both the building fabric and the mitigating factors that govern how an inspection can be carried out in a live food environment. In practice, that means understanding hygiene zoning, foreign body controls, segregation, washdown regimes, condensation management, pest ingress points, and the site rules that prevent the inspection process introducing contamination risk.
Competence for panel wall and ceiling condition surveys therefore sits across three linked areas: the building envelope and its failure modes; structural integrity and fixity where relevant; and controlled survey methodology inside operational constraints. On the fabric side, insulated panel systems and ceilings in cold chain settings present recurring technical issues that can affect hygienic suitability and integrity: joint degradation, sealant failure, impact damage, delamination, moisture ingress at penetrations, corrosion at fixings, loss of vapour control continuity, and local condensation associated with thermal bridging. Survey competence includes knowing which symptoms require targeted opening up, which defects affect cleanability and particle shedding risk, and which indicate a wider envelope performance issue that needs engineering input.
Structural integrity is often the part of these surveys that creates the greatest reliance risk. Statements about panel support systems, suspended ceiling hangers, secondary steelwork, fixings, or stability around penetrations become decisions about safety and continued use. Where the survey scope includes structural adequacy or load path issues, sign-off should sit with a professional whose competence covers structural assessment of the relevant elements and interfaces, and who can define limitations clearly. The route commonly used in the UK for evidencing that level of competence includes chartered status through the Engineering Council via UK-SPEC aligned assessment for Chartered Engineer registration [5]. Where the work is primarily building pathology and surveying, chartered building surveyor routes provide an alternative evidence base, particularly through Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors rules and competence frameworks, including the obligation to act with due care, skill and diligence, supported by continuing professional development expectations [6].
A competent appointment in this niche also depends on whether the person can demonstrate the mitigating factors that make the survey defensible in a food and cold chain setting. Work at height is frequently required for ceiling and high-level panel inspections, and UK requirements expect work at height to be properly planned and carried out by competent people [7]. In addition, a method that relies on invasive inspection needs controls for contamination, reinstatement quality, and operational isolation. The report gains credibility when it records the access achieved, the areas excluded, the basis for sampling or opening up, and the limits of conclusions. These points matter because a dutyholder may need to show why an area remained in use, why restrictions were applied, or why remedial work was prioritised.
The user-facing word “authorise” often becomes ambiguous in procurement. UK law tends to focus on dutyholder responsibility for appointing competent help, and on the competence of those doing the work, rather than creating a general licensing regime for panel condition surveys. That makes the commissioning documentation important. A practical way to build clarity is to require that survey proposals and reports include named accountable individuals for each class of conclusion, and that those individuals hold qualifications and experience aligned to the risk. Where a report makes conclusions that could be relied upon for structural safety decisions, including continued occupancy under suspended ceilings or around damaged panel interfaces, a structural engineer’s accountability is commonly expected in the UK market. Where the report addresses building condition and compliance risk for premises integrity and hygienic design, a chartered building surveyor or similarly qualified professional often provides appropriate accountability, depending on scope.
Professional engagement provides another evidence strand that a client can check. Active involvement in professional organisations, technical panels, and standards work helps demonstrate that the survey approach stays current as practice evolves. British Standards Institution explains routes for participation in standards development through committees [8]. This does not substitute for technical capability, yet it can support a competence case where the dutyholder wants confidence that methods align with current good practice and emerging policy direction.
ISO standards and certification can strengthen organisational assurance. ISO 9001 sets requirements for quality management systems, relevant to document control, internal review, corrective action and repeatability [9]. ISO 45001 provides an occupational health and safety management system framework that can support controlled delivery of intrusive inspections and access work [10]. These standards support confidence when they apply to the relevant scope and when the organisation can show how competence is managed for the specific survey type. UK Accreditation Service provides a mechanism for checking the validity of accredited management system certification via CertCheck, which can be used as part of procurement due diligence [11].
For food factories and cold chain operators seeking a practical rule set, the most defensible approach is to treat panel wall and ceiling condition surveys as inspection activities where competence is demonstrated at both individual and organisational level. That means appointing a provider who can evidence relevant professional leadership for the conclusions being drawn, experience within live hygienic operations, controlled methods that address work-at-height and contamination risk, and a clear sign-off structure for the report. It also means building the competence requirements into the brief so that the survey scope drives the competence evidence, rather than the other way around.
References
[1] Management of Health and Safety at Work Regulations 1999, Regulation 7 (competent persons)
https://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/1999/3242/regulation/7
[2] Health and Safety Executive, Getting help with health and safety
https://www.hse.gov.uk/simple-health-safety/gettinghelp/index.htm
[3] Construction (Design and Management) Regulations 2015, Regulation 8 (general duties)
https://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/2015/51/regulation/8
[4] Regulation (EC) No 852/2004 on the hygiene of foodstuffs, Annex II, Chapter I (general requirements for food premises)
https://www.legislation.gov.uk/eur/2004/852/annex/II/chapter/I
[5] Engineering Council, Chartered Engineer (CEng) overview
https://www.engc.org.uk/professional-registration/our-professional-titles/chartered-engineer-ceng/
[6] Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors, Rules of Conduct (PDF)
https://www.rics.org/content/dam/ricsglobal/documents/standards/2021_roc_en.pdf
[7] Work at height: The law, Health and Safety Executive
https://www.hse.gov.uk/work-at-height/the-law.htm
[8] British Standards Institution, Get involved with standards
https://www.bsigroup.com/en-GB/about-bsi/get-involved-with-standards/
[9] ISO 9001:2015 Quality management systems, Requirements
https://www.iso.org/standard/62085.html
[10] ISO 45001:2018 Occupational health and safety management systems, Requirements with guidance for use
https://www.iso.org/standard/63787.html
[11] UK Accreditation Service CertCheck (verify accredited certificates)
https://certcheck.ukas.com/

