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Discussion Document
October 2005
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Unsafe
Goods (Rubber Hot Water Bottles) Notice 2004
6. On the 25 November 2004 the Minister of Consumer Affairs
declared, rubber hot water bottles that do not meet the
British national standard to be goods that will or may cause
injury to a person by way of an unsafe goods notice under
Section 31 of the Fair Trading Act 1986 (a copy of the
Unsafe Goods Notice is attached in
Appendix A). In effect this
removed rubber hot water bottles which do not meet
BS 1970:2001 from the
New Zealand market and thereby reducing and preventing the
potential for injury.
7. An unsafe goods notice stays in force for a period of 18
months and has the effect of prohibiting the supply of the
goods to which it applies. The 18 month period is an interim
period which allows the Minister of Consumer Affairs to
consider the need for either an indefinite ban or a product
safety standard.
Background
8. The Ministry of Consumer Affairs received a cluster of
10 complaints between May and July 2004 that rubber hot water
bottles were splitting at the neck and causing injury. This
resulted in some of the complainants receiving hospitalisation
with significant burns. Many of these rubber hot water bottles
were marked with the British Standard,
BS 1970:1984 or
BS 1970:2001. The
Ministry purchased a number of bottles from various sources
and many upon closer visual inspection did not appear to meet
the standard.
9. The Ministry of Consumer Affairs issued a media alert on
the 31 August 2004 to ascertain the magnitude of any problem
with hot water bottles. A further 150 complaints were received
in 24 hours, including some relating to hospitalisations,
doctors visits and time off work were received. The bottles
had been purchased from a number of sources across a range of
retailers.
10. Problems identified with the rubber hot water bottles
were splitting at the neck, splitting of side seams or leaking
stoppers. The main problem found is that the rubber can be
less than the minimum required thickness of 1.4
mm (under
BS 1970:2001) for a
bottle of up to 2 litres, at various points on the bottle.
11. A foreseeable danger and misuse of a hot water bottle
is consumers filling the bottle with boiling water directly
from the kettle. However many complainants indicated that the
rubber hot water bottles were splitting with only hot water
from the tap or from filling cooled boiled water from the
kettle.
12. In September 2004, the Ministry undertook consultation
with various stakeholders. The Ministry consulted with the
Retailers Association, Commerce Commission,
NZ Customs Service, and known
importers, suppliers, and retailers, of the proposed course of
action at the time.
13. Maintaining the status quo was not considered a
desirable option as rubber hot water bottles are a low cost
item and the potential injury risk remained present for the
community and an unsafe goods notice was issued on the 25
November 2004. A product recall was also not considered a
viable option due to the extent of availability of the product
and number of suppliers and retailers who trade in hot water
bottles.
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