AP Green Insulation Adhesive
Product Description
AP Green Industries manufactured insulation adhesive for use in industrial settings from 1947 through 1972. The product was designed to bond and secure pipe insulation materials in place across a wide range of industrial applications, including power generation facilities, chemical processing plants, refineries, and manufacturing operations. As a specialty adhesive formulated for high-temperature environments, it was engineered to maintain a durable bond even under conditions of sustained heat and mechanical stress — environments common to insulated piping systems of the mid-twentieth century.
AP Green was a well-established name in industrial insulation and refractory materials throughout this era. The company produced a broad line of products intended for heavy industry, and its insulation adhesive was marketed and sold as a complementary component to pipe insulation systems. Workers and contractors in industrial environments routinely used this adhesive in the installation and maintenance of insulated piping, making it a fixture on job sites across the United States during the postwar industrial expansion.
The production period of 1947 through 1972 places this product squarely within the decades when asbestos use in industrial adhesives and insulating materials was standard practice and largely unregulated. Manufacturers of the period commonly incorporated asbestos fibers into adhesive formulations to improve heat resistance, tensile strength, and durability. Regulatory awareness of the health consequences of asbestos exposure was developing during this period, but product reformulation and withdrawal often lagged far behind the emerging scientific evidence.
Asbestos Content
AP Green’s insulation adhesive contained chrysotile asbestos, the most commercially prevalent form of asbestos used in twentieth-century industrial products. Chrysotile, also known as white asbestos, is a serpentine mineral fiber valued in industrial manufacturing for its flexibility, heat resistance, and binding properties — qualities that made it appealing for adhesive formulations intended to perform in high-temperature pipe insulation contexts.
Despite being the most commonly used asbestos variety, chrysotile is classified as a known human carcinogen by the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) and is regulated under OSHA’s asbestos standards (29 CFR 1910.1001 for general industry and 29 CFR 1926.1101 for construction). AHERA regulations further govern asbestos identification and abatement procedures in buildings where such materials may still be present.
The inclusion of chrysotile in an adhesive product creates particular exposure risk because adhesives are typically applied, spread, cut, mixed, or disturbed during installation and maintenance work — activities that can aerosolize asbestos fibers. Once airborne, chrysotile fibers can be inhaled deeply into lung tissue, where they may remain for decades and contribute to the development of serious respiratory diseases.
How Workers Were Exposed
Industrial workers who handled, applied, or worked in proximity to AP Green insulation adhesive during its years of production and use represent the primary population at risk of asbestos exposure from this product. Litigation records document that exposure occurred across a range of industrial settings where pipe insulation work was a routine part of facility construction, maintenance, and repair.
The mechanics of working with an asbestos-containing adhesive created multiple exposure pathways. Workers who mixed the adhesive from dry or semi-dry forms could disturb asbestos fibers during the blending process, releasing them into the surrounding air. Application of the adhesive to pipe insulation — using brushes, trowels, or by hand — could similarly disturb fiber-containing material and generate airborne particulates. In enclosed or poorly ventilated industrial spaces, those fibers could accumulate and remain suspended in the breathing zone of workers for extended periods.
Maintenance and repair activities posed additional exposure risks. When insulated piping systems required servicing, insulation materials bonded with asbestos-containing adhesive were often cut away, chipped off, or otherwise mechanically disturbed. These disturbance events could release previously encapsulated fibers. Workers performing such tasks — and bystanders working nearby — may have been exposed without adequate protective equipment, as respiratory protection and hazard communication requirements were not uniformly enforced during much of this product’s production lifespan.
Plaintiffs alleged that exposure to asbestos-containing insulation adhesive manufactured by AP Green contributed to the development of serious and life-threatening diseases, including mesothelioma, asbestosis, and lung cancer. Mesothelioma — a malignant cancer of the lining of the lungs, abdomen, or heart — is strongly associated with asbestos exposure and has a latency period that can extend from 20 to 50 years following initial exposure, meaning that workers exposed to this product during its production years may still be developing disease today.
Litigation records document that industrial workers generally, including those employed in plants, refineries, and manufacturing facilities where pipe insulation work was common, were among those who alleged injury from AP Green products. The industrial settings in which this adhesive was used were also environments where multiple asbestos-containing products were frequently present simultaneously, compounding cumulative exposure burdens for workers on those job sites.