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Deadly Risks of Aerosol Fire Suppression Technologies

Aerosol fire suppression technologies were originally developed in the 20th century by Soviet military engineers as specialized means intended for the rapid suppression of enemy personnel. In the 21st century, these technologies, initially created for military use, were commercialized by Russian and associated entities on Western markets as civilian fire safety systems. Their toxicological properties, presenting lethal hazards to humans, were concealed or significantly downplayed.

The UL 2775 standard, used by the certification body Underwriters Laboratories (UL), by UL’s own admission, does not include requirements regarding the toxicity of emissions from aerosol fire suppression systems. Therefore, systems officially certified according to UL 2775 do not undergo verification for human health safety and may remain lethal when used in occupied spaces.

The United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), responsible for safeguarding public health under the Clean Air Act, grants approvals for the use of aerosol fire suppression systems in occupied areas without conducting independent toxicological assessments. Instead, the EPA relies solely on information provided by manufacturers. Moreover, the EPA systematically and unlawfully classifies critical toxicity data as confidential business information (CBI), thus preventing the public and specialists from objectively assessing health and life risks.

It has been officially documented that aerosol fire suppression systems certified and approved, resulted in eight fatalities in Bangkok, Thailand, in 2016, and another fatality in Cornwall, UK, in 2019. These tragedies remained without adequate response from manufacturers and regulatory bodies, including EPA, UL, and NFPA, despite official appeals and inquiries from the public (such as FOIA requests EPA-HQ-2016 and EPA-HQ-2019, and calls to UL and NFPA for revising certification approaches).

To prevent further tragedies, our company has developed RadEX, a fundamentally new non-aerosol fire suppression technology. RadEX completely eliminates any toxic risks and, according to conducted tests, exceeds the fire extinguishing efficiency of existing aerosol technologies by more than 12 times.

On March 26, 2025, committed to transparency and aiming to prevent fraudulent testing practices historically widespread in this industry, our specialists, in cooperation with a reputable European scientific institution, conducted detailed toxicological tests of the RadEX prototype and a premium aerosol fire extinguisher officially purchased and certified by UL and approved by the EPA. The test data is currently undergoing independent review by several European institutes. A complete official report and test videos will be published soon on our website. We guarantee that these findings will provide significant revelations for manufacturers, consumers, and regulatory authorities alike.

In line with our principles of transparency and non-interference, below is a preliminary, unedited video recording of the RadEX testing process without commentary, intended solely for initial familiarization with the testing procedure.