European, US, and Australian fire classification systems all include these in "Class A" fire category.
Class A fires are those with ordinary combustibles such as wood, paper, fabrics and most kinds of refuse.
Fires involving burning liquids, gases, or metals are not Class A.
When you get a lighter and some paper then you set the paper on fire.
When you get a lighter and some paper then you set the paper on fire.
Division 1.3 is predominately a fire hazard, with a minor blast hazard.
Wrapping paper can become a fire hazard because if you wrap it with an electrical thingy, you would see that it can be plugged and can cause a fire
Explosives that have no explosive hazard are not explosives. Materials that have a fire hazard but no explosive hazard are Class 2 if they are gasses, class 3 if they are liquids, and class 4 if they are solids.
No
1.4
1.3
A class A fire is a fire that happened because of normal combustibles. This includes wood, paper, fabric, and most types of trash.
Class 3
3
a hazardous material