Title: Solidarity Occupational Health
1Solidarity Occupational Health Safety
Department.Presentation to the Parliamentary
Portfolio Committee for Labour.15 February
2005. Presented by Chris Pienaar.Head
Training Occupational Health Safety
22004 2005 Chemical Industry Gas related
explosion incidents.
- May 2004 Gas bottles exploding at a furniture
factory in - Koedoespoort Pretoria. Factory
demolished. - June 2004. Centurion Municipal, underground gas
- pipeline explosion. No injuries.
- 6 SASOL DISASTER EXPLOSIONS
- June 21 2004 Phenosolvent tank explosion
- at SASOL Synfuels Secunda. 1 Contractor
fatality 8 injured. - 1 July 2004 Acetylene gas explosion at SASOL
- Middelbult mine is Secunda. 1 Contractor
fatality 8 - injuries.
32004 2005 Chemical Industry Gas related
explosion incidents.
- September 1 2004 Monomers explosion at SASOL
Synfuels - 10 fatalities and 360 persons injured.
- November 30 2004 SASOL NATREF fuel transfer
burning - incident 2 Contractor fatalities.
- January 26 2005 SASOL NATREF Hydro Fluoric Gas
- explosion. 17 persons injured.
- January 29 2005 Sasol Synfuels Carbo Tar gas
explosion - 6 persons injured.
- A very definite, observable tendency of gas
related - explosion incidents occuring in the South
African - Chemical Indusry
4What is wrong? Contractor maintenance involvement
- Differential Induction training between
Contractors and full - time employees.
- Contractors abnormal hours of work.
- Contractor qualifications, experience,
competency and skills - levels.
- Recruitment, selection and appointment of
Contractors. - Contractor safety standards.
- Non compliance with safety specifications and
standards. - Unskilled Contractor employees working in a
higly specialised, - complexed, risk chemical plant without the
relevant training. - Maintenance pressure on Contractor employees.
5The Chemical plant system problem ?
- Maintenance shutdown procedures.
- Management attitude varying from plant to plant.
- Permit systems for maintenance work. (Open
permits). - Non transparent and non availability of plant
safety statistics. - General non transparency regarding the
investigation of - incidents.
- Ageing technical drawings of plants and poor
updating of the - same.
- Continuous reduction / cutting of personnel.
- Continuous loss of know how of personnel leaving
employment - for various reasons.
- Non availability of information after incidents
at various plants.
6The Chemical plant system problem ?
- Extensive / lengthy periods of investigating
incidents / - accidents and fatalities.
- Non compliance of safety standards by various
parties. - Deviations of original design in plant
maintenance. - Time pressure during scheduled maintenance
shutdown with insignificant focus on safety
aspects. - No safety committee to evaluate safety aspects
before and during maintenance procedures. - Negative attitudes of personnel due to continuous
pressure, cost savings, and equipment not
functioning correctly. - Sub standard risk analyses before and during
maintenance work. - Installation of sub standard safety equipment
such as gas detectors.
7The Chemical plant system problem ?
- Too many changes with too little training.
- Design and utilisation of equipment for a purpose
other than its intended purpose. - Lengthening the periods between shutdowns.
- Shortening the actual shutdown period.
- Moral, motivation and focus of employees
negatively affected, including the community. - Continuous restructuring / retrenchments in the
Chemical Industry. - Supervisory shortfall on contractors due to
skills lost and personnel cuts. - The cost of safety is measured in production
output.
8What needs to be changed urgently!!!!!!
- More Safety representatives.
- Election / designation of Safety representatives
should be done - on mutual consent between management and
organised - labour.
- Transparency in Health Safety a must for
continuous Safety - improvement.
- Specialist contractor maintenance teams should
be assembled - on a permanent basis to do continuous
maintenance on various - plants.
- Improved after care for relatives of deceased
employees as well as - injured employees.
- Safety disciplinary procedures to be separated
from the ordinary disciplinary procedure.
9What needs to be changed urgently!!!!!!
- Behaviour based Safety to have a positive effect
in all the plants. - Implementation of a National Chemical
Occupational Health Safety standard regulatory
body. - Utilisation of Forensic Pathology reports in the
event of fatalities occurring in the workplace. - The Chemical SETA (CHIETA) needs to be involved
with Funding and implementation of Safety
training programmes for Shop Stewards. - All training modules should contain Safety
training focus points. - Employees should be encouraged to report all near
misses and minor incidents to act pro-actively to
prevent further incidents / accidents. - An in depth research programme should be launched
regarding Occupational Health Safety with
constructive intervention outcomes.
10What needs to be changed urgently!!!!!!
- THE COST OF A PERSONS LIFE IN A FATAL ACCIDENT
SHOULD NOT BE MEASURED IN RELATION TO THE
PROPORTIONAL AMOUNT - AN EMPLOYER PAYS TO THE COMPENSATION
COMMISSIONER. THE COID ACT SHOULD BE AMMENDED SO
THAT IT WOULD BECOME A COSTLY FACTOR FOR AN
EMPLOYER TO INJURE OR HAVE FATALITIES AT THE
WORKPLACE.
11The seven deadly sins of the Chemical Industry!!!!
- Contractors involved in shutdown maintenance
procedures. - Attitude of management regarding incidents,
accidents and - fatalities.
- Non transparency from management.
- Unnecessary lengthy periods of investigating
incidents, accidents and fatalities. - Compensation and insufficient assistance to
affected employees and families. - Ageing chemical plants and equipment with sub
standard maintenance. - The continuous drive for production and profit,
compromising Safety in the workplace.