Title: Working Safely in Global Construction
1Working Safely in Global Construction
- Tom Will
- Rohm and Haas Company
2No one person or single party can create a safe
jobsite. It requires a collaborative effort with
the owner and contractors working together from
the top of their respective organizations down
to, and most importantly with, the hourly workers.
3Case Study Taloja, India
- Adhesives, sealants, emulsions plant
- 3.6 million work-hours
- Two lost time incidents, two recordable
injuries - Construction Users Roundtable (CURT) Award
- Presidents Health-Safety-Environmental Award
(Jacobs) - Joseph J. Jacobs Master Builder Award
- On time, on budget project that met business
goals with outstanding safety results
4Project Execution Strategy
- Joint partnership by
- Owner
- Rohm and Haas
- EPCM Contractor/Alliance Partner
- Jacobs HG
- Numerous subcontractors
5Safety Goals
- Zero injuries
- Everyone goes home in the same condition they
went to work - World-class safety program
- Proactive safety tools
- Support worker needs (on and off the job)
6Work Force
Taloja, India
- Safe workers shown 600
- Project peak 1,300
- Total employees indoctrinated 5,200
- Safe workers shown 600
- Project peak 1,300
- Total employees indoctrinated 5,200
7Safety Beliefs
- You can work safely anywhere ? all of the time.
- Owner, contractor, and subcontractors working
together make it happen. - It all starts at the top.
- Safety management culture and systems drive
results. - Each and every individual must contribute.
- Injuries are produced by at-risk behavior that
can be changed. - Changing behaviors requires systems, resources,
commitment, and hard work.
8What Were the Keys to Safety Performance?
- Application of Industry (CII) Best Safety
Practices - Owners Role in Safety research (CII Project
Team 190) - Rohm and Haas/
Jacobs Alliance
18 Best Safety
Practices
Details in Implementation Session
9Tie-off / Fall Protection Do Not Worry If I Lose
Balance, My Harness Would Save Me! Use Protective
Equipment Properly. Safety Harness Lanyard To Be
Hooked On Strong And Rigid Objects
10Safety Statistics
Category U.S. India
Construction workers 9 Million 100 Million
Injuries per day 1,800 50,000
Construction deaths per day 5 150
Construction deaths per year 1,250 40,000
11Comparison to Similar Gulf Coast Project
Category Gulf Coast Typical CII Equivalent Taloja, India
Total Installed Cost (TIC) 50MM lt 20MM
Work-Hours 800,000 3,600,000
Total Recordable Injuries 4 4
Lost Time Incidents (LTI) 1 2
Recordable Incident Rate (RIR) 1.0 0.2
CII Industrial RIR 1.0 1.1 1.0 1.1
U.S. Industrial RIR 5.0 7.0 5.0 7.0
12Challenges Risks Taloja, India
- No real safety culture or legislation.
- Many owners and contractors dont support safety.
- High manual labor content and worker density.
- Work force poor, unskilled, migrant.
- Civil work during monsoon season.
- Several distinct languages.
- Minimal use of construction equipment.
13Key Program Elements
- Management commitment, involvement,
accountability - World-class health-safety-environmental program
- One common safety team
- New employee orientation and training
- Medical facilities on and off site
- Pre-project planning
- Safety observations system and audits
- Recognition/reward and disciplinary system
- Incident investigation and feedback/learnings
14Professional Safety Staffing
Rohm and Haas 2 Jacobs 4 Safety specialty
sub 5 Contractors 12 Total 23
Additional support and auditing from management
at Rohm and Haas and Jacobs.
15Why It Worked
- Management support and corporate alignment.
- The core project team and Jacobs local presence.
- Corporate alignment (Rohm and Haas/Jacobs).
- Walked the talk.
- Organized, staffed project with safety as key
success factor. - Made local practices safe, didnt impose the
unfamiliar. - Supervisors were key and we won their hearts and
minds. - Work force felt that management cared about
safety.
16Summary of Injuries
- Three million, six hundred thousand work-hours
- ONE industrial injury
- Four recordable injuries
- - Two lost time incidents
- - Two recordables
- - One was slip and fall resulting in laceration
(only true industrial accident) - Forty-four first-aid cases
17Frequently Asked Questions
- How did you deal with poor contractor safety
culture? - Selection process, training,
zero tolerance.
18Frequently Asked Questions
- Only one industrial injury?
- Do people not report injuries at the site?
- Not normal in India.
- Site nurse improved reporting.
- Site procedures mandated reporting.
19Frequently Asked Questions
- Why 660 percent turnover?
- Migrant farm workers, contract agency workers,
paid daily with no retention incentive, zero
tolerance to at-risk safety behavior.
20Safety Management Beliefs and Principles
- All safety incidents are preventable.
- All safety incidents are caused by at-risk
behavior. - All behaviors can be changed.
- If youre not confronting at-risk behavior,
youre reinforcing it.
- Leadership is required to institute change and
improve safety. - Attainment of zero injuries is possible.
21Rigging For Long Loads Use Double Slings!
22Conclusions
- Success Factors
- True and highly visible management commitment.
- Local jobsite commitment (walk the talk).
- Key contractor culture and commitment.
- Implementation of a solid, detailed safety plan
utilizing CII Best Practices. - Follow-through with elements of the plan.
- Winning hearts and minds of supervisors, making
believers out of them. - Above all, uncompromising intolerance to at-risk
behaviors.
23The Bottom Line
- You will achieve the level of safety that you
demonstrate you want to achieve.
24Implementation Session
- Working Safely in Global Construction
- Moderator
- Randy Arrington, Jacobs
- Panelists
- A. L. Benny, Construction Manager (Jacobs)
- Geoff Bell, Project Manager (Rohm and Haas)
- Tom Will, Capital Manager (Rohm and Haas)
Georgia B 315-415 pm and 430-530 pm