stock photo not from the incident |
The handling of
molten aluminium occurs in factories outside our industry on a daily basis with
no incidents. But, on occasion when an incident occurs it can have severe
consequences. Here is a recent story:
In a serious
industrial accident in Europe during the first week of July 2019 , 28 people
were injured one afternoon - one of them seriously.
According to
a police report, at 2.45 pm, a container was overturned when working on a
smelting furnace in a factory. This resulted in hot, liquid aluminum pouring on the factory floor. One
worker was badly injured and many more workers suffered smoke poisoning. A
total of 14 people had to be admitted to hospitals, and another 14 were treated
by the rescue service on site. The cause of the accident has not yet been
finally clarified. According to the current state, an operator error on the
machine is assumed. The resulting property damage should amount to about
100,000 euros.
‘
The Aluminium Plant Safey Blog has posted incidents in the past
involving manufacturing plants involving accidental molten metal spills. These
spills commonly involve workers rushing through a task that they previously
have done successfully before countless times. Or the spill is result of a
cracked crucible. The numerous news media articles do not state equipment
failure. They do mention consistently operator error. One news media article
states “a container overturned” resulting “A worker was injured directly at the
foot by the hot aluminum". In our experience the worker was either not
wearing the proper footwear while working with molten metal or the molten metal
poured into the worker’s boot. Regardless, from past experience the worker’s
injuries are probably very very serious. One would expect third degree burns to
a foot that comes in contact with molten metal.
In addition to the operator being burned, workers in the nearby
vicinity required medical assistance from inhaling fumes. It would be our
opinion that the molten metal came into some combustible and ignited. Reports
state that no flames were visible. Regardless, the smoke generated from the
molten metal forced 14 workers to the hospital. While another 14 workers were
treated at the factory for inhalation problems.
We pray that all of the injured workers recover fully from this
incident. We hope that the company will investigate this incident and develop
training and engineering controls to prevent this from occurring in the
industry.
A great useful reference guide when working with molten aluminium
would be the Aluminium Association’s “Guidelines for Handling Molten Metal”.
That document can be found here.
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