The importance of
self-auditing and enforcement of lockout tag out procedures has been
recommended by the Aluminium Plant Safety Blog. Here is a recent incident that
may have been prevented if the aluminium company followed our recommendations:
The Canadian
government has handed an aluminium company a hefty fine for an incident at (one
of) the company’s smelters.
The company was
fined just over $660,000 last month for what the Canadian government described
as “high-risk violation”.
According to the
government report, two workers doing maintenance work inside a gas treatment
centre reactor were trapped inside the reactor and sustained exposure injuries.
Investigators found that the work had been done without all
locks in place as required by the firm’s confined space key box procedure. The Canadian
government says there was no record of a risk assessment for the work task and
the key box procedure did not name everyone who applied locks.
It says the
aluminium company failed to ensure that “energy-isolating devices were locked
in a safe position using acceptable procedures”.
The Canadian
government says penalties are published as a deterrent and to highlight the
importance of making workplaces safe.
We
pray that the injured workers recover fully from their injuries. All too often
when workers skip steps in the lockout tagout process a fatality is the result.
These two workers were very lucky to survive. We pray that this story will be
used a toolbox talk to educate workers on what could happen if they do not
follow their training.
The Aluminium Times Magazine had an article about lockout tagout. It
can be downloaded here.
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