WELCOME SHOCK HAZARD IDENTIFICATION BEHAVIOUR SAFETY 100% TIE OFF FIELD (1 FULL-DAY ) SAFETY TRAINING
WELCOMESHOCK
HAZARD IDENTIFICATION BEHAVIOUR SAFETY
100% TIE OFF FIELD (1 FULL-DAY ) SAFETY TRAINING
YOUR HSE TRAINER….
CARLO A. DELA CRUZ FORMERLY HSE OFFICER
TRAIN 4 & 5, PROCESS AREA CONSOLIDATED CONTRUCTOR’S INT’L. CO. (S.A.L.)
RAS LAFFAN INDUSTRIAL CITY QATAR
REQUIREMENTS
• HELMET• SAFETY GLASSES• COVER-ALL• SAFETY SHOES
• IF NOT COMPLETE…
NOT ALLOWED TO GO TO SITE!!!
PARTICIPANTS HERE BEFORE• CHINA• GHANA• EGYPT• JORDAN• INDIA• INDONESIA• NEPAL• NIGERIA• PAKISTAN• PHILIPPINES• POLAND• ROMANIA• THAILAND• VENEZUELA
HOUSE RULES• PUT YOUR MOBILE PHONE ON SILENT MODE
• IN CASE OF EMERGENCY……• NO EATING NO SMOKING
• REMOVE EYE & HEAD GEARS• KEEP THE ROOM CLEAN AND ORDERLY
• PARTICIPATE IN THE DISCUSSION• NO SLEEPING
QUESTION WHY ARE YOU HERE?WHY ARE YOU HERE?
MONEYNO ACCIDENT MEANS MORE MONEY !!!
ARE YOU READY TO LEARN???
FULL VIDEONEAR MISSSTAYING ALIVE
While hoisting the above SLAB of concrete the sling slipped due to bad slinging.The dead person was standing under the load when it fell.
CONCRETE SLAB SLIPPED SLING
REMOVING TYRE FROM HUB
This man was removing the TIRE from the wheel hub using the
sledge hammer.The hammer bounced off the rubber
tire and struck his head.
THIS MATERIAL FELL 15m OFF ROOF
This passer by was struck when the material fell 15m from an unprotected roof.
This man fell 2m from a platform scaffold Which was not constructed properly and had
no GREEN TAG to indicate it was safe to use.
TAKE NOTE• Protect from scratches; replaced if
many scratches• W ash with water; pat dry with dry
cotton cloth or tissue paper• Wear FACE SHIELD on top if flying
hazards are too much
TAKE NOTE• Do not apply paint on the shell• Do not drill holes on the shell• Do not wear in wrong position• Do not put anything inside the
harness/shell• Do not wear on top of a bull cap• Do not repair
HAND PROTECTION
• Wear to protect hands from bruises and other damage
• Damaged gloves be replaced• Do not wear near any revolving
part of any tool or equipment
FOOT PROTECTION• Regularly clean the
uppers• Check the soles for
cracks or any damage
• Do not ever remove the steel toe cap for whatever reason
• Continuous improvement of our Safety culture.• Recognise the impact of our own behaviour, and ensure that the rest of the team demonstrate exemplary safety behaviour• Practice good safety • Correct unsafe behaviours using a coaching style of conversation.• Listen to the advice from workforce and Supervisors and take action as necessary.
Disabling injury Or Death 1
600 Near Miss
8 L.T. Accidents
30 First Aid12 Medical Treatment
Any directly measurable thing that a person does, including speaking, acting, and performing physical functions.
Activators Activators (what needs to be done(what needs to be done))
CompetenciesCompetencies (how it needs to be done) (how it needs to be done)
ConsequencesConsequences (what (what happens if it is done)happens if it is done)
Human Behavior is a function of :
Use your senses that are safe to use, but don’t put yourself in danger!
- Sight- Sound- Smell -Touch-NEVER TASTE
Experience Gut Feel (Intuition)Check List
Other People above, below or adjacentTrip HazardsFall from HeightConfined SpacePoor LightingBlind CornersWaste MaterialEscape Routes Blocked
Work Site
LeakSpillOverflowWrong Mix
Product Escape
Material/Chemical Exposures
Inhalation Contact Absorption Ingestion
Hazard is a potential situation waiting to cause loss.Examples:
Open edge of platform
Uncovered opening
Unguarded or Defected Machine
Damaged rungs of ladder or miss used
Protruding steel bars or nails in timber
Incomplete or untagged Scaffolding
Un barricaded lifting
?
What could be the loss ?
Physical Loss:
Injury
Fracture
Disablement
Amputation
Death
Property Loss:
Material Damage
Equipment Damage
Collapse of Structure
NEXT LOSS…Environmental Loss:
Water
Soil
Air
Aquatic Flora and Fauna
Terrestrial Flora & FaunaTime Loss:
Production
Completion
De-scheduled
Disruption in normal work
Line Voltage Minimum Distance 150 – 750 Volt 2.0 Meters 750 - 50,000 Volt 3.0 Meters 50,000 - 250,000 Volt 4.5 Meters Over 250,000 Volt 6.0 Meters