Grangemouth Company Fined After Worker Gets 3,300-volt Electric Shock, UK

Main Category: Public Health
Article Date: 23 Oct 2009 - 4:00 PDT

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A Grangemouth-based company has been fined for breaching health and safety law after a worker was burned by live power cables.

The Health and Safety Executive (HSE) prosecuted refinery and petrochemical company Ineos Manufacturing Scotland Ltd for failing to ensure a safe system of work was in place before undertaking excavation work near live electrical cables.

A subcontractor needed hospital treatment for burns to his hands and face after he struck two live 3,300-volt cables with a powered breaking tool known as a Jackhammer on 3 November 2006.

The subcontractor and his colleagues were widening an existing cable trench containing several live electrical cables at the time of the incident.

Ineos Manufacturing Scotland Ltd of Bo'ness Road, Grangemouth, pleaded guilty to breaching regulation 4(3) of the Electricity at Work Regulations 1989 and was fined £1500 at Falkirk Sheriff Court on 20 October.

HSE Inspector Dr Heather Gates said:

"The men are lucky to be alive following this terrible incident, which could easily have been prevented. This type of work requires careful planning and management in order to avoid danger.

"Ineos Manufacturing Scotland Ltd and contractors should have conducted an adequate risk assessment before work started. They were aware of the live cables but underestimated the risks associated with working so close to them.

"They did not give sufficient consideration to the option of isolating the cables, nor could they justify why the electricity supply was not isolated.

"Ineos did not use other measures to minimise the risks to staff, such as using digging techniques that would not have damaged cables.

"I hope this case will remind companies how important it is for electrical work to be properly planned and implemented. Without proper planning employers are putting workers' lives of at risk."

Around 1,000 people are injured every year from electric shocks while at work in the UK, and about 25 people die from their injuries.

More information on preventing accidents is available at Electrical safety at work[1].

Notes

1. Regulation 4(3) of the Electricity at Work Regulations 1989 states: "Every work activity, including operation, use and maintenance of a system and work near a system, shall be carried out in such a manner as not to give rise, so far as is reasonably practicable, to danger."

2. The Electricity at Work Regulations 1989 require adequate planning of electrical work so as not to give rise to danger from electrical hazards, when work is being carried out on or near an electrical system. These regulations include work of a non electrical nature where there is a risk of electrical injury, for example excavation near live cables.

Source
HSE

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release.
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HSE. "Grangemouth Company Fined After Worker Gets 3,300-volt Electric Shock, UK." Medical News Today. MediLexicon, Intl., 23 Oct. 2009. Web.
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