Health Safety & Environmnetal Challenges
Health Safety & Environmnetal Challenges
Health Safety & Environmnetal Challenges
FOR
Date: ______20/12/08___________________
Total Marks = 60
5. The standard limit for the particulate matter in the sensitive area is 100µg/m3
6. The name of the gas that was responsible for Bhopal disaster Methyl Isocynate (MIC) gas
9. Ear muffs are used to get rid of high decibel noise pollution
10. The standard limit for the particulate matter in the industrial areas
is 360 µg/m3 Annual Average and 500 µg/m3 24 hourly/8 hourly values should be met 98% of the
time in a year. However, 2% of the time, it may exceed but not on two consecutive days
SECTION – B; ATTEMPT ANY THREE QUESTIONS (3x10= 30)
A work permit is generally issued by an operating supervisor called issue of the permit to the maintenance
supervisor a contractor, called the acceptor of the permit after ensuring all the necessary precautions.
Ans: Safety Procedures are all relevant operating procedures pertaining to an activity relevant to a
particular installation which are identified and documented clearly in simple language so that
everybody working in the installation understands these.
Ans: Risk involves determining what risks the organization faces and determining the relative importance of
these risks.Risk management is a structured approach to managing uncertainty related to a threat, a
sequence of human activities including: risk assessment, strategies development to manage it, and
mitigation of risk using managerial resources.
The strategies include transferring the risk to another party, avoiding the risk, reducing the negative effect of
the risk, and accepting some or all of the consequences of a particular risk.
A risk assessment need not be complex. It is usually a straightforward but conscientious study of anything in
the work environment that might hurt someone. Once the assessment is finished, managers review the
identified risks and decide the appropriate action to prevent accidents and injuries. The final task is
then to create and act upon a risk assessment plan. The objective of risk management is to reduce
different risks related to a preselected domain to the level accepted by society. It may refer to
numerous types of threats caused by environment, technology, humans, organizations and politics.
All of this is a legal requirement. An employer is obliged to keep workers and the public safe as far as
"reasonably practicable", although the law does not demand the eradication of all possibility of risk.
Definitions
There are two key definitions to risk assessment work.
Hazard
A hazard is an actual or potential danger or risk. In other words, it is an item (such as a toxic chemical) or a
process (roofing a building, for instance) that may lead to an accident.
Risk
A risk is a situation that involves an exposure to a hazard and carries the possibility that something
unpleasant may occur. The risk of injury may be low or high, and the result of the harm may be slight or
grave.
There are five steps, endorsed by the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) that demonstrate the basics of risk
assessment for the majority of organizations.
1. Identify the hazards.
Consider how people may be injured in the workplace. Be pro-active and examine the potential hazards,
whether they are short or long-term. Also ask for the views of employees and their representatives, and
read the accident book and the sick records for anything related to a work-based danger.
They probably don’t have right training and aptitude for identifying the many process hazards which are not
so obvious.
Safety issues in our organization can be addressed and made effective in following ways:
• All employees should have the opportunity to participate
• Representation by all departments, locations, operations, divisions, - Include Office staff
• Membership should be 5 to 15 (5 to 7 is optimal)
• Designee plus alternate
• Membership should be on a volunteer basis
• Rotate members
• Assign specific responsibilities to chairperson, secretary, and members.
• Improve Internal Communication
• Causes more effective deployment of resources
• Forward recommendations to appropriate management
• personnel
• Prepare periodic loss analysis reports / Large loss report
• Follow-up to past recommendations and report status
• Conduct meeting in orderly fashion
• Set a positive example for safe performance
• Conduct inspections according to schedule
• Participate in accident investigation and review
• Report unsafe acts or conditions
• Assign Tasks
– Expect Completion
• Establish effective problem solving methods
– How do they make recommendations?
– Who do they issue them to?
– Management needs to respond immediately, even
• Safety Promotion
– Awareness
- Posters
- Envelope stuffers
- Contests
- Get everyone involved
- Make it fun
• Program Development
– Review policy and procedures
– Participate in Accident Investigations reviews.
• Committee should sign off on all accident investigations
• Accident Prevention
• Target the key areas
– Ergonomics
– Training
– JSA’s
SECTION – C; COMPULSORY (1x20= 20)
Q.6 You are supposed to award some work to outside contractor. What will be your criteria to
award that work being a Manager- HSE?
Ans: One of the most important strategic contract management decisions to be made by the company is on
the way in which the contractor, or alliance of contractors, is held responsible for the management of HSE. I
would personally as a HSE Manager award the contractor based on two distinctly models as described
below:
Model-1: The contractor provides people and tools for the execution of work under the supervision,
instructions and HSE-MS of the company. The contractor has a management system to provide
assurance that the personnel for whom he is responsible are qualified and healthy for the job and
that the tools and machinery he is providing are properly maintained and suitable for the job.
Model-2: The contractor executes all aspects of the job under its own HSE management System, provides
the necessary instructions and supervision and verifies the proper functioning of its HSE
Management System. The company is responsible for verifying the overall effectiveness of the
HSE management controls put in place by the contractor, and assuring that both the company’s
and the contractor’s HSE-MS are appropriately compatible.
Selection of one of these models is preferred. However in certain situations it may be necessary to adopt a
mixture of the two models.
Screening
The screening process should be designed to assure that the contractors invited to bid can perform the work
to the required HSE criteria.
The general approach would be to send a uniform questionnaire (detailed below) to all potential
contractors, initial assess their HSE capabilities based on the questionnaire using an equitable measuring
system and supplementing this with site inspections of current contract work sites.
Contractors which have been used by the company previously can be assessed through the use of close out
reports and other historical records. A review of any potential changes to the contractor’s organization,
programmes and systems should also be conducted.
During pre-qualification of large contractors, especially those with many divisions in numerous countries,
the use of the record of the Corporation may not be appropriate. In such case, the focus should be on the
division for the work. HSE requirements should be met before work commences.
4. Waste Management
a. What systems are in place for identification, classification, minimization and
management of waste?
5. Drugs and Alcohol
a. Do you have a drugs and alcohol policy in your organization? If yes does it include
pre-employment and random testing?