IMCASF - Jan 16
IMCASF - Jan 16
IMCASF - Jan 16
These flashes summarise key safety matters and incidents, allowing wider dissemination of lessons learnt from them. The information below has been provided
in good faith by members and should be reviewed individually by recipients, who will determine its relevance to their own operations.
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in good faith, safety information for the benefit of members and do not necessarily constitute IMCA guidance, nor represent the official view of the Association
or its members.
Summary
In this Safety Flash, in order to facilitate timely distribution of incidents, we must cover a range of subjects rather than focus
on one particular area.
In the first incident, someone loses an eye by being in the line of fire of stored pressure release; two incidents involve personnel
transfer in the offshore renewables sector; there are two incidents of spontaneous combustion of towels in the laundry, and a
case of damage to pressurised cylinders during loading operations.
1 Lost Time Injury (LTI): Stored Pressure Release - Crewman Lost an Eye
A member has reported an incident in which a crewman lost an eye during a stored pressure release incident. The incident
occurred during maintenance work on the UV disinfection unit for the freshwater system on an offshore vessel. The job was
installation of the emitter protection tube. As the injured person started to tighten the tension screw, it appears that he
inadvertently touched the inlet valve handle – opening it by a third. This led to water running into the UV disinfection unit,
building up pressure below the emitter protection tube and forcing it out through the opening. The glass element hit the
injured person on the forehead and smashed. He was hit in the face and eyes by pieces of glass, and was brought to hospital
for surgery. The doctors were unable to save the left eye.
Emitter tube and UV-filter ready to be inserted Investigations revealed the inlet valve was approximately 1/3
open
Actual system on-board. Emitter protection tube lowered into the filter (picture from
another vessel).
Members may wish to refer to the following incidents (search words: eye, face):
IMCA SF 16/15 – Incident 3 – Line of fire injury – man struck in face by hammer;
IMCA SF 22/15 – Incident 4 – Hydraulic company sentenced after employee loses sight in one eye.
Whilst transferring personnel to a wind turbine generator tower during the hours of darkness in the winter months, a CTV
was pushed onto the boat landing for approximately 10-15 minutes. During this time two persons were transferred safely. As
a third person clipped on to the fall arrest device, a rogue wave hit the vessel. It was dark and the wave was unseen and
unexpected. It lifted the CTV at least 4 meters up the boat landing. The crewman assisting the transfer instructed the
transferee to quickly unclip from the fall arrest device to prevent himself from being picked up off the deck. He was able to
do so, and the vessel quickly dropped to its previous level on the boat landing.
The Master immediately notified the company of the incident and stopped transferring personnel until there was an
improvement in sea state and/or visibility. In due course the Master was happy that the safe transfers could resume, and
operations continued without further problem.
The client issued a safety notice warning of the imminent worsening seasonal weather in their newsletter – this included
additional instruction for CTV transfer during marginal weather conditions.
Members may wish to refer to the following similar incidents (search word: CTV):
IMCA SF 06/14 – Incident 3 – Near miss incidents during personnel transfer to offshore renewable energy installations;
IMCA SF 19/15 – Incident 1 – Near miss during transfer operations from a crew transfer vessel (CTV) to a turbine tower.
The issue of where and how to safely attach personal fall protection during transfer from one vessel to another, is one that is
currently of great interest to IMCA and its members within the renewables sector, as this kind of incident has been reported
several times to IMCA in recent years.
Safe transfer of personnel in general is dealt with in detail in IMCA SEL 025 Rev 1 – Guidance on the transfer of personnel to and
from offshore vessels and structures.
Incident 2 – Manoeuvring in close quarters to other vessels – crew transfer as Simultaneous Operations
(SIMOPS)
A CTV was requested to attend a wind turbine generator monopile to transfer some personnel, whilst a construction vessel
was nearby in dynamic positioning (DP) mode. The personnel were successfully transferred to the foundation, but as the
Master activated astern gear and pulled away from the monopole, the CTV went through the thruster wash caused by the
construction vessel (which was in DP mode). This caused the CTV to move in an unpredictable and uncontrollable way – the
CTV passed within 4 metres of the construction vessel itself.
Members may wish to refer to IMCA M 203 Guidance on simultaneous operations (SIMOPS).
The galley crew decided to wash & dry dirty, greasy towels. As soon as the laundry was removed from tumble dryer, it was
folded and placed inside a stainless steel cupboard in the galley area. A few minutes later, smoke was noted coming from the
cupboard. When the door was opened, the towels were found to be on fire due to self-combustion. The fire was rapidly
extinguished with no injuries or further damage sustained.
Spontaneous combustion occurs when a flammable or combustible substance (in this case, the oil or grease in the towels) is
slowly heated to its ignition point through oxidation, and many substances will begin to release heat as they oxidise. In this
incident, the process was sped up through heating in the tumble dryer. If the heat has no way to escape (such as with a pile of
laundry within a closed cupboard) the temperature will raise to a level high enough to ignite the oil and cause a fire in the
laundry.
Photograph of the burned towels. The stainless steel cupboards where the towels were kept.
Incident 2
Burning towels were discovered in a laundry room on an offshore vessel. Whilst working in the laundry room, the steward
on duty noticed a burning smell. Upon investigation a basket of galley towels was seen smouldering. The steward immediately
discharged a dry chemical extinguisher on the basket. After discharging the extinguisher the towels were moved to the wash
sink and saturated with water.
Showing the scene of the fire and the damaged towels.
Members may wish to refer to the following incidents (search words: dryer):
IMCA SF 07/03 – Incident 4 – Fire incidents (particularly fires involving laundry tumble dryers);
IMCA SF 16/09 – Incident 4 – Tumble dryer fire on-board a vessel.
Lessons Learnt:
Transportation and handling of pressurized cylinders should be conducted with extra care – only by trained/certified
personnel, and an appropriate task risk assessment should be conducted;
Local and international regulations and requirements and company procedures, should always be followed when
transporting pressurized cylinders offshore;
All pressurized cylinders should be transported in vertical “valve-up” position, secured to prevent falling or rolling, and
protected from impact from any other objects by the use of an appropriate box or crate of substantial construction.
Whilst this incident did not involve actual failure of a pillar valve, it highlights the underlying principles of appropriate care and
maintenance of pressurized cylinders and associated equipment, whether used for diving or not.