Access and Egress
Risk of:
·
Serious
injury, crushing or death.
Possible
causes:
·
Gangways
not properly rigged.
·
Walkways
and handrails not in good repair.
·
Inadequate
access to areas such as lashing platforms.
·
Failure
of access interlocks on the crane - crane operator not seeing person and moving
the trolley towards the docks and crushing the person.
·
Unsafe
access methods - walking across beams over open hatchways.
Chemical Agents
Risk of:
·
Fire.
·
Respiratory
Problems.
·
Death.
Possible
causes:
Exposure to:
·
Toxic
gases from vessels and exhaust fumes from vehicles, especially quay crane
drivers.
·
Leaking
or damaged chemical containers.
·
Unidentified
hazardous cargoes.
·
Nuisance
dust from neighboring bulk cargo operations.
Container Stacks
Risk of:
·
Collapse
of a stack causing personal injury or property / container damage.
·
Being
hit or crushed by a falling container.
Possible
causes:
·
Empty
or partially loaded containers being affected by the wind.
·
Impact
from mechanical handling equipment.
·
Ground
for stacking not level and smooth and capable of withstanding forces generated
by stacks and handling equipment.
·
Deformation
of bottom container in stack.
·
Stack
collapse due to mis-declared weights.
·
Misjudgment
of height of transported container above the stack.
Electricity
Risk of:
·
Electrocution.
·
Burns.
·
Death.
Possible
causes:
·
Contact
of work equipment with overhead lines.
·
Refrigerated
container lifted whilst still connected to electrical supply.
·
Adjacent
electrical risks from temperature controlled unit cable connection etc. during
lashing.
·
Inadequate
or lack of maintenance of straddle carrier electrical points.
·
Unsafe
system of work for connecting and disconnecting electrical connections.
·
Failure
to take faulty electrical equipment out of use e.g. lock and tag out system.
Ergonomics
Risk of:
·
Sprains,
strains and musculoskeletal disorders.
Possible
causes:
·
Poor
ergonomic design of cabs, plant and other seating.
·
Poor
working positions maintained over long periods of time e.g. crane, reach
stackers and straddle carrier drivers, working activities require long periods
of static posture.
·
Hard
physical work e.g. lashing, handling heavy twistlocks.
·
Kneeling
for long periods whilst working within container safety cages.
Falling Objects
Risk of:
·
Serious
injury or death.
Possible
causes:
·
Being
hit by falling tools, lashing gear or other objects.
·
People
not physically isolated from areas where loads are being lifted or lowered.
·
Container
being dropped or nudged onto vehicles or pedestrians.
·
Driver
error.
Fatigue
Risk of:
·
Increased
risk of accident or incidents occurring e.g. drivers falling asleep at the
wheel.
Possible
causes:
·
Lack
of job rotation.
·
Unpredictable
ship arrival times.
·
Requirement
for a fast turnaround.
·
Long
hours, pace and intensity of the work.
·
Physically
demanding nature of the job - close to sailing time the work becoming more
frantic.
·
Excessive
glare or inadequate lighting.
·
Working
in cramped, confined conditions.
Fire / Explosion
Risk of:
·
Burns.
·
Serious
injury or death.
Possible
causes:
·
Electrical
or machine room fire on lifting equipment.
·
Carriage
of dangerous goods such as explosives or highly flammable chemicals.
·
Unsafe
method of work during ship's bunkering.
·
Cutting
or burning jammed twist locks.
·
Explosion
of compressor unit on reefer container due to being charged or topped up with
contaminated gas.
·
Unsafe
system of work for refueling plant.
Lifting Equipment
Risk of:
·
Serious
injury, crushing or death e.g. being crushed by a moving load or lifting
equipment, being run over by moving equipment, falling from equipment at
height, being jammed between moveable parts of the crane.
·
Property
or ship damage.
Possible
causes:
·
Crane collapse or collision e.g. boom to ship
collision or gantry crane colliding with objects on the rail track, crane being
blown down or jammed container attached to crane causing crane damage.
·
Knocking containers from stacks.
·
Failure of lifting equipment.
·
Lack of equipment maintenance and thorough
examination.
·
Falling loads.
·
Over
complacency or over familiarity with the job.
·
Poor
road and dockside surfaces, equipment and infrastructure.
·
Lack
of or failure of interlocks on crane access gates.
·
Lifting
of road vehicle as well as container.
·
Crane
being blown along rails due to wind.
Manual Handling
Risk of:
·
Musculoskeletal
disorders, back problems.
·
Muscle
injuries.
·
Poor
quality of life.
Possible
causes:
·
Handling
heavy items e.g. lashing bars, turnbuckles and twistlocks.
·
Lifting
lashing poles overhead.
·
Working
in restricted areas or spaces, often on cluttered decks and platforms at night
in poor lighting and bad weather.
·
Repetitious
reaching, twisting and turning when lifting and lowering heavy gear.
·
Poor
handling techniques.
·
Manual
maneuvering of lifting gear and attachments or slung loads.
·
Breaking
out containers.
·
Hauling
mooring ropes off large ships.
·
Technical
staff carrying heavy loads and equipment up and down stairs.
Noise
Risk of:
·
Noise
induced hearing loss.
·
Stress.
·
Failure
to hear communications.
Possible
causes:
·
Containers
hitting each other or the quayside (i.e. steel on concrete).
·
Straddle
carrier and other alarms.
·
Machinery
and refrigerated cooling equipment on reefers causing noise.
open Edges
Risk of:
·
Serious
injury, drowning or death.
Possible
causes:
·
Working
near unprotected edge on a ship.
·
Lack
of edge protection.
·
Roll
of the ship causing imbalance.
·
Failure
to wear personal flotation devices when working near or over water.
Slips, Trips and Falls
Risk of:
·
Minor
injuries such as cuts to major injuries such as broken bones.
·
Concussion.
·
Serious
injury, death or drowning.
Possible
causes:
·
Working
on uneven, wet, slippery or icy surfaces both on the vessel and on the
quayside.
·
Badly
stowed container lashing gear, equipment, ropes or cables.
·
Oil
spillages or leaks.
·
Unprotected
openings.
·
Unsuitable
footwear.
Stress
Risk of:
·
Adverse health effects.
Possible causes:
·
Induced through shift patterns,
hours worked and nightwork.
·
Long irregular hours.
·
Pressure to finish off work in
a shift.
·
Payment systems that encourage
operatives to work faster and to take risks in order to get work completed.
·
Work intensity.
Vibration
Risk of:
·
Whole body vibration.
Possible causes:
·
Operation of mobile machines
especially if ground uneven or going over rails.
Working at Height
Risk of:
·
Fall from height during routine operations or one-off maintenance
activities resulting in serious injury, death or drowning.
·
Being hit or crushed by lifting equipment.
·
Body parts being crushed or trapped
Possible
causes:
·
Unsafe work practices - stepping across gaps between stows, walking
across beams over open hatchways.
·
Container top working - lack of systems of work, equipment and training.
·
Body parts outside the safety cage when safety cage in motion.
·
Damaged ladders, inappropriate ladders or ladder use e.g. when accessing
the ship's hold.
·
Weather conditions - high winds, icy surfaces and visibility all
increase risk of a fall.
·
Working on elevated equipment such as cranes e.g. crane maintenance,
repainting the crane, lubrication, inspection and changing of wire ropes, work
on electrical conductors rails etc.
·
Inadequate lighting.
Workplace Transport
Risk of:Serious injury, death or property damage due to:
·
Being hit
or run over by a vehicle.
·
Collisions
with people, property, other tractor trailer units, straddle carriers or other
mobile equipment.
·
Vehicle
overturning.
Possible causes:
·
No
traffic management system in place.
·
Truck
drivers and contractors unfamiliar with the terminal - lack of directions, site
rules etc.
·
Inadequate
or no arrangements for segregating pedestrians and vehicles.
·
No safe system
of work for people who have to work in operational areas e.g. reefer engineers.
·
Restricted
driver vision e.g. blind spots.
·
Quayside
work badly organized.
·
Inadequate
space for maneuvering trucks. and lift trucks.
·
Runaway
trailer.
·
Inattentive
/ distracted drivers or misunderstandings.
·
Overloaded
or mis-declared container weight or eccentrically loaded containers.
·
Road
damage.
·
Speeding
vehicles.
·
Tight
turns.
·
Carrying
containers at high level.
Port Container Terminals - Hazardous
4/
5
Oleh
sudarno hardjo