Dangers and safety controls when working in confined spaces

welding in confined space

Employers and workers must know their safety obligations to prevent serious injury and death for those working within confined spaces.

The atmosphere in confined spaces and limited access to enter or exit, presents a number of risks to workers and there are strict safety procedures that must be followed to minimise risk.

Potential hazards include oxygen deficiency, air contamination, fires, drowning, explosions, engulfment and asphyxiation.

Training and safety systems are critical but often ignored. A small 2006 Western Australia study found that causal factors for fatalities of workers in confined spaces included lack of training, supervision and safety procedures, either provided by the employer and or implemented by the employee.

The definition of a confined space

Safe Work Australia describes a confined space as “any enclosed or partially enclosed space that is not designed or intended primarily to be occupied by a person and is at normal atmospheric pressure while a person is in the space”.

Confined spaces may be found in vats, tanks, pits, pipes, ducts, flues, chimneys, silos, containers, pressure vessels, underground sewers, wet or dry wells, shafts, trenches, tunnels.

Confined spaces for workplace health & safety purposes do not include mine shafts or the workings of a mine.

Safety procedures and risk management

Employers should ensure that people working in a confined space are minimising risk by following these procedures from SafeWork Australia:

  1. Providing any workers and standby support with training and information on safety procedures that must be followed.
  2. Placing a standby-person outside the confined space to communicate with the person undertaking the task, and initiate emergency procedures if required.
  3. Providing personal protective equipment (PPE) and other safety, rescue and first aid equipment.
  4. Supplying safety harnesses and safety (or rescue) lines where there is a danger of falling while entering, leaving or being rescued from the confined space.
  5. Displaying clear signage to show entry is only permitted after signing the entry permit.
  6. Ensuring the area is well ventilated and clean.

Permit to work in confined spaces

A confined space entry permit is a formal check to ensure all elements of a safe system of work are in place before people are allowed to enter the confined space.

According to SafeWork Australia, a confined entry space permit must contain the following information:

  • Specify the confined space the permit relates to
  • Record the names of those permitted to enter the confined space and the period of time during which the work will be carried out
  • Set out risk control measures based on the risk assessment
  • Contain space for an acknowledgement that relevant work in the confined space has been completed and all individuals have left the space.

The permit provides a means of communication between site management, supervisors and those carrying out the work and ensures that the person conducting the business or undertaking (PCBU) has checked and authorised the entry to the confined space and it is safe to proceed.

The importance of wearing a suitable safety harness

Wearing a high-quality safety harness designed for working in confined spaces is one of the most important ways to protect workers.

A safety harness should always be worn, if there is a risk of falling during ascent or descent or rescue by a direct route, either vertically or horizontally.

LINQ Height Safety’s H301 harness is ideal for confined space work. It is certified to Australian Standards and has quick release buckles for ease of use and swift removal in the event of an emergency.

Fatalities in confined spaces

Despite the existence of strict confined space safety procedures, fatalities continue to occur with a lack of adequate training or safe systems often cited as a causal factor.

Workplace Health and Safety Queensland (WHSQ) is continuing its investigation into an incident at Sarina when two men were found dead inside a tanker in early 2018.

WHSQ Executive Director Julie Nielsen said they were cleaning cattle feed residue from the tanks after unloading the day earlier.

SafeWork NSW is investigating a fatality that occurred in September 2018, where a man was found deceased inside a water tank on a Northern Rivers Property.

The man had been repairing the damaged water tank and became overcome by fumes, after which he could not be revived.

Confined space training and keeping records

Employers have a duty of care to look after workers and provide them with adequate training, information and equipment to perform their jobs as safely as possible.

Training should be a high priority for workers and their supervisors to prevent unnecessary injury and fatalities. Employers must retain a record of worker training for two years.

SafeWork says employers must keep a copy of the risk assessment for at least 28 days after the work in the space has finished, and keep a copy of the work permit at least until the work is completed.

If there is an incident in the space, records must be kept for at least two years. Records must be made available to SafeWork Australia and any worker upon request.

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