Lifting Hazards & Crane Safety
Lifting Hazards & Crane Safety
Lifting Hazards & Crane Safety
CRANE SAFE
OPERATION
ADMA HSE policy reflects the company commitment regarding Health of Personnel, Safety of
Personnel and Facilities, and Protection of Environment.
Everyone who works for or on behalf of ADMA is responsible for their safety and the safety of
those around them.
The following safety rules will be strictly enforced to ensure the safety of our people and our
communities.
ZKAUs management and Team leader and front line supervisors are accountable for
communicating, training, implementing, and auditing these rules to assure compliance and
performance.
Personal protection equipment will be worn as per risk assessment and minimum site
requirements.
Emergency response plans, developed from a review of potential emergency scenarios, will
be in place before commencement of work.
Everyone has an obligation to stop unsafe work
HSE Golden Rules of Lifting Operations
Lifts utilizing cranes, hoists, or other mechanical lifting devices shall not
commence unless:
An assessment of the lift has been completed and the lift method and
equipment has been determined by a competent person(s)
Operators of powered, lifting devices are trained and certified for that
equipment
Lifting devices and equipment has been certified for use within the last 12
months (at a minimum)
Load does not exceed dynamic and/or static capacities of the lifting equipment
All lifting devices and equipment have been visually examined before each lift
by a competent person(s)
Are you trained and competent to perform this work?
You have an obligation to stop the work if its unsafe.
Lifting Facts and
Testing Guide
Equipment
Environment
Lifting team
Third parties
SUMMARY
Lifting operations are hazardous
There have been 7 fatalities associated with lifting within
E&P in year 2001 & 2002
Cranes, winches, hoists, derricks all devices have been
involved
Drilling, wells, production, seismic, construction all
operations have been involved
Roustabouts, floor hands, mechanics, riggers, banksman
,truck drivers all have died
Lifts occur every day but no lift is routine!
Unsafe lifts can be fatal! It can happen to you!
Stories of past failures
Azerbaijan - 2 floor hands struck by pipe whipping across
rig floor
Egypt - Mechanic dragged off roof when winch failed
Argentina - Truck driver crushed when load shifted in
transfer from winch truck to trailer
North Sea - Banksman crushed when load
slipped during stacking operation
Trinidad - Worker struck by moving load on
boat
Norway - Worker crushed when stacked
tank fell
Historical reasons for failures
Supervisors treated lifts as routine operations and did
not
audit the equipment, environment or people
People were not competent to do their job
People used wrong lift equipment out of convenience
People overestimated the integrity of lift equipment
People did not maintain lifting equipment
People underestimated the potential for injury of a
suspended load
People did not talk to each other
People did not recognize changing conditions or
improvised rather
than stopped the job
People violated procedures to get the lift done
People repeated unsafe behavior because they got
away with it in
the past
Agenda for testing a lifting operation
Verify that there is a single point
accountability for the lift operation.
Ask who is involved in the lift.
Test all persons involved on their roles and
responsibilities?
Ask to see the lift plan.
Verify that the lift plan has been approved by
a competent person and test that persons
competency.
Confirm that the lifting device is capable of
lifting the size and weight of the load.
Verify that all persons involved in the lift
participated in the design of the lift.
Request documentation that the lift
equipment has been
certified in the last 12 months.
Agenda for testing a lifting operation
Ask to see the lift hazard assessment.
Verify that those involved in the lift participated
in the
hazard assessment and test peoples knowledge
of the
hazards and their tolerance level to these
hazards.
Confirm that the hazards associated with the
equipment,
environment, lift team and third parties have
been
identified and mitigated.
Ask to see the lift procedures and confirm that
Agenda for testing a lifting operation
Verify that an inspection of all equipment
has been
completed.
Test the Lifting Device Operators
competencies.
Test the Rigger/Loader/Drill Crew
competency.
Test the Banksman/Signalmans
competency.
Verify that a communication methodology
is in place
and understood by all involved in the lift.
What did your testing reveal?
Lift Safely
Live Another Day.
Any Questions?