Two workers were exposed to the risk of an explosion while carrying out unsafe welding on a fishing boat’s diesel tank.
The  men, one of whom was only 17, were working for boat-repair company C  & L Marine Ltd. They were asked to carry out cleaning and welding  work to repair a fuel leak on the Margaret of Ladram, which was moored  in Sutton Harbour, Plymouth. 
The fuel tank was one deck down and  accessed from a small manhole below the vessel’s net store. The workers  were required to use buckets to empty the tank of more than 600 litres  of residual seawater and diesel, and had been provided with rags to  clean the inside in preparation for the welding.
Neither man was  provided training for the job, nor were they supplied with any  respiratory protection. They took turns to enter the tank to clean it,  in order to have respite from the fumes. One of them started to find it  difficult to breathe when he was inside the tank, and said he felt dizzy  and faint. 
The next day, one of the men used a grinder, causing  sparks to fall on his workmate, who was holding a lamp to illuminate  the work. Significant amounts of fumes were created and they evacuated  the boat and contacted staff at the harbour for advice. 
The  harbourmaster visited the boat and halted further work after the company  failed to provide documentation and permits to show the tank was safe  in which to work. He then notified the HSE about the unsafe work.
The  HSE visited the harbour and found that no gas monitor was used to  measure available oxygen in the tank and no gas-free certificate was  obtained before beginning the work. An electric fan was being used to  blow the fumes out of the tank, and a second fan was also put outside in  the net store. Neither fan had an extraction hose, which meant they  just blew the fumes about. 
Both men were unsupervised and  unfamiliar with the tank work they were undertaking. C & L Marine  also failed to considered the need to provide rescue equipment, such as  harnesses and lifelines, or other appropriate emergency arrangements.
The  firm was issued a Prohibition Notice, which ordered the repairs to stop  until a safe system of working in a confined space was created.
 
HSE  inspector David Cory said: “C & L Marine’s lack of preparation for  this work showed very significant failings, which could have led to  tragedy – they should have been well aware of the risks cleaning and  then welding in the diesel fuel tank would have posed.The tank  should have been thoroughly steam-cleaned or jet-washed, instead of  being bucketed out and mopped with rags. There was no test for the  presence of noxious or flammable gases, or whether there was sufficient  oxygen in the tank before the men began work. If the diesel fuel  residues had been sufficiently heated they would have created fumes  which could have led to an explosion, or fire. Ventilation was either  absent, or woefully inadequate.”
C & L Marine appeared at  Plymouth Magistrates’ Court on 18 March and pleaded guilty to breaching  reg.3(1) of the MHSWR 1999, and reg.3(1)9(a), reg.4(2) and reg.5(1) of  the Confined Spaces Regulations 1997. It was fined a total of £20,000  and ordered to pay £23,000 in costs.
After the hearing, inspector  Cory added: “All employers involved in confined-space working must  consider their activities properly, train and equip staff sufficiently,  and reduce and control risks as much as possible. All confined-space  work is high risk and, if not properly controlled, can go badly wrong,  very quickly.”
Source: SHP 19-3-13
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