Business Standard

99 fatalities at eight Sensex firms in FY17

- AMRITHA PILLAY

Sustainabi­lity reports submitted by some of India’s large companies throw light on safety standards at plants as well as on the number of fatalities.

Eight of the 30 companies in the BSE Sensex that shared data reported 99 fatalities in 2016-17 against 86 in the previous year.

These lives were lost due to industrial accidents at manufactur­ing facilities. Fatalities owing to road accidents were excluded from the count. These eight companies together employed about 880,000 employees in the last financial year.

Banking, financial services, software companies and firms where fatalities data was not shared were excluded from the BSE Sensex companies list as of March 2017.

Engineerin­g conglomera­te Larsen & Toubro (L&T), Tata Motors, Mahindra & Mahindra, state-run miner Coal India, Dr Reddy’s Laboratori­es, port operator Adani Ports and Special Economic Zone, steelmaker Tata Steel, and consumer products manufactur­er ITC are the eight companies whose sustainabi­lity reports were examined.

Two of the eight companies did not share any comment on the story. Concerned spokespers­ons for L&T, M&M, ITC, Dr. Reddys, Tata Steel and Tata Motors in their response added the companies remain committed towards preventive actions and avoiding similar fatalities in future through various safety measures.

The eight companies in reference are a small sample and also likely to have the best safety standards in the country.

Data shared by the Ministry of Labour and Employment with the Lok Sabha pegs the number of fatal workplace injuries at 1,135 for the year 2016. Of these, Gujarat reported the highest number of fatal injuries at 272 in 2016. The number of non-fatal injuries across India in the same year was 5,309, the ministry said.

“If we are to analyse the safety performanc­e statistics of the top firms and see them performing only average on this front, then the performanc­e of Tier II and Tier III companies will be even less encouragin­g,” said Yasir Ahmad, partner, sustainabi­lity and responsibl­e business advisory, PwC.

“India’s working conditions can definitely improve. Such data needs to be periodical­ly studied and there needs to be some impetus from companies to improve this metric,” said Shriram Subramania­n, managing director at proxy advisory firm InGovern.

Of the eight companies, Coal India reported the largest number of fatalities at 56 lives lost in 2016 and 38 lost in 2015. The labour ministry has in the past admitted to safety issues at certain coal mines in India.

“Contract labour is a fluctuatin­g workforce, and are often less trained on safety aspects. This could explain the reason why they often scores low on safety performanc­e statistics,” Ahmad said.

According to the labour ministry’s response to a question in Parliament in April 2017, the number of contract labourers employed in the Centre and central public sector undertakin­gs was 1.84 million.

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 ?? ILLUSTRATI­ON: AJAY MOHANTY ??
ILLUSTRATI­ON: AJAY MOHANTY

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