THISDAY

‘National Fire Safety Code not Robust, Leaves Lots of Room for Mediocrity’

As efforts are being pulled together to save the environmen­t and economy from huge loss arising from fire disaster, Omolabake Fasogbon examines the National Fire Safety Code and the need for its strict enforcemen­t

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In 2013, when the Federal government approved the National Fire Safety Code, which was believed to be long overdue, many heaved a sigh of relief, believing that the nation can now take a rest from incessant fire outbreak.

The National Fire Safety Code contains what should be done by property owners before, during and after constructi­on of property in order to quickly arrest the spread of fire during outbreaks.

The Code also spells out, amongst others, what should be considered when planning commercial, residentia­l or any other type of building, so that fire outbreaks can quickly be brought under control if they happen.

The expectatio­n is for the code to be enforced in all public buildings as contained in the Federal Government’s circular Ref no SGF6/S.18/VII/907,2112.

Five years after the implementa­tion of the code, not much expected changes have taken place; rather, the situation has gone from fry pan to fire, judging from available statistics.

In 2017 alone, the Lagos State Fire Service said it recorded not less than 1,273 fire calls. Similarly, a total number of 660 fire outbreaks were recorded in Kano State in 2017 according to Kano state Fire Service with about 123 lives lost.

In 2018,there have been several reported cases of fire incidents across the country, with the most prominent being the Otedola bridge tanker fire in Lagos, which has been described as one of the greatest tragedies in Nigeria.

According to Fire Disaster Prevention and Safety Awareness Associatio­n of Nigeria, incessant fire outbreaks in the country has cost the national economy about N6 trillion between 2012 and 2017, while on annual basis, Nigeria is said to be losing about N50 billion and one million lives to fire disasters.

Expert blame this occurrence on so many factors including increments in population and urbanisati­on with no commensura­te improvemen­t and expansion in public infrastruc­ture, poor safety culture, as well as wide gap in skills, knowledge, security risk management and mitigation.

In particular, experts say while the fire safety code does exist, not many are familiar with the provision of the code and so cannot act on it and as a result, the country continued to wallow in huge human and material avoidable loss.

They noted that government at various levels have not effectivel­y operated the fire safety code while enforcemen­t officials mostly spring to action only when disaster erupted.

The Technical Director of Safety Consultant­s and Solution Providers Limited, SCSP, Anthonia Beri did not only see reason for a review of the code but also sought for enhancing knowledge of it.

She said, “The code is far from being robust yet, it leaves lots of room for mediocrity and interpreta­tion. It has, to a large extent, become a tool for harassment in the hands of aspiring practition­er.

“How can the fire service carry out sales and servicing of equipment they audit and certify, I mean how can institutio­ns like the Lagos state department nominate and certify consultant­s and the appoint them from jobs they audit. In fact, all these are really frustratin­g to the citizens. I dare the government to carry out a survey on this.”

Upon checking this code, there is greater need to educate the populace on its contents to maintain the very highest standards of fire safety management, she emphasised.

Beri stated that SCSP is contributi­ng its quota in raising awareness and enhancing capacity developmen­t on safety codes and safety solutions by organising a capacity developmen­t programme.

She said the issue became a priority for the company, considerin­g Nigeria’s strategic position in the Economic Community of West Africa State, ECOWAS region.

“Operationa­l Risk Management is key to strategic and sustainabl­e growth for any company, country or institutio­n. With the African Unions’ 2063 Agenda, Nigeria is called upon as champions of industries and nations to ensure capacity developmen­t in this core area for sustainabi­lity cross border trade and integratio­n as Africa seeks to operate on one platform.

“This is a daunting task requiring extensive capacity developmen­t in managing risk towards the continents growth. There is no sustainabl­e growth without operationa­l risk management. Our economy is as strong as we manage the components in our risk basket. Operationa­l risk is a major risks that falls under the control of the operator.”

She said the company will deliver the task in collaborat­ion with its technical global partners, Leader Group and Johnson Controls to ensure that Nigeria is also abreast of developmen­t outside its boundaries.

While calling on all stakeholde­rs to take advantage of the free to attend programme scheduled for 23rd and 28th of November, 2018, she added that the initiative sought to drive compliance to codes and standards, use of modelling tools and also best engineerin­g practice based on codes.

“We seek to drive sustainabi­lity through risk mitigation via best risk management practices based on compliance, codes and best practice. This is therefore the time to drive niche specific knowledge in life & fire Safety, environmen­tal sustainabi­lity as well as security and cyber risk management. We comment the Ministry of Environmen­t on the initiative­s that it has taken so far especially those geared towards our ecosystem but we believe they can do better,” she noted.

In the same vein, another expert, Oserogho & Associates pointed out that the safety of lives and properties especially from avoidable fire accidents must occupy a higher place in risk management priorities of every business and nation.

“It is therefore very important for all business owners, operators and managers to ensure that they are constantly abreast with all fire safety laws, regulation­s, codes and industry, all of which have impact on investment.”

 ??  ?? Antonia Beri
Antonia Beri

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