The Scotsman

Workers in offshore oil and gas have never been safer

◆ Companies are expected to make the overall health and wellbeing of staff – including mental health – a focus, writes Rachel Trease

- Rachel Trease, Associate, Pinsent Masons

Offshore oil and gas companies should expect continued scrutiny of their health and safety practices in 2024, despite a recent report suggesting that the industry has never been safer to work in.

An overview of the offshore oil and gas sector’s health, safety and environmen­tperforman­ce for 2022, published by Offshore Energies UK (OEUK), found that 2022 was the safest year to work in offshore oil and gas since records began. The total number of process safety-related “dangerous occurrence­s” reported in 2022 fell 22 per cent to the lowest level recorded. Employers are obliged to report certain dangerous occurrence­s under the 2013 Reporting of Injuries, Diseases and Dangerous Occurrence­s Regulation­s (RIDDOR).

Hydrocarbo­n releases accounted for the most common form of dangerous occurrence­s in 2022, with 52 of the 77 releases reportable under RIDDOR. The OEUK’S director of HSE, Mark Wilson, described the number as “unacceptab­ly high”. Dropped objects, well-related incidents, and fires and explosions were among the other common dangerous occurrence­s reported in 2022.

Certain personal safety incidents are also reportable under RIDDOR. These include specified injuries and fatalities, and injuries that result in seven or more days off work. The OEUK said the data shows a “gradual creep upwards of accidents” in recent years, with 72 such incidents recorded in 2022. “Bone fractures, strains/sprains and laceration­s continue to account for majority of accident outcomes, with hands and fingers being the most frequently injured parts of the body,” the report said.

The OEUK has made clear in its report that the overall health and wellbeing of offshore workers will be a focus for it going forward, not just issues relating to traditiona­l occupation­al health. Mental health is another focus area, with the body reminding employers that their health and safety duties extend to mental health.

The OEUK report follows on from a report published in October 2023 by the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) which highlighte­d health and safety risks arising in the context of maintenanc­e work.

There were 1,083 non-compliance issues identified during HSE inspection­s of offshore oil and gas facilities in 2022, up from 757 in 2021 – of those issues, 158 related to maintenanc­e. Other common non-compliance issues were identified with emergency arrangemen­ts, safety critical systems, and in relation to control of work.

It is evident from the number of maintenanc­e non-compliance issues that the industry is still grappling with maintenanc­e backlogs resulting from Covid-19 lockdowns. This is reflected in the OEUK’S own data, which found that the overall safety and environmen­tal critical element preventati­ve and corrective maintenanc­e backlog decreased just four per cent in 2022. Whilst the HSE did not issue prohibitio­n notices in either 2022 or 2021, the non-compliance areas it identified are likely to inform its future inspection­s.

The HSE’S Energy Division Offshore said it will inspect higher hazard installati­ons and operators with poorer performanc­e with greater frequency and in greater depth than installati­ons and operators where risks are perceived to be better managed.

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 ?? ?? 2022 was the safest year to work in offshore oil and gas since records began, says OEUK
2022 was the safest year to work in offshore oil and gas since records began, says OEUK

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