Hawke's Bay Today

Firm fined over fire

Engineerin­g company penalised $48,000 after blaze breaks out on container ship

- Ric Stevens, Open Justice

The owner of an engineerin­g company has been fined $48,000 after molten material from his workers’ gascutting equipment started a fire in the hold of a ship.

Kerry Tong, of Napier, the sole director of KR Tong Engineerin­g, has also been ordered to pay $4000 in emotional harm reparation to a man considered a victim in the case, identified in court as one of his staff.

Tong appeared in the Napier District Court last month charged with exposing an individual to a risk of harm, laid under the Health and Safety at Work Act 2015.

The charge was laid by Maritime New Zealand following the blaze in the hold of the Kota Bahagia during the unloading of wind turbine components at the Port of Napier in December 2020.

At the height of the blaze, residents on nearby Bluff Hill were warned to keep doors and windows closed due to potentiall­y toxic fumes, and it took firefighte­rs six days to finally extinguish the fire.

A Transport Accident Investigat­ion Commission inquiry found that molten material ejected by gascutting activities on the ship very probably ignited dry sawdust or wood shavings in the hold, creating a fire which spread to other flammable materials.

Tong’s employees were using gascutters to remove metal braces which had kept the cargo in place during the ship’s voyage from China, where the wind turbine components had been loaded.

No one was physically injured and Tong was not on board the vessel when the fire broke out.

However, Maritime NZ’s manager of regulatory operations, John Maxwell, said Tong failed to ensure appropriat­e resources and processes were in place to minimise the fire risk.

As director of the company, he needed to ensure his people worked in a way to keep themselves and those in the vicinity safe, Maxwell said.

“He needed to ensure his company acquired and kept up to date with the standards and guidance required relating to safety procedures with hot works. He didn’t do so.”

Maxwell said Tong should have completed thorough safety checks, and full site and risk assessment­s. He should have placed a fire-watcher on board, and made sure fire blankets were available and used effectivel­y.

“Undertakin­g these steps would have reduced the potential of the fire starting and spreading,” Maxwell said.

“Due to the fire occurring in a confined space on the vessel, it posed a significan­t risk to the safety of the employees of Mr Tong, the stevedores, the crew, and all others in the vicinity.”

Judge Gordon Matenga also ordered Tong to pay $2500 in court costs.

 ?? ?? Open Justice — Te Pātiti, a Public Interest Journalism initiative funded through NZ on Air
Open Justice — Te Pātiti, a Public Interest Journalism initiative funded through NZ on Air
 ?? Photo / Paul Taylor ?? Firefighte­rs tackle the blaze on the Kota Bahagia at the Port of Napier in December 2020.
Photo / Paul Taylor Firefighte­rs tackle the blaze on the Kota Bahagia at the Port of Napier in December 2020.

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