Ensuring safe access to Australian domestic commercial vessels

AMSA has published a safety alert to raise awareness of the risks involved with getting on and off Australian domestic commercial vessels
AMSA has published a safety alert to raise awareness of the risks involved with getting on and off Australian domestic commercial vessels

The Australian Maritime Safety Authority (AMSA) has published a safety alert to raise awareness of the risks involved with getting on and off Australian domestic commercial vessels. Accessing a vessel while at berth is a routine activity and is sometimes taken for granted. The requirement for safe access can be overlooked, particularly where there are limited berthing options, or a vessel is only berthed for a short period. Failing to provide safe access can result in serious risk to people. This is heightened by bad weather or extreme tidal variations. Under the Australian National Law, the owner and master are responsible to ensure the safety of people boarding a domestic commercial vessel.

1 Assess the risks.
What are they? What could make them worse? What could happen to a person if things go wrong? How bad would the impact be?

2 Implement ways to control those risks.
These may include:
– Ensuring a ‘safe design’ gangway
– Securing platforms or gangways firmly and clear of the wharf edge or other potential hazards
– Limiting access in bad weather and if necessary, during extreme tidal variations
– Providing adequate lighting around the gangway, especially at night to increase visibility
– Including instructions on when and how to safely board the vessel—and when not to—in your crew safety inductions and signage. Under the general safety duties, crew, passengers and other visitors must follow these instructions
– Encouraging crew to report hazards and incidents associated with getting on and off the vessel.
– Developing emergency procedures for possible incidents associated with access to the vessel i.e. falls, person overboard.
– Ensuring crew are clear about what they need to do—if there is no safe access, do not proceed (report any issues related to safe access)
– Identifying, documenting and managing the risks will help you implement effective risk controls. These could include safe work procedures, regular inspections and maintenance of equipment, appropriate training, induction and supervision of crew.
– Document these risks and controls in your safety management system and review them periodically to make sure they are still relevant and practical.

Other factors influencing safe access

– Time and resource pressures: Rigging safe access is sometimes seen as a less important activity compared to other tasks when you berth. This can cause safe access arrangements to be rushed or overlooked Ensure enough time is given so that rigging and retrieval is done properly, and is safe.
– Wharf arrangements: When a vessel is alongside at a berth, the provision of safe access is a joint responsibility shared between the vessel and the provider of the berth. Often, it is poor wharf design that prevents landing a gangway, and this has a significant impact on the safety of access arrangements.
– Communication: This is important in identifying obstacles to safe access. Items such as water/fuel manifolds, bollards, and electrical installations on the wharf side are common obstructions and are something to consider when allocating berths to vessels. Co-ordination between shore-side and the vessel’s crew can help to mitigate these issues.
– Passenger vessels access: For passenger vessels, the provision of safe access needs to take into account that passengers may not be familiar with getting on and off vessels. The use of a single point of access may also facilitate headcounts.
– Assess the risks of rigging access: Rigging or adjusting gangways, accommodation ladders, or other access methods involves a heightened level of risk of entanglement, falling from heights, or overboard. Hence, it is also important to conduct a risk assessment of the rigging, adjusting and derigging of access equipment, including the selection of appropriate equipment and secondary means of support.

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