Sponsored By

Enclosed spaces remain serious safety hazard for seafarers: InterManagerEnclosed spaces remain serious safety hazard for seafarers: InterManager

Enclosed Space Entry remains one of the gravest onboard safety hazards facing seafarers today, Capt. Kuba Szymanski, secretary general of trade association InterManager, reiterated to delegates attending the International Shipowning and Shipmanagement Summit at this year’s London International Shipping Week.

Bob Jaques, Former Editor

September 11, 2019

1 Min Read
Kalyakan - stock.adobe.com

InterManager earlier this year conducted a three-month survey on the issue, he related, receiving data from almost 250 ships representing more than 5,000 seafarers.

Responses showed that the issue was far from solved, he said, with “numerous factors” reported to be contributing to incidence of perfectly healthy crew members setting off to inspect confined spaces aboard ship only never to return.

Szymanski pointed to safety culture failures, both ashore and onboard, in allowing such dangerous missions to take place, as well as ship design features themselves such as L-shaped tanks with only one probe located near the entrance which couldn’t determine the entire space was gas free.

InterManager will now continue its campaign to highlight the issue, he said, seeking to involve other industry stakeholders as well.

Meanwhile Szymanski showed enthusiasm for a new gas-freeing solution aiming to reduce enclosed space risk that was presented on Tuesday.

Read more about:

Intermanager

About the Author

Bob Jaques

Former Editor

Bob Jaques is a former editor of Seatrade Maritime Review magazine and has over 20 years of experience as a maritime journalist and moderator of shipping conferences.

Bob is an English literature graduate from the University of York with a postgraduate Diploma in Management Studies from Birkbeck College, University of London. He worked as an aerospace and media journalist in Geneva before joining Seatrade in the 1990s.

Bob is a past winner of the Seahorse ‘Journalist of the Year’ and ‘Best Feature Article’ Awards.

Get the latest maritime news, analysis and more delivered to your inbox
Join 12,000+ members of the maritime community

You May Also Like