1. Equipment failures and their contribution to industrial incidents and accidents in the manufacturing industry
- Author
-
François Gauthier, Dominic Bourassa, and Georges Abdul-Nour
- Subjects
Paper ,Safety Management ,Engineering ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,Poison control ,02 engineering and technology ,Occupational safety and health ,Manufacturing ,Manufacturing Industry ,021105 building & construction ,Injury prevention ,Forensic engineering ,Accidents, Occupational ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Safety, Risk, Reliability and Quality ,050107 human factors ,Trauma Severity Indices ,business.industry ,05 social sciences ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Human factors and ergonomics ,Equipment failure ,Risk analysis (engineering) ,Accidental ,Equipment Failure ,business ,Safety Research ,Material handling - Abstract
Accidental events in manufacturing industries can be caused by many factors, including work methods, lack of training, equipment design, maintenance and reliability. This study is aimed at determining the contribution of failures of commonly used industrial equipment, such as machines, tools and material handling equipment, to the chain of causality of industrial accidents and incidents. Based on a case study which aimed at the analysis of an existing pulp and paper company's accident database, this paper examines the number, type and gravity of the failures involved in these events and their causes. Results from this study show that equipment failures had a major effect on the number and severity of accidents accounted for in the database: 272 out of 773 accidental events were related to equipment failure, where 13 of them had direct human consequences. Failures that contributed directly or indirectly to these events are analyzed.
- Published
- 2016