HCB Magazine December 2020

Page 6

04

30 YEARS AGO A LOOK BACK AT DECEMBER 1990

HCB has written extensively over the past few years about the dangers posed by mis-declared and undeclared dangerous goods in the maritime supply chain, following a significant number of serious fires aboard containerships. Readers may perhaps be surprised to learn that this phenomenon is nothing new. Back in December 1990, Michael Newbery, claims director with the West of England P&I Club, wrote about the same subject, saying: “If only port and customs officials had X-ray eyes!” One event that had prompted Newbery’s article was an incident aboard the containership Ever Group in Los Angeles earlier that year, when crew found noxious fumes coming from a container with drums of trimethyl phosphate. Although there were no injuries and little damage, the response caused the main container terminal at the port to be closed for 24 hours – a costly exercise. Newbery noted that some ports had begun to work together, using what were then new tools available through computerisation, but that – as ever – there were plenty of shippers willing to ignore the regulations in order to save time and money. And, as now, it is very hard to bring those miscreants to justice, even

Elsewhere in the December 1990 issue, HCB reported that the International Labour Organisation (ILO) had included the transport of chemicals in its new draft Convention on Safety in the Use of Chemicals at Work, using the argument that training was not covered in the UN Orange Book, though the modal transport regulations such as ADR and RID and national administrations did recognise the need to provide some direction. HCB also noted that, while the ILO Convention, adopted in June 1990, covered training for those dealing with chemicals both in the workplace and in transport, the risks posed to the two sets of workers are different: transport workers are only generally exposed to chemicals in the event of an accident and, therefore, only acute risks are relevant, whereas those who deal with chemicals on a regular basis in the workplace may need to be alert to chronic hazards. There were plenty in the industry that felt it would be appropriate for the UN Model Regulations to contain provisions on training and the Hazardous Materials Advisory Council (HMAC, now DGAC) had put forward a proposal for consideration by the UN Sub-committee of Experts during its 1991-92 biennium. As HCB said at the time, such a move would enhance the

after a major incident. “I know of only one case in 20 years when a [P&I] club has succeeded in a counter-claim against a shipper indulging in misdeclaration,” he said, worried that, without an effective incentive to stop doing it, the problem would only get worse. “I am sure that real improvements in the present situation are within our grasp if we seek solutions at the all-important port gates,” he offered, although thirty years on, those improvements are still very hard to realise.

uniformity applied by the various modal authorities and enforcement agencies, while also providing guidance to those countries that had not as yet included training requirements within their national regulations. HMAC’s proposal addressed three levels of training requirements: general awareness, function-specific training and commensurate safety training, though it did not foresee the idea of competency-based training and assessment.

HCB MONTHLY | DECEMBER 2020


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Articles inside

Joint Meeting gets to work on tanks

17min
pages 60-65

The legal view of containership fires

6min
pages 58-59

Incident Log Stem the tide

6min
pages 56-57

Conference Diary

2min
page 55

Project Brenntag shaping up

6min
pages 50-51

News bulletin – chemical distribution

5min
pages 52-54

RIPA counts US reconditioning

2min
page 49

Greif introduces new concepts

2min
page 48

Recognition for Schütz IBC

3min
page 47

Time Technoplast arrives in the US

2min
page 46

News bulletin – storage terminals

5min
pages 44-45

Vopak holds up well

2min
page 42

Power-to-methanol for North Sea Port

2min
page 43

UM Terminals centralises services

2min
page 41

Tarragona hosts Med Hub Day online

13min
pages 34-37

GPS adds to ethanol in Amsterdam

2min
page 40

Stainless tanks for Maastank

2min
page 39

Bidvest, Petredec open LPG terminal

2min
page 38

BW LPG starts LPG fuelling

2min
page 29

Tough times for Kirby Corp

2min
pages 30-31

News bulletin – tanker shipping

5min
pages 32-33

Stena, Proman add to methanol plans

3min
page 28

Making headway in hydrogen shipping

4min
pages 26-27

Odfjell eyes normalisation

2min
page 24

HGK converts for Covestro

2min
page 25

News bulletin – tanks and logistics

5min
pages 20-21

Consolidation in chemical tankers

3min
pages 22-23

Fort Vale reflects on a strange year

6min
pages 18-19

A lighter tank from Van den Bosch

3min
pages 16-17

Dachser’s links in warehousing

3min
pages 14-15

Obituary – William O’Neil

5min
pages 4-5

STC disapproves of flexis

2min
page 10

VTG adds temperature sensors

3min
page 12

ITCO reports on rule changes

6min
pages 8-9

Cotac expands depot network

2min
page 11

Letter from the editor

2min
page 3

Learning by Training

2min
page 7

30 Years Ago

2min
page 6
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