Head Of Training, The Healthy Work Company

October 1, 2014

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Rolls Royce to pay £377k in radiation case

Rolls Royce Marine Power Operations Ltd has been fined £200,000 and ordered to pay costs of £176,500 following the loss of a radioactive source at its plant in Derby. HSE said that the company had failed in its duty of care after it lost control of the source.

The company, a subsidiary of Rolls Royce plc, which manufactures components for nuclear submarines, uses radioactive sources (containing Ytterbium -169) in their industrial radiography work to test that welds are perfect.

Leicester Crown Court heard that significant failings led to a radioactive source (a capsule which was the size of a small screw) being lost for approximately five hours at the Sinfin Lane site on 3 March 2011.

This resulted in a number of workers at the site being exposed to high levels of gamma radiation, in some cases many times in excess of relevant legal dose limits.

It prompted a joint investigation by HSE and the Environment Agency, who jointly prosecuted the company, after serious concerns were identified.

The court was told that at around 5am on the day of the incident the source was being used in a purpose-built radiography enclosure. During the work the source capsule became detached from its holder, was lost out of the end of the guide tube being used and ended up inside the component being tested. The loss of the source was not detected by the safety features of the radiography enclosure or by the radiographer in charge of the work.

The loss of the radioactive source was discovered when welders working on the component in the clean room spotted the capsule and removed it for examination, passing it amongst themselves. The radiographers returned for their next shift at this point and after some initial confusion, which involved some of them directly handling the capsule, they correctly identified the object as a radioactive source. The room was cleared, the radioactive source recovered and the area made safe.

The subsequent investigation by HSE and the Environment Agency found that:

  • The workers’ hand exposure to radiation was considerably in excess of the annual permitted dose of 500 millisieverts. In some cases it was exceeded by up to 32 times the permitted amount.
  • The company failed to ensure that a suitable and sufficient risk assessment was in place for the gamma radiography work carried out on site.
  • There were inadequate procedures and deficiencies in training which led to Rolls Royce Marine Power Operations Ltd failing to ensure that robust and effective controls were in place to manage the risk of using high activity radioactive sources.
  • The radiation monitoring equipment was not well understood and failed to detect where the radioactive source was at all times, which is an essential requirement when carrying out radiography work.

Rolls Royce Marine Power Operations Ltd, of Moor Lane, Derby, pleaded guilty to breaching sections 2(1) and 3(1) of the Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974, regulation 3(1)(a) of the Management of Health and Safety at Work Regulations 1999, regulation 11 of the Ionising Radiation Regulations 1999 and three counts of breaching regulation 38(2) of the Environmental Permitting Regulations 2010.

Speaking after the hearing, David Orr, HSE’s specialist inspector of radiation, said: “Industrial radiography carries a greater risk of radiation exposure compared to other industrial uses of radioactive sources by nature of the very high activity sources used. HSE expects companies carrying out such work to have robust safety systems and procedures in place to protect employees during normal work and following a radiation accident such as the detachment of the radioactive source.

“Gamma radiation emitted by this type of radioactive source is harmful to human health. Rolls Royce is fully aware of the danger it poses and has a clear duty to protect staff from harm. However the company failed its duty of care on this occasion, losing control of the source without realising it.

“There was no effective surveillance of it for five hours and the exposure of workers to radiation, including some who were not involved in the industrial radiography work, was considerably in excess of the annual permitted dose.”

Mark Haslam, area environment manager for the Environment Agency, said “Our overriding aim in regulating the use of radioactive materials is to ensure their safe management and control to protect the public and the wider environment from the harmful effects of radiation.

“For us, the most important thing is that the company has learnt the lessons from this and put improvements in place to ensure this does not happen again.”

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