Latest HSE Statistics YTD
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2014
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2015
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Workplace fatalities |
0 |
0 |
Non-work related fatalities |
0 |
0 |
Non-accidental deaths (NADs) |
0 |
0 |
Lost Time Injuries (LTIs) |
0 |
0 |
All injuries (excluding first aid cases) |
0 |
0 |
Motor Vehicle Incidents (MVIs) |
0 |
0 |
Roll over - MVIs |
0 |
0 |
Serious MVIs |
0 |
0 |
Lost Time Injury Frequency (LTIF) |
0 |
0 |
Life Saving Rules Violations YTD
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Journey management
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0
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Speeding/GSM
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0
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Seatbelts
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0
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Overriding safety device
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0
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Working at heights
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0
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Permit
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0
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Confined space
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0
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Lock out tag out
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0
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Drugs and alcohol
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0
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Gas testing
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0
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Smoking
|
0
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Suspended Load
|
0
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Vehicle Class A/B Defect YTD
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Important News
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Facts about water
The Qur’an, Chapter 21, Verse 30 states: “We Made from Water Every Living-thing”. Water is life. It’s vital for our existence. It supports the immense diversity of life on Earth. It’s a source of food, health and energy. Fresh water makes civilization possible. But fresh water, in turn, isn’t possible without a healthy planet – and human actions are putting a healthy planet at risk.
Water covers approximately 70 percent of the Earth’s surface, out of which only 2.5 % is freshwater. Most freshwater occurs in the form of permanent ice or snow, locked up at the poles,
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or in deep underground aquifers that are inaccessible to humans.The principal sources of water for human use are lakes, rivers, soil moisture, and relatively shallow underground basins. The usable and accessible portion of these sources is less than 1 % of all freshwater.
On a global average, drinking and sanitation require approximately 10% of the fresh water supplies, while industry, recreation, and other uses comprise about 20 %. Irrigation, which accounts for 70 % of all the water extracted from rivers, lakes, and aquifers, is by far the most intensive use of the world’s fresh water resources.
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What You Need to Know
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- Report all significant water losses (broken pipes, open hydrants, errant sprinklers, abandoned free-flowing wells, etc.) to the property manager, property owner, local authority etc.
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Conduct Water Audits - investigation of the types of systems or process which use water, the volume consumed and measures that can be implemented either through changing the equipment, processes or practices to reduce usage.
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