Industry News
Workers dig up asbestos dump
About 40 workers constructing a massive gas pipeline in remote Western Australia were undergoing medical tests after stumbling across a hidden asbestos dump.
[ + ]Petroleum safety authority gets the nod
A National Offshore Petroleum Safety Authority is on track to open its doors for business on 1 January 2005, after the Senate passed enabling legislation in the year's final sitting period.
[ + ]Ultraviolet irradiation could reduce office sickness
Sickness among millions of office workers in industrialised countries could be reduced by the use of ultraviolet radiation to kill bacteria and moulds in ventilation systems, conclude the Canadian authors of a study published in The Lancet journal.
[ + ]How safe is our food?
Between bacterial outbreaks, viral pandemics, irradiation and the continuing controversy surrounding food additives and genetic modification, it seems that the safety of what we consume regularly comes into question. The issue of food safety is a multi-faceted and cross-dimensional issue, covering many disparate areas and a plethora of often-conflicting scientific data. Since this issue affects each and every human being alive today, the question that needs to be asked is: “How safe is the food we eat?â€
[ + ]Ills of Ground Zero workers aired at hearing
At a recent congressional hearing in Manhattan, experts testified about long-term health problems among workers who inhaled fumes and dust while performing cleanup at the World Trade Center site.
[ + ]Company fined after inspection fails to pick up faults
A project management and engineering company has been fined $8000 for its role in an incident in which part of the first floor of a building under construction collapsed during a concrete pour.
[ + ]Keep your roof on this cyclone season
Cyclonic winds can batter a house with uplift forces at a typical roof truss connection equivalent to the weight of a car, which is good reason for homeowners to ensure their dwellings are up to scratch for the cyclone season, says David Henderson, the manager of James Cook University's (JCU) Cyclone Testing Station.
[ + ]Handling cash is like handling radioactive material
Handling cash is as risky as handling radioactive material, according to Security Consultant Terry Flanders who was speaking at a major workplace safety conference, recently presented by the Safety Institute of Australia.
[ + ]Finns develop bullet-proof material
The Technical Research Centre of Finland (VTT) has developed a revolutionary material that can be used for bullet-proof, anti-theft and shrapnel protection applications. The patent rights were sold to Exote Oy, a Finnish company that forecasts a multi-million dollar market for the new material. The company is planning to build a new production facility in southern Finland. The material will most likely be used to produce completely new types of structures for civil and military vehicles.
[ + ]Study to help reduce defence injuries
Preventing injuries in Australian Defence Force personnel will be the focus of a new study announced by Minister Assisting the Minister for Defence, Danna Vale.
[ + ]Disaster research centre opens
Disaster management, through the tracking of bushfires like the one that swept through Canberra suburbs at the start of 2003, will become a more accurate science with the opening of Australia’s largest commercial investment in geospatial technology.
[ + ]Safety failures should act as warning
WorkSafe has urged businesses to think of a $200,000 fine imposed on a company after a worker died as an urgent wake-up call.
[ + ]Child dies after falling from trailer
A five year old boy has died after falling from a trailer being towed by a ride-on mower at Rochester in the north of Victoria.
[ + ]Engineering researchers discover technique to improve railway safety
Engineering researchers at the University of Wollongong have discovered an innovative way of stabilising railway tracks to cater for modern high-speed trains that carry heavy loads.
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