Vehicle Rollover Incidents: European Industrial Gases Association Aisbl
Vehicle Rollover Incidents: European Industrial Gases Association Aisbl
Vehicle Rollover Incidents: European Industrial Gases Association Aisbl
SAG NL 88/09/E
Table of Contents
Vehicle Rollover Incidents in the Industrial Gases Industry ................................................... Page 1 Vehicle Rollover Causes ............................................................................................................. Page 3 Vehicle Rollover Prevention ....................................................................................................... Page 3
An ISO container unit full with liquid oxygen rolled over and caught fire. The driver sustained fatal injuries. While travelling on a 180o curved highway entrance ramp on an upward slope, the vehicle rolled over resulting in the trailer striking a concrete guard railing. The impact caused valves connecting the inner liquid vessel to the pressure building coil to sever. A violent fire occurred when the liquid oxygen stream was directed towards the vehicles engine and fuel tank. Additionally, damage to the vehicle, liquid oxygen container, and chassis resulted in a total loss.
A cylinder distribution vehicle operated by a contractor rolled over while travelling on a slip (access) road. The vehicle caught on fire at the front end destroying the cab and front third of the trailer. The fire brigade put out the fire, but the driver died in the cab. Cylinders suffered fire and/or mechanical damage. The vehicle cab was burnt out. The road was closed for about 12 hours.
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In the early hours of the morning a loaded CO2 tanker left the road and collided with a pole carrying power cables, after the driver had momentarily fallen asleep. The driver was not wearing a seat belt and died from impact with the steering wheel.
Are these one off issues or an industry problem? Road transportation is the highest risk activity we carry out in our day-to-day operations in the industrial gases industry. These risks fall into two main categories: o On the road, driving o At the customer delivery point Those at risk are the same individuals, contract and employee drivers that spend the majority of their working day unsupervised. European Industrial Gases Industry key figures 4.5 million delivery points 220,000 t/day production 10,400 delivery vehicles 530 million km/year-road transport 35 million cylinders and high volumes of bulk liquid are mostly delivered by road transport
Are these isolated events? Statistics are available for the road transport industry in the US (all industries, not just industrial gases) indicating that there are approximately 15,000 commercial vehicle roll-overs per year. 58% of these result in driver fatalities, 95% in hazardous material spills and average direct costs of $120,000 per event. Major industrial gas companies experienced between 25 and 45 rollovers per year, with similar consequences and cost before programmes were introduced to focus on prevention. In January 2008, EIGA held a Transport Symposium and invited the major industrial gas companies, hauliers and vehicle suppliers to discuss and present their experiences and their solutions.
20 15 10 5 0
Speed
Loss of Control
Fatigue
Error in Judgement
Non Preventable
Other
The studies have further shown that: o o o o Trailer high centre of gravity contribute to rollovers but are not the cause Driver fatigue and speed for conditions are the main causes of rollovers Rollovers can initiate at relatively low speeds with little or no warning to the driver Driver training programs alone have not been effective at reducing rollovers.
Systems can be fitted to the trailer or to the truck and trailer. Trailer systems are much simpler and give at least 50% of the benefit at virtually no cost option on new trailers or low cost to retrofit to older trailers. System Interventions can be recorded for later analysis with the drivers.
EIGA is a signatory to the European Road Safety Charter and is committed to improve general knowledge of road safety issues, and issuing newsletters with lessons learned from the analysis of relevant noteworthy accident reports. More information on the European Road Safety Charter can be found at http://www.erscharter.eu/ and through the European Commission Road Safety website http://ec.europa.eu/transport/road_safety/index_en.htm.
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