Why safety must remain first April 1st 2008
Health and safety in the industrial truck arena continues to
be the key message from the British Industrial Truck
Association (BITA), the UK's dynamic trade association
representing forklift truck manufacturers, suppliers,
service providers and media including Handling &
Storage Solutions. James Clark, BITA's secretary general,
reiterates why it must always be "safety first" and
highlights what BITA is doing to keep it that way
BITA provides numerous valuable
services to its members, including
producing UK industrial truck sales
statistics but it has also taken up the
challenge of keeping "safety first" for
industrial truck operators - and has pledged
to continue to push this message
throughout 2008.
The latest sales figures, released in
February, show that industrial trucks are a
key component keeping warehouses
flowing smoothly and that's why
professionalism within the industry, and
making sure safety is a number one priority
for all BITA's members, must be a key
message this year.
As the professional body representing 82
members, BITA has a duty to make sure it
leads the field in promoting the health and
safety at work message to its members
especially as recent figures from the HSE
have revealed that on average forklift trucks
are involved in 24% of all workplace
transport accidents.
Industrial truck users face hazards that
even the highest manufacturing
technologies cannot eliminate the Health
& Safety Executive (HSE) recorded 21,190
injuries involving forklift trucks between
2001/2002 and 2005/2006, of which 94
were fatal but safety can be managed in,
through initial operator training and then
by the continual reinforcement and
application of best practice.
Keeping safety in the back pocket
To this end, BITA has produced a series of
freshly packaged pocket-sized definitive
books on safety. In the average industrial
truck's operator environment, space to
carry bulky reference materials which
consolidate 'best practice', is limited. Truck
users and manufacturers alike increasingly
rely on BITA's pocket-sized operator safety
booklets to help them work safely and
efficiently.
BITA saw that what was needed was a
portable best practice guide that operators
themselves can carry with them for instant
reference and checklists before starting
work and to account for all eventualities
during the working day.
The contents of our safety booklets
should be observed as the Highway Code is
observed on the roads. The BITA booklets
are also valuable as an aide-mιmoire for
users who adopt a continuous 'on-the-job'
approach to Operator Training, which
increases accountability.
The BITA booklets represent a distillation
of more than 50 years' wisdom in the safe
and efficient operation of industrial trucks,
tracing their lineage back to the BITA Safety
Code for Powered Industrial Trucks, first
published in 1954, then enlarged and fully
revised in 1970 to become the BITA
Operator's Safety Code for Powered
Industrial Trucks (known as the 'green book'
for the colour of its cover).
Since then the 'green book' has enjoyed
continued updates to reflect evolution in
products, applications and legislation, and
now includes guidance on the rules
applying to forklift trucks used on public
roads.
In 1985, BITA created a separate guide,
the Operator's Safety Code for Rough
Terrain Lift Trucks (the 'red book'),
recognising that this new and fast-growing
product sector required individual
treatment.
In 1991, BITA created a third publication
in response to the European Machinery
Directive (89/655/EEC) and subsequent
amending directives, which specified the
need to specify details of all aspects of
operation that must be done, and those
which must not be done.
BITA's Dos and Don'ts for Users of
Industrial and Rough Terrain Lift Trucks (the
'blue book') is now in its eleventh printing,
and revisions will continue in line with the
current Machinery Directive (98/37/EC), and
the revised Machinery Directive
(2006/42/EC) that comes into effect in 2009.
The fourth BITA safety guide is Stability
Awareness for Powered Industrial Rough
Terrain Lift Trucks (the 'yellow book'), which
debuted in 1990.
BITA also sells its booklets to end-user
organisations seeking to ensure the safe use
of fork-lift trucks in their everyday business.
These are available to order online at
www.bita.org.uk or by phone on 01344 623
800 BITA members receive a 20%
discount.
There are also significant sales to
industrial truck manufacturers themselves.
BITA members Merlo, for example, provide
copies of BITA's 'red book' and 'blue book'
with every handler.
Of course, safety starts with a safe
vehicle, and all industrial trucks are subject
to inspection under the Provision and Use
of Work Equipment Regulations 1998
(PUWER 98 regulation 6); no further
investigations are required for low lift
trucks (i.e. which lift only to a height
sufficient for horizontal travel, e.g. pallet
stillage trucks) and low-lift order pickers
(with a maximum operator platform height
of 900mm).
All other lift truck types also require a
Thorough Examination - according to the
Lifting Operations and Lifting Equipment
Regulations 1998 (LOLER 98 regulation 9).
Thorough Examination checks are similar to
car and commercial vehicle MOT tests
and must be carried out on a regular basis,
in addition to regular servicing.
Like an MOT, it is distinct from any
maintenance procedure, and is a legal
requirement that applies to every fork-lift
truck in service, including hired trucks.
Unlike an MOT however, it applies to trucks
as little as one year old. Significantly, the
user is responsible for ensuring that the
truck has been tested and examined.
As BITA's Guidance Note GN28, Thorough
Examination and Safety Inspections of
Industrial Lift Trucks, explains, competent
persons carrying out thorough examination
and safety inspections should meet the
requirements of BS EN ISO 17020:2004. For
peace of mind and full legal compliance
operators can choose a Thorough
Examination provider accredited by the
CFTS Thorough Examination scheme, in
which BITA is a joint stakeholder. See
www.thoroughexamination.org for more
details.
Additionally, BITA has worked with the
BSI to create a concise safety guidance
specification the Publicly Available
Specification' PAS 90 to ensure the safety
of engineers working on site. This single
safety policy is a recognised specification
containing the minimum safety
requirements applicable to service
engineers working on customer sites. It
replaces proliferation of passport systems in
an aim to simplify health and safety on site
and makes the system more user-friendly,
and, crucially, more effective.
Looking into the crystal ball
Being able to forecast sales for the coming
year will always be welcome in any
industry, and with the growing threat of
economic decline, BITA has revealed it is
exploring the provision of economic
forecasting which will hopefully be
available to members in the near future.
This will be major new benefit for BITA
members, allowing them to predict the
future as much as one can do without the
aid of a crystal ball.
The peace of mind this service will offer
is invaluable. It is highly probable BITA will
be able to reveal full details of this service
at some point before our AGM in May. It
will give BITA great pleasure to be able to
offer a small amount of reassurance to our
members during a period of economic
uncertainty.
Safety, sales, success....
Knowledge of market trends is crucial for
any business, but in the UK, BITA is the sole
provider of industrial truck sales statistics,
contributed by BITA members. BITA thus
holds a unique repository of information on
the current state and historical trends of
the UK fork-lift market.
Details of UK orders and deliveries are
reported every month by members of BITA's
Truck Suppliers' Group (TSG), using
exclusive secure PC software. Aggregated
monthly and year-to-date figures are made
available on a confidential basis to all
contributing TSG members. Members of
BITA's Components & Services Group also
receive a monthly statistical overview, with
the option to purchase more detailed
information as required.
BITA members are thus equipped with
vital knowledge of how the market is
moving a real asset when planning
production levels for the year ahead.
The stable sales figures reported for
2007 reflect the importance of the forklift
in the logistics chain. The trend of contract
hire departments to keep a young fleet of
two years old or less, as well as the
recognised value of the modern forklift
truck in making sure warehouses run
smoothly, are both thought to be behind
the continued steady growth in sales.
The large supermarket, department store
and DIY chains, for example, know they
could not operate efficiently without high
quality, modern forklift trucks to move their
goods easily from truck to pallet proving
they are a vital cog in the wheel of the
modern day supply chain.
Although not quite the record figures of
2005, figures to the end of 2007 show a
stable market which continues to thrive.
Sales increased by 3%, with just under
31,000 units sold the fourth consecutive
year in which more than 30,000 trucks
were ordered from UK suppliers.
Looking ahead to 2008's final figures, it
is difficult to predict the likely strength of
the UK forklift truck market at a time when
business confidence in some sectors is not
as strong as it has been.
However, the market has shown a good
degree of resilience over recent years.
Although BITA expects 2008 to be a
challenging year for its members, we
expect it to be another rewarding year.
Over the year, orders for low level order
pickers saw the most impressive increase,
with just under 2,200 orders placed an
increase of 25% over the year. The number
of engine counterbalance trucks ordered in
the UK also fared well, with a 2.3% rise in
2007, while the warehouse truck market
grew by 4.9% over the same period.
However the market volume increases
have been in specific product areas rather
than across all truck types generally, with
2007 showing some very different patterns
and some areas have seen a slight
downturn.
Orders for reach trucks fell by 7%, while
orders for powered pallet trucks fell to
5800, a drop of 8.7% from 2006 figures
although 2006 was a record year which
means comparisons may not be indicative
of the overall market.
All BITA's activities and services can be
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