Fire hazards and control
209
➤
environmental damage from the fi re and/or fi ghting
the fi re – fi re-fi ghting water, the products of com-
bustion and exploding building materials, such as
asbestos cement roofs, can contaminate signifi cant
areas around the fi re site.
13.8
Fire risk assessment
13.8.1 General
What fi re precautions are needed depends on the risks.
There are several methods of carrying out a fi re risk
assessment, the one described below is based on the
method contained within ‘Fire Safety An Employers’
Guide’ published jointly by the Stationery Offi ce and HSE
Books. A systematic approach, considered in fi ve simple
stages, is generally the best practical method. The fi re
risk assessment under the RRFSO is separate from
the Risk assessment under the HSW Act Management
Regulations (see Chapter 5). Later guidelines may allow
a joint risk assessment in low risk premises but at the
time of writing this is not clear.
13.8.2 Stage 1 – Identify fi re hazards
There are fi ve main hazards produced by fi re that should
be considered when assessing the level of risk:
➤
oxygen
depletion
➤
fl ames and heat
➤
smoke
➤
gaseous combustion products
➤
structural failure of buildings.
Of these smoke and other gaseous combustion prod-
ucts are the most common cause of death in fi res.
For a fi re to occur it needs sources of heat and fuel.
If these hazards can be kept apart, removed or reduced,
then the risks to people and businesses are minimized.
Identify fi re hazards
in the workplace is the fi rst stage
as follows:
identify any combustibles
– Most workplaces contain
combustible materials. Usually, the presence of normal
stock in trade should not cause concern, provided the
materials are used safely and stored away from sources
of ignition. Good standards of housekeeping are essen-
tial to minimize the risk of a fi re starting or spreading
quickly.
The amount of combustible material in a workplace
should be kept as low as is reasonably practicable.
Materials should not be stored in gangways, corridors
or stairways or where they may obstruct exit doors and
routes. Fires often start and are assisted to spread by
combustible waste in the workplace. Such waste should
be collected frequently and removed from the work-
place, particularly where processes create large quanti-
ties of it.
Some combustible materials, such as fl ammable
liquids, gases or plastic foams, ignite more readily than
others and quickly produce large quantities of heat and/
or dense toxic smoke. Ideally, such materials should
be stored away from the workplace or in fi re-resisting
stores. The quantity of these materials kept or used in
the workplace should be as small as possible, normally
no more than one-half day’s supply.
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