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Excavation work exposed Eddie Stobart staff to asbestos

eddie stobart
An Eddie Stobart lorry (Photo 43520881 © Brett Critchley | Dreamstime.com)

Excavation work exposed staff at one of logistics company Eddie Stobart’s sites to asbestos.

The firm has received a £133,000 fine for a series of failures during the excavation work at its rail and container freight port in Widnes.

An investigation by the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) found that no asbestos survey had been carried out. The workers involved had not received any training in relation to asbestos, and Eddie Stobart failed to report the incident correctly.

Asbestos in surface material

Manchester Magistrates Court heard that in early 2018, the company earmarked an area of its Mersey Multimodal Gateway in Widnes for the storage of empty containers. After heavy lift loaders used to move containers damaged the ground, the company decided to scrape away the top layer to reach an older, more level surface below.

This work took place over several months and subsequently the remnants of old buildings containing asbestos were present in the surface material. Underground basement cavities were also found and excavated and then backfilled with rubble. Several workers complained about the dust created by these processes and what it may contain.

An investigation by HSE found an asbestos survey had not been carried prior to the work beginning to determine if any of the excavated material contained asbestos.

A risk assessment had not been carried out nor suitable control measures put in place to prevent or reduce exposure to asbestos or prevent the spread of asbestos-containing materials from the site. The workers involved in the excavation work had not received any training in relation to asbestos.

It was several months after the work had been completed that testing was carried out and the subsequent survey identified ACMs in the mounds of spoil, as well as scattered around the footprint where the work had taken place.

The company then failed to report the incident under the Reporting of Injuries, Diseases and Dangerous Occurrences Regulations 2013 (RIDDOR) within the 10-day time frame required.

Guilty plea

Eddie Stobart Ltd, of Stretton Green Distribution Park, Langford Way, Appleton, Warrington, Cheshire, pleaded guilty to breaching Regulation 5 of The Control of Asbestos Regulations 2012 and Regulation 11(1) of The Control of Asbestos Regulations 2012. The company was fined £133,000 and ordered to pay costs of £9,260 on 4 November 2022.

HSE Inspector Stuart Wood said: “Asbestos was historically used in countless applications and can be found in a variety of places.

“The law requires businesses undertaking work in demolition, maintenance or any other work which exposes, or is liable to expose, employees to asbestos to assume ACMs are present unless you have evidence, such as an asbestos survey to indicate otherwise.

“The duty to manage asbestos relates to entire premises, including yard areas, not just buildings. There is no safe level of exposure to asbestos.”

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