A Tauranga-based stevedoring company has been ordered to pay a fine of $90,000 and costs of $20,000 for safety failings
which resulted in an excavator being dropped overboard from a logging ship in 2018.
C3 Limited had previously pleaded guilty to a charge of breaching its duties under the Health and Safety at Work Act
2015 and was sentenced Friday, 4 February in the Wellington District Court.
Maritime NZ’s Central Compliance Manager, Blair Simmons, says that the incident, which took place at Wellington’s
Centreport on June 2, 2018, was particularly disappointing given it followed a similar incident at Northport in 2017 where it was incredibly lucky that no-one was injured. The previous incident resulted in a prosecution of C3 Limited
and another person, with C3 being convicted and fined $240,000.
“The excavator, which was being moved between two cargo holds where it was being used to load logs, fell from its
lifting arrangement attached to the ship’s crane, hit the side of the ship and fell into the water” Blair Simmons says.
The Maritime NZ investigation found several factors contributed to incident:C3’s standard operating procedure (SOP) for lifting heavy machinery was not developed or reviewed by a qualified
engineerthe lifting technique C3 was using has been identified as poor practice and is no longer being used by other stevedoring
companies in New Zealandworkers were not properly trained in the procedurethe lifting lugs that were fixed to the excavator were not certifiedC3 did not have a system in place for regularly testing and monitoring its workers’ hearing and vision to ensure they
were fit to operate machinery such as cranes.
Mr Simmons says the sentencing highlights the importance of staying up to date with industry best practice and having
strong training and health and safety systems in place.
“While no single factor can be identified as the cause of the incident, there were clearly several serious health and
safety failings that needed to be urgently addressed.”
C3 were charged under section 49 of the Health and Safety at Work Act 2015 for a failure to comply with duties under
sections 36(1), 36(2), 36(3).