Dear Sachin, I am trying your mobile number, but from morning 9.00 to 19.00 hrs it is out of coverage area. Hope you can recollect we have worked together. Waiting for your call. Girish V. Jagtap
From India, Pune
From India, Pune
Hi sir, i want complete information about ESH, and its legal social and ethical requirement of comapnies regarding ESH Thanx
From Pakistan, Karachi
From Pakistan, Karachi
Dear Mukesh, Please log on to CIOSHI.com . The are codnducting the best HSE course - distance learning Rergards, Kesava Pillai
From India, Kollam
From India, Kollam
Mr.Bhupesh, Your mail id is missing. Kindly provide mail id. I can suggest the best one in the field -with prolonged experiene and proven track record. Regards, K.Pillai
From India, Kollam
From India, Kollam
Dear Shrinkar,
You just refer to Factories Act and Rules to know about EHS statutesand from there you can take off. EHS manuals are prepared by each industry for their own use and it will be related to their operations only. I can guide you if you could only specify the typoe of industry you are in as to how to bring out your own manual.
Regards,
Kesava Pillai
From India, Kollam
You just refer to Factories Act and Rules to know about EHS statutesand from there you can take off. EHS manuals are prepared by each industry for their own use and it will be related to their operations only. I can guide you if you could only specify the typoe of industry you are in as to how to bring out your own manual.
Regards,
Kesava Pillai
From India, Kollam
Dear Pradeep,
Under hospitality there are many different kinds of industries like hotels, travel companies, resorts, transportation restaurants, and so on with some offering overlapping amenities. Two major safety controls in hospitality are fire prevention and emergency preparedness. However, many other including accidents prevention in general, electrical safety, prevention of slips, trips and falls hazards, hand and power tools safety, machinery safety , ladder safety, safety in material handling - both manual and mechanical, back problems, on-site driving dangers, hygiene, office safety measures and shift work adjustments also exist. In addition, many services including food preparation, housekeeping, and security are important and workers should be conversant with the many dangers that can occur while performing these functions. Managing EHS may vary from industry to industry. In case you can just specify the kind of your industry I may be able to help you with the requirement.
Regards,
Kesava Pillai
From India, Kollam
Under hospitality there are many different kinds of industries like hotels, travel companies, resorts, transportation restaurants, and so on with some offering overlapping amenities. Two major safety controls in hospitality are fire prevention and emergency preparedness. However, many other including accidents prevention in general, electrical safety, prevention of slips, trips and falls hazards, hand and power tools safety, machinery safety , ladder safety, safety in material handling - both manual and mechanical, back problems, on-site driving dangers, hygiene, office safety measures and shift work adjustments also exist. In addition, many services including food preparation, housekeeping, and security are important and workers should be conversant with the many dangers that can occur while performing these functions. Managing EHS may vary from industry to industry. In case you can just specify the kind of your industry I may be able to help you with the requirement.
Regards,
Kesava Pillai
From India, Kollam
Dear Sanjeev.ranchi
Crocodile principle on Safety / risk analysis.
In one of his publications, “Identify & Control Risk” Derek Viner uses the following illustration to discuss how we humans can contextualise risk.
“Mosquitoes & Crocodiles
We suffer irritation from a number of creepy crawly’s, but I dislike mosquitoes the most. I get bitten a lot, much more than my friends do. Mosquitoes can carry diseases such as encephalitis (a brain disease) and malaria. It is possible for me to get a very serious illness from mosquito bites but it is very unlikely. At least, where I live in the colder part of the country it is.
Now, crocodiles are something else! I don’t ever recall having been bitten by one, but I feel sure that if it did ever happen my chances of surviving would be very small indeed. I could do the heroic thing and gouge its eyes out as it carried me towards the river (that is what monkeys and baboons try to do in Africa) and hope it would drop me. If it did, I would be shaken and bitten but alive. Otherwise I would be drowned for sure.
The risk of crocodile attack is zero where I live because there aren’t any that live here. If I did expose myself to crocodile territory, however, the probability of being taken would depend on what I did to protect myself. I could avoid camping near water and avoid dangling my toes out of the boat when I was on a river.
The risk associated with crocodiles can be described as:
‘A very low probability of being bitten at all, with a slightly lower probability of dying.’
The risk associated with mosquitoes, on the other hand, can be described as:
‘A very high probability of being bitten with a very low probability of getting sick from it, and an even lower probability of dying from it.”
These statements describe the risk of injury.
Risk is a term which refers to both the probability and the seriousness of the consequence of the event being considered
Hope the above note is the one you needed.
Regards.
Kesava Pillai
From India, Kollam
Crocodile principle on Safety / risk analysis.
In one of his publications, “Identify & Control Risk” Derek Viner uses the following illustration to discuss how we humans can contextualise risk.
“Mosquitoes & Crocodiles
We suffer irritation from a number of creepy crawly’s, but I dislike mosquitoes the most. I get bitten a lot, much more than my friends do. Mosquitoes can carry diseases such as encephalitis (a brain disease) and malaria. It is possible for me to get a very serious illness from mosquito bites but it is very unlikely. At least, where I live in the colder part of the country it is.
Now, crocodiles are something else! I don’t ever recall having been bitten by one, but I feel sure that if it did ever happen my chances of surviving would be very small indeed. I could do the heroic thing and gouge its eyes out as it carried me towards the river (that is what monkeys and baboons try to do in Africa) and hope it would drop me. If it did, I would be shaken and bitten but alive. Otherwise I would be drowned for sure.
The risk of crocodile attack is zero where I live because there aren’t any that live here. If I did expose myself to crocodile territory, however, the probability of being taken would depend on what I did to protect myself. I could avoid camping near water and avoid dangling my toes out of the boat when I was on a river.
The risk associated with crocodiles can be described as:
‘A very low probability of being bitten at all, with a slightly lower probability of dying.’
The risk associated with mosquitoes, on the other hand, can be described as:
‘A very high probability of being bitten with a very low probability of getting sick from it, and an even lower probability of dying from it.”
These statements describe the risk of injury.
Risk is a term which refers to both the probability and the seriousness of the consequence of the event being considered
Hope the above note is the one you needed.
Regards.
Kesava Pillai
From India, Kollam
Hi Sachin, Can you please mail me any security policy from EHS or EHS handbook to take the reference from??
From India, Bhopal
From India, Bhopal
hi sachin,
i m planning to motivate my employees & contractor workforce to increase safety awarness among them & to give them rewards & gifts.though i hv planned some but still i would like to know how we can reward & motivate them. Budget is no constrain.
Regards,
Ms. Hansa Vyas
From India, Udaipur
i m planning to motivate my employees & contractor workforce to increase safety awarness among them & to give them rewards & gifts.though i hv planned some but still i would like to know how we can reward & motivate them. Budget is no constrain.
Regards,
Ms. Hansa Vyas
From India, Udaipur
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