(Jurong Oil Rig listed on Dec 3, 2012. It was upright on Jan 15, 2013, about one and a half month after the incident. The Straits Times, Jan 16, 2013)
The brakes on one of these three legs appeared to have given way. It
caused that side of the platform to slide downwards despite that just two days
earlier, the braking system had been subjected to a load test by applying 9,000
tonnes of weight on each leg. Altogether, the three legs are designed to bear
about 40,000 tonnes.
The oil rig accident was triggered by a failed braking system. Fail-safe
mechanisms would usually kick in to lock the jacking system. For this
particular case, the safety or back-up systems may be failed or were disabled
by someone. This could possibly happen if workers were doing repair work on
these back-up systems. “Jurong oil rig” was described as one of Singapore's
worst industrial accidents in recent times.
The jackup rig involved in the accident is the Friede & Goldman
(F&G) JU-3000N. Co-designed by Jurong Shipyard and naval architecture firm
F&G. When completed, the rig could operate in waters up to 120m deep and
could drill to depths of over 9,000m. It typically took three years to build
and cost about US$220 million (S$268million).
I used to share the Piper Alpha story when conducting naval platform
engineering seminars at one stage of my career. The major oil rig accident in
the world in terms of life lost and industry impact is the offshore oil
production platform Piper Alpha, which was located in the British sector of the
North Sea oil field and operated by Occidental Petroleum. At its peak, Piper
Alpha produced 300,000 barrels (48,000 cu.m) of oil a day, or a turnover of
about $30 million (US) a day by today’s standard. On July 6, 1988, Piper Alpha
engulfed in a catastrophic fire and caused the death of 165 men (out of 226) on
board the platform itself and 2 men on board a rescue vessel. Piper Alpha was
eventually lost in a sequence of structural failures. Over and above the tragic
loss of life, the financial damage was in excess of $3 billion (US).
The investigation results revealed that the massive fire was not the
result of an unpredictable “act of God” but of an accumulation of errors and bad
decisions. Most of them were rooted in the organization, its structure,
procedures, and culture. Risk assessment (severity versus frequency) and ALARP
((minimise risk to) as low as reasonably practicable) were subsequently
introduced as part of the safety standards. The enquiry made 106
recommendations for changes to North Sea safety procedures, all of which were
accepted by industry.
The “Jurong oil rig” was reminiscent of another major industrial
accident that happened 34 years ago - The Spyros disaster. At about 2pm of 12
October 1978, Liberian-registered Greek oil tanker Spyros exploded at Jurong
shipyard, killing 76 people and injuring hundreds. It remains as Singapore's
worst accident in Singapore post-war history, in terms of lives lost. It is
also Singapore's worst industrial accident.
(Greek oil tanker Spyros exploded at Jurong shipyard. NAS 1978)
Spyros explosion occurred as about 150 workers, including women,
returned to the engine and boiler rooms of the ship after their lunch break. The
blast flung debris from the 35,600-tonne ship as far as 100 metres away and
started a flash fire that prevented dockside workers from rescuing those
trapped inside the ship. Due to the after-lunch timing, the number of
casualties increased dramatically, as many workers were returning to the repair
works. Many were burnt to death. Others suffered serious burns and inhalation
of toxic gases. One of the problems of the kin of the deceased was identifying
the bodies. Many bodies were charred beyond recognition. DNA profiling
technology in 1978 was not as what it is today.
(Injured victim rushed to hospital. NAS 1978)
(One of the problems of the kin of the deceased was identifying the bodies. NAS 1978)
An inquiry found that due to a common practice of local shipyards in
turning around ships under repair in the fastest possible time, safety
procedures especially for hot work (welding, gas cutting etc.) were generally ignored.
For Spyros, sparks from the cutting torch used during repairs, caused a fire
which ignited an explosive vapour mixture within the aft starboard fuel tank of
the vessel. The fuel tank had been contaminated by crude oil. The explosion
ruptured the common bulkhead between the tank and the engine room, releasing
the burning oil into the engine room and setting it on fire, killing the
workers there instantly.
Indeed during 1970s, safety practices in shipyards were not strongly
enforced. For Spyros case, a repair cutting tool might have caused the sparks
to ignite the vapour of the crude oil on the tanker. More safety regulations
were implemented after the disaster.
The district court findings placed the main blame on a hull fitter
whose hot work resulted in the ignition for the blast. Malaysian worker Lim
Hock Hoe was accused of using an oxyacetylene cutting torch near the aft
starboard bunker tank without any hot-work certificate. He was also accused of
applying heat to a part of the same tank before it was inspected and certified
to be free from any explosive or flammable substance and safe for the
application of heat. He was sentenced to six months’ jail for causing the death
of 76 people.
Subsequently, Lim Hock Hoe won his High Court appeal against the
conviction (The Straits Times, Feb 21, 1980). The Chief Justice, Mr Wee Chong
Jin, found there was no criminal liability on Lim’s part. However, Mr Wee told
him: “you have to live with the fact that it was your act which sparked off the
chain of events that day (Oct 12, 1978).”
As for the rest:
Jurong Shipyard was fined $20,000 and Jurong Shipyard Executive was fined
$30,000. (The Straits Times, March 20, 1979)
Shipyard's safety officer acquitted (The Straits Times, March 2, 1980)
I was a Singapore Polytechnic student at that time and joined many of
my friends to Singapore General Hospital to pay visits to the unknown injured
personnel. We met many general public at the hospital who were there to give courage
to the victims and their family members. I am quite certain that Singaporeans
were not branded as emotionless in that era. On the contrary, Singapore was a
caring society inherited from the Kampong spirit then. Somewhat 30 over years
later according to international pollster Gallup (2012), while Singapore has
developed into a first-world economy, Singapore is also the most emotionless
society in the world, beating the traditionally po-faced Georgia, Lithuania and
Russia in a survey of more than 150 nations.
(We met many unknown general public at SGH, giving courage to the victims and their family members. Singaporeans were not branded as emotionless in that era. NAS 1978)
Jurong Shipyard was absorbed under Sembcorp Marine in the later years.
34 years later, another major industrial incident happened again in the same
shipyard although it has changed owner. For Spyros incident in 1978, the
victims were mainly Singaporean. For the "Jurong oil rig" incident in
2012, the victims were mainly from India and Bangladesh who come to Singapore
to make a better life. It reflects major manpower landscape changes in the high
risk industry.
Note (10 November 2017):
According to The Straits Times November 10, 2017, Jurong shipyard was fined $400,000 over the "Jurong oil rig" incident by District Judge Adam Nakhoda on 9 November. The maximum punishment is a $500,000 fine.
Note (10 November 2017):
According to The Straits Times November 10, 2017, Jurong shipyard was fined $400,000 over the "Jurong oil rig" incident by District Judge Adam Nakhoda on 9 November. The maximum punishment is a $500,000 fine.
文中没有提到的是Spyros意外引发了新加坡全体人民的同情心,男女老少都踊跃的捐款予受害人,
ReplyDelete但受害人似乎得到的并不成比例,话说要成立一个'工业意外基金',慢慢的,一切就好像甚么都没有发生过一样,
也'故意'地被遗忘了。从此也没有人再愿意捐款了,多年之后,公益金丑闻更令人为之'顿悟'!
要做好人,Don't count on me!
李国樑先生,期望您继续探讨当年的捐款和那个“工业意外基金”....
Delete大笔捐款进了唯的口袋!
thanks for making this post lol, i needed information for my history project and i got almost all the knowledge i needed about the spyros disaster here :D
ReplyDeleteGreetings from Idaho! I'm bored to tears at work so I decided to check out your website on my iphone during lunch break.
ReplyDeleteI enjoy the knowledge you provide here and can't wait to take a look when I get home.
I'm surprised at how quick your blog loaded on my cell phone
.. I'm not even using WIFI, just 3G .. Anyhow,
wonderful blog!
当父母(官)‘含糊其辞’,大众(喉舌)‘闷不吭声’,社会的 ’失忆症‘ 已 ‘病入膏肓’,
ReplyDelete甚至曾经捐款的 ‘善长人翁’ 都 ‘不约而同’ 噤声的时候,又何苦对这 ‘难言之隐‘
’苦苦追究’ ‘穷追猛打’ 强 李兄 所难 ?也许有些时候,‘无声胜有声’,一切从自己做
起,‘画公仔不用画出场’,一切尽在不言中 !
无名氏君,当年中文报馆筹得250万,其他来源150万,共约400万。至于这笔钱如何分配确实无法知悉,因此不作猜测。
ReplyDelete想必无名氏君知道一些内情,可否告知?
对于一个年愈古稀看尽人间百态的糟老头来说,经验时刻提醒我就算目睹世间
ReplyDelete众多不平之事往往也只能一笑了之,切莫与他人较劲,因为 ‘祸从口出’,切记
‘是非只因多开口,烦恼皆为强出头‘。‘枪打出头鸟’ 人间世许多怪像 ‘只可意会
不可言传’。
我还记得上世纪80年代的一次全球金融危机,新加坡的许多电影院最后被
‘非营利’ 机构所收购,在我生活的这个 ‘西方国家’,最富有和拥有最高价产业地
段的业主却是表面上不以营利为目的。反过来说,世界上某些 ‘高档’ 的
‘慈善基金’ 可是 ‘富可敌国’!‘钱’ 永远是最敏感的,提 ‘钱’也最伤感情,何苦呢 !
睁一只眼闭一只眼,退一步海阔天空,悠然自得,享受人生,cheers!
相当同意上述观点。
ReplyDelete有志者 事竟成 破釜沉舟 百二秦关终属楚 !
ReplyDelete苦心人 天不负 卧薪尝胆 三千越甲可吞吴 !
必须指出的是对世间不平之事的 ‘沉默’ 不等于接受,更不应该 ‘认命’,一切从自己做起,要不要做
‘善事’,应不应 ‘捐献’,要不要 ‘有力出力 有钱出钱‘ 没人能够迫你,自己看着办!
重要的是必须使自己强大,加强自己的价值与能力。
我佩服当年的许多华校生,他们努力的在国家 ‘认可’ 的教育制度之下完成学业,却不受 ‘承认’,被
无情的 ‘排挤’,受尽了屈辱,欲哭无泪,但有多少最后还是成功地在国内成为各行各业的佼佼者,
更多在国外取得更高的学位与成就之后,用脚投票,一去不回,对一个有真正诚意或标榜以
’选贤任能‘ 为国策的国家,不攻自破,这无疑是最大的讽刺,最无情的打脸,说的比唱的好听,‘不
攻自破’ 不是吗!
真金到那裡都会发亮,好汉不吃眼前亏,自强不息,时势造就的是假英雄,真正的英雄造时势 !
“中文报馆筹得250万,其他来源150万,共约400万,...”
ReplyDelete在我懂事之后,记忆中新加坡人曾经在上世纪50年代像打了鸡血般为了成立东南亚
首间华文大学,南洋大学而捐款。在70年代也曾为了救助 ‘糞败漏死’ 的死难者而全
民无私奉献。最令我感动的是在90年代初政府不得不出动 ’红头车‘ 维持为发财而排
长龙开设 ’股票户口‘,发着 ’全民拥股‘ 梦的群众的次序。
当年为了同情 ‘糞败漏死’ 的死难同胞,全国各学校,机构,社团,工会,... 无不倾力
捐助,当然也目睹了不少 ‘浑水摸鱼’,‘上下其手‘ !真正募得的真正数目也许永远成迷
就算400万,我还记得在上世纪70年代,幸运被录取为 ‘公务员’ 的南大毕业生的起薪是
$465/=, 一名机场杂工的起薪是$154/=, 点型五房式HDB组屋也僅售$27,500/=。
当时的400万可是 ‘天文数字’,完全不同的概念,不可与今日 ‘同日而语’ !