TY - JOUR
T1 - Workers' exposure to dust and potentially toxic elements during steel cutting in two ship dismantling cases
AU - Gunbeyaz, Sefer Anil
AU - Giagloglou, Evanthia
AU - Kurt, Rafet Emek
AU - Rogge, Karin Garmer
AU - Alkaner, Selim
AU - McKenna, Stuart A.
AU - Turan, Osman
AU - Lord, Richard
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 The Authors
PY - 2023/2/15
Y1 - 2023/2/15
N2 - Ship dismantling is the recommended recycling solution for the end of a ship's life, but the process is not free of occupational risk. Despite proper regulations, there are underlying chemical and physical hazards, mainly due to the cutting of steel parts, which is the core of the recycling process. The overall aim of this research study is to determine, in two case study examples, the ship recycling workers' potential occupational exposure by inhalation of chemical agents generated by the torch cutting process of coated and de-coated steel. This was carried out specifically through (i) monitoring and measuring ship recycling workers' local environment for the inhalable (total dust) and respirable (fine dust) fractions during their working operations, (ii) analysing the heavy metal content of the dust and (iii) calculating and comparing this against occupational exposure limits, (iv) comparing de-coating operations with cutting of coated and de-coated steel. Results of this study show that without further mitigation workers involved in torch cutting processes are at high risk of exposure to heavy metals by inhalation as these are exceeding the norms defined by regulatory bodies.
AB - Ship dismantling is the recommended recycling solution for the end of a ship's life, but the process is not free of occupational risk. Despite proper regulations, there are underlying chemical and physical hazards, mainly due to the cutting of steel parts, which is the core of the recycling process. The overall aim of this research study is to determine, in two case study examples, the ship recycling workers' potential occupational exposure by inhalation of chemical agents generated by the torch cutting process of coated and de-coated steel. This was carried out specifically through (i) monitoring and measuring ship recycling workers' local environment for the inhalable (total dust) and respirable (fine dust) fractions during their working operations, (ii) analysing the heavy metal content of the dust and (iii) calculating and comparing this against occupational exposure limits, (iv) comparing de-coating operations with cutting of coated and de-coated steel. Results of this study show that without further mitigation workers involved in torch cutting processes are at high risk of exposure to heavy metals by inhalation as these are exceeding the norms defined by regulatory bodies.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85146263523&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.oceaneng.2023.113628
DO - 10.1016/j.oceaneng.2023.113628
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85146263523
SN - 0029-8018
VL - 270
JO - Ocean Engineering
JF - Ocean Engineering
M1 - 113628
ER -