Kenny MacAskill (East Lothian) (Alba) A just transition was
proclaimed when COP26 was held in Glasgow in 2021. While that
global jamboree may have underwhelmed in so many respects, it was
at the forefront in one aspect, for as we transition from fossil
fuels to renewables, not just countries but businesses, communities
and workers were to be supported. Entire industries require to be
run down or forsaken and decent jobs given up, even lifelong
careers; however, financial...Request free trial
(East Lothian) (Alba)
A just transition was proclaimed when COP26 was held in Glasgow
in 2021. While that global jamboree may have underwhelmed in so
many respects, it was at the forefront in one aspect, for as we
transition from fossil fuels to renewables, not just countries
but businesses, communities and workers were to be supported.
Entire industries require to be run down or forsaken and decent
jobs given up, even lifelong careers; however, financial support
was to be given to assist nations in that journey. As for
workers, assurances were made that in the transition to net zero,
they would be protected and long-held rights would be
assured—justice for workers, as well as for our planet.
Those assurances were echoed outwith the global gathering,
endorsed by the UK Government—they have since been championed by
them in the green jobs taskforce—and chorused by the Scottish
Government in their just transition commission. The rhetoric has
been fairness and equity for those whose work would require to
change. In Scotland and in the UK as a whole, the sector most
affected is in the North sea. Though extraction of oil and gas is
still required, we are on a journey to decarbonise and to
transition to renewables; it is a transition, but it must be a
just one. That sector has provided huge wealth and benefit to our
society, and many who worked hard in those difficult and often
dangerous conditions are now moving into renewables. Where once
it was oil and gas, it is now becoming wind, wave and tidal—let
us not forget that we recently had a Prime Minister who
championed the UK as the Saudi Arabia of wind. It is a move that
matters for our nations and will create wealth, as well as
provide hope for our planet.
However, recent events in the North sea have revealed that while
there is a transition in the economy, there is no just transition
for those working in that new and growing sector—primarily in the
maritime sector, where minimum wage law does not apply
consistently and immigration law is used as a crude instrument to
profit from seafarer exploitation. That, though, is a debate for
another day. Tonight, I want to raise the issue of employment
rights, especially the effectiveness of health and safety
legislation that is too easily avoided. The lack of consistent
and effective offshore safety legislation has been brought to
light by a recent tragedy. We must hope that from that sorrow
there will come some solace, with the existing legislative gap
being remedied.
That legislative gap affects hundreds if not thousands of workers
in the offshore energy supply chain, sailing out of not just
existing offshore hubs such as Aberdeen or Dundee but Eyemouth,
Montrose, Fraserburgh, Wick, Buckie, and other Scottish ports
involved in delivering a successful offshore wind industry. It
also affects those in England servicing energy installations in
the North sea from Humberside, Tyneside, Teesside or East Anglia,
along with those who will be embarking from Holyhead, Milford
Haven, Mostyn and other ports in Wales. At present, the framework
of statutory employment and seafarer rights on which that
workforce will depend for their health and safety is not fit for
purpose. A just transition was promised, and a just transition
there must be for our maritime and offshore workers, as well as
our planet.
Let me detail the tragedy which brought those failures to light.
On Sunday 22 January, a man went missing from Valaris 121, a
mobile offshore drilling unit being towed to Dundee and located
some 98 miles from Aberdeen. Police Scotland investigated and
while satisfied that no criminal investigation was required, had
concerns regarding wider health and safety issues, which they
referred to the Health and Safety Executive. This is something
that the HSE would not normally investigate. That it did so here
is perhaps indicative of the concerns that the police had raised,
for it is not the same as an industrial accident on land. Neither
is it similar to that on an oil or gas rig on the UK continental
shelf, or even on a fixed or floating wind turbine in the UK
exclusive economic zone.
HSE legislation has rightly been extended to cover workers’
rights, but it is incomplete and, as a result, workers are at
greater risk. Mobile drilling units such as Valaris 121 are
classified as a ship or a vessel when towed, meaning that they
fall outwith HSE jurisdiction and within that of the Maritime and
Coastguard Agency. Accordingly, while the HSE could and very
likely would have carried out a full investigation had this
incident been on land, a rig or even a turbine, it is restricted
in what it can do in this instance. Likewise, a report that may
have seen a fatal accident inquiry in Scotland or a coroner’s
court hearing in England and Wales will not happen. Why is that?
It is because it is not classified as a health and safety issue,
giving the HSE authority. Instead, it is considered a maritime
safety matter, and the MCA has authority and leads these
investigations through the marine accident investigation
branch.
(Strangford) (DUP)
I commend the hon. Gentleman for bringing this matter forward.
When it comes to health and safety, we are all concerned. Given
the fact that the offshore energy created comes on land in
Scotland and England, is there some role for the Health and
Safety Executive, even though, as he has clearly outlined, the
MCA takes precedence? If the energy is coming here and the
workers work out of Scotland and England, is there not a
responsibility?
As I will come on to say, the HSE does a good job onshore, on oil
and gas and on turbines, but we require that its powers be
extended. It is the agency. The MCA and the MAIB do a wonderful
job in preserving life and ensuring wider maritime safety, but
they are not qualified in industrial accidents; neither are
employment laws within their remit. Fundamentally, and worsening
that handicap in expertise, the MCA does not even have
responsibility for the investigation, or jurisdiction over this
incident. That is because it occurred outwith UK territorial
waters, which extend to 12 miles. Beyond that distance, even when
within the UK exclusive economic zone of 200 miles and on the UK
continental shelf, incidents are subject to international
maritime regulations, which prescribe that the investigating
agency is to be from the vessel’s flag state. That is the country
where the ship is registered.
Valaris 121 is registered in Liberia, a flag state managed in
Virginia, USA. Accordingly, we have the absurdity of
responsibility for an investigation and jurisdiction in
enforcement for an incident leading to the death of a UK worker
resting not with police or Crown, HSE or MCA, or even with an
organisation based in Edinburgh or London, but in the flag state
of Liberia, a country located on another continent. That country
is one of the world’s largest shipping registers and is
categorised by the International Transport Workers Federation as
a flag of convenience. That means that employment and safety
standards are at the international minimum and ship owners pay no
tax to the Liberian state. That alone is a concern, as questions
are sometimes raised regarding registration, let alone
supervision.
Despite my asking numerous questions, the Government are unable
to tell me how many vessels operating in the UK sector are
foreign flagged. That should be a concern, as anecdotally it
would seem that the vast majority are not registered under the
red ensign, despite the Government’s obsession with wrapping
things in the Union Jack.
The Lord Advocate advised that a multi-agency meeting took place
to discuss the incident; it involved representatives of the
Maritime and Coastguard Agency, the Health and Safety Executive,
Police Scotland, the Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal Service
and the Republic of Liberia. They discussed who would have
primacy in the various investigations. I do not know this, but I
assume that it was a virtual meeting; likewise, I do not know who
the representative from Liberia was, or what level of seniority
they had. The Lord Advocate explained further that Police
Scotland remains in charge of the missing person enquiry, though,
sadly, the body may never be recovered.
The Lord Advocate confirmed that the HSE remained the lead agency
for the investigation in Scotland and the UK—but doing what, and
enforcing which laws? Is that because there is no one here from
Liberia to do it, and because the only folk nearby are from the
HSE? Will we simply see a report filed and no further action
taken? More importantly, how does this address the failure to
extend health and safety legislation for the oil and gas sector
to the new world of offshore wind, other renewable energies and
nascent green technologies such as hydrogen, carbon capture and
storage and liquefied natural gas?
Leaving aside the good intentions of the Lord Advocate and the
diligent work by the HSE, let us recall where jurisdiction and
enforcement lie: with the flag state, Liberia. Let me again set
out why that is—all this has been confirmed through repeated
parliamentary answers from several Government Departments.
Health and safety legislation applies to workers on land and
operating in UK territorial waters, as the hon. Member for
Strangford () mentioned; those territorial waters extend for 12
miles. The Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974 (Application
outside Great Britain) Order 2013 applies to oil and gas, and
even turbines, but that is insufficient for the new sector, as I
shall detail. Valaris 121 is classified as a vessel or ship,
which means that it is not subject to that legislation. As the
tragedy happened outwith UK territorial waters, it is classified
as a maritime incident—hence the involvement of the flag state,
and the absurdity of Liberian jurisdiction. The issue of the
absence of health and safety rights goes far wider than this
incident or this vessel. It goes to the very heart of how the new
sector to which we are transitioning operates.
As disclosed in parliamentary answer 139284 from the Department
for Work and Pensions, under the 2013 order, health and safety
protection applies to those operating in the offshore wind sector
when on a “structure or machine”; the provisions apply to
“structures for the production of energy from wind”,
and to
“the operation of a cable for transmitting electricity from an
energy structure.”
All well, one might think, but no; the legislation goes on to
specifically state:
“Ships are not defined as energy structures for the purposes of
this legislation.”
Therein lies the injustice of this North sea tragedy. It also
shows that current provisions are incapable of providing the
protections required for workers in this new sector. There are
two clear reasons for that. First, few people work on a turbine;
it is accessing, maintaining and supporting turbines that
matters. Workers do not live on them, as they do on oil and gas
rigs—or at least not yet, and if that changed, living
accommodation would likely be confined to flotels, special
operation vessels and other entirely separate solutions. If
protection is provided only when people are physically working on
the turbine, that totally ignores the nature of both the job and
the sector.
Secondly, Valaris is classified as a vessel or ship, but she is
not what most imagine a vessel or ship to be, as she is designed
as a working platform. Some workers will be drilling, and others
will be working while attached to a turbine. If they are
physically attached to the turbine, then they are covered, but
when they are travelling to the turbine or back, or even if they
are proximate to it but not physically attached to it—that will
likely be the bulk of the work—they are not.
The current legislation fails to take account of the operation of
and working practices in offshore wind. It is an expanding and
developing sector, which means that people are being denied cover
in aspects of the work that lack protections. The danger is that
this tragedy might be replicated, and oft times more, given the
expansion of the sector. Health and safety protections that apply
for oil and gas must be available for offshore wind and other
renewables.
I have had discussions with Offshore Energies UK, which takes
safety extremely seriously, as the House would expect, and it has
indicated an acceptance of the gap and a willingness to assist in
resolving the situation. To address it, the definition of energy
structures under the 2013 order needs to be extended, and
legislation to protect seafarers operating in the offshore wind
sector needs to be enacted, but so far the DWP has failed to show
any interest. Will the Minister agree to meet me and worker
representatives to discuss this? There must be a just transition
for our planet, but there must also be a just transition for
workers, and this most certainly is not a just transition in the
offshore wind sector.
9.36pm
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Work and Pensions
()
I am grateful to the hon. Member for East Lothian () for bringing this
important debate to the House, and I appreciate and understand
the passion and conviction he brings to this debate. The UK
Government take very seriously health and safety on offshore wind
farms in Great Britain’s territorial sea and the UK continental
shelf, and I am keen to reassure the hon. Gentleman that my
officials at the HSE confirm that we have a strong and
appropriate existing regulatory regime, which applies the
protection afforded by the Health and Safety at Work etc. Act
1974 to people working on offshore wind farms.
On the hon. Gentleman’s concerns, let me spell out that the
Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974 (Application outside
Great Britain) Order 2013 applies the provisions of the 1974 Act.
This covers certain activities offshore, including work
associated with offshore wind farms, as well as other offshore
installations such as those for oil and gas. Therefore, the 1974
Act applies to offshore wind farms in the territorial sea and the
UK continental shelf as well as to renewable energy zones, which
are also defined in the 2013 order. The 2013 order also applies
the provisions of the 1974 Act to offshore oil and gas
installations in designated areas in the UK continental shelf—I
really hope that pacifies the hon. Gentleman. I will say more
about that and come on to some of his other points later.
Furthermore, the 1974 Act places a legal duty on employers to
ensure, so far as reasonably practicable, the health, safety and
welfare of workers and others to ensure that they are kept safe,
whether they are working on oil or gas or, as I said, wind farm
installations. In addition, other legislation that applies to
work on offshore wind farms includes the Construction (Design and
Management) Regulations 2015. This helps employers to ensure that
their work is planned and that risks are assessed and managed.
Those regulations also ensure that employers consult and engage
with workers and make sure that information is communicated to
all those who need to know it.
The Health and Safety Executive enforces the 1974 Act and
subsidiary health and safety legislation on offshore wind farms.
The HSE does not have the legal basis to enforce activities that
are not specifically covered by the 2013 order. In those
situations, however, other regulators and organisations will
enforce health and safety legislation or investigate accidents.
For example, in a situation where a ship is in transit and the
HSE’s regulations do not apply, such a ship will still need to
comply with national and international maritime standards.
The Maritime and Coastguard Agency is responsible for enforcing
all merchant shipping regulations in respect of occupational
health and safety, the safety of vessels, safe navigation and
operation. This includes manning levels and crew competency.
Merchant shipping health and safety regulations extend to all
those working on the ship and any work activities undertaken on
board. These powers of the MCA extend to UK ships anywhere in the
world and to non-UK ships that are within UK territorial
waters.
The marine accident investigation branch investigates marine
accidents involving UK vessels worldwide and all vessels in UK
territorial waters. Its role is to help prevent further avoidable
accidents from occurring, not to establish blame or
liability.
For foreign flagged ships in the UK continental shelf, the
responsibility for investigating accidents lies with the flag
state. A memorandum of understanding between the HSE, the MCA and
the MAIB ensures effective collaborative working. Each
organisation has differing responsibilities for health and safety
enforcement and accident investigation. An operational working
agreement provides clarity and consistency where the jurisdiction
of the HSE, the MCA and MAIB overlap. It outlines the key and
supporting principles to be adopted when selecting the lead
organisation for health and safety enforcement and accident
investigation.
The HSE’s energy division has a team of inspectors dedicated to
the regulation of work activities at offshore wind farms. They
are supported by various onshore and offshore specialists who
provide technical advice on a range of relevant subjects during
inspection, investigation and enforcement of high-risk
activities. This addresses poor health and safety performance and
provides reassurance that there is good health and safety
management of such activities.
I spoke earlier with Offshore Energies UK and the National Union
of Rail, Maritime and Transport Workers, and this is not a
criticism of any existing or past Government. There is a
legislative gap because technology has moved so fast and nobody
anticipated it. We now, however, have a situation, which I think
is accepted by employers and employee representatives, where
those working in the sector are not getting the proper coverage
that should apply. Does the Minister not accept that there is
something wrong here in primacy resting with Liberia, and that we
need to extend the 2013 order to the new operations as they exist
now, and indeed as they may be in a few years?
I thank the hon. Gentleman. I will make some further points, and
I hope we can then come to a mutual arrangement and I can
reassure him on the issues he raises. The points he makes can
come into the conversation.
I have spelled out that the HSE energy division has inspectors
dedicated to the regulation of work activities at offshore wind
farms, but I accept the hon. Gentleman’s point that a lot is
going on in this sector and there needs to be reassurance. I have
spelled out some of the regulatory activity. The HSE works with
industry bodies and UK regulators to ensure that sensible
solutions are found to emerging risks.
On shipping standards, where the HSE regulations do not apply to
work activities on ships because they fall outside the scope of
the 1974 Act and the 2013 order, international shipping
regulations provide a broadly equivalent level of safety to
international shipping. International conventions on shipping,
such as the international convention for the safety of life at
sea, the international convention for the prevention of pollution
from ships and the maritime labour convention 2006 set a level
playing field, as all ships are surveyed by their flag and can be
inspected by port states against the internationally agreed
standards. Under this regime Valaris was inspected by the MCA
when it reached port in the UK, but I do appreciate the hon.
Gentleman’s points on that.
On Valaris 121, the Health and Safety Executive has served an
improvement notice on Ensco Offshore U.K. Ltd relating to
incorrectly installed gratings on Valaris 121 when it was in port
in Dundee.
On the flag state investigations of accidents occurring on the UK
continental shelf, the flag state of the ship involved is
responsible for ensuring that an investigation is conducted and
completed in accordance with the casualty investigation code. The
code mandates that certain incidents set out in chapter 1, part
A, of the 1974 international convention for the safety of life at
sea—or SOLAS—are investigated.
The hon. Member for East Lothian mentioned flags of convenience.
Open registries can pose a challenge to maritime security and the
enforcement of laws on the high seas. That is because some flag
states do not, or cannot, exercise effective oversight of the
ships on their registers, as I think the hon. Member pointed
out.
While there is some evidence of poor practice taking place under
open registries, there is no direct correlation between
poor-performing ships and open registries. However, Liberia, the
Bahamas and the Marshall Islands are all open registries and were
at the top of the 15 countries for low detention rates under the
2021 Paris memorandum of understanding on port state control.
It is an important issue that some flag states do not have
independent investigation bodies that may investigate accidents
in UKCS. The marine administrations for the Isle of Man, Bermuda,
the Cayman Islands and Gibraltar do not have independent
investigation bodies, and therefore have difficulty in ensuring
that safety investigations are impartial and objective. A
memorandum of understanding has therefore been reached, which the
UK’s Marine Accident Investigation Branch has agreed to, to
investigate incidents involving ships registered with those
marine administrations. The procedure for those investigations
set out in the legislation in force in the relevant marine
administration’s territory will apply.
I will cover two other points, then hopefully start to conclude.
The hon. Gentleman will be keen to know that the responsibility
for regulating the health and safety of workers travelling to and
from offshore workplaces—wind farms or oil and gas
installations—rests with the MCA within the territorial sea and
for UK-flagged vessels.
The responsibility for health and safety enforcement activities
and accident investigation is described in the MOU between HSE,
the MCA and the MAIB. That is supported by an operational working
agreement that provides clarity and consistency where the
jurisdiction of the respective agencies overlap.
In terms of those transiting to and from offshore workplaces, the
responsibility for regulating those transits rests with the MCA
within the territorial sea and for UK-flagged vessels. Again, the
responsibility for health and safety enforcement activities and
accident investigation is in the MOU between HSE, the MCA and the
MAIB. Again, that is supported by an operational working
agreement that provides clarity and consistency where the
jurisdiction of the respective agencies overlap. I understand the
point that the hon. Gentleman was making. Does he want to come in
on that?
I hope the Minister would accept that the technology is changing
and that most of the new turbines will be outwith UK territorial
waters in many instances, which changes the nature of the
jurisdiction. The organisations she referred to, the MAIB and so
on, have skills, but they are not skills relating to health and
safety at work. The fundamental difficulty is that the nature of
the operation is not attached to the physical turbine. The nature
of the activity is either accessing it or working in close
proximity to it. This man went off a ship that had been doing
that and yet we are faced with Liberia. It is on that basis,
because of the new world we face, that I seek for the Government
to extend the 2013 order. We are anticipating a new world and we
do not know what the North sea will look like, but it will be a
very busy workforce and a very busy workplace that is very
different from what we have at the moment.
The hon. Gentleman makes a really important point about learning
from what happened and ensuring it is fit for purpose, and, above
all, ensuring that he and the workers involved feel reassured. I
want to reassure him that the HSE works closely with G+ Offshore
Wind Health and Safety Organisation and its members to promote an
understanding of the offshore wind farm regime and the
regulations I have spelled out tonight.
On EU retained law, which the hon. Gentleman covered, the HSE
remains focused on ensuring that regulatory frameworks maintain
the UK’s high standards on health and safety protection, while
continuing to reduce burdens on business. The HSE’s approach
closely aligns with the Government’s pledge to do more for
businesses to promote growth by removing disproportionate burdens
and simplifying the regulatory regime. Our standards of health
and safety protections are among the highest in the world. The
HSE will continue to review retained EU law to seek opportunities
to reduce those burdens and promote growth, but not reduce health
and safety standards.
In conclusion, I have, I hope, set out the regulatory framework
in place to ensure the health and safety of people working at
offshore wind farms, and have detailed that the HSE is one of a
number of regulators and organisations that work together to
ensure that employers maintain health and safety standards in
this sector and protect their workers. I reassure the hon.
Gentleman that the UK Government continue to take health and
safety on wind farms very seriously, and recognise the
contribution made by this sector to energy security and the net
zero programme. I hope that that goes some way to reassuring the
hon. Gentleman that the current regulatory regime and framework
in place is sufficiently robust to protect the health and safety
of workers, but I appreciate —he has made some excellent points
this evening—that it is a complex, growing and challenging
picture. I offer to facilitate a meeting between him and HSE
officials, along with other relevant Departments and officials,
so that we can further reassure him, the sector, employers and
those who work in it that his concerns are fully understood and
addressed.
Question put and agreed to.
|