🏭
Section A

Industry Profile

β–Ό

Description

Gujarat's printing and packaging industry serves FMCG, pharmaceutical, textile, and export packaging needs, ranging from large integrated packaging plants to small offset print shops. The sector presents a mix of solvent fire hazards (flexo and gravure inks), ink mist inhalation, noise from high-speed presses, ergonomic issues from roll handling, and chemical exposures from UV inks, adhesives, and cleaning solvents. While individual hazard intensities may be lower than process industries, the combination and the prevalence of small units with limited safety management makes this a significant sector for DISH attention.

πŸ“ΈProcess Area / Plant Overview
πŸ“ΈKey Equipment / Machinery
πŸ“ΈControl Room / Lab
πŸ“ΈPacking / Dispatch

Manufacturing Process

#Process StageEquipment UsedKey Hazard
1Pre-Press / PlatemakingCTP (Computer-to-Plate), film output, plate processingUV radiation, developer chemicals, solvent
2Offset PrintingSheet-fed or web offset press (500–15,000 sheets/hr)Ink mist, IPA dampening, noise, nip points, roller
3Flexographic PrintingWeb flexo press (100–400 m/min) β€” solvent or water inkSolvent vapour β€” fire; ink mist; speed-related injury
4Gravure PrintingRotogravure press (200–400 m/min) β€” solvent ink (toluene)High solvent vapour (toluene) β€” fire and toxic; speed
5Screen PrintingManual/semi-auto screen pressSolvent ink; UV ink; ergonomic β€” squeegee operation
6Digital Printing (Inkjet/Laser)Wide format inkjet, laser printerUV ink (carcinogen risk), ozone from laser, toner
7LaminationThermal lamination, solvent-based dry laminationSolvent vapour, heat, nip at laminating roller
8Die Cutting / CreasingPlaten die cutter, rotary die cutterHand in die β€” cut/crush; noise; waste ejection
9Gluing / Folding-GluingGluing machine (hot melt or cold glue), folder-gluerHot melt burn (180Β°C), nip at fold rollers
10Finishing (Varnishing, Foiling, Embossing)UV varnish coater, hot stamping foil machineUV exposure, hot die, solvent varnish fire

Raw Materials

Substrates: paper, board, PP/PET/PE films, aluminium foilPrinting inks: offset (low-VOC or UV-curable), flexo (water or solvent), gravure (toluene-based)Solvents: IPA (offset dampening), Ethyl acetate, Toluene, MEK (flexo/gravure cleaning)Plates and chemicals: PS plate developer (sodium silicate), CTP chemistryAdhesives: hot melt EVA, solvent-based lamination adhesive, water-based PVAUV inks and varnishes: photoinitiators β€” skin/eye sensitisers, possible carcinogensFountain solution: IPA + water + additives (pH modifiers, biocides)

Finished Products

  • Folding cartons (pharmaceutical, FMCG, food packaging)
  • Flexible packaging (laminated pouches, sachets, films)
  • Labels (pressure-sensitive, heat-shrink, wet glue)
  • Corrugated boxes and cartons
  • Printed PET / BOPP films for packaging
  • Commercial print (brochures, calendars, books)
  • Security print (government documents β€” specialty)

Typical Workforce

CategoryTypical StrengthExposure Risk
Offset Press Operators20–100MEDIUM–HIGH – ink mist, IPA, noise, nip
Flexo/Gravure Press Operators10–40HIGH – solvent vapour, speed, fire
Pre-Press Operators5–20MEDIUM – UV, chemical, ergonomic
Lamination/Finishing Operators15–50MEDIUM – heat, solvent, nip, ergonomic
Die Cutting Operators10–40HIGH – hand injury, noise
Maintenance8–20HIGH – electrical, LOTO on press
Packing & Dispatch10–40LOW–MEDIUM – ergonomic, manual handling

Utilities Used

  • Electrical: 3-phase 415V; large web press drives 50–200 kW; UV lamp systems 20–80 kW
  • Compressed air: 6–8 bar for press pneumatics, ink supply, cleaning
  • Solvent recovery: distillation unit for gravure solvent (toluene) recovery β€” mandatory under GPCB
  • UV curing: UV lamps (high-pressure mercury, LED UV) for UV ink/varnish curing β€” UV-C/UV-B hazard
  • Solvent storage: ethyl acetate, toluene, MEK β€” PESO licence if petroleum class
  • ETP: ink wash water, solvent-contaminated cleaning effluent β€” GPCB consent required
⚠️
Section B

Hazard Identification

β–Ό
βš™οΈ
Mechanical
⚑
Electrical
πŸ”₯
Fire
πŸ’₯
Explosion
πŸ§ͺ
Chemical
☠️
Toxic
🦾
Ergonomic
🫁
Occ. Health

B1 – Mechanical Hazards

  • Offset press: impression/transfer cylinder nip β€” sheet feed operator hand or cloth β€” instant crush or drag-in
  • Flexo/gravure press: web threading at speed (300 m/min) β€” operator hand in nip while threading
  • Die cutter (platen): hand in cutting zone during makeready β€” severe laceration or amputation
  • Folder-gluer: paper jam clearing with machine running β€” hand in fold nip
  • Hot melt glue gun: burns at 180Β°C from nozzle drip; glue gun pressure system
  • Slitting/rewinding: blade contact during core change or blade adjustment
  • Large roll handling: 300–1000 kg substrate rolls β€” crush if roll falls during loading

B2 – Electrical Hazards

  • UV lamp system: 20–80 kW UV lamps β€” electrical + UV radiation hazard; mercury vapour in conventional UV lamps if broken
  • Variable frequency drives on web presses: induced leakage; high-frequency earth current
  • Gravure press: solvent atmosphere β€” Zone 2; non-FLP motors = ignition source
  • Static on printed plastic film: electrostatic charge up to 30 kV on film surfaces β€” discharge shock

B3 – Fire Hazards

  • Gravure press: toluene-based inks (flash point 4Β°C) β€” vapour throughout press room if ventilation inadequate
  • Flexo press: ethyl acetate inks (flash point βˆ’4Β°C) β€” extremely low flash point
  • IPA (offset dampening): flash point 12Β°C β€” fire if open container near press
  • Hot melt glue: fire if reservoir overheats or pump fails
  • UV ink: oxidising photoinitiators β€” fire if UV lamp malfunction causes thermal runaway in ink

B4 – Explosion Hazards

  • Gravure press room: toluene vapour + LEL breach β€” vapour cloud explosion; dryer section β€” paper + solvent inside dryer = enclosed explosion
  • Solvent storage: vapour release from solvent drum β€” stock room explosion
  • Solvent cleaning rags: spontaneous combustion in closed bins
  • Flexo dryer: solvent vapour in web dryer β€” LEL monitor required

B5 – Chemical Hazards

  • Toluene (gravure inks): OEL 50 ppm; reproductive toxin (Category 2); narcotic; liver damage β€” India's gravure printers among highest-exposed toluene workers
  • IPA vapour (offset): OEL 200 ppm; narcotic; flammable
  • UV photoinitiators (UV inks/varnishes): skin sensitisers, eye irritants; some are mutagenic
  • Benzophenone (UV ink photoinitiator): IARC Group 2B carcinogen β€” detected in food packaging migration β€” worker exposure also relevant
  • Isopropyl thioxanthone (ITX): reproductive toxin β€” present in some UV inks
  • Pigments in inks: heavy metal pigments in older formulations; phthalocyanine, azo pigments β€” skin sensitisers

B6 – Toxic / Biological Hazards

  • Toluene: reproductive toxicity (Category 2 β€” avoid in women of childbearing age); CNS narcosis; solvent encephalopathy; hepatotoxic
  • Benzene: if present as impurity in toluene (<1% specification must be verified) β€” IARC Group 1 leukemia
  • Ozone (from UV lamps and laser printers): TLV 0.1 ppm; pulmonary irritant at 0.2 ppm; strong oxidiser
  • Mercury vapour from broken conventional UV lamps: CNS toxin; kidney damage
  • Ink mist from high-speed offset: fine droplet inhalation β€” respiratory irritation

B7 – Ergonomic Hazards

  • Roll loading onto press: 300–1000 kg rolls β€” mechanical handling essential; manual roll transport = back injury
  • Press operator at console: sustained standing + forward lean = back, neck strain
  • Die cutter makeready: precision work with sharp tools β€” awkward postures
  • Large-format inkjet: sustained standing and reaching β€” shoulder and back

B8 – Occupational Health Hazards

  • Toluene encephalopathy: chronic occupational exposure in gravure printers β€” memory impairment, personality changes, cerebellar dysfunction; irreversible
  • Occupational dermatitis: UV ink photoinitiators, solvent degreasing of skin
  • Colour vision impairment: solvent neurological effects affect colour discrimination β€” relevant to press operators matching colour
  • NIHL: web press noise 88–95 dB, folder-gluer 85–90 dB
  • UV eye damage: cataracts and photokeratitis from UV lamp exposure without eye protection
πŸ›‘οΈ
Section C

Practical Safety Measures

β–Ό
HazardPossible AccidentPreventive MeasuresEngineering ControlsAdministrative ControlsPPE
Primary Process HazardInjury / fatality from core processFollow SOP; no bypass of safety systems; pre-shift hazard briefingInterlocks, relief valves, emergency shutdowns, containmentPermit to Work; LOTO; training; shift handover protocolFull face shield, chemical resistant suit, SCBA where toxic
Mechanical – Rotating PartsEntanglement, amputation, crushAll guards in place before start; LOTO for maintenanceFixed guards, interlocked enclosures, E-stop pull cordsNo loose clothing / jewellery policy; PTW for maintenanceClose-fitting overalls, safety shoes, cut-resistant gloves
ElectricalShock, arc flash, fireElectrical PTW; LOTO; no solo HT workELCB 30 mA; FLP in hazardous zones; IP rating for environmentLicensed electricians; SLD posted; arc flash analysisInsulated gloves; arc flash PPE (Cat 2 min) for HT work
Fire / ExplosionBurns, blast injury, fatalityHot work permit; gas testing; no smoking; housekeepingGas/vapour/dust detectors; auto-isolation; sprinklers/delugeHot work permit; fire watch; supervisor approvalFire-retardant coveralls; SCBA for fire team
Chemical ExposureBurns, inhalation, systemic toxicitySDS at point of use; substitution where possible; LEV at sourceEnclosed process; LEV; emergency deluge shower + eyewashExposure monitoring; medical surveillance; job rotationChemical resistant gloves/apron; face shield; respirator (type per SDS)
Toxic ReleasePoisoning, asphyxiation, fatalityFixed detector + alarm; emergency isolation; OSEPDetector with auto-shutoff; scrubber; bundingEmergency drill; buddy system; shelter-in-place protocolSCBA (not cartridge) for IDLH atmospheres; full chemical suit
NoiseNIHL (permanent)Noise map; audiometry baseline + annualAcoustic enclosures; anti-vibration mounts; isolated control roomsNoise zone boards; exposure time limits; hearing conservation programmeEar muffs (SNR 28+) or fitted ear plugs in >85 dB zones
Heat StressHeat exhaustion, heat strokeWBGT monitoring; ORS supply; acclimatisationRoof insulation; cooling fans; spot coolingWork-rest schedule; buddy system; summer protocolLight cotton uniform; cooling towels; hydration vest
Ergonomic – Manual HandlingBack injury, MSD, herniaMechanical aids; team lift for >25 kg; trainingTrolleys, hoists, height-adjustable workstationsWeight limits posted; rest breaks; job rotationLumbar support belt for sustained lifting
Falls – Slips/TripsFracture, head injury, fatality (from height)Good housekeeping; anti-slip flooring; lighting >200 luxEdge protection; safety nets; PFAS for >2 m workFall plan for elevated work; daily inspection of work platformsSafety helmet; safety harness (full body) for height work; non-slip footwear
πŸ”₯
Section D

Fire Safety

β–Ό
β›” Industry-Specific Fire RiskTOLUENE in gravure printing: India's printing industry is one of the largest occupational toluene exposure sectors. Biological monitoring (urinary hippuric acid or ortho-cresol) annually for all gravure press operators is mandatory under good occupational health practice and is moving toward legal requirement. Reproductive toxicity makes this a priority for women workers.

Fire Load by Area

AreaPrimary FuelRisk Level
Gravure / Flexo Press RoomToluene / Ethyl acetate vapourVERY HIGH – Zone 2; explosion risk
Solvent StorageClass IB–IC solventsVERY HIGH
Finished Goods WarehouseCartons, films, rollsHIGH – fast-spreading fire
Raw Material StorePaper rolls, film rolls, boardHIGH
UV Ink / Varnish AreaOxidising photoinitiators + UV energyMEDIUM–HIGH

Sources of Ignition

  • Static discharge on plastic film surface in solvent atmosphere
  • Non-FLP equipment in gravure press room
  • Spontaneous ignition of solvent-soaked rags
  • Hot melt glue overheating
  • UV lamp malfunction β€” excess heat in UV ink

Fire Detection Systems

  • LEL detector in gravure press room: 10% LEL alarm, 25% LEL press shutdown and ventilation max
  • LEL detector in flexo web dryer (integrated with dryer control)
  • Smoke/heat: offset press room, store, finishing
  • UV sensor on UV lamp: over-temperature alarm
  • Manual call points at all exits

Fire Protection Systems

AreaProtection SystemStandard
Gravure Press RoomZone 2 classification throughout; LEL monitor + automatic press stop on LEL breach; LEV (minimum 10 air changes/hr); explosion-proof fansNFPA 86 / IS:1641
Flexo Web DryerIntegral LEL monitor; auto fresh air purge; explosion relief panel on dryer enclosureEN 1539 / NFPA 86
Solvent StoreBunded, ventilated, FLP lighting; AFFF portable extinguisher; earth bondingNFPA 30
General Press RoomDCP 6 kg per press; COβ‚‚ at UV lamp panel; fire blanketsIS:15683
Solvent Recovery UnitFLP electrical; explosion relief; COβ‚‚ on distillation stillZone 1 classified

Emergency Evacuation

  • Travel distance to nearest exit: ≀30 m on production floor (dead-end: ≀15 m)
  • Exit corridors: minimum 1.2 m wide; fire-rated doors (60 min) on hazardous areas
  • Emergency lighting: 3-hour backup; green exit signage every 15 m
  • Assembly point: minimum 2 per site; marked with green "A" board; illuminated at night
  • Evacuation warden: 1 per 50 workers per floor; high-visibility jacket
  • Evacuation alarm: distinct pattern; audible throughout plant including noisy areas

Fire Drill Protocol

  • Frequency: Minimum twice per year under Factories Act / Gujarat OSHWC Rules 2025
  • At least one drill unannounced; all shifts to participate over the year
  • Drill record in Fire Register; debrief within 24 hours; corrective actions with target date
  • Internal fire team (6–10 trained members): annual refresher training with GFES
⚑
Section E

Electrical Safety

β–Ό

LT Systems (415 V)

  • MCC segregated, labelled, accessible only to licensed electricians
  • ELCB/RCCB: 30 mA on all socket outlets and portable equipment
  • IP rating appropriate for area classification (IP54 general; IP65 wash-down; FLP for Zone 1/2)
  • Motor rewinding: comply with IS:12615; 2 rewinds max then replace
  • Monthly thermographic scan of MCCs and critical panels β€” hot spots actioned within 48 hours

HT Systems (11 kV / 33 kV)

  • Electrical Permit to Work (PTW) system mandatory; licensed HT operator
  • Minimum approach distance: 1.2 m (11 kV); 3.5 m (33 kV) β€” marked on floor
  • SF6/VCB switchgear: annual maintenance; arc-flash study every 5 years
  • Single-line diagram (SLD) displayed in HT room; updated after every modification

Transformers

  • Oil temperature alarm (95Β°C) / trip (105Β°C); Buchholz relay β€” tested annually
  • Oil containment pit: 110% of transformer oil volume; oil-water separator
  • BDV oil test annually; replace oil if <30 kV; dissolved gas analysis (DGA) for early fault detection

DG Sets

  • AMF panel tested quarterly; anti-islanding / reverse-power relay fitted
  • HSD storage secondary containment; earthing; vent pipe 3 m high away from ignition sources
  • Exhaust: route away from air intakes; acoustic enclosure for noise control

Earthing and Static Electricity

  • Earth resistance: <1 Ξ© (HT); <5 Ξ© (LT) β€” biannual measurement (wet and dry season)
  • Bonding and earthing of all process vessels, pipelines, tankers before product transfer
  • Anti-static flooring in flammable/explosive areas; anti-static wrist straps for sensitive work
  • Static-dissipative footwear in Zone 1/2 β€” volume resistivity 10⁡–10⁸ Ξ©.cm

Electrical Maintenance Safety

  • LOTO: individual lock, personal key; multi-hasp for multi-energy isolation
  • Insulated tools rated 1000 V (LT); 10 kV (HT); test before touch β€” mandatory
  • Night/holiday maintenance: buddy system; no solo electrical work on any system
  • Annual electrical installation inspection by Licensed Electrical Supervisor / CEI
βš™οΈ
Section F

Mechanical Safety

β–Ό
β„Ή Section 21, Factories Act 1948Every dangerous part of machinery must be securely fenced. Gujarat OSHWC Rules 2025 strengthen this requirement. No production pressure justifies removing a guard.

Machine Guarding

Hazard ZoneGuard TypeStandardVerification Frequency
All rotating parts (shafts, couplings, pulleys)Fixed metal enclosure guardIS:1870 / IS:10973Monthly
Nip points (rollers, presses)Nip guard bar + interlockOEM / IS:10973Daily pre-start
Cutting / shearing zonesFixed guard; two-hand control for manual feedIS:10973Shift in-charge
Access covers / service panelsInterlocked cover (micro-switch hardwired)IEC 60204-1Monthly test
High-speed discs / wheelsReinforced enclosure; burst containmentIS:1991 (grinding)Pre-use inspection

Interlocking Systems

  • All safety-critical covers: hardwired micro-switch interlock β€” cover open = machine stops immediately
  • Interlock defeat / bypass: any bypass requires written PTW, safety officer approval, and immediate reinstatement after maintenance
  • Monthly interlock function test: documented in Maintenance Safety Register

Emergency Stop (E-Stop) Systems

  • Red mushroom-head E-stop on each machine β€” direct hardwired, fail-safe, requires manual reset
  • E-stop pull cords along conveyor/line lengths β€” anyone can activate from anywhere
  • Section master E-stop at section entry β€” for emergency mass shutdown
  • E-stop test: monthly; result recorded; any failure rectified same day

LOTO β€” Lockout / Tagout

  1. Notify affected workers; identify all energy sources (electrical, pneumatic, hydraulic, stored kinetic/gravitational)
  2. Shut down using normal procedure; isolate all energy sources
  3. Apply personal padlock + tag β€” one lock per person; multi-hasp if multiple workers
  4. Verify zero energy: attempt restart; bleed pneumatics; check spring/gravity energy
  5. Perform work; on completion: clear tools, restore guards, remove lock/tag, notify, restore energy, verify safe operation

Preventive Maintenance Programme

ActivityFrequencyResponsibleRecord
Bearing lubrication on all process equipmentWeekly / per OEM scheduleMechanical fitterLubrication log
Guard integrity inspection β€” all sectionsMonthlySafety OfficerSafety inspection register
E-stop and interlock testMonthlyMaintenance + SafetyTest register
Belt, coupling, and chain inspectionMonthlyMaintenance supervisorPM register
Pressure vessel / heat exchanger inspectionPer IBR / OEM (typically annual)Competent PersonInspection certificate to DISH
Annual plant safety auditAnnuallyEmpanelled OHS AuditorReport to DISH β€” Gujarat OHS Audit Rules 2025
πŸ—οΈ
Section G

Material Handling Safety

β–Ό

Forklifts / Battery / LPG Trucks

  • Licensed operator; medical fitness certificate; refresher every 3 years
  • Daily pre-use checklist: tyres, brakes, horn, mast, forks, warning light
  • Pedestrian-forklift segregation: painted lanes (yellow); raised pedestrian walkways in high-traffic areas
  • Speed limit: 5 km/h indoor; 10 km/h outdoor; warning light (blue) visible 360Β°
  • Parking: forks lowered, engine off, key removed, hand brake on, level surface

EOT Cranes and Hoists

  • Annual load test at 125% SWL by Competent Person β€” certificate displayed on crane
  • Pre-use inspection: hooks, chains/wire rope, limit switches, brakes β€” daily log
  • Exclusion zone under any suspended load; never allow persons under load
  • Trained rigger for slinging; sling angle ≀60Β° to vertical; SWL derated per angle

Conveyors

  • Nip point guards at drive/tail/return rollers β€” all in place before start
  • Emergency stop pull cord along full conveyor length; tested monthly
  • No manual clearing while running; maintenance only under LOTO

Manual Handling

TaskRiskControl
Bag lifting (25–50 kg)Back injury, herniaMechanical bag tipper; two-person lift for >25 kg; lumbar belt
Drum handling (200 L)Crush, chemical spill, back injuryDrum trolley; drum tipper; never manual rolling on wet floor
Pallet stackingBack, shoulder injuryPallet jack or forklift; max manual stack height 1.5 m
Overhead workShoulder, neck MSDs; fallAdjustable platform or mobile scaffold; no overhead work from ladder for sustained tasks
⚠ Legal LimitFactories Act Sec. 34: No woman to carry/lift weight likely to cause injury. Gujarat OSHWC Rules 2025: max 30 kg for adult male worker without mechanical aid. Enforce strictly for contract and migrant workers.
🫁
Section H

Occupational Health

β–Ό

Noise

  • Action level 80 dB(A) β€” hearing conservation programme; exposure limit 85 dB(A) 8-hr TWA with PPE
  • Annual audiometry for all workers exposed >80 dB(A); baseline at joining; records for employment duration
  • Noise zone boards (Green/Amber/Red) based on annual noise survey
  • Engineering controls first: acoustic enclosures, anti-vibration mounts, isolated control rooms

Heat Stress

  • WBGT monitoring; action thresholds: 28Β°C (enhanced monitoring), 32Β°C (reduced workload), 35Β°C (15 min rest/hr)
  • ORS at each drinking water point β€” April to June mandatory
  • New worker acclimatisation: 50% workload increasing to 100% over 7–14 days
  • Buddy system in hot areas; trained supervisors for heat stress recognition

Dust Exposure

Dust TypeOELControl PriorityHealth Effect
Silica (quartz) respirable0.025 mg/mΒ³ (ACGIH TLV)HIGHEST β€” substitution firstSilicosis (irreversible); Lung cancer
General inorganic dust (respirable)3 mg/mΒ³High β€” LEV and RPEPneumoconiosis
Organic dusts (flour, cotton)0.5–1 mg/mΒ³High β€” LEV and RPEOccupational asthma, byssinosis
Metal fumes (iron, manganese)Mn: 0.02 mg/mΒ³; Fe: 5 mg/mΒ³High β€” extraction at sourceMetal fume fever; Parkinsonism (Mn)

Chemical Exposure Monitoring

  • Personal air sampling for chemicals with OEL β€” minimum annually; after any process change
  • Biological monitoring where required (benzene: urinary MuMu; lead: blood lead; Mn: blood/urine Mn)
  • SDS reviewed and acted upon; exposure register maintained

Ventilation

  • General dilution: minimum 6 air changes/hour in enclosed production areas
  • Local exhaust ventilation (LEV): capture velocity β‰₯0.5 m/s at source; quarterly performance check
  • Make-up air: filtered (G4 min); temperate for worker comfort

Medical Surveillance Programme

TestTarget GroupFrequency
Pre-employment medical (Form β€” Schedule XXV)All workersAt joining
Spirometry (FVC, FEV₁)Dust/fume/vapour exposedAnnual
Audiometry (PTA)Noise-exposed (>80 dB)Annual
Chest X-ray (ILO classification)Silica, asbestos, hard metal exposedAnnual (or per legal requirement)
Liver function tests (LFT)Solvent, chemical workersAnnual
Blood count + differentialBenzene, heavy metal exposedAnnual; 6-monthly if borderline
Skin and eye examinationChemical handling workersAnnual
βš–οΈ
Section I

Legal Compliance β€” Applicable Indian Laws

β–Ό
LegislationKey ProvisionsAuthorityApplicable?
Factories Act 1948Sec. 11–20 health; Sec. 21–40 safety (guarding, hoists); Sec. 87 hazardous processes; Schedule diseases; Sec. 88 accident reporting; Schedule XXV medical examDISH, Gujaratβœ” Yes
OSH Code 2020 + Gujarat OSHWC Rules 2025Ch.IV employer duties; Ch.V OHS; Safety Officer threshold; Annual OHS Audit; Competent Person framework; OSH Committee; welfare provisionsDISH, Gujaratβœ” Yes
OSH Central Rules 2026 (G.S.R. 345(E), 8 May 2026)Updated competent person age limits; national OSH portal reporting; auditor empanelment; revised hazardous process schedulesDGFASLI / DISHβœ” Yes (New)
MSIHC Rules 1989 (as amended)Threshold quantity triggers for Schedule 1/2/3 chemicals; OSEP; mock drill; MSDS requirement; DISH/GIDC notificationDISH Gujarat + SPCB⚠ If threshold crossed
PESO (Explosives Act / Gas Cylinder Rules / Petroleum Rules)Compressed gas cylinder registration; petroleum storage licence; pressure vessel registrationPESO (Govt. of India)βœ” Yes
Indian Boilers Act 1923 / IBR 1950Registration and annual inspection of boilers and pressure vessels >22.5 L above 1 kg/cmΒ²Boiler Inspectorate, Gujaratβœ” Where applicable
Gujarat Fire Prevention & Life Safety Measures ActFire NOC for new/altered construction; annual renewal for high fire load or large occupancyState Fire Authority / GDMAβœ” Yes
Gujarat PCB (Air Act / Water Act / E-Waste Rules)Consent to Operate; stack emission compliance; ETP/STP for trade effluent; GPCB annual return; hazardous waste manifest (Form 3)GPCBβœ” Yes
Electricity Act 2003 / CEA RegulationsElectrical installation safety; periodic inspection; HT/captive generation licenceGERC / Electrical Inspectorateβœ” Yes
Gujarat Factories (OHS Audit) Rules 2025Annual OHS Audit by DISH-empanelled auditor; report submission; compliance within 90 daysDISH, Gujaratβœ” Yes (New 2025)
ESI Act / Workmen's Compensation ActESIC registration; compensation for occupational diseases; employer's liability for industrial accidentsESIC / Labour Commissionerβœ” Yes
⚠ New Regulations (2025–2026)OSH Central Rules 2026 (G.S.R. 345(E), 8 May 2026) and Gujarat Factories (OHS Audit) Rules 2025 are NOW in force. Ensure Safety Officer credentials are updated on the DISH portal and annual OHS audit is budgeted.
βœ…
Section J

Safety Audit Checklist

β–Ό
#Audit ItemLegal RequirementStatusRemarks
1Factory licence (Form 4) displayed and currentFactories Act Sec. 6βœ” CompliantVerify renewal date annually
2Safety Officer appointed and registered with DISHGujarat OSHWC Rule 2025βœ” CompliantCertificate on file; OSH Code threshold met
3OSH Committee constituted (workers + management reps)OSH Code 2020 Sec. 43⚠ ReviewVerify worker rep election minutes
4Annual OHS Audit by DISH-empanelled auditorGujarat OHS Audit Rules 2025⚠ DueSchedule within current FY
5All machine guards intact; interlocks functionalFactories Act Sec. 21βœ” CompliantMonthly inspection register maintained
6LOTO procedure documented; workers trainedGujarat OSHWC Rules⚠ Partial3rd shift training pending; schedule within 30 days
7Hazardous area electrical: FLP/IS equipment in Zone 1/2CEA Rules / IS:5571βœ” CompliantZone drawing updated
8Fire extinguishers: valid, serviced, accessibleFire NOC conditions; IS:15683βœ” CompliantAnnual service certificate on record
9Gas / toxic vapour detectors installed and calibratedMSIHC Rules / industry standard⚠ PartialCalibration of 3 detectors overdue; rectify immediately
10Emergency deluge showers and eyewash stationsMSIHC / factory good practiceβœ” CompliantTested weekly (flow test); within 10 seconds of hazard area
11ELCB (30 mA) on all socket outletsCEA Rules 2010βœ” CompliantTested quarterly
12Earthing resistance measured biannuallyCEA Rulesβœ” CompliantLast test result: <1 Ξ© (HT); <5 Ξ© (LT)
13Medical surveillance records (spirometry, audiometry, blood tests)Factories Act Schedule XXV⚠ PartialAnnual round not completed for new joiners
14SDS for all chemicals at point of use (Gujarati/Hindi + English)MSIHC Rules / OSH Codeβœ” CompliantReviewed against current inventory
15Boiler/pressure vessel IBR certificate currentIndian Boilers Act 1923⚠ CheckConfirm renewal with Boiler Inspectorate
16PPE issued, usage monitored, records maintainedGujarat OSHWC Rules 2025βœ” CompliantIssue register verified; usage monitoring done by supervisors
17Emergency evacuation drill β€” 2Γ— per yearGujarat OSHWC Rules 2025⚠ Partial1st drill done; 2nd due before year-end
18Accident / incident register (Form 11 equivalent)Factories Act Sec. 88βœ” CompliantAll injuries >48 hours reported to DISH
19Contractor safety induction and permit systemOSH Code 2020 Sec. 49⚠ PartialHot work permit system in use; confined space PTW not formalised
20On-Site Emergency Plan (OSEP) reviewed annuallyMSIHC Rules (if applicable)βœ” CompliantOSEP reviewed Jan 2026; copy with DISH and District Authority
πŸŽ“
Section K

Training Matrix

β–Ό
Training TopicWorkersSupervisorsEngineersContractorsManagersFrequency
Safety Induction (General)βœ”βœ”βœ”βœ”βœ”At joining
Machine Guarding & Hazard Awarenessβœ”βœ”βœ”~β€”Annual
LOTO (Lockout / Tagout)βœ”βœ”βœ”βœ”β€”Annual + at PTW issuance
Fire Safety & Extinguisher Useβœ”βœ”βœ”βœ”βœ”6-Monthly
Chemical Safety & SDS Awarenessβœ”βœ”βœ”~~Annual
PPE Selection and Correct Useβœ”βœ”βœ”βœ”β€”Annual
Permit to Work System (PTW)~βœ”βœ”βœ”~Annual
Electrical Safetyβ€”~βœ”βœ”~Annual
First Aid & Emergency Response~βœ”βœ”~βœ”3-Yearly cert + Annual drill
Manual Handling & Ergonomicsβœ”βœ”β€”βœ”β€”Annual
Noise & Hearing Conservationβœ”βœ”~~β€”Annual
Heat Stress Preventionβœ”βœ”~βœ”~Before summer (March)
Incident Investigation & Reportingβ€”βœ”βœ”β€”βœ”Annual
Confined Space Entry~βœ”βœ”βœ”β€”Annual
Legal Compliance (Factories Act / OSH Code)β€”~βœ”β€”βœ”Annual (or on regulatory update)

βœ” Mandatory  |  ~ Awareness level  |  β€” Not required for this role

🚨
Section L

Emergency Preparedness

β–Ό

Emergency Response Organisation

RoleDesignationResponsibility
Incident CommanderWorks Manager / GMOverall command; liaison with external agencies; media and regulatory communication
Safety CoordinatorSafety OfficerDamage assessment; DISH notification within 4 hours (fatal/major); investigation lead
Fire Attack Team LeaderSenior Supervisor / EngineerInternal fire team (6–10 trained); liaison with GFES on arrival
Evacuation WardenShift In-charge (each section)Floor sweep; headcount at assembly point; report all-clear to commander
First Aid CoordinatorTrained First Aider (1:50 ratio)First aid; triage; ambulance coordination; casualty list
Utilities ControllerChief Electrical / Maintenance EngineerEmergency isolation of power, steam, gas; safe shutdown of process
Security ControllerSecurity In-chargeGate control for emergency vehicles; restrict unauthorised entry

Mock Drill Programme

  • Fire Drill: Minimum 2Γ— per year; all shifts; β‰₯1 unannounced; record in drill register
  • Medical Emergency: 1Γ— per year; mass casualty simulation; hospital alert tested
  • Toxic Gas / Chemical Spill: 1Γ— per year (MSIHC units); includes evacuation and decontamination
  • Power Failure / Blackout: Quarterly; DG startup; emergency lighting verification
  • Written debrief within 24 hours; corrective actions with owner and due date

Assembly Points

  • Minimum 2 assembly points per site (primary + alternate) β€” away from gate, clear of emergency vehicle routes
  • Green "ASSEMBLY POINT – A" board (600Γ—900 mm minimum); illuminated at night; GPS coordinates known to fire brigade
  • 100% headcount mandatory; reported to Incident Commander within 10 minutes of alarm activation

Mutual Aid and External Coordination

  • Enrol in GIDC / ESIA Mutual Aid Group (MAG) for industrial estates
  • Emergency contact list: GFES (nearest station), DISH inspector, hospital with burns unit / ICU, DM's office, GPCB
  • MOU with β‰₯2 nearby factories for emergency resource sharing (fire pump, ambulance, personnel)
  • Off-site emergency plan coordination with DDMA (District Disaster Management Authority) for MSIHC units

On-Site Emergency Plan (OSEP)

  • Mandatory for MSIHC threshold factories; recommended for all units with >50 workers
  • Covers: fire, toxic release, explosion, medical mass casualty, power failure, civil unrest
  • OSEP reviewed annually and after every actual emergency or drill with significant findings
  • Copies: Works Manager, Safety Officer, Security, DISH Office (MSIHC), District Emergency Authority
πŸ†
Section M

Best Practices in Leading Indian Industries

β–Ό
  • Zero Tolerance for Guard Removal: Disciplinary action up to termination for guard removal under production pressure β€” integrated into HR policy and employment contract
  • Behaviour-Based Safety (BBS) Programme: Structured peer observation with trained coaches from the workforce; documented 30–50% reduction in unsafe acts in Indian industry adopters
  • Digital PTW and LOTO System: QR-code-based digital Permit to Work; real-time isolation tracking; prevents multi-shift overlap errors; audit trail for DISH inspection
  • Near-Miss Reporting Culture: Top performers achieve >200 near-miss reports per 1000 workers per year; zero-blame policy; every report acknowledged within 24 hours; weekly trend review
  • Safety Observation Round (SOR): Every supervisor submits β‰₯2 safety observations per shift via mobile app; weekly management review; top safety observer recognised monthly
  • Monthly Safety Incentive: Team/section with zero LTI and highest near-miss reports gets recognition (certificate + small reward) β€” reinforces positive safety behaviour without masking incidents
  • Contractor Safety Passport: All contractors undergo site induction + hazard briefing; safety passport card required for site entry; records digitised and verified at gate
  • Thermographic Electrical Survey: Annual IR thermography of all MCCs, panels, and critical connections β€” hot spots identified and corrected before fire or failure occurs
  • Annual Safety Day (4 March β€” National Safety Day): Safety quiz, banner competition, skill demonstration, management commitment event β€” builds safety culture across all levels
  • Visual Safety Factory: Colour-coded hazard zones; safety rules in Gujarati, Hindi, and Tamil (for migrant workers); pictorial boards replacing text-only signs
  • Management Safety Walk: Senior management (MD/Director) unannounced safety walkthrough quarterly; findings actioned within 2 weeks β€” signals top-level commitment that cascades through all levels
  • Process Safety Reviews (HAZOP/FMEA): Leading chemical and pharma plants β€” annual HAZOP for critical processes; FMEA for critical equipment; findings tracked to closure
πŸ“Š
Section N

Safety Performance Indicators

β–Ό
KPIFormulaUnitIndian Industry BenchmarkWorld-Class Target
Accident Frequency Rate (AFR)Reportable accidents Γ— 1,000,000 Γ· Man-hours workedAccidents / million man-hours8–20 (Indian manufacturing)<3
Accident Severity Rate (ASR)Man-days lost Γ— 1,000,000 Γ· Man-hours workedDays lost / million man-hours200–600<100
LTIFR (Lost Time Injury Frequency Rate)LTIs Γ— 1,000,000 Γ· Man-hours workedLTIs / million man-hours5–15<1.5
Near Miss RateNear misses reported Γ— 1,000 Γ· Man-hours workedPer 1000 worker-hours0.5–2 (heavily under-reported)>5 (high reporting = good culture)
PPE Compliance RateWorkers correctly wearing PPE Γ· Total observed Γ— 100%55–75%>95%
Training Compliance RateWorkers trained on schedule Γ· Target Γ— 100%50–70%>95%
Unsafe Act / Condition RateUnsafe observations Γ· Total safety observations Γ— 100%25–40%<5%
Safety Observation Rate (SOR)Observations submitted Γ· Supervisors Γ— monthObs/supervisor/month2–5>10

Near Miss Reporting Protocol

  • Simple form (paper or mobile): 5 fields max; option for anonymous reporting
  • Report within same shift; zero disciplinary action for reporter β€” absolute policy, communicated in writing
  • Weekly review in safety meeting; each near miss gets corrective action with owner and due date
  • Monthly trend analysis: repeat locations and hazard types β†’ focus resources on hotspots
  • Near-miss:LTI ratio target: 300:1 (high-reporting culture) vs. <50:1 (under-reporting β€” dangerous)
🎯
Section O

Conclusion – Critical Safety Actions

β–Ό
βœ… The Safety EquationIn every manufacturing facility, safety is not a cost β€” it is a productivity multiplier and a legal obligation. One serious accident can result in permanent disability, factory closure, criminal prosecution under OSH Code 2020, and irreparable reputational damage. Proactive safety management is the only rational business decision.

Top 10 Non-Negotiable Safety Actions for This Industry

  1. Gravure/Flexo Zone 2 compliance: LEL monitor at press and dryer; continuous ventilation; no non-FLP equipment in press room β€” solvent press fires and explosions have occurred in Indian printing units
  2. Toluene substitution or LEV: move from toluene to ethyl acetate or water-based gravure inks β€” if toluene retained, biological monitoring (urinary hippuric acid) mandatory annually for all exposed workers
  3. Press nip guarding: all impression/transfer/anvil nips guarded or covered with trip bar; emergency stop at all operating positions on the press β€” high-speed press nips are amputating
  4. Die cutter safety: two-hand control or light curtain on platen die cutter; no manual reach-in during cycling β€” die cutter injuries are under-reported but severe
  5. UV lamp safety: face shield for UV; gloves for UV ink; ozone extraction above UV lamps; lamp enclosure in good condition; UV power-off before any access to lamp area
  6. Static management on film presses: tinsel earth strips, ionising bars, bonded press frame β€” static shock and fire risk on plastic film substrates running at 300+ m/min
  7. Solvent store earthing and ventilation: solvent drums and IBCs earthed and bonded; explosion-proof ventilation; no ignition sources; flashpoint data posted
  8. Hot melt glue burns: insulated application gun, drip trays, heat-resistant gloves; glue application temperature control; burn is the most common acute injury in folding-gluing operations
  9. Roll handling: roll loading crane or roll stand for all rolls >50 kg; fork-mounted roll clamp for large rolls; worker foot-protection from roll fall
  10. Medical surveillance: annual spirometry for press operators (solvent asthma, respiratory irritation); colour vision test for press operators; neurobehavioural screen for gravure workers with >5 years exposure
πŸ“ž For Safety Compliance Consulting, Training & Audits β€” Gujarat This safety encyclopedia is produced by Udyogmitra Associates, Ahmedabad β€” specialists in OSH Code 2020, Gujarat OSHWC Rules 2025, Gujarat Factories (OHS Audit) Rules 2025, and factory safety compliance. Contact us for factory safety audits, Safety Officer training, DISH compliance representation, and customised safety training programmes for your workforce.