Chesterfield Special Cylinders Ltd was fined £700,000 this week for safety breaches after a 64-year-old worker was fatally wounded by shrapnel ejected from testing equipment.
Sheffield Crown Court heard that in June 2015, an employee was leak testing eight 1500 litre cylinders, by applying compressed air inside to create pressure, at the company's Sheffield site. Whilst in the process of venting the air through the test manifold, it catastrophically failed and fatally injured the employee.
An investigation by the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) found that prior to installing the fittings, 1.5 litres of a mineral oil-based corrosion inhibitor had been placed into each of the cylinders. The incident occurred because the inhibitor contaminated the leak test manifold during venting of cylinders and was subjected to enough pressure inside the manifold to ignite and cause the test equipment to fail.
Chesterfield Special Cylinders Ltd was found guilty of breaching the Health and Safety at Work etc Act 1974, was fined £700,000, and full costs of £169,498.82.
HSE inspector Eddy Tarn commented: "This was a tragic and wholly avoidable incident, caused by the failure of the company to identify any additional risks that arise when work processes are adapted".
"Companies should accurately identify and control all potential hazards in the workplace and thereafter monitor performance through effective supervision".