Skip to main content

Safety first - understanding bitumen hazards

BP Bitumen has launched its new SafetyFirst initiative using "some best in class industry practices" to help its partners better understand some of the main hazards associated with bitumen storage and handling. The bitumen industry has worked hard at improving safety and has achieved significant results. "But we still need to be more vigilant: we want to ensure that our plant employees, and customer employees as well as third party employees, are sustaining continuous personal development, utilising best pr
February 10, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
BP Bitumen's SafetyFirst initiative aims to help partners better understand some of the main hazards associated with bitumen storage and handling
1161 BP Bitumen has launched its new SafetyFirst initiative using "some best in class industry practices" to help its partners better understand some of the main hazards associated with bitumen storage and handling.

The bitumen industry has worked hard at improving safety and has achieved significant results.

"But we still need to be more vigilant: we want to ensure that our plant employees, and customer employees as well as third party employees, are sustaining continuous personal development, utilising best practice safety guidelines, actively preventing incidents and more importantly to ensure all staff is working in a safe environment", says Laurent Galland, country manager BP Bitumen France.

Ingeborg Schröder, HSSEQ ( Health Safety Security Enviromental Quality) advisor for BP Bitumen in Germany, says: "We learned from near misses and incidents that incorrect handling of bitumen can lead to severe accidents, putting health and life of the people involved at risk. Bitumen itself is not classified as hazardous material and is therefore often not considered to be dangerous: a big mistake. The typical handling temperature of around 180°C alone does pose a threat to everybody dealing with bitumen.

"On this account we are launching our SafetyFirst programme which aims to achieve improved safety performance at load locations and asphalt mixing plants. The SafetyFirst initiative will introduce a new approach to safety management enabling a value-based dialogue with our customers, working in partnership for bitumen safe handling and storage." The BP SafetyFirst initiative is based on a DVD, and incorporates the experience and knowledge of customers, drivers and employees at the loading and discharging sites.

The SafetyFirst DVD is available as a European version and is presented in multiple languages.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Clean road construction technology is coming from Wirtgen
    May 14, 2025

    Dr Volker Knickel, CEO of the Wirtgen Group said that the firm is working to deliver sustainable and efficient road construction technologies. Warm asphalt plays a key role in sustainable road construction and will grow in use in the next few years. Dr Knickel commented that sustainability will be of increasing importance for contractors, while in Germany there are also stricter regulations on reducing the exposure site personnel to VOCs.

  • Clean road construction technology is coming from Wirtgen
    June 18, 2025
    Wirtgen is introducing advanced technologies that will boost sustainability
  • The use of telematics in construction machines is growing
    May 20, 2015
    Demand for telematics technology is growing, as equipment users begin to lean the value of these systems – Alan Dron reports With construction projects increasingly operating to wafer-thin profit margins, any technological assistance that can keep the accounts in the black is welcome. This is particularly the case with those projects where contractors can share a larger slice of the profits if they complete their work ahead of schedule. The downside, of course, is that they also share the pain if the
  • Advances in bitumen technology: new applications
    February 16, 2022
    This month, we look at four very different pavement technologies in four very different applications