MAIB reports on Cherry Sand

The dredger Cherry Sand

The Marine Accident Investigation Branch (MAIB) has released its findings on the man overboard from dredger Cherry Sand with loss of one life.

In February 2019, the master of Cherry Sand was crushed between the dredger and the jetty after he fell while attempting to step ashore to assist berthing the vessel in Rosyth, Scotland.

The master had climbed over Cherry Sand’s bulwark and onto the rubbing band in readiness to step ashore as part of a self-mooring operation. The chief officer was still manoeuvring the dredger towards the berth when the master took a single step towards the quayside. Cherry Sand was too far away from its berth, with the result that the master’s foot missed the quay, and his upper body struck the chains and quayside with force before he fell between the quay wall and the vessel. He was crushed by the moving dredger before slipping into the water.

The master was wearing a lifejacket and the ship’s crew were able to recover him onto the quayside, but his injuries were too severe and he could not be revived.

MAIB has highlighted the following safety issues.

  • The method used for self-mooring Cherry Sand was inherently hazardous, and crew routinely stepped ashore/onboard when the vessel was not tight alongside.
  • Linesmen were not used, and no measures had been taken to avoid having to place a crew member ashore while the vessel was unmoored.
  • UK Dredging’s safety management system audits had not identified that Cherry Sand‘s operational practices, and the general safety culture on board, were below the expected level.
  • Of the occupational accidents investigated by the MAIB over the past five years, more than 40% of the mariners who lost their lives were over 50 years old. Over the same period, the four persons who lost their lives while attempting to step on/off during mooring operations were between the age of 58 and 72. HSE guidance warns that older workers may experience more slips, trips and falls than younger workers, and recovery following an injury may take longer.

Read the full report online, including recommendations to the Maritime and Coastguard Agency and Associated British Ports.

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