Hot work
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hot work is a process that can be a source of ignition when flammable material is present or can be a fire hazard regardless of the presence of flammable material in the workplace. Common hot work processes involve welding, soldering, cutting, brazing burning and the use of powder-actuated tools or similar fire producing operations outside of designated hot work areas. When flammable materials are not present, industrial processes such as grinding and drilling become cold work processes.[1]
The examples and perspective in this 2023-01-19 may not represent a worldwide view of the subject. (January 2023) |
In some countries, such as the UK and Canada,[2] a hot work permit is required for hot work.[1] The purpose of a hot work permit is to effect "the employer's written authorization to perform hot working operations".[3] The UK's Health and Safety Executive suggests that a hot work permit should specify:
- what work will be done;
- how and when it is to be done;
- what safety and health precautions are needed;
- who is responsible for checking it is safe for the work to start;
- who will check that the work is done safely;
- who is responsible for confirming that work is complete and there is no longer a risk from, or to, the people doing the work.[4]