Saturday, September 7, 2024

Fatalities is farming are twenty times more likely than industrial average, new figures reveal

Agriculture has the poorest safety record of any occupation in the country, according to figures just released by the HSE, with fatalities at least 20 times more likely than any other industry.

NFU Deputy President and Farm Safety Partnership chair David Exwood said every number was a personal tragedy, after news that 27 people lost their lives in the year to March 2024 in England, Wales and Scotland.

Release of the figures marked the start of Farm Safety Week – a campaign managed and funded by the Farm Safety Foundation (Yellow Wellies). The 2024 campaign will focus on the importance of recognising and recording near-misses.

Despite accounting for only 1% of the working population, agriculture accounts for 20% of all deaths in the workplace.

Nearly 40% of farm workers killed were over the age of 65.

Four members of the public were killed, two of which were children.

Mr Exwood added: “Our sector must work on improving the culture of farm safety. You are 21 times more likely to have a fatal accident working in agriculture than any other industry and frustratingly the risks and necessary precautions are well known and understood.

“This isn’t about time or money. Nothing costs more than a serious accident or death in a business, and the effect on what are often family members can be devastating. This is about putting safety first in simple, cost-effective ways that will mean everyone goes home at the end of the working day.”

The Farm Safety Foundation has said the industry needs to address the attitude to risk-taking and poor safety behaviours, adding that “we cannot let this continue”.

This year marks ten years of the Farm Safety Foundation and while the charity says it is proud of what has been achieved so far, today’s figures highlight “there is so much more to be done to address the risks and dangers farm workers face every day to put food on our plates”.

Stephanie Berkeley, Farm Safety Foundation manager said: “Attitudes and behaviours around farm safety are changing but the pace of change is slow – too slow for the families of those we have lost in the industry and too slow for the thousands of farmers suffering every day with long term ill-health or serious injuries as a result of their work.”

 

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