The HSE Definition of competence;
To be competent an organisation or individual must have:
• sufficient knowledge of the tasks to be undertaken and the risks involved
• the experience and ability to carry out their duties in relation to the project, to recognise their limitations and take appropriate action to prevent harm to those carrying out construction work, or those affected by the work
Competence develops over time. Individuals develop their competence through a mix of initial training, on-the-job learning, instruction, assessment and formal qualification.........
With CDM2007 applicability for construction projects offshore on the UK continental shelf, and the development of offshore renewables (wind farms) gathering pace, competent CDM and H&S practitioners are in very short supply. Not that there aren’t plenty of CDMc‘s and H&S professionals out there, it’s just that the availability of CDM Coordinators and health and safety professionals with offshore construction or installation, and offshore renewable energy experience “Relevant” to these projects are few and far between.
Many clients have little understanding of the need to appoint CDM coordinators with experience “relevant” to their project, often basing their selection simply on the CDM Coordinator being a member of a construction related professional institution or listed within a register of CDM Coordinators and misinterpreting the requirement or ignoring that key word in the HSE recommendation for assessing competence “Relevant”
The situation is being exacerbated by the ridiculous fact that All of the available professional bodies and CDMc registers ignore the fact that qualifications and experience relevant to the field of offshore construction are also relevant to membership of their "construction related professional institutions" with these organisations or institutions awarding points for experience and qualifications and stating that a minimum number of points is a condition of membership, and ignoring or dismissing those with qualification and experience in commercial diving, offshore drilling, offshore cable and pipe laying, vessel operations, marine and maritime engineering. All relevant to the largest construction projects ongoing in the UK today.
A background in maritime industries such as, offshore oil & gas,, commercial diving or marine civil engineering for example will give a CDM Coordinator and H&S practitioner a far better insight into the risks presented by projects in the offshore environment, where construction, supply and transport is carried out by vessels constrained by environmental conditions, time and distance from shore and weather windows,
In a nutshell, someone with a project relevant background is far more likely to spot the risks and the gaps in both design and safety management systems, than someone with H&S/CDM background solely in onshore civil engineering/construction and with no marine/maritime experience. After all, you wouldn’t take a health and safety manager whose only experience was Health and safety management in a Hospital and expect him to effectively manage health and safety on a bridge construction project, or vise versa.