Lorry Drivers Forced to Keep to EU Working Hours

KENT, UNITED KINGDOM, Jul 06 (MARKET WIRE) —
It has been revealed that self-employed lorry drivers will not be made
exempt from the working time directive, following events on June 15th.
MEPs voted against the move to make self-employed drivers exempt from EU
rules on working hours.

A European Commission proposal on the issue provoked a concentrated
debate from MEPs, largely centring on regulations and restrictions
already facing small businesses versus lorry drivers’ safety when working
long hours.

Flint Insurance, a leading HGV Insurance company reported how the
directive was first brought out in 2002 to regulate EU working times and
independent lorry drivers had been made exempt since 2009. However, they
will now be forced to adhere to the 48 hour maximum working week as well
as ensuring they take regular breaks.

It had been a concern to the Commission that some drivers purportedly
work over 80 hours a week, which raised the matter of over worked lorry
drivers prone to dangerous driving because of exhaustion.

A spokesperson for Flint, who specialise in Lorry Insurance , commented:
‘It is very important for drivers to make sure they take frequent breaks
and stay alert. Many lorry drivers are forced to work for lengthy
stretches on the roads, putting them at major risk of losing their
concentration. It is therefore vital that drivers avoid this by taking
appropriate measures whenever they feel extremely fatigued’.

The Commission hopes to prevent such situations so that drivers are not
at peril of putting their own life or others’ in danger. But some MEPs
claim that there is no evidence to show that lorry drivers are involved
in many accidents due to tiredness.

The main question to come out of the debate is whether or not small
businesses can realistically cope with the potential work hour
restrictions and organise themselves appropriately, while maintaining
their income and not overstretching resources.

Some MEPs have argued that they cannot and this latest restriction is
simply unnecessary. It remains to be seen whether or not the proposal
will go ahead or not.

About Flint Insurance:

Flint Insurance is an independent insurance broker. With over 30 years’
experience in the trade, they can offer a range of cover for businesses
including specialist HGV insurance cover throughout the UK. By using a
panel of over 35 insurers, they can provide the most appropriate and
cost-effective cover for their clients.

For further information, please visit: www.flintinsurance.co.uk or call
0800 021 4501.

Contacts:
HGV Insurance Public Relations – Flint Insurance
Dave Stoneman
Kent, United Kingdom
0208 309 5000
Davestoneman@flintinsurance.co.uk

Copyright 2010, Market Wire, All rights reserved.

Italy energy import costs to rise in 2010 – industry

June 10 (Reuters) – Italy’s overall energy import costs in 2010 are expected to increase by 7-9 billion euros on the back of rising prices from 42 billion euros last year, the head of industry body Unione Petrolifera (UP) said on Thursday.

Italy, which covers just 6.2 percent of its energy demand with domestic output, is likely to see oil import costs rising by 6 billion euros ($7.22 billion) from 20.4 billion euros in 2009, UP Chairman Pasquale De Vita told its annual meeting.

UP represents major national and foreign refiners and oil products distributors working in Italy.

Italy’s oil industry strongly opposes proposals to deepen the European Union’s cut in carbon dioxide emissions by 2020 to 30 percent from 20 percent targeted at present, De Vita said.

He said the oil industry should tighten its operating rules and controls after BP’s (BP.L) oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico but ruled out similar accidents offshore Italy because safety levels are high and work is carried out mostly in shallow waters.

($1=.8307 Euro)

(Writing by Svetlana Kovalyova)

Plan for unified force to tackle railway crimes

New Delhi, May 29 — Rattled by a series of Maoist attacks on passenger trains, the railways have tossed up a proposal for setting up a unified force to deal with railway crimes, with a clearly defined control and command structure. A draft favouring a unified railway force is under consideration and likely to be moved to the Union cabinet for approval, ministry sources said.

“Railway crimes are nobody’s baby as the RPF has all the responsibility and no powers, while the GRP has all powers and no responsibility,” said A.K. Suri, former RPF director-general. Railway crimes are jointly dealt with by the 69,000 strong Railway Protection Force (RPF) and 36,000 personnel comprising the Government Railway Police (GRP).

The railways pays compensation to passengers, but the RPF deals only with minor crimes. Fifty per cent of the salaries of GRP personnel are borne by the railways and the unit handles major crimes, but has little accountability.

As at Jhargram, the two organisations have continuously displayed a tendency to play the blame game after accidents. “All that the railways needs to do is to invoke the 7th schedule of the constitution for putting in place a unified railways force.

But the political will has been lacking,” said Uma Shankar Jha, general secretary of the RPF Association. The railways do not have a unified all-India cadre, with personnel of nine different cadres working in the ministry.

Men faster, riskier behind the wheels: Study

Wellington, May 20 (ANI): Although women drivers are involved in more crashes, accidents involving men drivers are far more fatal, as they tend to take more risks on road, according to a survey.

The AA Insurance Drivers Index surveyed 4336 drivers aged between 18-65 and found that 24 per cent of men admitted breaking the speed limit most of the time, com-pared with 16 per cent of women.

While women avoid speeding because of safety, men fear demerit points.

More men feel okay about drinking before driving, compared to women. And it is men who alter their driving route to avoid police checkpoints.

The average claim for accidents involving men is $2450, whereas it is the average claim is 2450 dollars, whereas women”s claims, when at fault, average 2257 dollars in women”s claims.

“I don”t feel safe when he”s driving,” Nzherald.co.nz quoted Antje Schomacker, 28, who has been driving for 10 years compared to her partner”s two, as saying.

“It feels like he doesn”t have the car in control. We were travelling through New Zealand in a campervan and I was like ”no, no, no, you get out” because I was scared … he”s driving too fast around the corners like ”oh, this is fun” and you can feel he doesn”t have control.”

Scott Douglas, her husband agrees.

“Sometimes I scare myself driving. She”s the better driver – way better.”

Luckiest man in the world gives away his lottery fortune

London, May 14 (ANI): He has cheated death seven times, celebrated his fifth marriage and now given away his lottery worth 600,000 pounds – Frano Selak, dubbed the world”s luckiest man, is grateful for his “good luck” and has now decided to lead a frugal life.

Selak, 81 has fallen out of a plane door to land on a haystack, survived a train wreck, been in a fatal bus accident and sent his car flying over a 300 ft precipice – and miraculously, escaped from each of these disasters alive.

And now, he has given away his lottery fortune of 600,000 pounds to lead a meagre lifestyle, for he says – money can’t buy happiness after all.

He kept the last bit of his winnings for a hip replacement operation so he could enjoy life with his wife and also so he could build a shrine to the Virgin Mary to give thanks for his luck.

“All I need at my age is my Katarina. Money would not change anything.

“When she arrived I knew then that I really did have a charmed, blessed life.

“I never thought I was lucky to survive all my brushes with death. I thought I was unlucky to be in them in the first place,” The Telegraph quoted him as saying.

After surviving plane and train crashes and numerous other accidents, the pensioner has finally realized how lucky he is.

He said that people were always telling him he was lucky to have survived so many disasters but he added, “I always think I was unlucky to have been in them in the first place but you can”t tell people what they don”t want to believe.” (ANI)

Calamity Crozier, Scotland’s most accident-prone woman, collects £1k!

London, May 12 (ANI): A woman, who has been named as Scotland’s most accident-prone person, seems to have a had a change of luck after she beat more than 100 other clumsy Scots to win the title and 1,000 pounds.

Lorraine Crozier, 35, from Motherwell, North Lanarkshire, nicknamed Calamity Crozier, has suffered more than 20 serious accidents as well as countless bumps, trips and falls.

Her injuries include a broken coccyx, ruptured knee ligaments, fractured elbow, chipped collarbone, dislocated shoulder, and four broken toes – despite the fact she once worked as a health and safety investigator.

Crozier, who has a two-year-old daughter Hannah, is so accident-prone that on one occasion she damaged her shoulder walking into a lamppost on her way to the optician’s.

“I entered the competition as a bit of a joke to prove to my friends that something good could come of all of my accidents. I never believed I’d win,” the Scotsman quoted Crozier as saying. (ANI)

1 in 10 Brits has been injured while gardening!

London, Apr 30 (ANI): Around 10 percent of Britons have injured themselves while gardening, says a research.

This is four times as many as those who suffered on the ski-slopes, added the study, published in advance of the Mayday weekend.

DIY had a similarly high casualty rate with 1 in 20 enthusiasts hurt whilst repairing their houses, more than those harmed whilst horse riding or rock climbing, reports The Telegraph.

Carried out by AposTherapy, a new therapy to help people cope with chronic joint pains, the study found that walks in the country led to more accidents than mountain biking.

Dr Peter Mace, assistant medical director of Bupa, which provides the therapy, said: “Anyone planning to spend time gardening or decorating this weekend should remember that they may be using muscle groups and joints they haven’t exercised in a long while.

“There are simple precautions people can take to avoid injury and the onset of a chronic condition. For instance simple stretching and remembering correct posture can make a massive difference.” (ANI)

Underdeveloped brain makes young drivers more prone to car crashes

Melbourne, Apr 28 (ANI): A new study claims to have found the reason as to why young drivers are involved in so many car crashes: underdeveloped brains.

According to Dr Lisa Wundersitz, from the Centre for Automotive Research, the underdeveloped brains make young drivers more impulsive and less able to properly assess risks.

Wundersitz said research has shown that inexperience, distractions from modern technology and a cultural tendency to “take risks” were the reason for most accidents, reports The Couriermail.

“There is a biological element the prefrontal cortex of the brain is not fully developed until they are in their 20s,” she said.

“This means their long-term planning skills, reasoning and impulse skills are all lacking.

“Typically, a lot of people might speed because they love the adrenaline rush it”s sensation seeking.

“I guess you want to experience certain impulses and as we get older, you might have the same impulse but you will think of the consequences as well.”

Wundersitz also blamed modern technology for the increase in young driver crashes.

“You have mobile phones, GPS, iPods, entertainment screens it can be quite distracting.

“An inexperienced driver suddenly has to divide their attention between driving and these distractions.

“It”s more difficult for them than a more experienced driver, where the driving process is more automated,” she said. (ANI)

Meet Britain”s unluckiest motorist

London, April 24 (ANI): A British man has claimed that he is Britain”s unluckiest motorist after going through five car crashes, three hit-and-runs and also being struck by a bus while cycling.

John Child, 45, a mechanical design engineer from Milton Keynes, Bucks, who has even been mowed down on a zebra crossing, is scared to leave his home.

He revealed he has been in ten accidents in the last ten years, and in every case he has had to fight to clear his name after being accused of being at fault.

Child has suffered from whiplash, severe bruising all over his body and even a torn shoulder ligament, and he has also had to fork out for more than 4,500 pounds for repairs to his cars and bike.

“I”ve seen my doctors so many times now after crashes I”ve told them I”m allergic to cars,” the Sun quoted him as saying.

And to add to his woes, the out-of-luck engineer was made redundant from his job at Jaguar in Warwickshire last year.

His catalogue of disasters began on January 24, 1999, when a woman pulled out and drove into the passenger side of his VW Golf as he drove across a roundabout.

“I have been driving since I was 18 for 28 safe years and I have never caused a collision,” he said.

“I used to cycle 25 miles in the evening after work to clear my head, but I”ve given that up now. It”s just not safe to cycle on the roads anymore.

“I still can”t work out why this keeps happening to me,” he said.

Colour-blind Child has managed to clear his name in nine out of the ten disputes but is still fighting a legal battle from an incident in March last year.

His luck may finally be changing though, as he was recently offered his old job back and will return to Jaguar later this year.

“It”s great news getting my job back. I hope this means my luck is turning,” he said.

Adding: “After everything that”s happened to me, I”m lucky to be alive.” (ANI)

Crewman ‘possibly affected by alcohol’ when he died

An investigation has found a crewman who died on board a cargo ship at Townsville in 2008 may have been affected by alcohol.

The Australian Transport Safety Bureau (ATSB) has completed its final report into a fatal incident on the Maltese-registered container ship ‘Spirit of Esperance’.

In November 2008, a crewman died after falling four metres while trying to stow a cargo crane hook while the ship was berthed in Townsville.

The investigation found that the correct procedures were not followed during the docking of the ship and raised concerns about whether safety procedures were routinely met.

It also found that the crewman was probably under the influence of alcohol at the time of the accident which may have affected his reaction time, balance and general ability.

Springborg sorry about car crash

Deputy Opposition Leader Lawrence Springborg has apologised over his involvement in a traffic accident in Brisbane yesterday.

Mr Springborg’s car collided with another vehicle at Albion on Brisbane’s northside.

A woman from the other car was taken to hospital for observation.

Mr Springborg was not hurt.

Mr Springborg says he had driven from his property on the southern Darling Downs, but says he was not tired.

“Nothing like that whatsoever – it’s just one of those things – accidents happen and there’s just no explanation,” he said.

“Sometimes if you sat down, if there was a clear explanation it would make it a lot easier for everyone to understand.

“I’m just pleased that no one has been seriously injured – it’s just one of those things that happen, just stupid.

“These things shouldn’t happen and they do and there’s just sometimes no explanation as to why things happen, accidents happen and I just apologise to people for any inconvenience which has been caused.”

Oil pumped from grounded coal ship

Salvagers have pumped almost 40 tonnes of oil from a coal carrier grounded on the Great Barrier Reef off central Queensland.

It has been almost a week since the Shen Neng ran aground on Douglas Shoal, spilling more than two tonnes of oil.

Authorities are now pumping out more than 970 tonnes of fuel oil still on the ship.

Queensland Premier Anna Bligh says the ship’s insurer will be forced to pay for the salvage operation and the Government will recoup its expenses from the insurance company.

“But that is a matter for down the track,” she said.

“Number one priority – get this ship out of this reef safely without any damage to the reef.”

Ms Bligh says the shipping company could face fines of up to a million dollars over the incident.

Reporting dispute

Australian maritime authorities are disputing a claim that the grounding was reported within five minutes.

In a statement on Friday the Chinese state-owned Shenzhen Energy Transport apologised for the incident saying it is cooperating with authorities.

The company says it alerted Australian authorities about five minutes after the ship ran aground but the Australian Maritime Safety Authority (AMSA) disputes the claim, saying it was not told for about an-hour-and-a-half.

It then took another 25 minutes for Maritime Safety Queensland to become involved.

AMSA has asked the Chinese company to clarify its comments.

There was criticism last year that authorities took too long to act after a major oil spill off south-east Queensland.

Could take days

Meanwhile, authorities are putting safety equipment in place to reduce the risk of a further spill as they prepare to pump out the remaining fuel.

About 250 workers are on standby should any oil reach the coast.

Maritime Safety Queensland (MSQ) general manager Patrick Quirk says it could take days to transfer all the oil.

“This is just a part of a long process and we need to keep our eye on the short game, which is the pumping of the oil,” he said.

“The medium-term game is the refloating and what we’re going to do when we refloat her.”

Mr Quirk says the carrier is holding together.

“The salvors have put on electronic monitoring, hull-monitoring equipment and they have advised that they are detecting no further deflections of the hull, which means that the damage has stabilised,” he said.

“We’re doing a metre-by-metre check of the ship with the salvors and that will determine what goes into the computer programs in terms of the damage-assessment reports.”

Mr Quirk says the weather conditions today are favourable.

“A bit of a wind change due Monday which we’ll need to keep our eye on, but at the moment we’re not being alarmed by the weather change,” he said.

Prime Minister Kevin Rudd says the oil transfer is a difficult and delicate operation.

“Anyone who thinks this is all over red rover, frankly, they’re not getting it right,” he said.

“This is going to take a lot of time, a lot of technical precision and hard work and it’s a very difficult situation still with no absolute guarantee of success.”

Political ‘sightseeing’

Meanwhile, Queensland Opposition Leader John-Paul Langbroek has criticised Premier Anna Bligh for travelling to inspect the stricken coal carrier.

Ms Bligh will today fly over the ship.

Mr Langbroek say Ms Bligh is the fourth Labor politician to go and look at the damage.

“I think it’s interesting that Anna Bligh is following the example of Kevin Rudd, [Federal Environment Minister] Peter Garrett and [Queensland Transport Minister] Rachel Nolan to be the fourth senior politician to take a plane flight over the Shen Neng 1,” he said.

“I think it’s time for the sightseeing to stop by senior politicians and let’s just let the experts get on with fixing it.”

- Reporting by Paul Robinson, Maria Hatzakis, Kerrin Binnie and Natalie Poyhonen

Rough ride: trio rescued from roller-coaster

Two teenagers and a woman in her 40s have been given the all clear by ambulance officers after being trapped on a roller-coaster at Sydney’s Royal Easter Show.

The trio were stuck in a horizontal position in their seats, five metres above the ground, for about 90 minutes when the roller-coaster stopped unexpectedly about 4.00pm.

Fire Brigade Superintendent Ian Krimmer says emergency service workers used a ladder truck to bring the passengers down safely.

“It would have been a stressful time for the three people. They were stuck for over an hour,” he said.

“It’s been a combined effort to bring them down by the three services: police, fire and ambulance.

“They’re currently being assessed by ambulance crews on the ground and the cause of the incident will be investigated shortly.”

A WorkCover inspector will examine the roller-coaster tonight and determine if it is safe to continue operating.

Defence probes asylum boat sinking

The Defence Department says it will investigate why a boat carrying asylum seekers sank in the Indian Ocean last night.

HMAS Wollongong responded to a distress call from the boat which was found south-east of Christmas Island.

Defence says the boat initially appeared to be in good condition and it was being escorted back to the island.

The Deputy Chief of Joint Operations, Rear Admiral Allan Du Toit, says the 16 women and children were transferred off the boat before it sank and the other passengers were rescued from the water.

“[They] are now safe with no apparent health issues,” he said.

“Rescue operations like this are always extremely difficult and the fact the rescue took place safely in the dark is a credit to all of those involved.”

Highway accident site inspected by state opposition leader

New South Wales Opposition Leader Barry O’Farrell says his tour of the Pacific Highway has confirmed the dangerous conditions on the north coast stretch.

Mr O’Farrell drove from Ballina to Grafton on Thursday, the same day as a fatal accident on the highway near Iluka.

He’ll continue the drive from Grafton to Coffs Harbour on Friday.

Mr O’Farrell inspected the accident site yesterday.

“You are not going to have head on accidents if there is divided highway,” said the opposition leader.

“What was chilling for me was not just the accident yesterday on the day that I was visiting but listening to (local politicians) recount the names of the accidents as we went past them,” said Mr O’Farrell.

“They weren’t doing it from notes they were doing it because like good local members they understand what happens in their community they understand where these accidents have occured and they want to see an end to it, ” he said.

More details have emerged of the latest deadly accident on the Pacific Highway.

A 69 year old man died from injuries he received in a head-on collision between his car and a semi-trailer.

The accident happened around half-past five on Thursday morning, two kilometres north of the Iluka.

Police say a station wagon was travelling south when it slammed head on into the prime mover.

The truck’s fuel tank ruptured, it lost a wheel and veered into a truck-stop hitting another truck parked in the area.

The driver of the northbound truck, a 63-year-old Tamworth man, and the man sleeping in the parked truck were not injured.

Police are preparing a report for the coroner.

Teen refused bail after car crash

A teenage boy has been refused bail after a car crash that left seven people injured.

The 16-year-old is facing seven charges after crashing into a four-wheel drive on Tuesday night.

Police allege the boy stole the sedan before picking up friends.

He was following the four-wheel drive to West Albury when the crash occurred. Seven people were hurt in the crash, including a 20-year-old woman who remains in a serious condition with spinal injuries, a punctured lung and bleeding on the brain.

The defence said the boy would plead guilty to one count of dangerous driving occasioning grievous bodily harm, and one of unlicensed driving.

Oil wells fail company’s own safety standards

The company that owns the oil well that leaked into the Timor Sea last year says none of the other wells it owns in the oil field comply with its own safety standards.

The well is located in the Montara field off the north-west coast of Western Australia.

From August last year, it leaked thousands of barrels of oil and gas into the Timor Sea each day for 10 weeks, causing Australia’s third largest oil spill.

Andy Jacobs is the Chief Operating Officer of PTTEP Australasia, the Thai-based company that owns the well.

He is the most senior representative from the company to give evidence at the Federal inquiry into the incident.

The inquiry has previously heard the blowout was caused by poor decisions made while the well was being temporarily suspended in the months before the accident.

Now Mr Jacobs has told the inquiry not one of the five wells PTTEP own has been suspended the way it should be, according to the company’s own safety guidelines.

Mr Jacobs also admitted two managers did not do their jobs when it came to reviewing important information about the well’s construction.

The inquiry has heard that the well’s cementing was significantly weaker than it should have been and that that was one of the underlying causes of the blowout.

But Mr Jacobs said the two senior managers, who were based at the company’s Perth office, had all the information they needed to realise there was a problem with the cementing of the well.

Two die in Princes Hwy crash

Two people have been killed in a car crash in far East Gippsland.

Police say two cars collided on the Princes Highway at Genoa near the New South Wales border today.

Paramedics say there are reports two other people are injured.

Traffic is being redirected at Cann River along the Monaro Highway.

Two dead in Gippsland car crash

Two people have been killed in a car crash in East Gippsland.

Police say two cars collided on the Princes Highway at Genoa, near the New South Wales border late this morning.

Police believe one car was travelling west when it took a bend and struck gravel before over-correcting and veering into the path of an oncoming vehicle.

A 35-year-old woman and an eight-year-old boy were killed in the crash.

Two other people in the second car were injured.

The middle-age man and woman have suffered chest and back injuries and will be flown to the Royal Melbourne Hospital for treatment.

Eastbound traffic on the Princes Highway is being diverted via the Monaro Highway and westbound traffic from the border is being diverted along local roads.

The Victorian road toll is 88, that is eight more than at the same time last year.

Police fear drivers ignoring safety advice

Traffic police in central Victoria say they are frustrated that motorists are not heeding road safety messages.

The comments come after two serious car crashes in the region on Wednesday.

Sergeant Geoff Neil says some drivers do not believe they will ever be involved in an accident.

“We have an element in our community that don’t think, don’t care,” he said.

A 51-year-old Kyneton woman was killed when her car overturned on the Calder Freeway at Macedon on Wednesday afternoon.

Shortly afterwards, four boys were injured in a separate accident when their car hit a tree in New Gisborne.

Police say it appears the driver of the second car was an unlicensed 16-year-old. Investigations are continuing and no charges have been laid.