An explosion of a reactor in a chemical factory in the Dombivli Maharashtra Industrial Development Corporation (MIDC) area in May 2024 resulted in the loss of lives and injuries to workers and people.
Relevancy for Prelims: Directorate General Factory Advice Service & Labour Institutes report, International Labour Organization’s Labour Inspection Convention (081), 1947, etc.
Relevancy for Mains: Recurring industrial accidents in India, Current state of factory inspection in India, etc. |
Factory Accidents
It also caused damage to factories, shops and residencies in the neighbourhood.
- The Maharashtra government announced compensation to the kin of the deceased and funds for the treatment of the injured.
- Newspaper reports show that fatal industrial accidents were frequent in 2016, 2018, 2020 and 2023.
- The Maharashtra government is guilty of not relocating 156 chemical factories in the Dombivli MIDC area even after “deciding” in 2022 to relocate them to Patalganga.
- It is now known that the boiler in the chemical factory was not registered under the Indian Boiler Regulations, 1950.
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Poor Inspection
In 2021, in Maharashtra, 1,551 of 6,492 hazardous factories were inspected, i.e., a 23.89% inspection rate.
- And, 3,158 out of 39,255 registered factories were inspected, i.e., an 8.04% inspection rate.
- The situation is no better in two other top industrial States. In Tamil Nadu, the general inspection rate was 17.04% and the hazardous factories inspection rate was 25.39%. In Gujarat, it was 19.33% and 19.81%, respectively.
- The all-India figure, of 14.65% and 26.02%, respectively, is not surprising (the data are from the Directorate General Factory Advice Service & Labour Institutes report, 2022).
- The poor inspection rates could also be due to a shortage of personnel among other reasons.
- In Maharashtra, the appointment rate is just 39.34%; 48 out of the 122 sanctioned officers were appointed.
- The numbers are better in Gujarat (50.98%) and Tamil Nadu (53.57%).
- The all-India figure was 67.58%.
- Even the sanctioned posts relative to the number of registered factories have been inadequate to ensure that every factory is inspected in a year.
- For example, for an all-India reach, each of the 953 sanctioned inspectors would have had to inspect 337 registered factories in a year, in 2021.
- The inspection rates are poor because of the heavy workload of the inspectors.
- An inspector in Maharashtra must inspect 818 factories in a year; 589 in Gujarat; 532 in Tamil Nadu, and 499 at the all-India level.
- The prosecution rate, i.e., the number of prosecutions decided as a percentage of total prosecutions (including pending cases) was 6.95% in Gujarat; 13.84% in Maharashtra, and 14.45% in Tamil Nadu.
- As a result, inspections lose their “deterrent effect“.
- From the data, it is clear that labour market governance through the labour inspection system is weak and does not perform efficiently.
- However, employers call it pejoratively as “inspector-raj”, implying harassment and prevalence of compromising practices such as bribes.
The criticism is not without merit.
- Given the vast universe of inspection, the inspectors may “target” and “harass” several factories/establishments, exhibiting state power and also attempting to secure bribes.
- But this cannot be universal as the statistics are telling.
- The president of the Maharashtra Industry Development Association has admitted, in a media report in May 2024, that in many cases, safety inspection and certification were done “on an “understanding” between the auditors and factory owners or managers”.
- Employers are as guilty as the labour inspectors, and tackling the “supply side” of “rent seeking” is as important as reforming the “demand” side.
- Reforms of the inspection system are necessary but not of the kind initiated in most States in response to employer criticism.
- Self-certification, randomised inspections, online inspections, and third-party certification have been introduced by ruling political parties at the all-India level and in many States.
- These changes violate several articles in the International Labour Organization’s Labour Inspection Convention (081), 1947.
- According to the Convention, there must be sufficient qualified and well-provided inspectors and they shall enter the establishments freely and without prior notice at any time to secure due compliance of the labour laws, among others.
- Instead of liberalising the inspection system, governments must ensure a strong labour market governance by implementing the provisions of the ILO Convention.
- Given the fast-paced changes taking place in technology, and the use of hazardous and chemical substances, the increased need for inspection is felt.
- Inspectors can both “inspect” and “facilitate” due compliance of laws by providing suitable advice to employers and unions. This is recognised by the ILO Convention.
Penalties for the Enforcer
- If a firm or a trade union does not comply with laws, they are prosecuted by the state.
- If the state fails in its governance what is the penalty the state, viz. the government and the labour department officials pay?
- Simple and meagre compensation to the victims and their families? No.
- There must be a penal system for the enforcers also which will pave the way for complete legal compliance.
- The recurrence of the same kind of industrial disasters shows a lack of learning by the government.
- In the name of reforms and a lean government, the state cannot abrogate its fundamental duty – to ensure a safe working and living environment.
- It should carry out meaningful reforms to ensure an “efficient” and “ethical” labour inspectorate.
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Conclusion
To ensure safety and compliance, meaningful reforms are needed to create an efficient, ethical labour inspectorate and penalize government failures in industrial governance.