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Elements and Performance Criteria
Range Statement
This field allows for different work environments and conditions that may affect performance. Essential operating conditions that may be present (depending on the work situation, needs of the candidate, accessibility of the item, and local industry and regional contexts) are included. |
Regulatory framework | The latest version of all legislation, regulations, industry codes of practice and Australian/international standards, or the version specified by the local regulatory authority, must be used.Applicable legislation, regulations, standards and codes of practice include:health, safety and environmental (HSE) legislation, regulations and codes of practice relevant to the workplace, manual handling, hazardous materials and environmental protectionAustralian/international standards relevant to the materials being used and products being made any relevant licence and certification requirements.All operations to which this unit applies are subject to stringent HSE requirements, which may be imposed through state/territory or federal legislation, and these must not be compromised at any time. Where there is an apparent conflict between performance criteria and such requirements the legislative requirements take precedence. |
Procedures | All operations must be performed in accordance with relevant procedures.Procedures are written, verbal, visual, computer-based or in some other form, and include one or any combination of:emergency procedureswork instructionsstandard operating procedures (SOPs)safe work method statements (SWMS)formulas/recipesbatch sheetstemporary instructionsany similar instructions provided for the smooth running of the plant. |
Hazards | Hazards must be identified and controlled. Identifying hazards requires consideration of:fumes/vapours weight, shape, volume of materials to be handledhazardous products and materialsrotational equipment or vibrationsharp edges, protrusions or obstructionsslippery surfaces, spills or leakssmoke, dust or other atmospheric hazardshigh temperatureselectricitygasgases and liquids under pressure structural hazardsequipment failuresmachinery, equipment and product massother hazards that might arise. |
Problems | Routine and non-routine problems must be resolved.Non-routine problems must be resolved by applying operational knowledge to develop new solutions, either individually or in collaboration with relevant experts, to:determine problems needing actiondetermine possible fault causesdevelop solutions to problems which do not have a known solutionfollow through items initiated until final resolution has occurredreport problems outside area of responsibility to designated person.Non-routine problems are unexpected problems or variations of previous problems and include one or more of:variations in contractor/personnel performanceatypical waste production situations emergency situationsintermittent faults.Operational knowledge includes one or more of:procedurestrainingtechnical information, such as journals and engineering specificationsremembered experiencerelevant knowledge obtained from appropriate people.Routine problems are predictable and have known solutions and include one or more of:hold-ups in waste removalenvironmental querieswaste removal systems not working. |
Performance Evidence
Knowledge Evidence