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Calls For An Industry-Standard Heat Policy (Read 90 times)
whiteknight
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Calls For An Industry-Standard Heat Policy
Jan 21st, 2026 at 6:08am
 
Calls for an industry-standard heat policy to be implemented on worksites as summers get hotter


Mon 19 Jan 2026
ABC News


In short:
Jenny Newport's son, Glenn, died while working on a coal seam gas pipeline construction project.   Sad

Temperatures at the construction site where he was working had exceeded 40 degrees Celsius that day.   Sad

What's next?
Ms Newport is calling for state and federal governments to implement heat policies to help protect workers.


It has been 13 years since Jenny Newport's son died from extreme heat while on a worksite in Queensland, and she believes not much has changed.

Ms Newport had hoped there would be an effective heat policy for every worksite across the state after her son's death.

"It's unbelievable," she said.

"The government still hasn't done anything or taken the coroner's recommendations and enacted a policy from that."   Angry
Her son, Glenn Newport, had flown to his worksite in Queensland's Western Downs from Brisbane amid a three-day heatwave in 2013.

According to the coroner's report into Mr Newport's death, the temperature on the day "exceeded 40 degrees Celsius".

Mr Newport had been contracted to work on a coal seam gas pipeline construction project near Roma and had been taking regular breaks with his crew throughout the day.

A young man smiles for the camera. He is wearing a green t-shirt with a large lion pictured on the front of it.
Construction worker Glenn Newport died at a worksite near Roma in Queensland's southern inland. 

The 38-year-old became gradually incapacitated by the heat and was taken to the worksite clinic for treatment around lunchtime.

"He was seen staggering as he walked back to his donga, and it was left up to his mates to check on him," Ms Newport told the ABC.

By the evening, Mr Newport had collapsed in his room and was taken to hospital, but he died from hyponatraemia — as a consequence of working in excessive heat — while in the ambulance.

Hyponatraemia is a condition from drinking too much water which then causes sodium levels in your blood to drop below normal range.

That can lead to the swelling of cells, with symptoms including nausea, fatigue and in severe cases seizures and coma.

"If there had been an overall heat policy for all of the state at the time, that would have applied to where Glenn was working,"  his mother said.
"If he'd been allowed to stop work, or if there had been that duty of care, he would still be here.   Sad

"State governments and federal governments are doing so much to safeguard our country from climate change, isn't it about time we actually safeguarded or future-proofed our workforce?"

'It's not about stopping work'
A rear view of construction workers wearing hi-vis safety clothes and hard hats.
Experts believe a "fit-for-purpose" heat policy can reduce heat stress and increase productivity on worksites.  (ABC News)

In Queensland there is no set maximum temperature for workers, but employers need to manage heat risks according to the Health and Safety Act.

Under the Best Practice Industry Conditions (BPICs) standards, which were negotiated between the Construction, Forestry and Maritime Employees Union (CFMEU) and the former Queensland Labor government, workers could stop work at 35C or 29C with 75 per cent humidity.

Best Practice Industry Conditions explained
A worker standing on the road holds a 'slow', 'stop' sign next at a construction site.
The new LNP government has suspended BPIC for new major government projects. Here's what they are.

In 2024, the newly-elected LNP government sensationally suspended BPIC for new major government projects.

CFMEU Queensland executive Jared Abbott said an industry standard heat policy would ensure workers would be protected and would not reduce productivity.

"The policy is not the be all or end all. It's not about stopping work — it's not about giving people another excuse,"  he said.
"[A heat policy] would drive companies to have better productivity and certainly drives better behaviour on site."


Jared Abbott says heat policies drive good behaviour. (ABC News)

Workplace Health and Safety Queensland provides guidance — including an online heat stress calculator to help businesses undertake a heat stress risk assessment — and other educational resources on its website.

A 'graded approach' recommended
With extreme heat becoming increasingly more prominent, experts have also warned a heat policy that is "fit for purpose" needs to be adopted across worksites.

Professor Ollie Jay, the director of the Heat and Health Research Centre at the University of Sydney, said he believed a graded approach should be used.

Professor Ollie Jay in his laboratory at University of Sydney.
Ollie Jay co-developed the Australian Open's heat policy.

"We need to shift from thinking about just hot weather to focusing on hot people in hot environments," Professor Jay said.

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whiteknight
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Re: Calls For An Industry-Standard Heat Policy
Reply #1 - Jan 21st, 2026 at 6:13am
 
A year after Mr Newport died, the Australian Open was in the grip of a four-day heatwave that saw a record number of players pull out.

Professor Jay worked on developing a heat policy, which the grand slam adopted, with a focus on cooling down the athletes while they performed in extreme temperatures.

The policy measures air temperature, humidity, black globe temperature and wind speed as a collective and uses graded measures — such as applying ice towels and increasing water intake — to reduce heat stress while also maintaining productivity.

A man holds a towel up over himself while seated in the stadium at the Australian Open in 2014.
The Australian Open made headlines in 2014 after a string of hot days. (AAP: Joe Castro)

Professor Jay said a common problem is that the standard meteorological measure of air temperature is taken in the shade, meaning the radiant heat on worksites in direct sun is often much hotter.

He suggested that a heat policy similar to the Australian Open's could be adopted nationally for workers.

"It's such a pressing need. We know it's getting hotter and these are things that need to be put in place to protect workers," Professor Jay said.

"It can be directly applied for worksites but it will need to be repurposed from catering to athletes to catering to worksites.

"There's already been so much research done. We need to focus on using the research that's already been done [as] I haven't really seen that."
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whiteknight
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Re: Calls For An Industry-Standard Heat Policy
Reply #2 - Jan 21st, 2026 at 6:58am
 
Yes of course places should have a heat policy.  If they don't have a heat policy then they should get one.   Angry
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whiteknight
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Re: Calls For An Industry-Standard Heat Policy
Reply #3 - Today at 5:35am
 
Extreme heat is killing workers: Unions urge national rules to save lives
February 4, 2026  ACTU.
Australian Unions are calling for new national safety rules that require employers to stop work or modify duties when temperatures reach dangerous levels, warning that increasingly frequent heatwaves driven by climate change now pose a major workplace health and safety threat.

Countries like Japan already enforce mandatory occupational health and safety heat requirements, but there are currently no national heat standards in Australia. State and territory workplace health and safety laws do not clearly set out employer obligations to safely manage the risks of working in heat. Unions are urging Safe Work Australia to introduce a heat regulation that requires employers to provide controls such as rest breaks, work scheduling and work stoppages at defined temperature thresholds, and to ensure workers’ compensation coverage for heat-related illnesses.

The push comes ahead of Extreme Heat Awareness Day on 4 February, with the ACTU joining the Australian Medical Association (AMA), Australian Red Cross, the Australian Local Government Association (ALGA), the Australian Nursing and Midwifery Federation (ANMF) and Sweltering Cities to call for coordinated national action to protect workers and communities from escalating heat hazards driven by climate change.

Australia’s housing standards are also forcing millions of workers, particularly renters, to endure unsafe temperatures at home. Unions are urging the Federal Government to update the National Construction Code to include climate-resilience measures so new homes maintain safe indoor temperatures, and to work with states and territories to introduce minimum energy-efficiency standards for rental properties.

The Commonwealth’s 2025 National Climate Risk Assessment projects heat-related deaths in major cities will more than quadruple without change – rising 444 per cent in Sydney, 423 per cent in Darwin, 312 per cent in Perth, and 259 per cent in Melbourne.

Safe Work Australia data shows workers currently carry 74 per cent of the financial burden of heat-related injuries and illnesses, while employers bear just 5 per cent.

Quotes attributable to ACTU President, Michele O’Neil:

“No worker should be told to push through the brutal heat and risk their own life. When it’s dangerously hot, your boss should either change your work or stop your work.

“A rest break or work stoppage in extreme heat can be the difference between a worker going home safe or not going home at all.

“We regulate asbestos and silica because they kill people and devastate families. It’s time we treat climate hazards like extreme heat in the same way. There is no excuse for Australia to leave workers exposed without clear, enforceable rules, especially when the government’s own reports project heat-related deaths to more than quadruple in our major cities.

“No worker should have to live in a home that becomes unsafe every summer, especially renters who have the least power to demand improvements. Updating the construction code and setting minimum standards for rental homes is basic public safety.

“The science tells us that heatwaves are getting worse, but our regulations haven’t caught up. If countries like Japan can introduce national heat standards, surely Australia can too.

“If you get sick from working in extreme heat, it should be treated like any other workplace injury – and that means workers’ compensation coverage, so you can focus on getting better, instead of worrying about paying the bills.”
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