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Industrial Chemicals Ltd Fined £3.8M After Workers Suffer Caustic Burns

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Summary

Industrial Chemicals Limited (ICL) was fined £3.8 million and ordered to pay costs of £124,748 at Southwark Crown Court on 21 April 2026 after pleading guilty to two charges of breaching Regulation 7(1) of the Control of Substances Hazardous to Health Regulations 2002. In the first incident at West Thurrock on 6 December 2019, an employee lost part of his leg below the knee after stepping in a puddle of caustic soda; his safety boots were not in good condition and had not been sufficiently tested against British Standards. In the second incident at Grays on 30 August 2022, another employee required skin grafts after suffering burns while manually decanting caustic soda; there was no risk assessment or documented safe system of work for this task. HSE found a consistent failure to properly assess and control the risks associated with handling and containing hazardous substances across both sites.

“Losing my independence and work is a huge loss and I feel I have gone through a grieving process as my work life was such an important and integral part of my life.”

HSE , verbatim from source
Why this matters

Chemical manufacturers handling corrosive substances should audit their COSHH risk assessments and equipment maintenance programmes specifically: ICL was penalised not for a single lapse but for systemic failures — leaking pipework, unmade ground enabling puddles, inadequate walkways, substandard PPE, and no documented safe systems for manual handling. The availability of an automatic dosing plant that could have eliminated manual handling of caustic soda was treated as an aggravating factor, suggesting regulators expect engineering controls to be evaluated and implemented where feasible. The fine of £3.8 million plus costs of £124,748 followed a guilty plea.

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GovPing monitors HSE Press Releases for new labor & employment regulatory changes. Every update since tracking began is archived, classified, and available as free RSS or email alerts — 14 changes logged to date.

What changed

Industrial Chemicals Limited (ICL) was prosecuted by the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) for two breaches of Regulation 7(1) of the Control of Substances Hazardous to Health Regulations 2002, arising from separate incidents of worker exposure to caustic soda at two sites in Essex. The first incident in December 2019 at West Thurrock resulted in a worker losing part of his leg after stepping in a caustic soda puddle — HSE found multiple hazardous substance leaks, inadequate inspection and maintenance of pipework, no suitable system for preventing leaks, and insufficient walkways to direct workers safely. The second incident in August 2022 at Grays resulted in another worker requiring skin grafts after suffering burns while manually decanting caustic soda — HSE found no risk assessment or documented safe system of work for this task, despite the availability of an automatic IBC dosing plant that could have eliminated manual handling.\n\nEmployers handling hazardous substances including caustic soda should review their obligations under COSHH Regulations: first priority must be preventing worker exposure through equipment maintenance, proper walkways, and process design, with automation considered where available. PPE must not be relied upon as the primary risk control measure and must itself meet required standards. The £3.8 million penalty signals that systemic failures across multiple sites will attract significant sentences — the inspector stated the company 'manifestly failed to put proper measures in place to protect their workers'.

Penalties

Fine of £3.8 million plus costs of £124,748 at Southwark Crown Court

Archived snapshot

Apr 24, 2026

GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.

Chemical company fined £3.8 million after investigation into serious chemical burns suffered by two employees

Search news

24th April 2026

Press release Prosecution
- HSE investigation found clear failings leading to two separate incidents of exposure to caustic soda at Essex-based manufacturer.
- Employee lost part of their leg in 2019 incident after stepping in puddle of caustic soda at West Thurrock site.
- In 2022 a second worker needed skin grafts after suffering burns while decanting caustic soda at Grays site.
Industrial Chemicals Limited (ICL), a chemical manufacturing company based in Essex, has been fined £3.8 million after two employees at two separate sites suffered serious chemical burns as a result of exposure to sodium hydroxide, known as caustic soda.

In the most serious incident, an employee lost his leg below the knee. In the second, another employee sustained burns requiring skin grafts to heal.

Across both sites, HSE found a consistent failure to properly assess and control the risks associated with handling and containing hazardous substances.

First incident – West Thurrock, 6 December 2019

Michael Bartholomew, now 60, a father of two and grandfather of seven from Grays in Essex, was working as a chemical loader at ICL’s site at Old Power Station, Stoneness Road, West Thurrock when he stepped into a puddle of liquid suspected to contain caustic soda. The safety boots he had been provided with were not in good condition and did not provide adequate protection against the chemical — and had not been sufficiently tested against British Standards. Mr Bartholomew sustained serious burns that resulted in his leg being amputated below the knee. He has not been able to work since.

A Health and Safety Executive (HSE) investigation found multiple leaks of hazardous substances from pipework, valves, hoses and vessels across the site. There was no suitable system for the inspection, maintenance and testing of pipework and equipment to prevent or reduce the likelihood of leaks in the area where Mr Bartholomew was walking. Systems of work did not account for spillages, there were inadequate controls for clearing them up, the ground around the boiler house was unmade — enabling puddles to accumulate — and there were insufficient designated or enforced walkways to direct workers safely across the site.

In a Victim Personal Statement following the amputation, Mr Bartholomew said:

“I felt that this was game over for me. I would not be able to work or support my family. I miss my work and my work colleagues.

“Losing my independence and work is a huge loss and I feel I have gone through a grieving process as my work life was such an important and integral part of my life.

“I used to go to track days and drive different cars, I cannot do any of these things anymore…I used to take my grandchildren out fishing, I used to play football with them in my back garden, I can’t do any of these things with them anymore.”

A safety boot Mr Bartholomew was wearing when he received the injury

Second incident – Titan Works, Grays, 30 August 2022

At ICL’s Titan Works site on Hogg Lane, Grays (now closed), an employee was manually decanting caustic soda at 50% concentration using a hose into 25-litre containers, in order to top up intermediate bulk containers (IBCs) to the required concentration. After completing the task three times, he noticed that drips from the hose had fallen onto his foot, causing burns that later required skin grafts to heal. He has since returned to work.

The HSE investigation found there was no risk assessment or documented safe system of work for this task. Investigators also found that it would have been possible to automate the process entirely by bringing back into service an existing automatic IBC dosing plant with fixed pipework and remote controls — removing the need for manual handling of caustic soda altogether. Following the incident, the use of 25-litre containers was stopped, and IBCs were instead delivered to site already mixed to the required concentration, eliminating the risk entirely.

About caustic soda

Sodium hydroxide, also known as caustic soda, is used in the manufacture of washing and cleaning products. It is a white, odourless solid at room temperature and is strongly alkaline. It has a strong corrosive action on all body tissue, causing burns and frequently deep ulceration.

HSE guidance is clear that employers must take reasonable steps to reduce workers’ exposure to hazardous substances like caustic soda. The first priority is to prevent exposure altogether — for example, by changing how the work is done and making sure equipment and pipework are properly maintained.

If exposure can’t be avoided, it must be properly controlled using good working practices. Personal protective equipment (PPE) should only be used as a last resort and not relied on as the main way to manage the risk.

Further guidance is available in the Control of substances hazardous to health (COSHH). The Control of Substances Hazardous to Health Regulations 2002 (as amended). Approved Code of Practice and guidance L5

Industrial Chemicals Ltd, of Jupiter House, Warley Hill Business Park, The Drive, Brentwood, Essex, CM13 3BE, pleaded guilty to two charges of breaching Regulation 7(1) of the Control of Substances Hazardous to Health Regulations 2002. The company was fined £3.8 million and ordered to pay costs of £124,748 at Southwark Crown Court on 21 April 2026.

The Caustic Loading area from the ICL site

HSE Inspector Julia Gebauer said:

“This was a company operating with significant volumes of a highly corrosive material but had manifestly failed to put proper measures in place to protect their workers and prevent exposure.

“The consequence was two separate incidents at two separate sites – one of which resulted in life-altering injuries – that pointed to a pattern of avoidable risks that Industrial Chemicals Ltd could and should have prevented.

“That Mr Bartholomew didn’t have protective boots that were up to standard when he stepped in a puddle of caustic soda was only one of many failures that Industrial Chemicals Ltd have been held to account for.

“I hope the scale of the fine handed down brings some closure to the workers at the centre of this case and sends a clear message to employers that they must have proper plans in place to prevent their workers being exposed to danger.”

The HSE prosecution was brought by HSE enforcement lawyer William Bodiam and paralegal officer Chidimma Elechi.

Further information:

  1. The Health and Safety Executive (HSE) is Britain’s national regulator for workplace health and safety. We are dedicated to protecting people and places, and helping everyone lead safer and healthier lives.
  2. More information about the legislation referred to in this case is available.
  3. Further details on the latest HSE news releases is available.
  4. Relevant guidance can be found here Control of substances hazardous to health (COSHH). The Control of Substances Hazardous to Health Regulations 2002 (as amended). Approved Code of Practice and guidance L5
  5. HSE does not pass sentences, set guidelines or collect any fines imposed. Relevant sentencing guidelines must be followed unless the court is satisfied that it would be contrary to the interests of justice to do so.  The sentencing guidelines for health and safety offences can be found here.

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
HSE
Filed
April 24th, 2026
Instrument
Enforcement
Branch
Executive
Legal weight
Binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Substantive

Who this affects

Applies to
Employers Manufacturers
Industry sector
3254 Chemical Manufacturing
Activity scope
Chemical handling Worker safety Equipment maintenance
Geographic scope
United Kingdom GB

Taxonomy

Primary area
Occupational Safety
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
Chemical Manufacturing Healthcare

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