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Improving Global Quality of Life

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6 Needs and challenges in health, safety, education, training, qualification and certification<br />

On Tuesday 15 Aug 2006, the Wall Street Journal published an article:<br />

Where have all the welders gone, as manufacturing and repair boom? Quoting from it; “Welding, a dirty and<br />

dangerous job, has fallen out <strong>of</strong> favour over the past two decades, as young skilled labourers pursue cleaner,<br />

safer and less physically demanding work. Now, thanks to global boom in industrial manufacturing, skilled<br />

welders are in greater demand than ever. Companies can’t find enough <strong>of</strong> them.” and also “The average age<br />

<strong>of</strong> welders, currently 54, keeps climbing. As a wave <strong>of</strong> retirements loom, welding schools and on-site training<br />

programmes aren’t pumping out replacements fast enough.”<br />

One commentator stated “We need welders like a starving person needs food…”<br />

The American Welding Society had correctly predicted that by 2010 demand for skilled welders would<br />

outstrip supply by 200,000 in the US alone.<br />

At first glance this might appear to be totally irrelevant to anybody outside the US, but with a bit <strong>of</strong><br />

experience <strong>of</strong> welding operations, one realises that a similar scenario has already unfolded on a worldwide<br />

scale. The underlying causes may be different to that <strong>of</strong> the US, but the potential negative affect is just as<br />

devastating. Every single day on construction sites the implications <strong>of</strong> the declining pool <strong>of</strong> skilled artisan<br />

welders manifests itself. Repair rates on high pressure and high temperature plant completed weldments<br />

as high as 50% on some components prove not to be uncommon any more. Repairing unacceptable weld<br />

defects is notoriously expensive due to many factors such as negatively impacting on planned schedules,<br />

as well as metallurgical issues. Although the manpower to repair the defects is usually for the contractor’s<br />

account, this can be insignificant when compared for instance to the potential loss in production costs on<br />

the client’s plant.<br />

One might argue that plant owners should not be concerned with where resources for maintenance and<br />

erection projects come from, as long as the required contract work is completed on-time to appropriate<br />

quality levels while the market forces in a global economy takes its course. The reality, however, is that<br />

top welders will be lured to perform relatively easy welding jobs at a very competitive remuneration, as<br />

compared to the demanding weldments required, for instance boiler and pressure vessel work, with respect<br />

to skill and quality requirements. Not only will this put tremendous strain on finding enough welders for<br />

the ongoing world-wide expansion programme <strong>of</strong> power generation and petrochemical facilities, but also<br />

those available will provide their services at great premium prices. This will inadvertently lead to cheaper<br />

replacements brought in from other countries, that is if the booming global utility market will allow it with<br />

current large expansions projects that are planned for China, Europe and the USA looming.<br />

The solution seems to be fairly simple and obvious. End-user companies need to realise their obligation to<br />

embark on an urgent concerted effort to establish an artisan welder training programme, using a country’s<br />

own resources and existing facilities. With the necessary funds invested in a bursary scheme coupled to<br />

some form <strong>of</strong> tax relief to the company, groups <strong>of</strong> fully trained artisan welders can be presented to the<br />

industry every two year cycle. Remuneration packages would need to be constituted attractively enough in<br />

order to attract promising young students to the welding industry, with sufficient long term job prospects to<br />

aspire to, while participating in the effort to steady the ship so to speak. Market forces will dictate and some<br />

<strong>of</strong> the successful candidates will inadvertently leave the employer but one can be sure that a significant<br />

proportion will take up permanent positions within organisations.<br />

6.4 Communication and information technologies<br />

6.4.1 Training, education, qualification and certification<br />

Training, education, qualification and certification are issues on which the future <strong>of</strong> industry is dependent. In<br />

fact, a look through the publications and newspapers, which reflect informed opinion, will confirm that there<br />

Through Optimum Use and Innovation <strong>of</strong> Welding and Joining Technologies<br />

<strong>Improving</strong> <strong>Global</strong> <strong>Quality</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Life</strong><br />

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