Hazard Management · Saudi Arabia

How to Identify and Control Workplace Hazards

Workplace injuries in Saudi Arabia share a pattern that repeats itself across industries: a hazard was present, recognised by nobody, and therefore never controlled. Hazard identification is where every safety management system begins. It is also where most programmes fall short. This guide covers how to do it properly, what the hierarchy of controls means in practice, and what Articles 121 to 135 of the Saudi Labour Law require from employers.

IN THIS GUIDE

  1. What Is a Workplace Hazard and Why Does It Matter?
  2. Six Levels of Hazard Control, From Most to Least Effective
  3. How Hazard Identification Is Applied in KSA
  4. Frequently Asked Questions
  5. Getting Hazard Identification Right

Understanding Workplace Hazards

What Is a Workplace Hazard and Why Does It Matter?

A hazard is anything with the potential to cause harm. That includes physical hazards like unguarded machinery, chemical hazards like solvent vapour, ergonomic hazards like repetitive manual handling, and psychosocial hazards like excessive work pressure. The process of identifying these hazards before they cause harm is called hazard identification and risk assessment (HIRA). In Saudi Arabia, this process is a legal obligation under Articles 121 to 135 of the Saudi Labour Law.

The practical implication: Saudi Labour Law places the responsibility for hazard identification squarely on the employer. If a worker is injured by a hazard that the employer could reasonably have identified and controlled, the employer faces legal liability. Documentation of your hazard identification process is your primary defence.

The Hierarchy of Controls

Six Levels of Hazard Control, From Most to Least Effective

Elimination

Remove the hazard entirely. If a chemical causes cancer, stop using it. If a work process creates a fall risk, redesign the process so the work happens at ground level. Elimination is the only control that makes the hazard impossible to cause harm.

Substitution

Replace the hazard with something less dangerous. Use a water-based paint instead of a solvent-based one. Use a lighter tool to reduce manual handling strain. Substitution reduces risk without eliminating the work.

Engineering Controls

Physically separate people from the hazard using guards, barriers, ventilation, or machine interlocks. Engineering controls work even when workers forget to act safely, which is why they are more reliable than administrative controls.

Administrative Controls

Change how work is organised or how people behave. Rotate workers to limit chemical exposure. Require job hazard analyses before starting tasks. Restrict access to high-risk areas. Administrative controls depend on human compliance, which makes them less reliable than physical controls.

Signage and Warnings

Warn workers about hazards they cannot otherwise detect. Radiation warning signs, chemical hazard labels, and noise warning notices fall into this category. Warnings do not reduce the hazard. They only help if workers see, understand and act on them.

Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)

PPE is the last line of defence. When the hazard cannot be eliminated, substituted, engineered or administratively managed, PPE protects the worker from what remains. Used alone, PPE is the least reliable control because it depends on correct selection, fitting, use and maintenance every time.

Hazard Identification in the Saudi Context

How Hazard Identification Is Applied in KSA

Saudi Aramco Job Hazard Analysis (JHA)

Saudi Aramco requires a documented Job Hazard Analysis before any non-routine task on its facilities. The JHA identifies specific hazards for each work step and specifies the controls to apply. Contractors must complete and submit JHAs before receiving permits to work.

SABIC Process Hazard Analysis

For process-related work in Jubail and Yanbu, SABIC requires formal Process Hazard Analysis (PHA) studies for any changes to process design, equipment or operating procedures. These studies use structured methodologies like HAZOP to identify potential hazards before changes go live.

Vision 2030 Construction HSE Plans

Major construction projects under Vision 2030 require contractors to submit detailed site-specific HSE plans that include hazard registers covering all anticipated activities. These registers are reviewed and approved before site mobilisation.

Ministry of Human Resources Inspections

Ministry inspectors check whether employers have documented hazard identification processes, particularly in construction, manufacturing and petrochemical sectors. A workplace with no hazard register is treated as one with no hazard management programme, regardless of what actually happens on site.

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the main types of workplace hazards in Saudi Arabia?
The five main hazard categories are: physical (machinery, noise, heat, falls), chemical (solvents, gases, dust), biological (bacteria, viruses in healthcare or food environments), ergonomic (manual handling, repetitive strain, awkward postures), and psychosocial (excessive workload, shift work, harassment). In Saudi Arabia, heat stress is an additional physical hazard requiring specific risk assessment in outdoor work environments.
How do you conduct a hazard identification in Saudi Arabia?
A practical approach follows five steps: identify the tasks performed, identify the hazards in each task, assess who is at risk and how likely harm is, select and implement appropriate controls from the hierarchy, and document and review. For complex or high-risk processes, formal methodologies like HAZOP or FMEA are used.
Is a hazard register legally required in Saudi Arabia?
Saudi Labour Law requires employers to identify workplace hazards and implement controls. A documented hazard register is the standard way to demonstrate compliance. While the law does not prescribe a specific format, employers without one face difficulty proving compliance during Ministry inspections or legal proceedings.
What is the difference between a hazard and a risk?
A hazard is the source of potential harm: a wet floor, an unguarded machine, a chemical vapour. Risk is the likelihood and severity of harm actually occurring. The same hazard has different risk levels depending on how many people are exposed, for how long, and whether controls are in place. Risk assessment follows hazard identification.
Who is responsible for hazard identification in a Saudi company?
The employer is ultimately responsible under Saudi Labour Law. In practice, the HSE manager or safety officer leads the process, with input from supervisors and workers who understand the tasks. Saudi Aramco and SABIC require that hazard identification is led or reviewed by a competent safety professional for high-risk activities.

Getting Hazard Identification Right

A hazard register that collects dust in a filing cabinet makes no one safer. Effective hazard identification is an active, ongoing process led by people who know the work, reviewed when tasks change, and used to drive real controls from the top of the hierarchy downward. PITC KSA trains safety officers, supervisors and workers across KSA in hazard identification, risk assessment and control implementation in Saudi industrial environments.

Related reading: What Is Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)? | Permit to Work Training Saudi Arabia | Why Is Health and Safety Training Important?

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PITC KSA delivers TVTC-accredited safety training across Saudi Arabia, including hazard identification, risk assessment and control implementation.