Lesson 1Emergency organisation and command structure: on-site and incident command interfacesDescribes the emergency team setup, roles, and command line, including on-site posts and links to outside incident command, making sure clear power, control range, and decision paths.
Emergency roles and responsibilitiesOn-site command post setup and toolsInterface with external incident commandSuccession and delegation of authorityTraining and competency requirementsLesson 2Evacuation strategy and personnel accounting: muster points, roll-call, assembly area managementSets out evacuation plans, paths, and muster spots, plus ways to count people, roll-call steps, and handling assembly areas to make sure everyone gets out safe and checked.
Evacuation triggers and decision criteriaPrimary and alternate escape routesMuster point layout and signageRoll-call and headcount techniquesManaging vulnerable or disabled personsLesson 3Definitions, abbreviations, and reference documents (MSDS/SDS, P&IDs, site maps)Explains how definitions, short forms, and reference papers make a clear, steady POI, using MSDS/SDS, P&IDs, and site maps to guide helpers, planners, and checkers in prep and real events.
Standard POI terms and abbreviationsUse of MSDS and SDS in emergenciesReading and applying P&ID diagramsSite maps, access routes, and hazardsReference document control and updatesLesson 4Scope, objectives, applicability, and legal context of the POIMakes clear the POI’s range, aims, and who it covers, tying to laws, rules, company standards, and risk checks, saying which sites, jobs, and people it includes.
POI scope and facility coverageEmergency response objectives and KPIsApplicability to staff, visitors, and contractorsLegal and regulatory framework mappingAlignment with corporate policies and riskLesson 5Documentation, recordkeeping, revision control, and regulatory compliance mappingExplains paperwork and record needs for the POI, with change control, version tracking, and links to rule duties, for easy checks, audits, and ongoing betterment.
POI document structure and formatRecordkeeping for incidents and drillsRevision control and approval workflowRegulatory requirement cross-referencesRetention periods and secure storageLesson 6Post-incident actions: incident investigation, root cause analysis, evidence preservation, corrective actionsSets how to handle after-event tasks, from locking the scene and saving proof to proper checks, finding root causes, and fixing to stop repeats.
Immediate scene stabilization and controlEvidence preservation and chain of custodyIncident investigation team rolesRoot cause analysis tools and methodsCorrective and preventive action trackingLesson 7Alarm, detection and communication systems: signals, escalation, and notification listsCovers alarm and spot systems, signal kinds, step-up rules, and who-to-call lists, showing how alerts start, get read, and shared for quick, right info in events.
Detection technologies and alarm typesAlarm priorities and escalation rulesInternal notification lists and triggersExternal notification and reporting pathsAlarm testing, maintenance, and logsLesson 8Scenario-specific response procedures: flammable liquid release, toxic gas release, fire and explosionGives step-by-step replies for main danger cases, with spot signs, first moves, control ways, safety steps, and talk flows for flammable liquid, toxic gas, fire, and blast events.
Flammable liquid release response stepsToxic gas release isolation and PPEFire response, suppression, and backupExplosion risk control and blast zonesScenario-based drills and simulationsLesson 9Coordination with external emergency services and mutual aid protocolsDetails site teamwork with outside emergency help and aid partners, with pre-plans, info share, joint practice, and rules for one command and resource mix.
Pre-incident liaison and contact listsMutual aid agreements and scopeInformation sharing during incidentsUnified command and joint operationsJoint drills, reviews, and debriefs