Why Forklifts Remain the Number One Killer in Warehousing
Forklift incidents consistently account for more workplace fatalities in Australian warehousing than any other single hazard category. The combination of heavy mobile plant operating in confined spaces alongside pedestrian workers creates an inherently high-risk interaction that cannot be managed through operator training alone. Analysis of forklift fatalities reveals that pedestrian-forklift collisions are the dominant fatal incident type, followed by forklift tip-overs, load drops, and workers being crushed between forklifts and fixed objects. The majority of pedestrian fatalities occur at aisle intersections, in loading dock areas, and in warehouse zones where no physical segregation separates pedestrian walkways from forklift operating areas. A critical finding across multiple investigations is that administrative controls such as painted floor markings, speed limits, and right-of-way rules consistently fail to prevent fatal incidents because they rely on continuous human compliance in a high-activity environment where attention is divided between tasks. Physical segregation barriers with controlled crossing points are the only control measure that has been demonstrated to reliably prevent pedestrian-forklift collisions in high-traffic warehouse environments.
Traffic Management Plan Design
An effective forklift traffic management plan for a warehouse must address four elements systematically. The first is physical segregation between pedestrian and forklift zones using bollards, guardrails, or raised kerbs that prevent pedestrians from entering forklift operating areas except at designated crossing points. The second is intersection management using one-way systems, mirrors, warning lights, or sensor-activated alerts that prevent blind-corner collisions where aisles intersect. The third is speed management using electronic speed limiting devices, radar-activated speed displays, and geo-fencing technology that automatically reduces forklift speed in high-risk zones near pedestrian crossings and dock areas. The fourth is loading dock management that coordinates truck positioning, forklift access, and pedestrian movement to prevent the three-way interaction that makes docks the most dangerous zone in any warehouse. The traffic management plan should be developed through consultation with workers, tested through a risk assessment process, and documented with a site layout plan showing all zones, routes, crossing points, and speed limits. The plan must be reviewed whenever the warehouse layout changes, new equipment is introduced, or an incident or near-miss reveals a gap in the existing controls.
Operator Competency Beyond the HRWL
The LF class high risk work licence is a legal prerequisite for forklift operation but it is not a sufficient demonstration of competency for the specific warehouse environment, forklift type, and operational conditions at any given site. PCBUs must implement site-specific competency assessment that verifies each operator can safely operate the specific forklift types used at the site, navigate the actual warehouse layout including narrow aisles and dock areas, comply with the site-specific traffic management plan, and respond correctly to emergency situations. This site-specific assessment should include a practical driving assessment conducted by a competent assessor on the actual equipment in the actual warehouse environment. Competency should be reassessed at defined intervals and following any incident, near-miss, or observed unsafe behaviour. New operators should complete a supervised probationary period before being permitted to operate independently. Competency records must be maintained and available for regulator inspection. The distinction between the HRWL and site-specific competency is important because it reflects the PCBU's obligation to manage the specific risks at their workplace, which will differ from the generic competency assessed during the licence process.
Forklift Fleet Technology and Safety Devices
Modern forklift technology offers safety devices that significantly reduce incident risk when consistently specified, installed, and maintained across the entire fleet. Proximity detection systems using radio frequency, ultra-wideband, or LiDAR technology can detect pedestrians wearing transponder tags or any person in the detection zone and automatically slow or stop the forklift before a collision occurs. Speed limiting devices that restrict maximum speed based on load weight, travel direction, and location within the warehouse prevent the excessive speed that contributes to many tip-over and collision incidents. Blue spot or red zone warning lights projected onto the floor ahead of and behind the forklift provide visual warning to pedestrians of an approaching forklift, which is particularly valuable in noisy warehouse environments where audible alarms may not be heard. Camera and display systems give operators improved rear and side visibility, reducing blind spot risks during reversing and aisle navigation. Impact sensors mounted on forklifts detect and record collisions with racking, vehicles, and infrastructure, enabling management to identify operators who are causing damage and address the behaviour before a serious incident occurs. The effectiveness of these technologies depends on consistent deployment across the entire fleet because a single forklift without the safety device negates the protection provided by the rest.