Designing for DSEAR Compliance
INSIGHT
Why The Design Stage Matters
Most DSEAR problems don’t happen because people ignore the regulations. They happen because of small, early decisions often made before anyone realises their long-term impact.
On many projects, DSEAR is assumed to be something that will be picked up later. Sometimes it’s treated as an operational issue. Sometimes hazardous area classification is delayed until layouts or equipment are already fixed. Sometimes responsibility isn’t clear, and everyone assumes someone else is covering it.
By the time these gaps are noticed, the project has usually moved on. Equipment has been specified or installed, assumptions are hard to undo, and compliance becomes reactive. Fixing the problem then means redesign, rework, delay or accepting a level of risk that no one is really comfortable with.
This presentation looks at DSEAR the way they play out in real projects. It follows the project lifecycle from early design through to operation, showing how risk assessment, hazardous area classification, equipment selection and competency management connect.
- Why early DSEAR thinking consistently leads to safer and more practical designs
- How DSEAR responsibilities evolve across the project lifecycle
- Where hazardous area classification adds the most value (and where it’s often left too late)
- Common design and procurement mistakes seen on real projects
- Simple steps that could have prevented costly delays, rework, and non-compliance
Author: Graham Doggett
Hazardous Area Trainer and Consultant
Related Resources
Sorry, we couldn't find any posts. Please try a different search.