Bangladeshi garment factories are routinely
built without consulting engineers. Many are located in commercial or
residential buildings not designed to withstand the stress of heavy manufacturing.
Some add illegal extra floors atop support columns too weak to hold them,
according to a survey of scores of factories by an engineering university that
was shown to The Associated Press.
A separate inspection, by the garment industry,
of 200 risky factories found that 10 percent of them were so dangerous that
they were ordered to shut. The textiles minister said a third inspection,
conducted by the government, could show that as many as 300 factories were
unsafe.
Taken together, the findings offer the first
broad look at just how unsafe the working conditions are for the garment
workers who produce clothing for major western brands. And it's more bad news
for the $20 billion industry that has been struggling to regain the confidence
of Western retailers and consumers following a November fire at the Tazreen
Fashions Ltd. factory that killed 112 people and the April collapse of the Rana Plaza
building that killed 1,129 people in the worst garment industry tragedy. But
the proliferation of inspections could signal the industry is finally taking
its workers' safety seriously.
Rana
Plaza was "a wakeup call for everybody" to ensure their buildings
were structurally sound, said Shahidullah Azim, vice president of the
Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers and Exporters Association.
"Earlier
it was not in our minds. We never, ever thought of this," he said.
But Rana Plaza
wasn't the first factory building to collapse in Bangladesh . In 2005, the Spectrum
sweater factory crumbled on top of workers, killing 64. That building was also
found to have illegal additions.
After
the Rana collapse, the government and the garment manufacturers asked the
Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology to begin evaluating the
buildings. The university formed 15 teams of two engineers each — a structural
expert and a foundation expert — to conduct initial inspections, examining a
building's support columns, frame, foundation and the soil it was built on,
said Mujibur Rahman, head of the university's department of civil engineering.
Rahman
said further tests using sophisticated equipment will be completed in the
coming months.
AP was
shown initial results of some of the inspections of about 200 buildings — many
of them garment factories — on condition the factories not be identified. The
owners volunteered their buildings for inspection — even paying for the surveys
— a decision that suggests they are among the more safety conscious in the
industry. The remainder of the country's 4,000 garment factories could be
worse, said Rahman.
While
initial inspections showed that many of the factories appeared safe, some had
problems so serious that engineers recommended they be immediately shut down.
Others were told to seal off the illegal floors at the tops of their buildings
and gingerly remove the heavy equipment stored there.
"There
were buildings that we found that were really critical and we asked them to
immediately vacate those buildings," Rahman said.
The
engineers found that huge numbers of the factories were housed in commercial or
residential buildings not designed to withstand the vibrations and heavy loads
of industrial use, Rahman said. Machinery vibrations were blamed as one of the
causes along with additional illegal floors as the cause of the Rana collapse.
Most of
the examined buildings did not have structural tests dating back to their
construction, and it was "very rare" that an engineer supervised
construction, Rahman said.
They
found a building approved for only six stories that had been expanded to 10.
Support columns that were supposed to have five steel bars inside them had only
two. Other columns were too small to support the structures. Some of the
buildings had structural cracks that threatened their integrity.
In one
report, the engineers found structural cracks on two columns and a heavy power
generator located on the roof, where its vibrations could threaten the
building's integrity. They recommended sealing all the floors above the ground
floor pending a more thorough assessment. Rahman said he told the owners it
would be safer just to demolish the building and start over.
A
five-story factory had 30-centimeter by 30-centimeter (12-inch by-12 inch)
structural columns that did not appear strong enough to handle the load. The
engineers called for sealing the top floor until the building could be
strengthened.
Another
factory building had seven stories instead of the approved five and was meant
for residential use. Its 25-centimeter by 25-centimeter (10-inch by 10-inch)
columns were too small and the foundation was not wide enough to anchor the
building in the red Dhaka clay. The engineers
recommended closing the top two stories.
In other
cases, the engineers called for the demolition of the illegal top floor of a
seven-story building and the closure of several other buildings with structural
cracks.
Rahman
said some owners begged him to change the recommendations, saying they had
three months of back orders to fill and then could address the problems. He
refused.
Other
owners appeared to think twice about the inspections.
The
engineers were initially overwhelmed with requests to examine 400 buildings.
But after their work began, some owners stopped answering their phones and
engineers were unable to visit half of them, Rahman said.
It was
not clear whether all the recommendations were being followed, but there were
signs that some risky buildings were being forced into compliance.
Not far
from the swampy pit where Rana Plaza once stood in the Dhaka
suburb of Savar, a factory was dismantling — on government orders — two illegal
floors it had been adding.
Industry
and government officials said they were taking the results seriously and have
announced a steady stream of factory closures in recent weeks.
"We
are very much taking care of this thing, because we know that for one or two
buildings, we cannot destroy all the industry," said Azim from the garment
manufacturers' group.
The
group set up its own engineering team and inspected 200 suspect factories in
recent weeks, he said. They found violations so worrisome they shut 20 of them,
he said.
Some
will be moved to other buildings, others will be strengthened and some will be
allowed to reopen after heavy equipment is removed from upper floors, he said.
It was not clear if those 20 factories overlapped with those inspected by the
university.
The
garment association also established rules forcing factories to submit
structural plans and soil test reports or risk losing their membership in the
organization — and their export licenses, he said.
Textiles
Minister Abdul Latif Siddique said the government was conducting its own
inspections and expects to close factories as well.
"I
think 200 to 300 factories will be vulnerable, and I think we will identify
those buildings very quickly," he said.
In the
wake of the Rana Plaza disaster, the country was under
extreme pressure from Western brands to improve safety, he said. But he also
appealed to those companies to pay higher rates to cover the upgrades.
"To
provide security, better wages and compliance is not cheap," he said.
Swedish
retailer H&M, PVH, the parent company of Calvin Klein, and Inditex, which
owns Zara, are among companies that signed an agreement to help finance safety
improvements in Bangladesh
factories. Wal-Mart and the Gap have not.
Experts
said the recent disasters were a product of the explosive growth of garment
manufacturing here from a cottage industry into a behemoth that employs 4
million people. It began in the 1980s with small factories in residential
buildings with no special fire exits, the workers sewing and cutting on the
lower floors while the owner lived upstairs. When the business grew, the owner
moved out and the factory expanded into the whole building.
Some
factories later moved into commercial space. The most successful eventually
constructed their own buildings, but even that was unregulated until Bangladesh
established its first statutory building code in 2006.
Mubasshar
Hussain, president of the Institute of
Architects , Bangladesh , said 50 percent of the
factories likely have problems, but all of them can be addressed within a year
with a coordinated campaign to retrofit those buildings.
"We
have the manpower, we have the technology, we have the material. All we need is
the awareness of the owner," he said,
But
Hussain worried that the burst of activity following the Rana Plaza
collapse could dissipate. He pointed to a long-forgotten 2005 garment
association report recommending close structural monitoring of factories in the
wake of the collapse of the Spectrum sweater factory that killed 64 workers.
Siddique,
the textiles minister, said the new disaster was too horrifying to be ignored.
"We
are serious now, hopefully it will be better," he said.
First syndicated by Associated Press (AP) June
13, 2013
Associated
Press reporter Julhas Alam contributed to this report.