Chennai, June 29 (IANS) The Tamil Nadu government has revived plans to integrate industrial inspection records across multiple regulatory departments following the fatal ammonia leak in Tiruvallur, while clarifying that a single unified inspection authority is neither legally feasible nor administratively desirable as each department functions under distinct statutory powers.
The renewed initiative comes in the aftermath of the industrial disaster at a seafood processing unit in Tiruvallur, where an ammonia leak claimed 16 lives and left more than 60 workers hospitalised.
The tragedy has intensified scrutiny of the state’s industrial safety framework and reignited debate over the fragmented nature of regulatory oversight for hazardous industries.
Senior government officials said discussions are underway to establish a common digital platform that would integrate inspection data generated by different regulators through application programming interface (API) links.
The proposed system would enable departments to share inspection records and compliance data while allowing each authority to retain its independent legal jurisdiction.
Under the proposal, the Directorate of Industrial Safety and Health (DISH) will continue overseeing worker safety under the Factories Act, while the Tamil Nadu Pollution Control Board (TNPCB), the Directorate of Boilers, Guidance and other agencies will carry out inspections within their respective mandates.
A key feature of the proposed system is a common online portal that would host inspection schedules, reports and compliance records generated by various departments.
The platform is expected to improve coordination among regulators while enhancing transparency by enabling industries and the public to track inspections carried out by different agencies.
The proposal was first conceived nearly four years ago as part of Tamil Nadu’s ease-of-doing-business reforms. In October 2020, the Industries Department issued a Government Order establishing the Tamil Nadu Central Inspection System, envisaging a single digital portal to coordinate inspections by DISH, TNPCB, the Labour Department and the Directorate of Boilers.
The order also called for publishing inspection schedules, inspector allocation and inspection reports to improve transparency and accountability. However, the system was never fully operationalised. Officials acknowledged that preliminary discussions to implement the portal had taken place two to three years ago, but failed to gather momentum.
The Tiruvallur tragedy has now brought the proposal back into focus, with the government reviewing whether existing inspection mechanisms are adequate for industries handling hazardous chemicals and refrigerants such as ammonia.
Labour rights organisations and environmental activists have called for a comprehensive overhaul of the state’s industrial safety regime, arguing that greater transparency, better coordination among regulatory agencies and easier public access to inspection records are essential to preventing similar industrial disasters in the future.
–IANS
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