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Marine Pile Driving SWMS

Wharf and offshore pile driving from a barge or jack-up. Crane and pile-driver coordination, marine pile noise impact on cetaceans, drowning risk at platform edge.

βš–οΈWHS Regulation 2025 & Codes of Practice β€” legally binding from 1 July 2026 (s26A)
πŸ‘·Reviewed by certified occupational health and safety professionals
πŸ—ΊοΈState-specific variants for all 8 Australian jurisdictions
$199 AUDβœ“ Instant Download Available

SWMS variants reference your state’s WHS legislation. Instant download after payment.

Marine pile driving for wharves, jetties and offshore structures involves driving steel or concrete piles into seabed material from a barge, jack-up rig or temporary platform using diesel, hydraulic or vibratory hammers suspended from crawler or floating cranes. The work combines high-energy powered mobile plant operating over water, suspended loads at height, underwater noise emissions affecting marine mammals, and continuous drowning exposure at unprotected platform edges. Under WHS Regulation 2025 this activity is High Risk Construction Work triggering multiple Schedule 1 categories simultaneously β€” work in or near water (Cat. 17), diving work where pile inspection or cutting is required (Cat. 18), and powered mobile plant operation (Cat. 15). A Safe Work Method Statement is mandatory before work commences and must be developed in consultation with divers, crane crew, dogmen and marine crew under s38 of the WHS Act. The SWMS must remain accessible at the work location, be reviewed when conditions change (sea state, tide, crew rotation), and retained for the project duration plus two years, or indefinitely where a notifiable incident occurs.

Hazards identified

7 hazards covered, sorted by priority.

Drowning from fall over unprotected pile platform or barge edgeHIGH

Fatal cold-water immersion, secondary drowning, or hypothermia within minutes in southern Australian waters

Crane load swing or pile slip during hammer engagementHIGH

Crush fatality, fractured limbs, or vessel capsize from sudden load shift onto barge

Underwater noise impact on cetaceans and protected marine faunaHIGH

EPBC Act breach, project shutdown, prosecution, and reputational harm from marine mammal injury

Diver entanglement or barotrauma during pile inspection or cuttingHIGH

Decompression sickness, drowning, arterial gas embolism, or pneumothorax requiring hyperbaric evacuation

Barge instability from tide change, swell or uneven pile load distributionHIGH

Platform listing, equipment loss overboard, crew injury, or vessel grounding on falling tide

Hand-arm and whole-body vibration from vibratory hammer operationMEDIUM

HAVS, vibration white finger, lumbar disc damage with prolonged exposure exceeding AS 2670 limits

Hydraulic fluid release from hammer hoses or power pack into marine environmentMEDIUM

Marine pollution offence under MARPOL, slip hazard on deck, and dermatitis from skin contact

Control measures

Hierarchy-of-controls order: elimination β†’ substitution β†’ isolation β†’ engineering β†’ administrative β†’ PPE.

  1. 1Elimination β€” Pre-drill or jet pilot holes in soft sediment to eliminate the need for high-energy impact driving where geotechnical conditions permit refusal-free penetration.
  2. 2Elimination β€” Schedule pile driving outside identified cetacean migration windows confirmed via DCCEEW marine fauna data to remove acoustic exposure entirely.
  3. 3Substitution β€” Replace impact diesel hammers with vibratory or hydraulic press-in hammers reducing peak sound pressure level by 15-20 dB re 1 Β΅Pa underwater.
  4. 4Substitution β€” Use biodegradable hydraulic fluid (ISO 15380 HEES grade) in hammer power packs to substitute petroleum-based oil in marine-sensitive zones.
  5. 5Engineering β€” Deploy bubble curtain or noise mitigation sleeve around pile during driving to attenuate underwater sound transmission per AS/NZS 2299.1 marine guidance.
  6. 6Engineering β€” Install certified barge edge protection β€” 1m rails, mid-rail and toe-board β€” plus retractable fall arrest lines compliant with AS/NZS 1891.4 across the work platform.
  7. 7Administrative β€” Conduct daily pre-start SWMS review including tide chart, sea state forecast under Bureau of Meteorology, marine mammal observer briefing and dogman radio protocol confirmation.
  8. 8Administrative β€” Maintain dive supervisor logs, hammer cycle counts and exclusion zone monitoring records per AMSA Marine Order 504 and AS/NZS 2299.1 commercial diving standards.
  9. 9PPE β€” Issue AS 4758 Level 100 marine inflatable PFDs with integrated AIS beacons, thermal protection coveralls, and hearing protection rated SLC80 26 for hammer crew.
  10. 10PPE β€” Provide divers with full surface-supplied breathing apparatus, hot-water suits, helmet comms and through-water comms compliant with AS/NZS 2299.1 clause 5.

Applicable Codes of Practice

AS/NZS 2299.1:2015 Occupational diving operations β€” Standard operational practiceβš– Legally binding Β· 1 Jul 2026

Clauses 4-7 mandate dive supervisor competency, dive plan, decompression procedures and emergency response for any in-water pile inspection or cutting.

WHS Regulation 2025 Part 4.4 Construction Work and Schedule 3 High Risk Construction Workβš– Legally binding Β· 1 Jul 2026

Regulations 291-299 require a SWMS before HRCW commences, with worker consultation, accessibility on site and review when controls fail.

AMSA Marine Order 504 (Certificates of operation and operation requirements) 2018

Establishes operational and crewing requirements for the barge or jack-up as a Domestic Commercial Vessel during pile driving campaigns within Australian waters.

EPBC Act Policy Statement 2.1 β€” Interaction between offshore seismic exploration and whales (applied to impact pile driving)

Defines marine mammal observer protocols, exclusion zones and shutdown triggers for underwater noise sources including impact pile hammers.

High-Risk Construction Work triggered

17
Work carried out in or near water or other liquid where there is a risk of drowning

Crew operate continuously on a barge or pile platform over tidal water with edge exposure and immersion risk every shift.

18
Diving work

Surface-supplied or SCUBA divers inspect pile toe penetration, cut off pile heads underwater, and verify seabed scour during the campaign.

15
Work carried out on or near powered mobile plant

Crawler cranes, floating cranes and hydraulic hammers operate continuously alongside ground crew, dogmen and divers within the slewing radius.

Legal consequence

PCBUs must consult workers when preparing the SWMS, keep it accessible at the workplace, and retain it for at least two years after the project ends β€” penalties for breach are substantial and indexed, with the current maximum following the prevailing WHS schedule.

Who this is for

  • β†’Marine civil contractors building wharves and jetties
  • β†’Offshore renewables principal contractors installing monopiles
  • β†’Port authority project managers overseeing berth upgrades
  • β†’Commercial dive contractors supporting marine piling

What you receive

  • βœ“Editable DOCX template β€” Microsoft Word compatible
  • βœ“State-specific WHS legislation schedule (NSW/VIC/QLD/SA/WA/TAS/NT/ACT)
  • βœ“Hazard register with risk ratings + hierarchy-of-control mapping
  • βœ“Worker sign-on register, pre-start checklist, and incident escalation flow

Worked example

On a regional port berth-extension project, the marine works supervisor opens the Marine Pile Driving SWMS at the 0600 pre-start brief on the accommodation barge. Tide is making, swell is forecast at 0.8m rising to 1.4m by 1400, and a humpback pod was logged 3km offshore by the marine mammal observer the previous evening. Walking the crew through Section 3 hazard ID, the supervisor highlights drowning at the new pile template edge (rails were repositioned overnight) and the cetacean exclusion zone trigger. Controls selected from the hierarchy include deploying the bubble curtain before the first hammer blow, soft-start protocol for the first 30 minutes, and stand-down if any cetacean enters the 500m observation zone. The dive supervisor signs on separately under the AS/NZS 2299.1 dive plan annex. Each crew member β€” crane operator, dogman, two riggers, two divers, MMO and deck crew β€” initials the sign-on register against the controls they are responsible for executing. At 1130 the swell exceeds the 1.2m threshold recorded on the SWMS trigger table; the supervisor halts driving, annotates the field copy, briefs the change, and re-signs the crew before resuming with reduced hammer energy. The marked-up SWMS is scanned to the project records at end of shift, preserving the audit trail for the two-year retention requirement.

Related legislation

  • WHS Act 2011 (model)
  • WHS Regulation 2025
  • AS 2550 β€” Cranes, hoists and winches; AS 1418 series
What's in this SWMS

Document details

Regulation
WHS Regulation 2025 (NSW) + state equivalents; AS/NZS 2299 series; AMSA Maritime Orders; Marine Safety (Domestic Commercial Vessel) National Law Act 2012
HRCW Category
HRCW β€” see HRCW Cat. 17 (work in/near water with drowning risk), Cat. 18 (diving work), Cat. 15 (powered mobile plant)
Hazards Identified
11 hazards with controls
Format
Editable DOCX (Microsoft Word)
Author
Certified Industrial Hygienist (CIH)
Delivery
Instant download after payment