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Presentation

by
CIDB MALAYSIA

The Challenge

11

Improve
capability
and
capacity

Achieve
business
viability and
sustainability
Enhance
quality and
productivity

12

Trends Impacting Construction

Sustainability
Technology

Towards Zero Accident in the


Construction Industry

Life in the
Construction Industry

Dirty

D
ifficult
D
angerous

TARGET AHEAD FOR THE MALAYSIAN


CONSTRUCTION INDUSTRY

By 2015, reduce to 5.0 fatality per


100,000 workers
By 2020, reduce to 3.9 fatality per
100,000 workers
No. of const. workers : 1.164 mil
(2012)
SOURCE: DOSH

By 2015
Work-related fatality rate down by 20%
from 12.4 fatalities per 100,000 workers
Work-related injury rate down by 30%
from 6.1 injuries per 1,000 workers

FACTORS

1. Safety Management
2. Working Environment
3. Manpower

SHASSIC
Safety & Health Assessment System
in Construction

OBJECTIVE SHASSIC
To benchmark the level of Safety &
health Performance in Construction Industry

Standard System on Safety & Health


Assessment

OBJECTIVE SHASSIC
Contd.

To assess OSH performance


based on standard CIS 10:
2008

To evaluate contractorss
OSH performance at site

For further Improvement &


Corrective Action

Statistical Analysis

COMPONENT OF ASSESSMENT &


WEIGHTAGE
Divided into 3 categories:40 %

DOCUMENT CHECK

40 % WORKPLACE INSPECTION
20 %

EMPLOYEE INTERVIEW

SHASSIC
(Score %)

Star(s) Awarded

Justification

85 to 100

Potential and significant


workplace high risks/ hazards
are managed and documented.

70 to 84

Potential and significant


workplace high risks/ hazards
are managed and documented
but there are few low risks work
activities are neglected.

55 to 69

Potential and significant


workplace high risks/ hazards
are managed and documented
but there are few medium risks
work activities are neglected.

40 to 54

Potential and significant


workplace high risks/ hazards
partly managed and not
properly documented.

39 and less

Potential and significant risks/


hazards poorly managed and

QUALITY IN CONSTRUCTION

PROJECT PERFORMANCE
Cost
within budget..RM%
Time
On time.months..%
Quality
?????
Quality (Leon, 1995) : meeting agreed requirements

Quality Yardstick?

Customer satisfaction no. of complaints


- customer feedback
form

DEFINITION
Quality Assessment System (QAS) In Construction (QLASSIC) is
an independent method to assess and evaluate the quality of
workmanship of a construction work based on the relevant
approved standard.
Construction work (520 Act) building, road, bridge, dam,
railway, drainage etc

However CIS 7: 2006 is


QAS meant for Building
Construction Work

o
b
j
e
c
t
i
v
e
s

Assess the quality of the workmanship


of a construction project

Establish an industry standard QAS for


quality of workmanship for construction project
Benchmark the acceptable level of quality of
Workmanship for construction project
Evaluate the performance of contractors
based on quality of workmanship
Compilation of data for statistical analysis

End User

Quality End product

Consultant

Enhance the
inspection activities

Client

Contractor

improve
marketability
satisfy the End User
Continually improve
Q performance

Elevate Quality
performance in
construction
industry to a
higher level

Visuals + measurements

Tools
door leaf

door frame

steel rule

steel rule to measure gap between door leaf & door


frame (tolerance in CIS 7: size of gap <5mm).

Tools

QLASSIC tapping rod to check for


hollowness on wall or floor.
Also used to check for lippage
between two tiles on the floor or
wall.

Tools

angle mirror to check the paintwork on top &


bottom of door leaf.

Tools
steel wedge

spirit level
spirit level (1.2m) & steel wedge
to measure evenness of wall
surface or floor surface (tolerance
in CIS 7: <3mm/ 1.2m).

SUSTAINABLE CONSTRUCTION

Construction and Climate Change


Buildings 40% global energy used
Chemical Process major portion
Transportation of material
energy intensive

Onsite
Construction
Energy Used

Mining/ Manufacturing
Highest Impact

Cement
Sector
5%

GHG
Emissions
From
Construction

Maintenance of
Building significant
energy used

Carbon Emission in Building Life Cycle


Construction Emissions
arising from construction
processes
Operating Emissions
arising from the use of a
building
Maintenance Emissions
arising from keeping a
building in good repair
Demolition Emissions
arising from eventual
disassembly or demolition

ELEMENT OF SUSTAINABILITY
To covers aspects of the delivery of buildings and infrastructures that
meet the requirement and satisfactory of the user
To increased profitability and
competitiveness

Will take consideration and concerns on the conservation of natural ecosystems and
minimization of environmental impacts and the consumption of energy and natural resources

Performance Criteria for GHG Reductions for Cities

Urban Environment
Urban Transportation
Urban Infrastructure
Building

Urban Environment (5)


Urban Transportation (4)
Urban Infrastructure (4)
Building (2)

Urban Environment (20)


Urban Transportation (8)
Urban Infrastructure (7)
Building (7)

Performance Criteria are measurable strategies to reduce carbon


emission through:- Policy control, Technological development, better process & product
management, change in procurement system, carbon capture, consumption
strategies & others.

Save Green Save Future


33

Green Efficiency

The push for energy and


green efficiency is
poised to generate
opportunities for the
construction industry
from green buildings to
green industries and
green energy projects

Why Green Construction/ Building

Money Saving
Tax Incentives

Environmental Benefit
Lifetime and Property
Value

Making buildings greener


Green/sustainable buildings, are not just about designs but;
is the practices of creating and using healthier and more resource-efficient
models of construction, renovation, operation, maintenance

demolition
Adapting to these processes/tools help makes buildings greener:
Building Codes

Building Standards
Design Guidelines
Best Practices
Rating/Assessment tools

and

GREEN BUILDING
RATING TOOLS

International GBRT

COMMON
GOAL

Establishing a common standard of


measurement and fulfilling the
requirements
Offers opportunities towards sustainability
goals

Malaysia GBRT
Green Building
Index (GBI) GBI
Sdn Bhd

Green Performance
Assessment System
in Construction
(GreenPASS) - CIDB

Green
Building
Rating
Tools

Penarafan Hijau JKR


(pH JKR) - JKR

MyCREST
Carbon Reduction and
Environmental Sustainable tool

Merging pHJKR & GreenPASS

MyCREST

DEVELOPMENT PROCESS

EAG Consulting Sdn.Bhd. ( Malaysia )


Environmental .Analytical .Green
Copyright 2013. All rights reserved

MyCREST

PROCESS FLOW

EAG Consulting Sdn.Bhd. ( Malaysia )


Environmental .Analytical .Green
Copyright 2013. All rights reserved

Time for Change


Adjusting to
global dynamics
Keeping pace with
other industries
Adapting to
new world

Conclusion

Malaysian construction companies need to embrace


technology as the way forward
They should incorporate quality, sustainability and
safety & health into their planning and operations
Our challenge is to ensure that construction remains
one of the most important industries and economic
drivers for Malaysia

THANK YOU

shassic@cidb.gov.my
sazali@cidb.gov.my

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