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SAFETY TRAINING BUILDS SAFER AND HEALTHIER WORKPLACES

PNG Haus Bung By PNG Haus Bung | May 4, 2026

SAFETY TRAINING BUILDS SAFER AND HEALTHIER WORKPLACES

Keeping a strong, healthy and safe workplace is always a daily priority in every organization because it helps to reduce unwanted incidents in a workplace, something which Mr. Nakikus Tion knows very well.

Mr. Nakikus is the Health, Safety and Environment (HSE) Field Officer with Australia’s Economic and Social Infrastructure Program (ESIP) in Papua New Guinea (PNG).

In partnership with the Government of PNG, ESIP delivers critical infrastructure across energy, telecommunications, health and markets, while also supporting PNG’s state-owned enterprise reform program.

Each day, hundreds of people work across ESIP project sites and offices. HSE professionals like Nakikus play a vital role in protecting the health, safety and wellbeing of workers, contractors, and partners.

Through regular health and safety training, delivered with the PNG Fire Service and St John Ambulance, Nakikus and his team are building safety capability.

The training and awareness sessions help staff, contractors and partners understand safety risks and respond confidently in both on-site and office settings.

Strong health and safety practices help reduce workplace incidents. Training improves awareness and decision-making, enabling workers to identify risks early and apply safe work practices every day.

Project staff build safety into day-to-day work, from site inductions and prestart safety meetings to clear safety requirements for contractors and visitors.

This consistent approach encourages everyday safe behaviours, such as workers feeling confident to raise risks, checking conditions before starting tasks and following agreed safety procedures.

“If safety messaging can save one life, it is worth repeating,” Nakikus said. “It helps build a strong culture of safety, which is just as important as building the infrastructure.”

“It helps build a strong culture of safety, which is just as important as building the infrastructure.”

Reflecting on why health and safety matters most to him, Nakikus said everyone deserves to go to work and return home safely.