As
equipment engineers or managers, we deal with equipment maintenance
every day - from replacing a sensor to disassembling and overhauling the
main unit, and the most overlooked aspect is the "unexpected startup" -
this silent killer. And LOTO (Lockout-Tagout) is the
last line of defense and the most crucial safety barrier against this
killer. Many people think LOTO is just a "formality": "I've been working
with equipment for over a decade. Power off and it's done. I've never
had an accident." "To meet the schedule, we just start working and add
the tags later." But the tragic accidents tell us: Every step of LOTO
cannot be taken lightly. On the morning of March 15, 2026, in a vertical
warehouse of an automotive parts company in Shandong Yantai, an
unexecuted LOTO maintenance directly claimed the lives of three people.
The lesson was so painful that it was almost unbearable.
Let's understand: What is LOTO? Why is it necessary? Many newcomers and even experienced employees only
understand LOTO as "power off and lock". But this is far from enough.
The core of LOTO is "energy isolation + warning notification", which
essentially means using physical means to completely cut off all
dangerous energy sources of the equipment and clearly inform all
personnel on site that "the equipment is under maintenance and starting
is prohibited", ensuring that the operators can operate safely in a
"zero energy state".
The
"dangerous energy" here is not just the electricity we are most
familiar with, but also hydraulic energy, air pressure energy, heat
energy, chemical energy, and even the gravitational potential energy of
the equipment itself (such as the suspended forks and the unreset
mechanical arms) - if these energies are released accidentally, they can
cause either equipment damage or casualties. According to industry
statistics, nearly 30% of industrial accidents occur during equipment
maintenance, and among them, the unexpected startup and energy release
caused by not following the LOTO procedure are the
fatal "number one killer". From a compliance perspective, GB/T
33579-2017 "Mechanical Safety - Methods for Hazard Energy Control -
Lockout/Tagout" and GB/T 44686-2024 "Mechanical Safety - Hazard Energy
Control - General Principles" both clearly require enterprises to
establish a LOTO management system. Failure to do so
will face severe penalties and also bear legal responsibility for safety
accidents. For equipment personnel, LOTO is not an
"extra burden", but a "protective charm" to protect their own and
colleagues' lives - every standardized operation is a way to avoid fatal
risks for themselves and the team.