By the end of this topic you will be able to:
- Respond immediately and correctly to a fuel or oil spill on the forecourt.
- Identify the contents of a spill kit and know how to use each item.
- Follow the procedure for containing and cleaning up a spill safely.
- Understand the legal and environmental obligations around spill management.
Why Spill Management is Critical
A fuel spill on the forecourt is a simultaneous fire hazard, slip hazard, and environmental hazard. Petrol is highly flammable and evaporates quickly, producing invisible vapour that can ignite from a spark metres away. Fuel that enters stormwater drains can contaminate groundwater and rivers, resulting in significant regulatory fines for the station.
Types of Spills on the Forecourt
| Spill Type | Common Cause | Risk Level |
|---|---|---|
| Petrol (ULP) spill | Nozzle overflow, tank already full, customer driving off with nozzle in | 🔴 High — extremely flammable |
| Diesel spill | Overflow during filling, hose disconnection | 🟠 Medium — less volatile than petrol; still flammable |
| Engine oil / fluids | Dripping from vehicles or spilled during top-up | 🟡 Low-Medium — slip hazard; environmental risk |
| Water | Rain, hose overflow, cleaning | 🟢 Low — slip hazard only |
Immediate Response — STOP, CONTAIN, CLEAN
- STOP fuelling immediately — replace the nozzle in the pump holster and switch off the pump if possible.
- Eliminate ignition sources — ask the customer to switch off their engine immediately. Do not allow smoking within 10 metres. Do not use your mobile phone.
- Alert your supervisor — shout or use your radio to inform your manager immediately. Do not manage a large spill alone.
- Secure the area — place traffic cones or barriers around the spill to prevent vehicles or pedestrians from entering the area.
- Contain the spill — use spill socks or absorbent booms to prevent the spill from spreading towards drains.
- Absorb the liquid — pour absorbent granules (vermiculite or kitty litter) generously over the spill. Allow to absorb for 2–3 minutes.
- Sweep up — use a non-sparking broom (plastic, not metal) to sweep up the used granules into a sealed, labelled hazardous waste bag.
- Apply degreaser — spray the affected area with a forecourt degreaser, leave for the recommended contact time, then rinse with water.
- Record and report — complete a spill incident report detailing the time, quantity estimated, location and action taken.
The Spill Kit — Know Your Contents
| Item | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Absorbent granules / pads | Soak up liquid fuel and oil |
| Spill socks / booms | Contain the spill; prevent it reaching drains |
| Sealed yellow waste bags | Hazardous waste disposal for used absorbents |
| Non-sparking broom and dustpan | Sweep up used granules without creating sparks |
| Nitrile / rubber gloves | Protect skin from fuel and chemicals |
| Safety goggles | Protect eyes from splashing fuel or degreaser |
| Traffic cones / barrier tape | Secure the area to keep others away from hazard |
What NOT to Do During a Spill
- Do not wash fuel spills into storm drains or gutters — this is illegal under NEMA and can result in prosecution.
- Do not use a metal broom or scraper near a fuel spill (spark risk).
- Do not attempt to ignite or burn off a spill — this is extremely dangerous.
- Do not leave a spill unattended — it is a live hazard until fully cleaned.
- Do not use excess water to dilute a fuel spill — this spreads contamination.
Legal and Environmental Requirements
South Africa’s National Environmental Management Act (NEMA) and National Water Act place a legal duty of care on all employees to prevent and report spills. Key obligations:
- All spills must be recorded in a spill log (date, time, quantity, substance, action taken).
- Significant spills (more than 5 litres) may need to be reported to the Department of Environment, Forestry and Fisheries.
- Used absorbents are classified as hazardous waste — they must be stored in sealed containers and collected by a licensed waste contractor.
Key Terms
| Term | Definition |
|---|---|
| NEMA | National Environmental Management Act — South African law governing environmental protection and waste management. |
| Absorbent granules | Granular material (e.g. vermiculite) used to soak up liquid fuel or oil spills. |
| Spill boom / sock | A tube-shaped absorbent barrier used to contain a spill and prevent it spreading to drains. |
| Hazardous waste | Waste material that is dangerous to health or the environment and must be disposed of through specialist contractors. |
- What is the very first thing you should do when a fuel spill occurs on the forecourt?
- Why must you never wash fuel down a storm drain?
- Name three items you would find in a forecourt spill kit.
📚 Additional Resources
📖 Further Reading
🎬 Watch: Fuel Spill Response Procedure
This video demonstrates the correct procedure for responding to and containing a fuel spill on a forecourt.
📊 Chapter 3 Presentation
Review the full Chapter 3 slide deck used in this module:

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