Category Archives: 2025 Europe

28 April: The Hazards Campaign calls on the Government to increase HSE funding

News release, 23 April 2025 [No embargo]

Every year globally, on 28 April, trade unions, workers, and families hold remembrance events marking International Workers Memorial Day (IWMD) because each year work continues to kill millions. In the UK alone the Hazards Campaign calculates 50,000 deaths a year, that’s 137 daily. (1)

IWMD is our opportunity to ‘Remember the Dead and Fight for the Living.’  This year’s theme is AI and digital platforms and their impact on workers health and safety.

Although Artificial Intelligence (AI) could be used to mitigate monotonous work, AI at work is increasing work intensification, monitoring and surveillance, generating negative impacts on mental and physical wellbeing, as workers experience the extreme pressure of constant, real-time micromanagement and automated assessment.’ (ITUC)(2)

 

AI is already prolific in our working lives, it is used to allocate tasks and track workers but also has been used to negate workers’ rights, for example restricting appropriate breaks leading to work related stress and mental ill health. AI in many circumstances, is leading to unacceptable pressures through pervasive monitoring and target-setting technologies, serious injuries and ill health.(3)

Workers need more than strong words to ensure AI doesn’t increase the pressure on workers.  Workers need robust Government policies and also health and safety enforcement authorities with the teeth to control the risks to workers.

Decades of underfunding and under resourcing with increased responsibilities means HSE is running on empty.

The HSE’s own data shows enforcement is stagnating, it is not making impact on fatal and major injuries at work and is conducting far fewer inspections.  Work related ill-health is stuck at an all-time high of 1.7-1.8 million workers, an increase of almost 40 per cent since 2010. With working time losses of 34 million working days in 2023/2024, an increase from 22 million in 2010.  (4)

If Stephen Timms, the Minister of State for Social Security and Disability responsible for the HSE, and the Government are serious about keeping people in work, they must also be serious about making sure that work is of a decent standard. Jobs should not harm workers or push disabled and ill people out of the workplace—or into an even worse situation.

There is both a moral and economic case for holding employers accountable for managing occupational risks faced by workers. Enforcement authorities must ensure that employers are meeting their legal duties. The Government must guarantee transparency from regulators and provide them with the resources they need to do their job properly.

The Hazards Campaign challenges the Government to invest in the health and safety of workers by resourcing the enforcement authorities and that only then, will work pay and not by workers lives.

For more information please see:

  1. Hazards Campaign The Whole Story – https://www.hazardscampaign.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/The-Whole-story-2024.pdf
  2. ITUC – https://28april.org/?p=7125
  3. Hazards, number 168/169 double issue, 2025 – CODE RED| AI and digitalisation – technology shouldn’t be the boss of you  https://www.hazards.org/AI/codered.htm
  4. Hazards, number 168/169 double issue, 2025 – FLATLINING | Work hurts more, but bosses have never been less accountable – https://www.hazards.org/deadlybusiness/flatlining.htm
  5. https://gmhazards.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/International-Workers-Memorial-Day-general-circular-2025.pdf
For more information, press only:
Contact: Janet Newsham
Tel: 07734317158

The Hazards Campaign is a UK-wide network of resource centres and campaigners. The Hazards Campaign supports those organising and campaigning for justice and safety at work.

Contact details:
The Hazards Campaign
c/o Greater Manchester Hazards Centre
Windrush Millennium Centre
70 Alexandra Road
Manchester, M16 7WD
ENGLAND
twitter @hazardscampaign

Moldova: Revoluționarea securității și sănătății – CNSM

Revolutionising health and safety: the role of artificial intelligence and digitalisation in the workplace World Day for Safety and Health at Work

Revoluționarea securității și sănătății: rolul inteligenței artificiale și digitalizării la locul de muncă.  Ziua mondială a securității și sănătății în muncă

Europe: 28 April conference – Is it time for an EU directive on #PsychoSocialRisks? – ETUI

Is it time for an EU directive on #PsychoSocialRisks

This upcoming conference will bring together researchers, trade unions and policymakers to discuss the state of play regarding stress, #burnout, harassment and job insecurity in the world of work

Drawing on the ETUI’s latest research on the topic, the conference will provide in-depth insights into the current landscape of psychosocial risks and the necessary steps to prevent and eliminate these hazards from European #workplaces 

Register here and join the conversation 🔗 etui.org/Z6L

Download the draft programme HERE .  Interpretation will be available in English, French, Italian and Spanish.  The conference will be in-person only.

Date  – 
Location Double Tree by Hilton, (Rue Gineste 3, 1210 Brussels), room Pagoda

Türkiye: Making a statement on extreme heat hazards

Turkish affiliates of the global construction union  federation BWI – YOL-IS, AGAC-IS, TARIM ORMAN-IS, CIMSE-IS and ORMAN-IS – are planning to gather together to make a statement on the hazards of extreme heat.

Wales: National Workers’ Memorial Day event, Cardiff – TUC Cymru

Mon, 28 Apr 2025 – 10:00 to 12:00 Register to attend here

Wales’ National Workers’ Memorial Day event, Cardiff
You are invited to attend Wales’ National Workers’ Memorial Day event.

Every year, we share the message of workers’ memorial day, to remember the dead and fight for the living. The trade union movement in Wales, with our sisters and brothers across the world, remain as committed as ever to this principle.

Join us for a breakfast roll and a hot drink.  There will then be a short ceremony to lay wreaths at the National Workers’ Memorial Stone. We will be joined by dignitaries including trade union leaders.  This year, International Workers’ Memorial Day will focus on the impacts of AI on occupational safety and health.

Please dress in smart dark clothes.

For further details on this event, please contact; cwilliams@tuc.org.uk

UK: Over 50,000 a year die because of work – Hazards Campaign

The impact of AI and digitisation on the fundamental right to occupational health and safety

Remember the dead, Fight for the Living

Every year on 28 April we remember over 50,000 people in the UK, who have died because of work.

We call on all workers to participate or organise an event in their workplace, community or trade union to remember those who have been killed by work and to campaign for  safer and healthier work

Read more on the  true figures of workplace deaths and injuries  www.hazardscampaign.org.uk/thewholestory

www.hazardscampaign.org.uk

 

UK: Technology shouldn’t be the boss of you. #iwmd25

Hazards magazine warns that the UK’s rush to exploit AI, algorithmic management and automation could be dangerous for workers, with work intensification, psychosocial problems and management by algorithm making work more unsafe and more unfair. A special report for International Workers’ Memorial Day, 28 April 2025.

Code red: AI and digitalisation – technology shouldn’t be the boss of youHazards magazine report, April 2025.

Europe: ETUI/ETUC invitation “From data to directive: confronting work-related psychosocial risks in the EU”

From Data to Directive: Confronting Work-Related Psychosocial Risks in the EU.

28 April 2025, 09:00 – 16:00 CET 

Venue: Hotel DoubleTree by HIlton, Rue Gineste 3, 1210 Brussels, Belgium, meeting room: Pagoda

On International Workers’ Memorial Day, we remember the countless workers who have lost their lives due to workplace accidents and occupational diseases. This day is not only about remembrance—it is about action. While significant progress has been made in reducing physical workplace hazards, psychosocial risks—such as work-related stress, burnout, harassment, and job insecurity—remain among the most prevalent and least regulated occupational hazards in Europe. These risks undermine both workers’ health and workplace productivity, and their prevention must become a priority.

This event will bring together experts, policymakers, and trade union representatives to shed light on the latest data on work-related psychosocial risks, their economic and social costs, and the pressing need for stronger regulatory action at the EU level. We will also launch several new ETUI publications, providing in-depth insights into the current landscape of psychosocial risks and the necessary steps to prevent and eliminate these hazards from European workplaces.

Following the publications launch, a high-level roundtable discussion will engage key stakeholders—from trade unions, policymakers, and researchers—to debate the next steps towards a robust EU directive on psychosocial risks. This discussion will be a critical opportunity to shape the future of occupational health and safety, ensuring that mental well-being is given the same priority as physical safety in the workplace.

Join us in driving the change! Let’s turn research into action and make work safer for everyone—because no one should suffer, fall ill, or lose their life because of their job.

Save the date and be part of this pivotal conversation!

Download HERE the draft programme.

To register please click HERE

UK: Stoneworker’s bereaved family calls for silica reform

The widow of Paul Gray, a Bradford stonemason who died of silicosis aged 57, is urging greater worker protections after lawyers secured a settlement over his exposure to deadly silica dust. Paul was never given protective gear during his 20-year career. Legal firm Irwin Mitchell has seen rising numbers added to its Silica Exposure Register and is calling for action ahead of Workers’ Memorial Day, warning silica risks may rival asbestos in future.

Hazards magazine silica webpages

Scotland: International Workers’ Memorial Day 2025 events listings

a man kneeling down next to the international workers memorial

International Workers’ Memorial Day 2025

 

International Workers’ Memorial Day (IWMD) is the day that the trade union movement unites to remember workers at home and across the globe who have paid the ultimate price, those who left for work and never returned.

 

International Workers’ Memorial Day is on Monday 28th April 2025.

Memorial events will take place across Scotland to commemorate those who lost their lives at work:

Friday 25th April:

Bathgate (11:00am): Workers Memorial, Bathgate Sports Centre, Torpichen Road
Coatbridge (12 noon): Summerlee Industrial Museum, Heritage Way, Coatbridge
Glasgow (12 noon): Workers Memorial, People’s Palace / Winter Gardens, Glasgow Green

Saturday 26th April:

Alexandria (1:00pm): Memorial Tree, Christie Park
Aberdeen (12:30pm): Workers’ Memorial, Persley Walled Garden, Bridge of Don, Aberdeen
Edinburgh (12:30pm): Memorial and Tree, West Princes Street Gardens
Falkirk (11:00am): Bandstand, Callendar Riggs, Falkirk
Kirkcaldy (11:00am): Memorial Tree, Beveridge Park
Paisley (12 noon): Workers Memorial, Renfrewshire House, Cotton Street
Renfrew (11:00am): Workers Memorial Cairn, Robertson Park, Paisley Road

Sunday 27th April:

Kilmarnock (11:00am): Memorial Tree, Dean Country Park

Monday 28th April:

Forfar (11:00am): Forfar Community Campus, Kirriemuir Road, Forfar
Dundee (12 noon): City Square, Dundee
Inverness (12:30pm): Workers Memorial, Friars Shott, Huntly Street
Bishopbriggs (1:00pm): Cadders Pit Memorial Cairn, Bishopbriggs Library & Community Hub

Visit the STUC website to keep up to date with events around the country