
A Morning Shift That Never Ended (Image Credits: Unsplash)
Attleborough, Norfolk – A routine pest control visit turned fatal in 2018 when two workers suffocated in a nitrogen-filled passageway at a local chicken processing facility. Banham Poultry Ltd and Air Products PLC faced justice years later at Norwich Crown Court, where judges imposed substantial penalties for health and safety failures. The case highlighted persistent risks in industrial gas systems designed to safeguard food production.[1][2]
A Morning Shift That Never Ended
Jonathan Collins, 34, from Watton, and Neil Moon, 49, from Spalding, arrived at Banham Poultry’s factory around 8:30 a.m. on October 3, 2018. Employed by subcontractor Ecolab, the men entered the site for standard pest control duties. Hours passed without word from them, prompting worried families to alert authorities. Rescuers discovered their bodies near 1 a.m. the next day in a narrow passageway.[2]
Post-mortem reports confirmed asphyxiation as the cause. Nitrogen gas had displaced oxygen in the confined space, leaving no chance for survival. The workers had no warning of the invisible hazard lurking nearby.[1]
Flaws in the SafeChill System Exposed
For months, staff noted issues with the factory’s nitrogen venting. The SafeChill system, supplied and maintained by Air Products, chilled freshly slaughtered chickens using extremely cold nitrogen gas. This rapid cooling aimed to curb bacterial growth, including Campylobacter, a common poultry contaminant.[3]
Waste gas should have vented safely through roof ducting. Temporary fixes followed reports of ground-level leaks, even dense clouds reaching a nearby railway platform. Yet, added ducting proved fragile. During unrelated roof repairs, it slipped free, channeling concentrated nitrogen directly into the passageway. No monitoring detected the oxygen depletion.[2]
Neither company conducted proper risk assessments for contractors like Collins and Moon. Banham Poultry failed to track visitors effectively, delaying the alarm.
Court Delivers Long-Awaited Accountability
Norwich Crown Court convened a three-day hearing in early April 2026. Banham Poultry pleaded guilty to two counts under the Health and Safety at Work Act 1974, earning a £900 fine amid its liquidation status. Air Products admitted one count, receiving a £2,475,000 penalty plus £83,359 in prosecution costs.[1]
Mrs Justice Farbey noted she would have levied a heavier sum on Banham Poultry absent its financial collapse. The breaches directly contributed to the deaths, prosecutors argued. Corporate manslaughter charges did not proceed.[2]
| Company | Fine Amount | Additional Costs |
|---|---|---|
| Banham Poultry Ltd | £900 | – |
| Air Products PLC | £2,475,000 | £83,359 |
Families Grapple with Grief and Disappointment
Relatives described seven and a half years of “heartbreak, fear, and unanswered questions.” A joint statement read: “We must say honestly that we do not feel justice has been served. For us, true justice would be Jonathan and Neil still being alive.”[1]
They urged industry leaders: “If you are responsible for staff or contractors, take that responsibility seriously. You have a duty of care.” Detective Superintendent Stuart Chapman called the lapses “inexcusable and completely avoidable.”[1]
Crown Prosecution Service specialist Busola Johnson emphasized: “These deaths were entirely avoidable, and today’s sentence reflects the gravity of that failure.”[2]
Key Takeaways from the Tragedy
- Risks from industrial gases demand rigorous assessments, especially in confined spaces.
- Contractor tracking and communication systems prevent delayed responses.
- Temporary fixes require ongoing monitoring to avoid cascading failures.
This sentencing underscores the human cost of overlooked hazards in food processing. Stronger oversight could spare future families similar pain. What steps should factories take to protect workers? Share your thoughts in the comments.


