Bambolim, April 30, 2026
The Goa Occupational Safety and Health (OSH) Expo & Summit 2026 concluded on April 30 at the Dr. Shyama Prasad Mukherjee Indoor Stadium, marking the close of a two-day platform centred on workplace safety, industrial health and emerging safety technologies. The final day brought attention to future-ready systems and the need for structured approaches across sectors.
The closing session brought together Shri Neelkanth Halarnkar, Minister for Fisheries, Animal Husbandry and Veterinary Services, Factories and Boilers, Government of Goa, Shri Sadanand Shet Tanavade, Member of Rajya Sabha, Shri Sanjeev Gadkar, IAS, Secretary for Factories and Boilers, and Shri Anand Pangam, Chief Inspector of Factories and Boilers, alongside a wide cross-section of industry leaders and stakeholders. The outcome was unambiguous. Growth achieved without safety cannot be counted as progress, and any industry that believes otherwise is operating on borrowed time.
The summit drew participation across manufacturing, construction, healthcare, logistics and public administration, with more than 60 exhibitors occupying the floor across both days. Personal protective equipment, fire and gas protection systems, safety training modules and risk management tools were on display, but the more telling detail was who was in the room. Government regulators, private sector operators and safety professionals were present together, in conversation, which is precisely the kind of alignment that policy documents alone cannot produce.
Day 2 pushed the conversation into territory that safety forums often avoid. Tourism, one of Goa’s most economically significant sectors, was brought squarely into the occupational safety discussion. With nearly 11 million visitors arriving annually and a vast supporting network of hotels, transport providers and recreational operations, the scale of the challenge was firmly established.
A sector operating at that scale and under that level of public scrutiny has no credible basis for treating worker safety as secondary. The sessions extended the definition of occupational safety to cover workers, service providers and visitors within the same framework, which represents a broader and more demanding standard than most operators in the sector currently apply.
Technical sessions on Day 2 addressed behaviour-based safety and accident prevention with a consistent underlying position. Reactive safety culture, one that waits for incidents before acting, is both operationally expensive and difficult to defend. Exhibitors presented predictive monitoring tools, advanced protective equipment and real-time data systems that point toward an industry moving, however gradually, toward evidence-based safety management. The technology is available. The remaining variable is organisational will.
What the summit produced, beyond the exhibition floor and the formal addresses, was a working platform for conversation between regulators, practitioners and industry decision-makers. That dialogue is consequential because standards mean little without shared understanding of how they are to be applied, and compliance frameworks mean even less without the institutional buy-in to implement them with seriousness.
The event saw a networking dinner at Bay 15, Odxel Beach, Dona Paula, an appropriate setting for a summit whose most productive exchanges often happen when the agenda is put aside and professionals speak to each other directly.
The platform continues to gain relevance as industries place greater focus on structured safety systems. This direction will extend into larger national forums, including the upcoming OSH India 2026 Expo, scheduled from October 7 to 9 at the Bombay Exhibition Centre in Mumbai, which will present advanced personal protective equipment, emerging safety technologies and conferences addressing workplace safety standards and regulatory frameworks.
For media enquiries: narendra@synthesisindia.in
