Transcript Document

Health
Healthand
andSafety
Safety
Executive
Executive
Prevention of Major Hazards
Kevin Myers
Deputy Chief Executive
Health and Safety Executive, UK
Implementing Occupational Safety And Health Standards Globally
The Role of Labour Inspection, Social Partners, Social Security,
Practitioners and Non-State Actors
International ILO Conference
Düsseldorf, Germany, 3-6 November 2009
Coverage of Presentation
•
•
Lessons learnt from major incidents and HSE interventions
•
Critical importance of:
– Board level leadership
– Process safety management
Importance of understanding and maintaining barriers of
protection and development of relevant Performance
Indicators
Regulating UK Major Hazards sector
•
•
•
•
Over 1,200 sites onshore
•
Regulators job is to influence companies to ensure they
effectively manage and properly control the risks they
create
•
Around 300 offshore oil and gas installations
Permissioning/Safety Case regimes
Those that create risks are responsible for their
management and control
Heat and Light
Incidents, events and inspections
•
BP Grangemouth refinery, 2001
•
ConocoPhillips Refinery, 2001
•
BNG THORP Plant, Sellafield, 2005
•
Buncefield, 2005
•
BP Texas City refinery, 2005
•
Offshore asset integrity report, 2007
– (www.hse.gov.uk/comah/bpgrange/contents.htm)
– (www.hse.gov.uk/comah/conocophillips.pdf)
– (www.hse.gov.uk/nuclear/thorp.htm)
– (www.buncefieldinvestigation.gov.uk)
– (www.chemsafety.gov/…..)
– (www.hse.gov/offshore/kp3.pdf)
Baker Panel’s opening statement
•
•
“…no illusion that deficiencies in process safety culture,
management or corporate oversight are limited to BP.
Other companies……..
“..urge .. companies to regularly and thoroughly evaluate
their safety culture, the performance of their process
safety management systems and their corporate safety
oversight for possible improvements.”
Why?
•
•
•
Focus on what can be easily measured?
•
•
•
•
•
•
Devaluing Engineering?
Loss of corporate memory?
Lack of understanding of barriers, process safety
issues at a senior level
Cognitive dissonance?
Lack of a learning culture?
Tactical not Strategic focus?
Fragmentation of functions?
Increased divestment/contractorisation?
Lessons learned – 7 key elements
•
Leadership
A Mission Statement
•
•
•
•
Responsibility to conduct (ourselves) according to certain
basic tenets of human behaviour that transcend industries,
cultures, economics, and local, regional and national
boundaries
We treat others as we would like to be treated ourselves……
We work with customers and prospects openly, honestly and
sincerely
We are satisfied with nothing less than the very best in
everything we do. We will continue to raise the bar for
everyone. The great fun here will be for all of us to discover
just how good we can really be.
Lessons learned – 7 key elements
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Leadership
Process Safety Management
Real and dynamic risk assessment
Robust management of change
Sustainability
Well trained and competent people
A learning organisation
Swiss Cheese Model of Defence
Hazard
Ideal
Reality
Incident
Health
Healthand
andSafety
Safety
Executive
Executive
Hazard
Incident
Process safety indicators
HSE publication HSG254
•
•
What can go wrong?
•
•
•
What systems are in place to manage those challenges?
Where within the facility will these challenges to
integrity be most critical?
What does success look like?
What are the critical activities which must work right
to deliver the intended outcome?