[SystemSafety] NYTimes: The Next Accident Awaits

Nancy Leveson leveson.nancy8 at gmail.com
Thu Jan 30 20:58:54 CET 2014


It would be nice to actually introduce some data into the discussions on
this list. First, although it is very true that the U.K. has excellent
comparative occupational safety statistics, this exceptional performance
predated safety cases by at least 100 years and is as much a cultural
artifact of the U.K. as any current practices. While the rest of the world
was suffering the results of steam engine explosions in the late 1800s, for
example, Great Britain was the first to implement measures to reduce them.
(I wrote a paper on this once if anyone is interested.) Although the
British citizens on this list know more about the history of the UK HSE, I
believe they were the first country to require companies to have safety
policies, etc., after the Flixborough explosion. Safety cases, I believe,
came into being only after the more recent Piper Alpha explosion.

Trying to tie accident rates in different countries to particular ways of
regulating safety is dicey at best. First, there are significant
differences between the engineering, agricultural, industry, and service
rates of accidents in countries, often related to technical differences.
Some have high agricultural accident rates but low service accident rates.
For example, accident rates are going to be very different in a country
with high tech agricultural techniques compared to those still plowing
fields with a pair of oxen. Politics plays an even more important role. For
example, western countries often put very dangerous processes and plants in
third world countries or governments in these countries do not have laws
that require manufacturers to use even minimal safety practices in
manufacturing, for example, and they will not as long as they need the
revenue and jobs. The safety culture in these countries will not change
magically by using one type of regulatory regime.

Note also, that there are vast differences in industries. Those with the
very safest records, such as the U.S. SUBSAFE program, do not use safety
cases. (And they have managed to have an incredible safety record despite
being in the U.S. :-)). If we want to compare the effectiveness of
different regulatory regimes, then we need to provide scientific
evaluations and not just misuse statistics (which may involve factors that
have nothing to do with the actual regulatory regime used).

Also, as Michael Holloway noted, culture differences will make different
types of regulation more or less different in different countries and
industries.

Finally, I would like to point out to those who are making some national
comparisons and putting down the U.S. in comparison with France, for
example, that the fatal occupational accident rate in the U.S. is less than
that of France. Perhaps we can avoid mixing politics and chauvinism with
science on this list.

Nancy

On Thu, Jan 30, 2014 at 8:50 AM, Martyn Thomas <
martyn at thomas-associates.co.uk> wrote:

>  I'm a non-exec Director at the UK's Health and Safety Laboratory (
> www.hsl.gov.uk). We carry out the basic research that underpins the UK's
> regulation of occupational health and safety, ranging from reducing
> accidents on construction sites and improving the tethering of loads on
> lorries, through to reproducing and analysing major explosions (such as
> Buncefield - http://www.buncefieldinvestigation.gov.uk/) and
> destruction-testing the physical integrity of tankers and rolling-stock.
>
> We also undertake commercial work that uses our unusual experimental and
> analysis capabilities and very strong science base.
>
> The UK is unusual in having a goal-based, safety-case regulatory regime
> and a regulator (HSE) with its own expert research establishment (HSL). We
> are getting an increasing number of approaches from Governments in the Far
> and Middle East who see the UK's good performance in occupational Health
> and Safety and who want to investigate setting up similar goal-based
> regulation.
>
> Maybe there is something in the HSE/HSL approach that the US chemical
> industry could benefit from.
>
> Regards
>
> Martyn
> Martyn Thomas CBE FREng
>
>
>
>
> On 29/01/2014 22:05, Peter Bernard Ladkin wrote:
>
> A worthy opinion piece from the Chair of the US Chemical Safety Board. Note his suggestion that identifying hazards and mitigation is just well-established best practice. I can say from experience that it is not yet in Europe in all industries with safety aspects, even though he holds Europe up as having a factor of three fewer chemical accidents as the US.
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> The System Safety Mailing List
> systemsafety at TechFak.Uni-Bielefeld.DE
>
>


-- 
Prof. Nancy Leveson
Aeronautics and Astronautics and Engineering Systems
MIT, Room 33-334
77 Massachusetts Ave.
Cambridge, MA 02142

Telephone: 617-258-0505
Email: leveson at mit.edu
URL: http://sunnyday.mit.edu
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