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Risk Management in Pilotage - By Mr. Marantis Stylianos
1.
2. ISPO requirement for risk
management
11.2 Risk Management
………The pilot organization shall maintain a
documented system to ensure that risks are
identified, analysed, evaluated and if required
controls put in place to reduce the identified
risk. Management shall ensure that controls are
communicated and their effectiveness reviewed.
3. ISPO requirement for risk
management
11.2 Risk Management
………The pilot organization shall maintain a
documented system to ensure that risks are
identified, analysed, evaluated and if required
controls put in place to reduce the identified
risk. Management shall ensure that controls are
communicated and their effectiveness reviewed.
4. What is risk?
Risk is:
• the combination of the likelihood of a hazardous
event or exposure(s) and the severity of the
injury or ill health that can be caused by the
event or exposure(s) [BS 18004:2008]
• effect of uncertainty on objectives [ISO
31000:2009- Risk Management]
5. What kind of risks we have?
Risk to
health and
safety
Risk to
environment
Cost
Risk to
operations
12. Definitions of risk management
Actions that minimize risk within acceptable limits.
[USCG Risk Based Decision Making Guidelines]
Safety risk management is a generic term that
encompasses the assessment and mitigation of the
safety risks of the consequences of hazards that
threaten the capabilities of an organization, to a
level as low as reasonably practicable (ALARP).
[International Civil Aviation Organisation]
14. Business management vs. risk
management
• Business management is about maximising
the chance of success
• Risk management is about minimizing the
chance of failure
• Effective risk management requires structured
risk assessment as an input
15. Risk assessment in simple terms
• What can go wrong?
hazard identification - the hazard turning into an accident
• How likely is it to go wrong?
likelihood
• What happens if it does go wrong?
consequence
• Do I have to do something about it?
Depends on risk level and tolerability of risk
Implement or improve controls to reduce likelihood
Implement or improve controls to reduce consequences
17. Definitions - BS 18004:2008
Hazard:
Source, situation, or act with a potential for harm in terms of human injury
or ill health, or a combination of these
Hazardous event (near miss)
Occurrence that results in, or has the potential to result in, an incident
19. Identify hazards
In considering sources, situations and acts,
it may be better to think in terms of
– unsafe acts
– unsafe conditions
– job factors
– personal factors
20. UNSAFE ACTS
• Operating equipment without authority
• Removing/making safety devices inoperable
• Using defective equipment
• Improper use of equipment
• Not using PPE
• Servicing equipment in operation
• Under influence of drink or drugs
UNSAFE CONDITIONS
• Inadequate guards/barriers
• Inadequate/improper PPE
• Defective tools/equipment/material
• Workspace restrictions
• Hazardous environmental conditions
• Noise, high/low temperatures
• Inadequate lighting
• Inadequate ventilation
21. PERSONAL FACTORS
Physically inadequate
Mentally inadequate
Lack of knowledge
Lack of skill
Stress
Improper motivation
JOB FACTORS
Inadequate supervision
Inadequate leadership
Inadequate engineering
Inadequate purchasing
Inadequate maintenance
Inadequate tools/equip
’
Inadequate work standards
Inadequate design