A case study exploring field-level risk assessments as a leading safety indicator - SME Transactions 2017

- Organization:
- Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
- Pages:
- 7
- File Size:
- 480 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 2017
Abstract
Health and safety indicators help mine sites predict the likelihood of an event, advance initiatives to
control risks, and track progress. Although useful to encourage individuals within the mining companies
to work together to identify such indicators, executing risk assessments comes with challenges.
Specifically, varying or inaccurate perceptions of risk, in addition to trust and buy-in of a risk management
system, contribute to inconsistent levels of participation in risk programs. This paper focuses on
one trona mine’s experience in the development and implementation of a field-level risk assessment
program to help its organization understand and manage risk to an acceptable level. Through a transformational
process of ongoing leadership development, support and communication, Solvay Green
River fostered a culture grounded in risk assessment, safety interactions and hazard correction. The
application of consistent risk assessment tools was critical to create a participatory workforce that not
only talks about safety but actively identifies factors that contribute to hazards and potential incidents.
In this paper, reflecting on the mine’s previous process of risk-assessment implementation provides examples
of likely barriers that sites may encounter when trying to document and manage risks, as well as
a variety of mini case examples that showcase how the organization worked through these barriers to
facilitate the identification of leading indicators to ultimately reduce incidents.
Citation
APA:
(2017) A case study exploring field-level risk assessments as a leading safety indicator - SME Transactions 2017MLA: A case study exploring field-level risk assessments as a leading safety indicator - SME Transactions 2017. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 2017.