Applying Risk Management to the Mining Industry
 
    
    - Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 5
- File Size:
- 96 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1986
Abstract
One of the earliest recorded risk  management schemes was implemented by the  boatmen of the Yangtze river some 4,000 years  ago.. Between them they arranged for shipments  to be split up in such a way that a load was  divided five ways: if one was lost, then 80% of  the shipment got through. Bottomry contracts  were in vogue in Babylonian times with similar  systems being used in India, in 60OBC and 4th  century Greece. One of the first accepted mutual insurance  ideas came in 1835 when a mill owner in America  negotiated a lower insurance premium in return  for installed fire safety measures. Approximately 20 years ago risk management as a  philosophy was developed in the U.S.A., the  philosophy followed to England and hence to  Australia about 10 years ago. The business climate which induced the  philosophy of risk management was that of "tight  money". The definition of "assets" was then  broadened to include earning capacity, skilled  personnel and in a negative sense, a  corporation's liabilities. In more affluent days losses were  comfortably absorbed into the ongoing business  expenses, the more prudent managers took out  insurance which "covered everything" at a  suitable premium. Statistics are available to indicate that  a high percentage, (over 60%) of businesses  which suffer massive plant damage due to fire,  do not restart operations, or in the event of  restarting have closed operations within the  next 2 to 3 years - in spite of collecting an  insurance payout.
Citation
APA: (1986) Applying Risk Management to the Mining Industry
MLA: Applying Risk Management to the Mining Industry. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1986.
