Title
The value of safety indicators
Author
van Kampen, J.
van der Beek, B.D.
Groeneweg, J.
Publication year
2013
Abstract
Organisations are looking for ways to gain insight into the level of safety in their company so that additional measures can be taken when necessary and the effectiveness of interventions can be measured. That said, measuring safety, health and the environment is not easy. A survey among members of the NVVK (the Dutch Society for Safety Science) was conductued and analysed. Companies that fall under the SEVESO directive were analysed separately. This study shows which indicators are used the most in the industry. It also shows that the respondents take safety very seriously: on average, they use 15 of the 37 safety indicators stated. The second question is what the organisations then do with these indicators in practice? Much of the collected information is not used as an indicator to improve organisations, even those that are considered to be of utmost importance for safety. The number of indicators used in organisations proved to be a reasonable good at discriminating between companies with a good or not-so-good personal safety performance (LTIF rate). It cannot be concluded from this that using more indicators leads to fewer accidents. It is more likely that good organisations gather and use more information to steer safety efforts, and that this leads to fewer personal accidents. What is also evident is that more successful organisations make more use of specific types of indicators. Notably, neither the amount nor the nature of indicators collected can be related to process safety performance. This could be due to the lack of standarisation with respect to what is measured and how it is measured. At present, there is no set indicators that can be collected in organisations that can reliably discriminate between organisations with no or few or organisations with many process related incidents. This study legitimises the continued pursuit of suitable 'leading indicators' for process safety. Copyright 2013, Society of Petroleum Engineers.
Subject
Organisation
SHB - Safe & Healthy Business
BSS - Behavioural and Societal Sciences
Work and Employment
Workplace
Healthy Living
To reference this document use:
http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:250d159a-2961-456a-94ea-1e8a3729bb95
TNO identifier
478844
ISBN
9781627482844
Source
SPE European HSE Conference and Exhibition 2013: Health, Safety, Environment and Social Responsibility in the Oil and Gas Exploration and Production Industry, 16 April 2013 through 18 April 2013, London, 109-121
Series
Society of Petroleum Engineers
Document type
conference paper