Facilitator Judy Clarey CPRM FRIMA RiskAlign Training & Advisory Services October 2012 RRTO Mining...

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Facilitator Judy Clarey CPRM FRIMA RiskAlign Training & Advisory Services October 2012 RRTO Mining Conference Risk Management Effective Risk Assessment Techniques Professional Development Workshop Yeppoon 19 th October 2012

Transcript of Facilitator Judy Clarey CPRM FRIMA RiskAlign Training & Advisory Services October 2012 RRTO Mining...

Page 1: Facilitator Judy Clarey CPRM FRIMA RiskAlign Training & Advisory Services October 2012 RRTO Mining Conference Risk Management Effective Risk Assessment.

Facilitator Judy Clarey CPRM FRIMARiskAlign Training & Advisory Services

October 2012

RRTO Mining Conference Risk Management

Effective Risk Assessment TechniquesProfessional Development Workshop

Yeppoon 19thOctober 2012

Page 2: Facilitator Judy Clarey CPRM FRIMA RiskAlign Training & Advisory Services October 2012 RRTO Mining Conference Risk Management Effective Risk Assessment.

“Humans - Pre-programmed to take

Risks”

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Page 3: Facilitator Judy Clarey CPRM FRIMA RiskAlign Training & Advisory Services October 2012 RRTO Mining Conference Risk Management Effective Risk Assessment.

Effective Risk Assessment Techniques

Risicare – Early Italian word for “To dare”To take a chance on a favourable outcome 3

Page 4: Facilitator Judy Clarey CPRM FRIMA RiskAlign Training & Advisory Services October 2012 RRTO Mining Conference Risk Management Effective Risk Assessment.

Introduction & Check-in1.0 Introduction

1.1 Legislative Drivers of Risk management

1.2 Global Business Drivers

2.0 Impact of National & International Standards

2.1 Improved RM Process

2.2 Fit-for-purpose Techniques

2.3 Common Risk Assessment Tools

2.4 Risk Matrix-based Analysis

2.5 Inherent Vs Residual Risk

3.0 Recalibrating Risk Management Systems

4.0 Group Feedback4

Page 5: Facilitator Judy Clarey CPRM FRIMA RiskAlign Training & Advisory Services October 2012 RRTO Mining Conference Risk Management Effective Risk Assessment.

1.1 Legislative Drivers of RM

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Page 6: Facilitator Judy Clarey CPRM FRIMA RiskAlign Training & Advisory Services October 2012 RRTO Mining Conference Risk Management Effective Risk Assessment.

1.21.2 Global Business DriversGlobal Business DriversAdapted from BHP Billiton’s Sustainable Development PlanAdapted from BHP Billiton’s Sustainable Development Plan

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Social Social ResponsibilitResponsibilit

yyHealth & SafetyHealth & Safety

Good Corporate CitizenGood Corporate Citizen

Social Social ResponsibilitResponsibilit

yyHealth & SafetyHealth & Safety

Good Corporate CitizenGood Corporate Citizen

Business and Business and Commercial Commercial PerformancePerformance

Business and Business and Commercial Commercial PerformancePerformance

Managing the Managing the

EnvironmentEnvironmentPolitical, Economic , NaturalPolitical, Economic , Natural

Reputation Reputation

Brand/mageBrand/mage

Market ShareMarket Share

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2.1 Improved Risk Management Process

EstablishEstablish the context

Identify the

Analyse the Risks

Evaluate therisk/s

Treat (control) the risk/s

AS/NZS ISO 31000:2009

Identify theRisk/s

Communicate & consult Monitor and

Review

RIS

K A

SS

ES

SM

EN

T

Plan Do

CheckAct

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Page 8: Facilitator Judy Clarey CPRM FRIMA RiskAlign Training & Advisory Services October 2012 RRTO Mining Conference Risk Management Effective Risk Assessment.

Hazard - something with the potential to cause harm / injury / illness

Risk – Chance of injury or loss occurring from a hazard

2.2 Fit-for-Purpose Risk Assessment Techniques

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Risk Assessment Techniques Applicable To Mining Operations.

1. Informal risk assessment (RA)—identification & communication of hazards & risks in a task by applying a way of thinking, often with no documentation.

2. Job safety/hazard analysis (JSA/JHA)—identification of hazards & controls in a specific task, usually for determining standard work practice (SOP).

3. Preliminary hazard analysis/ Workplace Risk Assessment and Control (PHA/WRAC)—identification and analysis of risk issues/events, often to determine the need for further detailed study.

4. Hazard & operability study (HAZOP)—systematic identification of hazards in a process plant design. ·

5. Fault tree analysis (FTA)—detailed analysis of contributors to major unwanted events, potentially using quantitative risk analysis methods.

6. Event tree analysis (ETA)—detailed analysis of the development of major unwanted events, potentially using quantitative methods.

7. Failure modes, effects and criticality analysis (FMECA)—general to detailed analysis of and other potential consequence areas. (7

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2.3 Common Risk Assessment Tools

PHA

PRA

Figure 10

QLD Guidance Note 17 10

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2.4 Risk Matrix-based Analysis

Estimate the“Residual” Level with

appropriate Controls in

place ? 11

Page 12: Facilitator Judy Clarey CPRM FRIMA RiskAlign Training & Advisory Services October 2012 RRTO Mining Conference Risk Management Effective Risk Assessment.

2.5 Inherent Vs Residual Analysis

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WCGW

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Residual Risk AssessmentResidual Risk Assessment

Controls

“Acceptable” Residual Risk

HazardRisk

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WCSGW

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Group Review Activity 1Do current Job safety Analysis and Risk Assessment tools help us to

decide:The context or scope of hazards and risk associated with an activity, including? The objectives, purpose or outcomes of the activity?Whether or not to undertake the activity?Are the hazards and their associated risks clearly defined in relation to “outcome/s”Which risks can be accepted without further control?Which hazard should be controlled first (or to prioritise hazards? Whether existing controls are being applied effectively?Are there gaps in the margin of safety or hazard controls?What new or additional controls need to be implemented / type of control required?Whether more detailed studies or major risk assessment needs to be conducted? The owner/s of risk controls and actions? Workshop Notes Page

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3.0 Recalibrating Risk Systems3.0 Recalibrating Risk Systems

Existing OperationsExisting Operations

Changes to operationsChanges to operations

New ProjectsNew Projects

Acquisition/DivestmenAcquisition/Divestmentt

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3.1 Taking “Stock” of RM Systems

The definition of risk in the new Standard is: 

“the effect of uncertainty on objectives” 

This change in definition should shift our thinking and emphasis of analysis ‘the risk event’ (something happens) to analysis of ‘the effect’ and, in particular, the “effect” on objectives.

By way of illustration, risk isn’t the chance of the commodity processes falling - but the chance that a crash will disrupt or affect the company objectives - for example, limiting capital for expansion.

Notes:•An effect is a deviation from the expected — positive and/or negative.•Uncertainty is the state, even partial, of deficiency of information related to, understanding or knowledge of, an event, its consequence, or likelihood.• Objectives can have different aspects (such as financial, health and safety, and environmental goals) and can apply at different levels (such as strategic, organization-wide, project, product and process).

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Page 17: Facilitator Judy Clarey CPRM FRIMA RiskAlign Training & Advisory Services October 2012 RRTO Mining Conference Risk Management Effective Risk Assessment.

3.2 3.2 Risk Assessment In mature organisations:

Risk Assessment is linked to risk appetite, and begin and end with specific objectives;

Accountability & ownership is clearly established when scoping the assessment;

Reliable & relevant information on Likelihood & Consequence is always considered;

Additional analysis techniques & advice are included as required;

Estimation of residual risk is based on the adequacy and effectiveness of existing controls

Group feedback on additional considerations

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18Grant Purdy Broadleaf Capital

Group Review Activity 2ISO 31000 Principles & Attributes

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Group Feedback & Check out

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Train the Trainer Workshop Feedback

The risk assessment process should:

Provide a clear scope of the job or activity to be analysed,

Clarify / qualify all of the hazard risk/s associated with the job /activity,

Determine the potential sources, causes and exposure levels of these risks,

Identify and record those risks that are “acceptable” without further treatment

Acknowledge risks that will / should always remain in the “high / unacceptable” consequence category for the job/activity.

Rank risks in order of priority for the job, then “estimate” the likelihood of the risk occurring with “known or existing controls” in place,

Then estimate the “most credible /reasonable” magnitude of the consequences of the risk should it occur - before deciding on the level of “residual risk” etc etc

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Page 21: Facilitator Judy Clarey CPRM FRIMA RiskAlign Training & Advisory Services October 2012 RRTO Mining Conference Risk Management Effective Risk Assessment.

Tips for facilitatorsTips for facilitators

Do your pre-workshop research & preparation;

Pre-clarify scope, context and accountability for the risk assessment outcomes;

Select a multi-disciplined team – make sure they understand the problem, the process & their role;

Use ‘fit for purpose” tool/s that you are confident with;

Additional analysis techniques & advice may be required;

The facilitator should lead and support the team, not instruct them.

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