Product Design & Development

Are We Safer, Yet?

By Scott Orlosky, In Safety
Friday, June 25, 2010

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Scott Orlosky
Scott Orlosky, In Safety



Safety has been in the news a lot lately. Remember the Upper Big Branch coal mine explosion in April and the HUGE ongoing Gulf of Mexico oil debacle?  As always there is enough finger pointing going on to implicate a whole host of manufacturers and operators. If we set aside all this media attention for a moment and get down to the nuts and bolts of safety there are really three main players: Original Equipment Manufacturers (OEM’s), Operators, and Regulatory Agencies.

As a manufacturer of sensors we supply to the Original Equipment Manufacturers and they rely on us to provide enough technical information and support to safely build our products into their equipment. Operators (and sometimes the OEM’s are the operators) rely on the OEM’s to give them enough information to safely operate and maintain the equipment. Meanwhile the regulatory agencies let everyone in the chain know what are the safe limits for design and operation of equipment intended to be used in the particular environment.

Given the nature of operating in dangerous environments, even with all the players doing their job well – accidents are inevitable.  There is no doubt that the loss of life is tragic and devastating. Coupled with all the peripheral losses (environmental, loss of income, hours taken in clean-up, etc.) the cost is largely incalculable. 

But where do we draw the line between reasonable expectation of the inevitable and cautiousness to the point of disabling whole industries? 

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Furthermore, does more regulation even create safer conditions with the complexities of modern day operations? Given that most accidents eventually come down to operator error should regulations be directed toward manufacturers or operators?

Here’s a case in point. Today’s technology could be used to create a virtually accident-proof car. Front and rear radar could ensure safe separation of cars in traffic, governor control could prevent speeding (and even slow things down in poor conditions), traction systems could prevent skids, alcohol breath analyzers could lock-out drunk drivers and so on. This would be an expensive car, but it would save approximately 40,000 lives per year in the US alone. 

It also takes a lot of the responsibility for safe operation of the vehicle off of the vehicle operator and puts it squarely on the manufacturer. Would people even want to buy a “safe” car or would it infringe on their personal freedom of driving expression?  Would manufacturers even be willing to take on the liability for such a car?

The bottom line – can we ever be truly safe and at what point does the economic hardship of “perfect” safety outweigh the risks of inherently risky operations?

For more information www.beisensors.com

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3 Comments

  • Ignoring safety regulations day after day until an explosion occurs in a coal mine and workers are killed should be criminal. In past decades while coal company incomes have increased by over 200% the pay to the workers has been raised by less than 4% and their communities and their children are being poisoned by the sludge that the coal companies are dumping into the rivers and streams. At 5 different times during the drilling of the oil well by BP the advice of engineers was overridden by the project manager who was thinking more about his bonus than the lives of the 17 men on the platform he killed or the devastation to millions of families affected by the spill. The problem is that is I drive drunk and kill someone I will most likely go to jail. If I purposely drive at high speed into a parking lot while sober and kill someone I will definitely go to jail. If I disregard safety regulations and procedures in a coal mine or on a drilling rig and kill a few dozen people it is an industrial accident and I should walk away with no time in jail. Who in their right mind would justify this double standard when the actions of men cause the deaths of others?

  • Aside from the economic limits, wouldn't a "perfectly" safe system be so infinitely complex that it becomes inherently unreliable at best and, at worst, unsafe?
    Yet another important factor to consider is complacency. Falsely believing anything with inherent dangers is safe because it is claimed to be so, will some day make for a very rude awakening to anyone that survives. Believing anything is "perfectly" safe is a perfectly dangerous mindset.

  • Thank you Scott for a breath of sensible fresh air. I am sick of the hyperbole regarding the Gulf. So many in the mainstream media are treating the Gulf situation like it was Armageddon. Lord knows that Mother Nature will take care of this. This is after all, a naturally occuring substance. Of course, we will (and should) do what we can to help Mother Nature clean it up. There will be lessons learned from all this but what we don't need is a bunch of ignorant politicians and their ill-informed knee-jerk reactions.

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