Limitations of current risk assessment methods to foresee emerging risks : Towards a new methodology ? - Archive ouverte HAL Access content directly
Journal Articles Journal of Loss Prevention in the Process Industries Year : 2016

Limitations of current risk assessment methods to foresee emerging risks : Towards a new methodology ?

Abstract

The objective of this work-in-progress is to investigate the potentialities but also the limitations of traditional risks analysis tools especially in the context of emerging technologies and develop a method facilitating the early detection of scenarios of accidents. This is certainly a challenge particularly for new industrial fields since, in this case, very little or no lesson from past accidents is available. It is believed that such situations cannot be conveniently treated using traditional risk assessment methods (HAZOP, FMEA, …) and typical examples are given. The reason is that those methods rely heavily on past accidents and are therefore “trapped” in them so that they are largely “inductive”. In terms of foreseeing the future, the shortcomings of inductive methods are recalled. The possibility to imagine the future with very little clues is then discussed on the ground of theoretical consideration and a way to do so is proposed (abduction, serendipity). Then on the basis of the observation of how the experts work and how discoveries are made, a potential new methodology is outlined.
Fichier principal
Vignette du fichier
2016-202_post-print.pdf (671.32 Ko) Télécharger le fichier
Origin : Files produced by the author(s)
Loading...

Dates and versions

ineris-01863019 , version 1 (28-08-2018)

Identifiers

Cite

Jean Escande, Christophe Proust, Jean-Christophe Le Coze. Limitations of current risk assessment methods to foresee emerging risks : Towards a new methodology ?. Journal of Loss Prevention in the Process Industries, 2016, 43, pp.730-735. ⟨10.1016/j.jlp.2016.06.008⟩. ⟨ineris-01863019⟩
37 View
729 Download

Altmetric

Share

Gmail Facebook Twitter LinkedIn More