2012 Spring Meeting & 8th Global Congress on Process Safety
(112a) Understanding and Developing Quantitative Risk Criteria
Authors
Understanding and Developing Quantitative Risk Criteria
Jatin Shah and Mike Moosemiller
Baker Engineering and Risk Consultants
There are several factors that make the establishment of Risk Criteria a daunting task that few want to undertake. For large global corporations, it is likely that one or more facilities have to meet governmental requirements. For U.S. facilities, there is now also an incentive to having risk criteria in that it allows greater flexibility in complying with the updated API Recommended Practice 752 on siting of occupied permanent buildings, which for the first time now allows risk-based safety management strategies. Having corporate risk criteria is imperative to ensure that facilities and operations that are not in “regulated jurisdictions” have a consistent framework to make risk related decisions. Risk Criteria range from the use of the traditional risk matrix (consequence vs. likelihood) to the more quantitative risk criteria that include Geographic risk (individual risk) and/or Societal risk criteria. This paper discusses the steps necessary to help companies develop robust defendable risk criteria that facilitate decision making.
Potential pitfalls are also presented and discussed including: (a) the potential to develop criteria that are unachievable or too lax, (b) developing criteria that are inconsistent with other established programs in the company, and (c) reconciling the needs between unit level criteria and business or group level criteria. Typical risk tolerance criteria, and examples of issues and pitfalls that are commonly faced by companies developing such criteria, are also presented.