Bow ties in risk management : a concept book for process safety

"Explains how to construct bow ties of high practical value for operationalizing barriers, avoiding common pitfalls, with realistic examples -Explains how to treat human and organizational factors in a sound and practical manner -Proposes a standardization of terminology and definitions associa...

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Bibliographic Details
Corporate Authors American Institute of Chemical Engineers. Center for Chemical Process Safety (Author), Energy Institute (Great Britain)
Format Electronic eBook
LanguageEnglish
Published Hoboken, NJ : [New York, NY] : John Wiley & Sons, Inc. ; American Institute of Chemical Engineers, 2018.
SeriesCCPS concept book.
Subjects
Online AccessFull text
ISBN9781119490388
1119490383
9781119490357
1119490359
9781119490340
1119490340
9781523119707
1523119705
9781119490395
Physical Description1 online resource (xv, 357 pages)

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Table of Contents:
  • Intro; BOW TIES IN RISK MANAGEMENT; CONTENTS; LIST OF TABLES; LIST OF FIGURES; ACRONYMS AND ABBREVIATIONS; GLOSSARY; ACKNOWLEDGMENTS; ONLINE MATERIALS ACCOMPANYING THIS BOOK; PREFACE; 1 INTRODUCTION; 1.1 PURPOSE; 1.2 SCOPE AND INTENDED AUDIENCE; 1.3 ORGANIZATION OF THIS CONCEPT BOOK; 1.4 INTRODUCTION TO THE BOW TIE CONCEPT; 1.4.1 Reason's Swiss Cheese, Models of Accident Causation and Bow Ties; 1.4.2 History and Regulatory Context of Bow Ties; 1.4.3 What Bow Ties Address; 1.4.4 Key Elements of a Bow Tie; 1.4.5 Benefits of Bow Ties; 1.4.6 Linkage between Bow Ties, Fault Trees, and Event Trees.
  • 1.5 CONCLUSIONS2 THE BOW TIE MODEL; 2.1 BOW TIE MODEL ELEMENTS; 2.2 HAZARD; 2.2.1 Hazard: Characteristics; 2.2.2 Formulating the Hazard; 2.2.3 Hazard Examples; 2.3 TOP EVENT; 2.3.1 Top Event: Characteristics; 2.3.2 Formulating the Top Event; 2.3.3 Top Event Examples; 2.4 CONSEQUENCES; 2.4.1 Consequences: Characteristics; 2.4.2 Formulating Consequences; 2.4.3 Consequence Examples; 2.5 THREATS; 2.5.1 Threats: Characteristics; 2.5.2 Formulating Threats; 2.5.3 Threat Examples; 2.6 BARRIERS; 2.6.1 Barriers: Concept and Location on Bow Tie; 2.6.2 Barriers: Type and Characterization.
  • 2.6.3 Barrier Properties2.6.4 Metadata; 2.6.5 Barrier Examples; 2.7 DEGRADATION FACTORS AND DEGRADATION CONTROLS; 2.7.1 Degradation Factors: Characteristics; 2.7.2 Degradation Controls: Concept and Location on Bow Tie; 2.7.3 Use Degradation Factors and Degradation Controls Sparingly; 2.7.4 Degradation Factors and Degradation Control Examples; 2.7.5 The Level of Detail Should Match the Goal and Audience of the Bow Tie; 2.8 CONCLUSIONS; 3 BOW TIE DEVELOPMENT; 3.1 RATIONALE FOR BOW TIE DEVELOPMENT; 3.2 BOW TIE WORKSHOP; 3.2.1 Bow Tie Workshop Pre-Work; 3.2.2 Workshop Team.
  • 3.2.3 The Bow Tie Workshop3.3 POST-BOW TIE WORKSHOP ACTIVITIES AND QUALITY CHECKS; 3.4 CONCLUSIONS; 4 ADDRESSING HUMAN FACTORS IN BOW TIE ANALYSIS; 4.1 HUMAN AND ORGANIZATIONAL FACTORS FUNDAMENTALS; 4.1.1 Introduction; 4.1.2 Human and Organizational Factors
  • Conventional Approach; 4.1.3 Human and Organizational Factors
  • New Paradigm; 4.1.4 Human Failure as a Degradation Factor; 4.2 STANDARD AND MULTI-LEVEL BOW TIE APPROACHES; 4.2.1 Standard Bow Tie Approach; 4.2.2 'Multi-Level Bow Tie' Extension; 4.2.3 Comparison of Multi-Level and Generic Human Factors Bow Ties.
  • 4.3 HUMAN AND ORGANIZATIONAL FACTORS AS A BARRIER OR DEGRADATION CONTROL4.3.1 Barriers; 4.3.2 Degradation Controls; 4.3.3 Training and Competence; 4.4 VALIDATING HUMAN PERFORMANCE IN BARRIERS AND DEGRADATION CONTROLS; 4.5 QUANTIFYING HUMAN RELIABILITY IN BOW TIES; 4.6 CONCLUSIONS; 5 PRIMARY USES OF BOW TIES; 5.1 PRIMARY USE EXAMPLES; 5.2 LINKING BOW TIES TO THE RISK MANAGEMENT SYSTEM; 5.2.1 Uses for Bow Ties
  • Design Verification; 5.2.2 Uses for Bow Ties
  • Communication and Management of Barriers and Degradation Controls; 5.2.3 Uses for Bow Ties
  • Risk Management during Operations.