Management of Process Safety Risk Assessments – a gap in compliance?

Post Date
21 January 2023
Read Time
1 minute

Most operating companies within the high hazard industries are familiar with process safety risk assessment techniques such as Hazard and Operability (HAZOP) and Hazard Identification (HAZID) studies. Recent intelligence, however, indicates that a focus of the COMAH competent authorities is not just on the quality of such studies but how a linkage is made with an operator’s major accident hazard scenarios and the overall safety management system.

During interactions with the competent authority, many sites can present a suitable HAZOP or HAZID study, however there are many examples of other COMAH requirements being difficult to demonstrate. Examples include:

  • Have you identified all potential major accident hazard scenarios?
  • Do the site’s major accident hazard scenarios all link back to underlying hazard identification studies?
  • Is the site’s application of process safety risk assessment proportionate?
  • Do you have an overarching procedure for managing process safety risk assessments?
  • Which process safety risk assessment tool should be used for a given circumstance?
  • How do we know that our process safety risk assessments are effective?
  • Have we taken all measures necessary to prevent, control or mitigate major accident hazards?

Our process safety specialists use these tools every day, helping clients in decision making to ensure the right tool is used and that the measures are in place for prevention, control, and mitigation of major accident hazard scenarios. If you want to find out more, please get in touch.

Recent posts

  • Insight

    30 April 2024

    5 minutes read

    When is an Air Quality Assessment required for a planning application?


    View post
  • Insight

    29 April 2024

    4 minutes read

    ULEZ: A key battleground in the London Mayoral Election

    by Ben Turner


    View post
  • Insight

    26 April 2024

    6 minutes read

    Transition planning: The map is not the territory

    by Julie Pike


    View post
See all posts