Workshop on Risk Assessment and Safety Decision Making Under Uncertainty
September 21-22, 2010, North Bethesda, Md
Hosted by Consortium for Risk Evaluation with Stakeholder Participation (CRESP) Vanderbilt University
Workshop Overview:
The goal of this workshop is to understand the state-of-the-practice across a range of federal agencies and industries and the state-of-the-science for the use of qualitative, quantitative, and probabilistic risk assessments techniques as part of the decision basis for insuring safety for processes that have critical needs in protecting worker and public safety. Specifically, the following questions are to be addressed: (i) when and what type of risk assessment should be used as part of safety decisions? (ii) how should deterministic and risk assessment techniques and results be integrated? (iii) how are and should risk assessment results be used in decision making? And (iv) what are current policies and processes used by federal agencies and private industries to guide use of risk assessments in safety management? Lessons learned and best practices identified during this workshop will provide input into future practices to be used by DOE.
Many federal agencies (e.g., DOE, NRC, DOD, NASA, FAA) and industries (e.g., nuclear, chemical processing, aerospace) have needed approaches to identifying and mitigating risks over the full range of expected frequency of occurrence and magnitude of consequences. A wide spectrum of approaches and tools/techniques ranging from qualitative to quantitative are available for uncertainty and risk assessment, and for decision-making under uncertainty. Performance evaluation of engineered systems is increasingly relying on the use of sophisticated computational tools, due to infeasibility or prohibitive cost of testing, decreasing product development cycles, or political/social factors. This gives rise to the need to address uncertainty in the model prediction and uncertainty regarding the use of model prediction results in the decision-making process.
All engineering decisions are made under some degree of uncertainty, arising from either natural variability of system properties and demands (aleatoric), or from lack of knowledge regarding the system behavior and operating conditions (epistemic). Safety-related decisions require a structured approach to decision making under uncertainty to protect human health and focus allocation of resources in the context of mission requirements, constraints and risks. Decisions are needed at every stage of the engineering system’s life cycle and processes, including during design, manufacturing/construction, operations, maintenance, and system retirement. Safety policies, along with underlying concepts of risk and uncertainty, reliability and robustness play important roles in the decision making process. Decision making has to address the interests of multiple stakeholders, and there may be multiple decision-makers in large, complex systems, giving rise to uncertainty about the other decision-makers’ preferences/actions.
The objectives of this workshop are to: (1) exchange information on the current approaches to safety assessment and decision making across a range of federal agencies, industries, and researchers, (2) identify best practices, and (3) identify key knowledge and methodological gaps and research needs. Participants are expected from DOE, NRC, DOD, NASA, FAA, DHS, national laboratories, academia, and nuclear, aerospace, chemical industries.
Session 1: Workshop Objectives and Challenges
Session Chair: Prof. D. Kosson, Vanderbilt University and CRESP
Workshop introduction
Prof. D. Kosson, Vanderbilt University and CRESP View Presentation
Safety Decision Making Under Uncertainty: One Board Member’s Perspective
The Honorable Larry W. Brown, Member, Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board View Statement
Making Better Decisions with Probabilistic Risk Assessment
Dr. B.J. Garrick, Chair, Nuclear Waste Technical Review Board View Presentation
Session 2: DOE Activities & Challenges
Session Chair: Prof. S. Mahadevan, Vanderbilt Univ. and CRESP
National Nuclear Security Administration
Mr. J. McConnell, Assistant Deputy Administrator for Nuclear Safety, National Nuclear Security Administration View Presentation
Department of Energy’s Activities & Challenges
Dr. J. O’Brien, Director, Office of Nuclear Safety Policy and Assistance View Presentation
One Perspective from a Chemical Industry.
Mr. S. Urbanik, Sr. Consultant, Process Safety & Fire Protection Engineering, E. I. DuPont de Nemours & Company, Inc View Presentation
Session 3: Examples of Current Uses of Risk Assessments in Safety Decisions
Session Chair: Dr. J. O’Brien, Office of Nuclear Safety Policy and Assistance
Safety Risk Management
Mr. M. Falteisek, Federal Aviation Administration, Air Traffic Organization-Office of Safety Manager, Safety Risk Management View Presentation
The Probabilistic Risk Assessment of the Abandoned Chemical Weapons in China
Dr. D. Johnson, Vice President for Probabilistic Risk Analysis and Management, ABS Consulting View Presentation
Risk Analysis for Truck Transportation of High Consequence Cargo
Dr. R. Waters, Distinguished Member of the Technical Staff, Sandia National Laboratory View Presentation
Session 4: Examples of Current Uses of Risk Assessments in Safety Decisions
Session Chair: Mr. B. Hallbert, Director, Nuclear Safety and Regulatory Research, Idaho National Laboratory
Use of QRA as Part of Hydrogen in Piping and Ancillary Vessels (HPAV) Design Assessment
Dr. R. Bari, Senior Physicist, Brookhaven National Laboratory View Presentation
Probability and Provability in the Regulation of Food Additives and Contaminants
Dr. Clarke Carrington, Pharmacologist, Food and Drug Administration View Presentation
Communicating Risk, Benefit, and Uncertainty for Biologics: A Case Study
Dr. M. Walderhaug, Assoc. Director for Risk Assessment, Office of Biostatistics & Epidemiology, Food and Drug Administration (Contact L. Bliss for access to this presentation.)
Session 5: Risk, Uncertainty and Decision Making – Concepts and Methods
Session Chair: Mr. A. Wallo, Office of Nuclear Safety, Quality Assurance and Environment
Uncertainty sources, types and quantification models for risk studies
Prof. B. Ayyub, Director, Center for Technology and Systems Management, Univ. of Maryland View Presentation
Quantification of Margins and Uncertainty for Risk-Informed Decision Analysis
Dr. K. Alvin, Sandia National Laboratory View Presentation
Quantitative Methods for Decision-Making Under Uncertainty
Prof. Sankaran Mahadevan, Vanderbilt Univ. & CRESP View Presentation
Consideration of Human factors in Risk Assessment and Management
Mr. B. Hallbert, Director, Nuclear Safety and Regulatory Research, Idaho National Laboratory View Presentation
Alternative Methods for Incorporating PRA Concepts Into the Safety Decision-Making Process
Prof. M. Abkowitz, Vanderbilt Univ., CRESP, and Member, Nuclear Waste Technical Review Board View Presentation
Session 6: Approaches to Safety Decision Making under Uncertainty – Policies and Practices
Session Chair: Prof. C. Powers, Vanderbilt Univ. and CRESP
An Introduction to Current Practices at DOE
Dr. J. O’Brien, Director, Office of Nuclear Safety Policy and Assistance View Presentation
Implementation of PRA Policy at US Nuclear Regulatory Commission
Dr. M. Cunningham, Director of the Division of Risk Assessment, Nuclear Regulatory Commission View Presentation
Nuclear Power Industry Experience with Risk-Informed Regulation
Mr. B. Bradley, Director, Risk Assessment, Nuclear Energy Institute View Presentation
Session 7: Approaches to Safety Decision Making under Uncertainty– Policies and Practices
Session Chair: Dr. R. Bari, Senior Physicist, Brookhaven National Laboratory
Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Policy and Approach to Risk Management and Analysis
Mr. S. Breor, Deputy Director, Office of Risk Management and Analysis, and Dr. R. Kolasky, Assist. Director for Risk Governance and Support, Department of Homeland Security View Presentation
NASA’s Risk Management Approach
Dr. H. Dezfuli, NASA Technical Fellow (System Safety), NASA View Presentation
Predicting Risk Through Modeling of Leaker Plumes
Mr. A. Cushen, P.E., Chief, Occupational Health and Safety,US Army Chemical Materials Agency View Presentation
Contacts:
Technical: David Kosson, David.Kosson@Vanderbilt.edu, (615) 322-1064 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting (615) 322-1064 end_of_the_skype_highlighting
Organizing Committee:
CRESP Co-Chairmen
Prof. David S. Kosson, Vanderbilt University
Prof. Sankaran Mahadevan, Vanderbilt University
DOE Co-Chairmen
Dr. James O’Brien, Director, Office of Nuclear Safety Policy and Assistance
Dr. Steven Krahn, Deputy Assistant Secretary, Safety and Security, Office of Environmental Management
DOE Committee Members
Mr. James Hutton, Chief Nuclear Safety Advisor
Mr. Samuel Rosenbloom, Nuclear Engineer, Office of Nuclear Safety Policy
Ms. Leydi Velez, DOE Fellow, Applied Research Center, Florida International University
CRESP Staff Support
Ms. Lisa Bliss, Assistant Director, CRESP
Ms. Randi Hall, Administrative Assistant
This meeting is supported by the U. S. Department of Energy, under Cooperative Agreement Number DE-FC01-06EW07053 entitled ‘The Consortium for Risk Evaluation with Stakeholder Participation III’ awarded to Vanderbilt University. The opinions, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed herein are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily represent the views of the Department of Energy or Vanderbilt University.
Disclaimer: This meeting was prepared as an account of work sponsored by an agency of the United States Government. Neither the United States Government nor any agency thereof, nor any of their employees, makes any warranty, express or implied, or assumes any legal liability or responsibility for the accuracy, completeness, or usefulness of any information, apparatus, product, or process disclosed, or represents that its use would not infringe privately owned rights. Reference herein to any specific commercial product, process, or service by trade name, trademark, manufacturer, or otherwise does not necessarily constitute or imply its endorsement, recommendation, or favoring by the United States Government, or any agency thereof. The views and opinions of authors expressed herein do not necessarily state or reflect those of the United States Government or any agency thereof.