DEVELOPMENT OF HSE MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS FOR HIGH-RISK INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES BASED ON ISO STANDARDS, OSHA PRINCIPLES, AND FIELD PRACTICE
Keywords:
Health, Safety, and Environment (HSE), High-Risk Industrial Facilities, ISO Standards, OSHA Principles, Risk Management SystemsAbstract
The day-to-day running of high-risk industrial sites – be they oil and gas, chemical or mining operations, or power plants – is fraught with occupational, environmental, and operational hazards. Given the nature of these environments, a strong Health, Safety, and Environment (HSE) management system is called for to keep accidents at bay, limit ecological damage, and stay on the right side of regulators. Yet even with international safety standards in place, one finds that many organisations are still plagued by workplace incidents, often due to a piecemeal approach to management, poor risk controls, or an uneven application of safety protocols.
In this paper, we set out to put together an integrated HSE framework for such facilities. Our approach is to blend the dictates of ISO and OSHA with what has been proven to work in the field. To do so, we have carried out a systematic qualitative review of the literature, poring over scholarly works, industry and regulatory reports, and international standards on everything from process safety and risk management to organisational performance. A thematic analysis of these sources was used to zero in on the hallmarks of effective HSE implementation.
What our results show is that you cannot have sound HSE performance without a mix of leadership buy-in, proper hazard and risk assessment, a competent workforce, and the like, alongside emergency readiness and a willingness to improve. We find that when the structured nature of ISO is married to OSHA's preventive stance and hard-earned operational know-how, you get a far more complete way of dealing with the vicissitudes of a high-risk setting.
Ultimately, the framework we propose is meant to be a working guide for companies looking to put down roots in a stronger safety culture and make their operations more resilient and environmentally responsible. By offering a model that unifies the demands of international bodies and regulators with the realities of the shop floor, this study adds to the body of knowledge on how to achieve safer, more sustainable industrial practice.
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