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RISKS IN TECHNOLOGY AND SCIENCE PRECAUTIONARY PRINCIPLE

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Title: The Precautionary Principle Author: jin03003 Last modified by: Gordana Dodig-Crnkovic Created Date: 12/4/2003 2:52:20 PM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: RISKS IN TECHNOLOGY AND SCIENCE PRECAUTIONARY PRINCIPLE


1
RISKS IN TECHNOLOGY AND SCIENCEPRECAUTIONARY
PRINCIPLE
  • Balaji, Artur and Jonas

2
Definition of Risk
  • Risk emergences from a combination of probability
    of occurrence and consequence.
  • The severity of the risk is judged by its nature
    and possible consequences.
  • William D. Rowe says a Risk is acceptable when
    those affected are generally no longer
    apprehensive about it.

3
Uncertainties in Design
  • Risk will be seldom in a product. It arises
    because of many uncertainties faced by the design
    engineer, also the manufacturing engineer and
    finally even by the sales and application manager
  • Coming to applications design that do quite well
    under static loads may fail under dynamic loads.
    A very famous example is the wooden bridge
    collapsed when a contingent of Napoleons army
    crossed it marching in step. The same even
    affected to one of the Robert Stephensons steel
    bridges. The bridges shook when the British
    troops make their march.
  •  A product is said to be safe if its capability
    exceeds its duty. Actually the stress that
    materializes at the load varies quite a large
    when compared with the stress calculated by the
    engineer for a given condition of load 

4
Methods of Testing
  • There are different approaches called as scenario
    analysis, failure mode analysis, effect analysis,
    fault tree analysis.
  • In scenario analysis one starts from a given
    event, then we have to study the different
    consequences that evolve from it.
  • In failure modes and effect analysis,
    systemically we examine the modes of each
    component with out however focusing on causes or
    relation ships among the elements of complex
    systems.
  • Fault tree analysis method in which one poses a
    system failure and then traces the events back to
    possible causes at the component level. Now we
    have a final method called as event tree method,
    which is the reverse of fault tree method, and it
    is the more mathematically oriented version of
    scenario analysis.

5
Testing For Safety
  • We can gain experience only through tests.
  • Now a days engineers test an entire airframe for
    fatigue, often one of the first production
    models.
  • We cannot trust testing procedures uncertainly.
  • The pressure from the management to fudge data
    for now, because by the time we get into
    production we will have ignored out of the
    problem.
  • So the conscientious engineers had therefore
    better made occasional spot checks on their own
    unless the organization they work for uses an
    independent testing service free of production
    pressures.

6
Risk-Benefit Analysis And Risk Reduction
  • Many big projects are generally justified by on
    the basis of a risk benefit analysis. When we
    examine risk benefit analysis in a close manner
    it reveals many difficulties.
  • It is clear that both risks and benefits lie in
    the future. Since there is some uncertainty, so
    we should multiply the magnitude of the potential
    loss by the probability of its occurrence,
    similarly with the gain.
  • The matter of delayed effects presents
    particular difficulties when an analysis is
    carried out
  • It should be noticed that risk-benefit analysis
    is just like cost-benefit analysis, it is
    concerned with the advisability of undertaking a
    project.
  • So the engineers must be aware of differences so
    that they do not unknowingly carry the
    assumptions behind one kind of concern into their
    deliberations over the other.

7
The Precautionary Principle
  • A new principle for guiding human activities, to
    prevent harm to the Environment and to human
    health, has been emerging during the past 10
    years. It is called the "principle of
    precautionary action" or the "precautionary
    principle" for short.
  • http//www.sdearthtimes.com/et0398/et0398s4.html

8
The Principles of Precautionary Action
  • People have a duty to take anticipatory action to
    prevent harm. (As one participant at the
    Wingspread meeting summarized the essence of the
    precautionary principle, "If you have a
    reasonable suspicion that something bad might be
    going to happen, you have an obligation to try to
    stop it.")
  • The burden of proof of harmlessness of a new
    technology, process, activity, or chemical lies
    with the proponents, not with the general public.
  • Before using a new technology, process, or
    chemical, or starting a new activity, people have
    an obligation to examine "a full range of
    alternatives" including the alternative of doing
    nothing.
  • Decisions applying the precautionary principle
    must be "open, informed, and democratic" and
    "must include affected parties."

http//www.sdearthtimes.com/et0398/et0398s4.html
9
Case study 1 Air Bags
  • SafeComp is a company that, among other things,
    designs and makes sensing devices for automobile
    air bags. Bob Baines was hired to work in the
    quality control department. About six weeks after
    starting work, he was asked to sign off on a
    design that he felt very uncertain about. He
    checked with people involved in the design and
    found the situation, at best, ambiguous.
  •  
  • Bob told his manager that he would not feel
    right about signing off, and, since he was
    relatively inexperienced with SafeComp's
    procedures, asked that he not be required to do
    this. His manager kept applying pressure.
    Eventually, Bob decided that he wished neither to
    violate his principles by doing something that he
    thought was wrong, nor to become involved in a
    battle in which his career would certainly be
    major casualty. Bob quietly resigned.

10
Case study 2 Making Good Wafers Look Bad
  • Don Fisher, an electrical engineer, worked for
    Dicers, a company that purchased wafers for
    microprocessor chips from another company and
    then diced, packaged, and sold them. Don was
    assigned the task of testing these wafers. After
    a while, he was instructed by his manager to
    alter the testing process in such a manner that
    the quality of the purchased wafers was made to
    seem lower than it really was, which had the
    effect of the lowering the price paid. Don
    objected to this practice and refused to go
    along. Eventually he was discharged.

11
Case study 3 Not Lighting Up
  • Will Morgan, a licensed electrical engineer,
    worked for a state university on construction and
    renovation projects. His immediate manager was an
    architect, and next in the chain of command was
    an administrator, John Tight, a man with no
    technical background. Tight, without talking to
    the engineers, often produced estimates on
    project costs that he passed on to higher
    university officials. In those cases, not
    infrequent, where it became evident that actual
    costs were going to exceed his estimates, he
    would pressure the engineers to cut corners.
  • One such occasion involved the renovation of a
    warehouse to convert some storage space into
    office space. Among the specifications detailed
    by Morgan was the installation of emergency exit
    lights. These were mandated by the building code.
    As part of his effort to bring the actual costs
    closer to his unrealistic estimate, Tight
    insisted that the specification for emergency
    lights be deleted.
  • Will strongly objected on obvious grounds. When
    he refused to yield, Tight brought charges
    against him, claiming that he was a disruptive
    influence. Although his immediate superior, the
    architect, did not support these charges, he did
    not fight for Morgan, who was ultimately
    dismissed by the university. Morgan is now suing
    for wrongful discharge.
  •  
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