Safety Engineering Meets Behavioral Science

Technological advances might require safety engineers and machine operators to rethink safety needs. The latest Automation World survey reveals how the human side of safety engineering is evolving, and what challenges lie ahead.

Operator safety
Operator safety

Industrial work is often dangerous work, as evidenced by the string of media headlines about chemical plant explosions and equipment rollovers in recent months. But the truth is that industrial workplaces have reported slight overall reductions in serious accidents in the past few years. That’s because industry has done a great deal to improve industrial safety methods, technology, training and system design to ensure human operators are safe during routine and aberrant activities. Human behavior, however, continues to be the wild card in any operation.

To augment regular coverage of the new technologies and systems that keep workers safe, Automation World explored the human side of safety through our latest reader survey and compared results to a similar 2015 poll. Responses reflect how readers’ ideas and behaviors around safety have changed, and what experts say is impacting safety system engineering today—namely, collaborative applications that require humans and robots to work closely together, the recognition that some critical components of safety fluctuate in real time, and insights from the field of behavioral economics.

First, a look at that wild card in the manufacturing plant: humans. Newer employees raised on remote control cars and cellphones might look at an automated guided vehicle (AGV) and be complacent about safety. “That’s someone who believes they’re safe and takes safety for granted,” says George Schuster, Industry Safety Specialist for Rockwell Automation. “They think, ‘It’s just a robot. I had one as a kid. What could possibly go wrong?’”

Other workers might anthropomorphize their machine, naming it like people name ships or cars because it has a perceived personality. “This can be both good and bad,” Schuster says. “It’s good when people can view machines as coworkers who are really able to help them. It’s bad because there have been documented cases where people in a factory have thrown themselves between a hazard and their coworker robot to protect the robot.”

Traditionally, when a machine and a person needed to be in the same place at the same time, safety engineers would manage that shared space with mechanisms like hard guarding or alarms to keep people and machines separate. Because of this, safety was seen as an obstacle to productive operations.

This is one reason why workers might be less than diligent about following the safety guidelines set forth. Asked if they’ve seen coworkers do something unsafe in an industrial environment, the majority of respondents to our latest safety psychology study (67 percent) answered, “Yes, but not very often.” Unsafe actions occur all the time, according to 14 percent of respondent, while slightly more (19 percent) said that their coworkers always follow safety guidelines. These results are similar to those from the 2015 Automation World survey.

In a white paper titled “Human Factors and Their Impact on Plant Safety,” ABB noted that some 70 percent of reported incidents in the oil and gas industry worldwide can be attributed to human error. “Industrial plants are designed with the highest degree of accuracy in mind, often with several separate safety loops checking the integrity of process systems,” says Luis M. Duran, Global Product Manager for Safety Systems at ABB and co-author of the report. “However, this approach can’t check for human intervention, and a small human error could cause an enormous catastrophe.”

The industrial sector has been mainly focused on the physical component and automation process of the working environment rather than on the human as a part of both physical and psycho-social elements, Duran says. “The human was ignored, regardless of the fact that it is the human that makes most critical decisions when abnormal situations occur,” he adds.

Safety culture and standards

The concept of a safety culture has developed and grown over time. “Ten years ago, when the topic of machine safety was brought up with industrial users, [we] saw a big gap in terms of users understanding the requirements of machine safety and its implications,” says John D’Silva, Safety Technology Manager for Siemens.

That gap was addressed by automation vendors and others with training materials and awareness programs about developing a safety culture, as well as with further development of safety standards. There have been a lot of lessons learned from industry accidents and incidents, and these have been captured in the writing of International Functional Safety Standards (IEC 61508 and IEC61511), and previously ISA 84.

These lessons learned impact product design, project implementation, operations and maintenance activities, and affect multiple areas of the plant lifecycle. “Nowadays, when interacting with industrial users, they are very knowledgeable and know the benefits of machine safety, not only from a compliance standpoint, but also how it protects operators and contributes towards an increase in productivity and operator morale,” D’Silva says.

A strong safety culture recognizes the impact of safety behaviors and actions on the integrity of the production asset. Asked whether they believe their companies have established a strong safety culture, the proportion of our survey respondents saying “yes” jumped from 63 percent in 2015 to 79 percent this year.

Factors that readers deem essential to developing a strong safety culture include training (93 percent), defining safety responsibilities (74 percent), leadership buy-in (73 percent) and enforcing accountability (71 percent). All four factors were seen as more important by 2019 respondents than they were by 2015 respondents.

“Nowadays, many times the discussions with industrial users move straight ahead to functional safety for their applications,” D’Silva says. That shows that safety standards, which provide methodologies like risk reduction and risk assessment, are clearly defined and accepted.

Duran agrees. “Today, functional safety standards have matured,” he says. “And with that maturity, their application and importance has also become the norm.”

Functional safety standards introduced the concept of the safety lifecycle, describing the phases that should take place from concept to design to implementation and operation of a safety instrumented system (SIS). “The safety lifecycle is a step in the direction of reducing the impact of human factors by establishing the proper design best practices, documentation reviews and validation, and verification steps in the execution of a safety project,” Duran explains.

Additionally, the standards introduce two important elements: competence of personnel and the functional safety management system (FSMS). “Recent changes to International Functional Safety Standard IEC 61508 have turned these requirements into normative clauses of mandatory compliance instead of a recommendation, as in the previous versions,” Duran says.

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