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Keywords = total recordable injury rates (TRIR)

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15 pages, 394 KiB  
Article
Advancing the Sustainability of Risk Assessments within the Renewable Energy Sector—Review of Published Risk Assessments
by Mark Jenkins, Sean Loughney, Dante Benjamin Matellini and Jin Wang
Sustainability 2024, 16(6), 2446; https://doi.org/10.3390/su16062446 - 15 Mar 2024
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1431
Abstract
Repeated regulatory incident investigations demonstrate the insufficiency of company risk assessments and the vulnerabilities that this exposes to the business and its duty holders who are, ultimately, culpable for the subsequent legislative breaches. While the epistemology and taxonomy of the traditional risk assessment [...] Read more.
Repeated regulatory incident investigations demonstrate the insufficiency of company risk assessments and the vulnerabilities that this exposes to the business and its duty holders who are, ultimately, culpable for the subsequent legislative breaches. While the epistemology and taxonomy of the traditional risk assessment are well established, there is a paucity of information that allows the verification and validation of the risk assessment content. Using evidence-based methodologies such as Content Analysis, Thematic Analysis, and validating the outputs using a survey, it became possible to “reverse engineer” the risk assessment content. This analysis of the published risk assessments, kindly supplied by six different Renewable Energy businesses, established that deterministic and behavioristic risk management methodologies had been adopted. These methodologies permitted and guided the use of vague and imprecise terminology and phraseology, numerical inconsistencies resulting in data ossification, and flawed assumptions. This analysis enables the duty holders to make informed and rational judgements about the adequacy of the risk assessment documents, and the process that permitted and guided their creation. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Sustainable Energy Systems and Renewable Generation)
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