Abstract

In the oil sector, analysis, evaluation, and management of risk are vital, considering the accidents potential severity with respect to human life, environment and property. Since the greater part of the accidents in this sector is caused by human factors, and given the lack of suitable tools for its consideration along the systems life cycle, especially in the design phase, the development of models and processes dedicated to human factors in risk analysis is essential. In this context, a technique for early consideration of human reliability (TECHR) was designed for developing a prospective human performance model which can be exploited in the system design phase and which can be updated along the system life cycle. TECHR is based on the use of expert opinion in relation to systems that operate or have operated in recent years to obtain estimates of the probabilities of the various types of human error which may occur during the performance of a specific action. This paper briefly presents the application of a prospective human performance model — obtained by the TECHR — in the study of an oil tanker operation, focusing the human factor quantification in scenarios of collision. In this work, the actions presented in a previous fault tree — for the vessel operation — are quantified considering the mentioned model, and the results are discussed in view of the previous results of this fault tree.

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