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This book presents a comprehensive approach to address the need to
improve the design of tailings dams, their management and the
regulation of tailings management facilities to reduce, and
eventually eliminate, the risk of such facilities failing. The
scope of the challenge is well documented in the report by the
United Nations Environment Program (UNEP) and GRID Arendal entitled
"Mine Tailings Storage: Safety Is No Accident," which was released
in October 2017. The report recommends that "Regulators, industry
and communities should adopt a shared, zero-failure objective to
tailings storage facilities..." and identifies several areas where
further improvements are required. In this context, the application
of cutting-edge risk-assessment methodologies and risk-management
practices can contribute to a significant reduction and eventual
elimination of dam failures through Risk Informed Decision Making.
As such, the book focuses on identifying and describing the
risk-assessment approaches and risk-management practices that need
to be implemented in order to develop a way forward to achieve
socially acceptable levels of tailings dam risk.
This book aims, through its chapters, at providing the knowledge to
make competent decisions, convince peers or top management to take
appropriate action, or beat out the competition for climate
adaptation measures including adjustments for design and
operations. Topics discussed include business-as-usual vs.
divergence; the effects of public pressure on corporate, industrial
and government decision making; techniques for gathering the proper
information to assess risks and hazards; the importance determining
risk tolerance thresholds; the difference between tolerable risks,
intolerable ones that benefit from mitigation and those that
require strategic shifts; why common practice approaches such as
FMEA, and risk matrices are inadequate in today's world and do not
help ensure infrastructural and systemic resilience and
sustainability. Case histories and three complete case studies that
can be adapted to any industry or project walk the reader step by
step from client request to recommendations and conditions of
validity. The ultimate aim is to understand how to reduce risks to
tolerable and societally acceptable levels while simultaneously
creating sustainable and ethical systems.
This book aims, through its chapters, at providing the knowledge to
make competent decisions, convince peers or top management to take
appropriate action, or beat out the competition for climate
adaptation measures including adjustments for design and
operations. Topics discussed include business-as-usual vs.
divergence; the effects of public pressure on corporate, industrial
and government decision making; techniques for gathering the proper
information to assess risks and hazards; the importance determining
risk tolerance thresholds; the difference between tolerable risks,
intolerable ones that benefit from mitigation and those that
require strategic shifts; why common practice approaches such as
FMEA, and risk matrices are inadequate in today's world and do not
help ensure infrastructural and systemic resilience and
sustainability. Case histories and three complete case studies that
can be adapted to any industry or project walk the reader step by
step from client request to recommendations and conditions of
validity. The ultimate aim is to understand how to reduce risks to
tolerable and societally acceptable levels while simultaneously
creating sustainable and ethical systems.
This book presents a comprehensive approach to address the need to
improve the design of tailings dams, their management and the
regulation of tailings management facilities to reduce, and
eventually eliminate, the risk of such facilities failing. The
scope of the challenge is well documented in the report by the
United Nations Environment Program (UNEP) and GRID Arendal entitled
"Mine Tailings Storage: Safety Is No Accident," which was released
in October 2017. The report recommends that "Regulators, industry
and communities should adopt a shared, zero-failure objective to
tailings storage facilities..." and identifies several areas where
further improvements are required. In this context, the application
of cutting-edge risk-assessment methodologies and risk-management
practices can contribute to a significant reduction and eventual
elimination of dam failures through Risk Informed Decision Making.
As such, the book focuses on identifying and describing the
risk-assessment approaches and risk-management practices that need
to be implemented in order to develop a way forward to achieve
socially acceptable levels of tailings dam risk.
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