Redirigiendo al acceso original de articulo en 22 segundos...
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Human and Organizational Factor Considerations at Nuclear Power Plants in Pakistan

Mehnaz .    
Sami-ud-Din Ahmad    

Resumen

Recent events at Fukushima Dai-ichi Nuclear Power Station (NPS), the Chernobyl disaster and the Three Miles Island (TMI) accident revealed the importance of Human and Organizational Factors for the safe and reliable operation of Nuclear Power Plants (NPPs). At Fukushima Dai-ichi NPS, organizational levels of defense-in-depth were severely challenged. Inadequate human performance was later found to be the principal cause of the multiple events happened at Fukushima. Occurrence of nuclear accidents despite of continued technical improvements at the operational NPPs indicates that human judgment is imperfect and human error is the major cause of most of the accidents. The entire range of interactions of individuals with technology and organization plays key role in enhancing safety based on interdependency of organization and personnel. Therefore, it is necessary to identify human errors directly affecting safety and the way to eliminate or mitigate them, in order to achieve a high tolerance of human errors in the nuclear installation. In this context, post Fukushima assessments of NPPs in Pakistan were conducted to evaluate technical improvements made as well as human and organizational factors considered for avoiding recurrence of such accidents. This study provides an insight to  several improvements made to enhance human performance such as: more comfortable work environment;  more operators friendly Human-Machine Interface (HMI) in the Main Control Rooms (MCR); appropriate training imparted to workers; use of Full Scope Training Simulator (FSTS), training / re-training of MCR operators, enhanced ability of MCR operators to develop action plans and procedures in real-time during normal as well as accidental conditions; enhanced decision making competence of the plant management; refining design of Emergency Control Centers (ECC) considering human performance etc.

 Artículos similares

       
 
Denis Alves Coelho    
The aim of this concept article is to articulate multiple contributions from socio-technical fields into an approach for sustaining human-centred lifecycle management of industrial systems. Widespread digitalization and advanced robotics have fostered in... ver más

 
Mareike Winkler, Sergio Gallego-García and Manuel García-García    
Modeling manufacturing organizations for optimizing their design, management, control, and continuous improvement by considering all functions and their assignment to specific areas and employees enabling the identification of improvement potentials.
Revista: Applied Sciences

 
Ahmad Adnan Al-Tit, Sura Al-Ayed, Abdulaziz Alhammadi, Mohammad Hunitie, Aktham Alsarayreh and Wijdan Albassam    
There is a shortage of research investigating the link between employee development practices and intellectual capital as mediated by knowledge management. The aim of the current research was to consider the influence of employee development practices on... ver más

 
Ashraf Bany Mohammad, Manaf Al-Okaily, Mohammad Al-Majali and Ra?ed Masa?deh    
This study aims to examine the factors that influence business intelligence and analytics (BIA) usage in the banking sector. Based on a comprehensive literature review, a theoretical model was developed to explore the impact of three key factors on busin... ver más

 
Jan Christian Bauer and Michael Wolff    
Technological advances in the field of artificial intelligence offer enormous potential for organizations. In recent years, organizations have leveraged this potential by establishing new business models or adjusting their primary activities. In the mean... ver más
Revista: Information