DocumentCode
1727944
Title
The safety envelope: managing the safety culture
Author
Blackwood, Edward B. ; Carnes, W. Earl ; Sturdivant, Maggie H.
Author_Institution
US Dept. of Energy, Washington, DC, USA
fYear
1992
Firstpage
471
Lastpage
473
Abstract
The commercial nuclear industry, the US Naval Nuclear Propulsion Program, and the DOE nuclear complex have used various models to operate and manage complex nuclear facilities in a safe manner. These models have focused primarily on operating parameters and design control. Using the idea of a safety envelope, the authors describe a new model that depicts the interrelationship of these and many other factors that contribute to nuclear safety. Management of nuclear facilities can use this model to establish and maintain a safety culture.<>
Keywords
fission reactor operation; fission reactor safety; human factors; management; nuclear power; nuclear power stations; personnel; power station control; propulsion; design control; fission reactors; human factors; management; nuclear power stations; nuclear propulsion; operating parameters; personnel; safety culture; safety envelope; Airplanes; Books; Inductors; Propulsion; Protection; Radioactive materials; Safety; Testing; US Department of Energy; User interfaces;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Human Factors and Power Plants, 1992., Conference Record for 1992 IEEE Fifth Conference on
Conference_Location
Monterey, CA, USA
Print_ISBN
0-7803-0888-3
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/HFPP.1992.283362
Filename
283362
Link To Document