“I will be contacting the federal government to begin discussions about the setup of a stand-alone regulator,” Premier Kathy Dunderdale said to applause in the House of Assembly Monday.
Posts Tagged ‘single regulator’
Independent Safety Regulator for Newfoundland?
Posted in accidents, tagged Canada, helicopter crash, Newfoundland, offshore oil, single regulator on December 14, 2010| Leave a Comment »
The Ultimate Single Regulator Solution
Posted in IRF, Offshore Energy - General, Regulation, tagged international, IRF, Jan de Jong, regulations, safety culture, single regulator, SSM, vancouver on November 5, 2010| Leave a Comment »
The above slide is from the excellent presentation that Jan de Jong (Inspector General, State Supervision of Mines, the Netherlands) never got to deliver in Vancouver. As session chair, Jan graciously yielded his time to his panelists.
Jan’s presentation notes the growing importance of international cooperation. This trend has the potential to improve regulatory capabilities, expand data availability and access, reduce regulatory costs through the sharing of resources, reduce costs for industry through greater international consistency and regulatory certainty, and improve international relations. The Netherlands, Russia, Norway, Cuba, the US, and everyone else should be on the same team when it comes to offshore safety and pollution prevention. Some near-term suggestions follow:
- Except where regional conditions dictate otherwise, the same standards should be applied worldwide. Government and industry should be collectively questioning, testing, and improving these standards. Remember that the goal is continuous improvement, not mere compliance.
- An international information system should provide for the collection and verification of incident and performance data.
- Using international data and expertise, a cooperative risk assessment program should be initiated.
- An organized international audit capability should be established to evaluate operators and regulators.
- To improve access to expertise and reduce costs, a network of specialists should assist regulators worldwide.
- Industry training requirements should be uniform and consistently applied, and regulator training programs should be consolidated regionally or internationally.
- The international research network should be expanded.
- To ensure that accidents are investigated independently and to minimize the potential for political influences on the investigation process, an international accident investigation capability should be established.
- The safety culture message should be promoted worldwide. Successes and failures should be cooperatively examined.
Western Australia Resists Single Regulator
Posted in Regulation, tagged Australia, regulatory philosophy, single regulator, Western Australia on November 4, 2010| Leave a Comment »
From Western Australia Business News:
The gulf between the Western Australian government and Canberra continues to widen, with state mines and petroleum minister Norman Moore writing to local oil and gas companies for support to block plans for a single national oil regulator.
Comment: What is Mr. Moore offering the companies in return for their support? This “turf” battle shows why you can’t have multiple authorities regulating the same facilities. Disputes, self-interest, conflicting agendas and priorities, and “turf” issues drain too much energy from the regulators and the industry being regulated. Concerns about critical operational risks are superseded by coordination activities and debates about who is in charge.
