Aviation Safety Fundamental
Aviation Safety Fundamental
Aviation Safety Fundamental
Fundamental
7. SAFETY CULTURE
1. CONCEPT OF SAFETY
01
6. SAFETY POLICY AND
07
OBJECTIVES 2. EVOLUTION OF
06 02 SAFETY
03
5. HAZARD
05 3. ACCIDENT
IDENTIFICATION 04 CAUSATION
4. MANAGEMENT
DILLEMA
SATU
CONCEPT REFF.
OF SAFETY
1. ICAO Annex 19, 2nd edition, The Safety Management
2. ICAO Doc 9859, 4th edition, Safety Management Manual
3. UU No. 1 tahun 2009, Penerbangan
4. PP No. 3 tahun 2001, Keamanan dan Keselamatan Penerbangan
5. PM 62 tahun 2017, CASR 19 Sistem Manajemen Keselamatan (
Safety Management System)
SATU
CONCEPT SAFETY…
OF SAFETY
1. Zero accidents (or serious incidents)?
2. Freedom from danger or risks?
3. Error avoidance
4. Regulatory compliance?
5. ?
SATU
CONCEPT SAFETY…
OF SAFETY
The state in which risks associated with aviation activities, related to,
or in direct support of the operation of aircraft, are reduced and
controlled to an acceptable level.
Acceptable level of safety performance (ALoSP). means minimum
level of safety performance of service provider, as defined in its
safety management system, expressed in terms of safety
performance targets and safety performance indicators.
SATU
CONCEPT SAFETY…
OF SAFETY
Safety performance target, means medium or long-term objectives
of a services provider SMS, determined weighing what is desirable
and what is realistic for an individual services provider, and
expressed in numerical terms.
Safety performance indicator, means established objectives of a
services provider SMS, linked to major components of a services
provider SMS, and expressed in numerical terms.
DUA
EVOLUTION
OF SAFETY
Technical Era,
permulaan 1900 sd akhir 1960
Organizational Era,
pertengahan 1990
PENYEBAB PENYEBAB
PENYEBAB ACCIDENT KERUGIAN
TIDAK LANGSUNG
DASAR
LANGSUNG
Management
Dilemma -
Balancing
Production &
Protection
LIMA
HAZARD
IDENTIFICATIO A condition or an object with the potential
N
to cause or contribute to an aircraft
incident or accident
LIMA
HAZARD
IDENTIFICATIO The two main METHODOLOGIES for identifying hazards are :
N
1. Reactive - analysis of past outcomes or events,
2. Proactive - existing or real-time operational situations
LIMA
HAZARD
IDENTIFICATIO 1. Accident/ incident investigation reports (Reactive)
N
2. Audit, inspection or survey reports (Proactive)
3. Voluntary hazard/ incident reports (Proactive)
4. Operational data monitoring systems, etc (Proactive)
LIMA
HAZARD
IDENTIFICATIO
TYPE OF HAZARDS
N
1. Natural
2. Technical
3. Economic
ENAM
SAFETY POLICY
AND
OBJECTIVES
Safety policy and objectives define roles, responsibilities, and
relationships outlined in aviation service providers' policies and
procedures.
1. Policies;
2. Processes and procedures; and
3. Organizational structures of key safety personnel.
ENAM
SAFETY POLICY
AND
FIVE ELEMENTS OF AVIATION SMS PLANNING AND DESIGN
OBJECTIVES
REQUIREMENTS
1. Management Commitment and Responsibility;
i. A safety policy; and often
ii. A CEO Commitment to Safety statement.
2. Safety Accountabilities; Duties & Requirements of Key Safety Personnel
i. All senior management positions;
ii. All staff management positions;
iii. All employees; and
iv. All stakeholders (customers and contractors)
ENAM
SAFETY POLICY
AND
FIVE ELEMENTS OF AVIATION SMS PLANNING AND DESIGN
OBJECTIVES
REQUIREMENTS
3. Appointment of Key Safety Personnel;
i. managing SMS implementation for the accountable executive;
ii. preparing SMS documentation for auditors;
iii. investigating safety concerns;
iv. addressing audit findings and audit concerns; and
v. disseminating safety promotion materials to stakeholders.
4. Coordination of Emergency Response Planning;
i. Documented;
ii. Regularly reviewed;
iii. Practiced (including documentation); and
iv. Made accessible by all key ERP personnel.
ENAM
SAFETY POLICY
AND
FIVE ELEMENTS OF AVIATION SMS PLANNING AND DESIGN
OBJECTIVES
REQUIREMENTS
5. SMS Documentation.
i. Safety policy and objectives;
ii. SMS requirements;
iii. SMS processes and procedures;
iv. Accountabilities, responsibilities and authorities for processes and
procedures; and
v. SMS outputs.
TUJUH
SAFETY
CULTURE
WHY IS SAFETY CULTURE SO IMPORTANT ?
The probability (risk) of being killed in an aircraft accident varies from 1
in 260,000 (Africa)
1 in 11,000,000 (45 million 2012 USA)
A difference of 42 times better
TUJUH
SAFETY
CULTURE
THREE “C’s”
COMMITMENT
COMPETENCE
COGNIZANCE
TUJUH
SAFETY
CULTURE
SIX STEPS TO A SAFETY CULTURE
1. JUST CULTURE
i. Foundation of any safety culture
ii. Where “Honest & At-Risk” mistakes do not result in discipline
iii. Where an Administrative policy spells out “Reckless Behaviour”
iv. Where persons can admit to an error without fear of
punishment
TUJUH
SAFETY
CULTURE
SIX STEPS TO A SAFETY CULTURE
2. TRUSTING CULTURE
HIGH
SYNERGISTIC - WE CAN SOLVE
THE PROBLEM (WIN WIN)
TRUST
DEFENSIVE – US VS. THEM (LOSE LOSE)