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Introduction to
ICAO
Safety Management Systems (SMS)
Asian Regional Aviation Safety Team
ARAST ~~ Bangkok
March 17, 2010
Kim Trethewey
Chief Technical Advisor
COSCAP North Asia
The first ultra-safe industrial system
Fragile system (1920’s -1970’s) Individual risk management & intensive training Accident investigation
Safe system (1970’s – mid 1990’s) Technology and regulations Incident investigation
Ultra-safe system (mid 1990’s onwards) Business management approach to
safety (SMS) Routine collection and analysis of
operational data Less than one catastrophic
breakdown per million
production cycles
10-3
10-5
10-6
2010-03 Introduction to Safety Management
Systems (SMS)
States shall require, as part of their State Safety Programme
(SSP), that a [service provider] implement a safety
management system (SMS) acceptable to the State that, as
a minimum:
a) identifies safety hazards;
b) ensures the implementation of remedial action
necessary to maintain agreed safety performance;
c) provides for continuous monitoring and regular
assessment of the safety performance; and,
d) aims at a continuous improvement of the overall
performance of the safety management system .
Basic safety management SARPs
2010-03 Introduction to Safety Management
Systems (SMS)
What is a Safety Management System (SMS) ?
Safety policy and
objectives
Safety risk
management
Safety assurance
Safety promotion
SMS components
2010-03 Introduction to Safety Management
Systems (SMS)
A systematic approach to
managing safety, including
the necessary
organizational structures,
accountabilities, policies
and procedures
SMS features
Systematic – Safety management activities are in
accordance with a pre-determined plan, and applied in a
consistent manner throughout the organization.
Proactive – An approach that emphasizes hazard
identification and risk control and mitigation, before events
that affect safety occur.
Explicit – All safety management activities are documented
and visible.
2010-03 Introduction to Safety Management
Systems (SMS)
Safety
WHAT? WHO? WHEN?
WHY? HOW?
A concept of accident causation
Activities over which any organization has a reasonable degree
of direct control
Factors that directly influence the efficiency of people in
aviation workplaces.
Actions or inactions by people (pilots, controllers, maintenance engineers, aerodrome staff, etc.) that have an immediate
adverse effect.
Resources to protect against the risks that organizations
involved in production activities generate and must control.
Conditions present in the system before the accident, made
evident by triggering factors.
Latent conditions trajectory
2010-03 Introduction to Safety Management
Systems (SMS)
The essential is invisible to the eyes
Number of occurrences
1 – 5 Accidents
30 – 100 Serious incidents
100 – 1000 Incidents
1000 – 4000 Latent conditions
2010-03 Introduction to Safety Management
Systems (SMS)
System performance in the real world
System
design
Baseline performance
Practical drift
Operational
deployment
Managing safety – “Navigating the drift”
Baseline performance
Practical drift
Organization
Navigational aids
Reactive Proactive Predictive
2010-03 Introduction to Safety Management
Systems (SMS)
Navigational aids
Reactive method
The reactive method
responds to the
events that already
happened, such as
incidents and
accidents
Proactive method The proactive
method looks actively for the
identification of safety risks
through the analysis of the organization’s
activities
Predictive method The predictive
method captures system performance
as it happens in real-time normal
operations to identify potential future problems
Strategies – Levels of intervention and tools
Baseline performance System
design Practical drift
HA
ZA
RD
S
Predictive
Highly efficient Very efficient Efficient Insufficient
Proactive Reactive Reactive
FDA Direct
observation system
ASR Surveys Audits
ASR MOR
Accident and incident
reports
Safety management levels
Desirable management levels
ICAO SMS framework
Safety policy and objectives 1.1 – Management commitment and responsibility 1.2 – Safety accountabilities 1.3 – Appointment of key safety personnel 1.4 – Coordination of emergency response planning 1.5 – SMS documentation
Safety risk management 2.1 – Hazard identification 2.2 – Risk assessment and mitigation Safety assurance 3.1 – Safety performance monitoring and measurement 3.2 – The management of change 3.3 – Continuous improvement of the SMS Safety promotion 4.1 – Training and education 4.2 – Safety communication
2010-03 Introduction to Safety Management
Systems (SMS)
Safety Management Applicability Dates
Safety Management SARPs for Service Providers Annex Intended Audience Denomination Date Applicable
11 Air traffic services providers
Safety Management Programme
Nov, 2001
14 Certified Aerodromes Safety Management Programme
Nov, 2001
2005 – Harmonization of Safety Management SARPs 6, 11 and 14 A/C Operators & AMOs SMS Jan, 2009
2008 – 2nd Harmonization of Safety Management SARPs 1 Training Organizations SMS Nov, 2010
8 Manufacturers SMS Nov, 2013
1, 6, 11, 14 SMS Framework Nov, 2010
Safety Management SARPs for States
Annex States Denomination Date Applicable
2005 – Harmonization of Safety Management SARPs
6, 11 and 14 States Safety Programme Nov, 2006
2008 – 2nd Harmonization of Safety Management SARPs
1, 8 and 13 States SSP Nov, 2010
1, 6, 8, 11, 13, 14 States SSP Framework * Nov, 2010
*Attachment
2010-03 Introduction to Safety Management
Systems (SMS)
Kim Trethewey
Chief Technical Advisor
ICAO COSCAP North Asia
kim.trethewey@coscap-icao.org
+86 139 1118 9842
ICAO Safety Management
http://www.icao.int/anb/safetymanagement/
Thank you
2010-03 Introduction to Safety Management
Systems (SMS)
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