Abstract:
The International Civil Aviation Organisation maintains that future
viability of air transportation may well be predicated on perception
of safety rather than any more tangible measures. In order to keep
safety risks at an acceptable level it advocates a change of
fundamental approach to the system of safety management, one
that is more proactive. This study examines the causes of such a
requirement for change, and the scope for improving the efficiency
of what Calabresi refers to as the second principal goal of accident
law, namely accident cost reduction. First, testing the validity of the
traditional approach to safety analysis and management, as stated
in regulatory guidelines. Secondly, examining the possibility that
the efficiency of safety cost-benefit analysis can be practicably
improved.
A subsequent aim is to find an empirically based proxy measure for
the acceptability of risk by examining the outcomes to potential
safety related risk scenarios. Such a measure, if validated, may
convert many existing intangible assessments concerning safety
management into more transparent and reliable judgements.
The offshore helicopter industry has many unique characteristics,
some of which derive from the fact that the customers, the oil & gas
companies, are more powerful than the operators. Others relate to
the absence of any intermodal competition, and passengers who are
specially trained to be properly aware of their safety. As choice is
severely limited, this population is also likely to reflect a much
broader range of risk preference. A carefully structured
questionnaire was presented to a sample of these passengers, and
the responses analysed in depth.
The conclusions of this study are that choice is driven by the
perceptions of safety, and that market stability is only maintained
with the pre-condition that safety is deemed acceptable. Further,
the failure of this pre-condition will follow a predictable pattern,
based on a normal distribution for the population. The
recommendation of this study is that such reactions to perceptions
of safety risk are given due consideration alongside traditional costbenefit
analysis, and in so doing it is likely that more secondary and
tertiary accident cost factors will be more fully addressed. This will
improve the overall efficiency of accident costs reduction, and make
a significant contribution to the aim of proactive safety
management.