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College of Engineering -- University of Wisconsin-Madison The Fountain
Home : News & Events : Headlines : 2001 :
Professor studies nuclear safety in deregulated landscape

Vicki M. Bier

Vicki M. Bier (21K JPG)

The pool of the college's nuclear reactor

The pool of the college's nuclear reactor (44K JPG)

A study of deregulation's past impact on several safety-critical industries provides valuable insight into the factors affecting safety of deregulated nuclear power plants.

Recently a group led by Vicki Bier, a professor in the Departments of Industrial and Systems Engineering and Engineering Physics at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, completed a study for the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) on deregulation and nuclear power safety. Since electricity deregulation is only beginning to unfold nationally, Bier and colleagues James Joosten (a nuclear safety expert and managing partner at Connect USA) and David Glyer, Jennifer Tracey and Michael Welsh (economists at Laurits R. Christensen Associates, Inc.), looked to three other high-technology, safety-critical deregulated industries — the U.S. aviation and railroad industries, and the United Kingdom nuclear power industry — to gain insights into possible sources of risk.

On one hand, the study found no evidence that deregulation causes widespread safety lapses, and in the case of air and rail, the period after deregulation was associated with improved long-term safety records. But the speed of change after deregulation could create potential safety hazards, Bier says, and should be cause for vigilance in an industry that strives to avoid even a single serious accident.

According to the report, organizational changes — such as management, staff size, and corporate restructuring — are especially important to monitor. Such changes could adversely affect safety culture, and were associated with particular safety problems in other deregulated industries, Bier says.

Bier's study draws on information from more than 250 documents about the three case-study industries, as well as interviews from senior industry, regulatory and labor representatives. The study looked at factors such as financial pressures, equipment maintenance and aging, corporate restructuring and human-performance issues such as fatigue and downsizing.

"We found that the rate of change with deregulation can create safety problems, especially during a transitional period," Bier says. "Those transitions could come from very rapid downsizing, or with mergers and acquisitions — both of which can lead to reorganization of job functions and responsibilities, and to rapid changes and instability."

There were also clear statistical connections between financial pressures and poor safety records, especially in the air and rail industries, she says. But the cause and effect on this question is not entirely clear.

Other findings include:

Since the Three Mile Island accident in 1979, Bier says the number of reported safety problems in the U.S. nuclear power industry has steadily declined. The decline reflects a significant performance improvement, but deregulation produces a new competitive playing field that already has triggered mergers and acquisitions, some plant closings, and a push to increase both the power capacity and life expectancy of plants. Bier says it is too soon to determine what impact these new challenges will have on the past trend of improving safety.

The nation's 103 nuclear plants supply about 20 percent of the nation's power, and safety is a paramount concern of the industry. Says Bier: "You can't afford to have one serious accident in any segment of this industry without it being disastrous (to the industry) as a whole."

The group's report to the NRC is titled, "Effects of Deregulation on Safety: Implications Drawn from the Aviation, Rail, and United Kingdom Nuclear Power Industries." It is available from the NRC as NUREG/CR-6735.


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Copyright 2001 The Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System
Date last modified: Monday, 08-Oct-2001 00:00:00 CDT
Date created: 08-Oct-2001
Content By: perspective@engr.wisc.edu

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