Just Finished Reading: Inviting Disaster – Lessons from the
Edge of Technology: An Inside look at Catastrophes and Why they Happen by James
R Chiles (FP: 2001/2002)
We live, as we are often reminded, in a technological age –
an age of wonders, an age of miracles. We also live, as we are too often
reminded, in an age of disasters and catastrophe. Not surprisingly the two are,
again too often, linked. With great power comes the potential to do truly awesome
amounts of unintentional damage. But why is that true? It’s something that the
author of this equally fascinating and frightening book has been looking at for
most of his professional life.
For decades now technology in its many aspects has become
ubiquitous – ever present but virtually invisible. That is indeed part of the
problem. We are all users of technology but very few of us (including me!)
actually understand much of any of it. Not that long ago even the average
driver would not only use his or her car but also maintain it, changing out
components and understanding the basics of the internal combustion engine.
Today hardly anyone has the technological knowhow – outside a mechanics
workshop – to either diagnose or fix a problem most especially if neither the
problem or solution are obvious. Now imagine you’re are a pilot flying across
the Atlantic in a new aircraft. Naturally you have spent many hours in
simulators learning to fly it and have been told about its new features
(improved of course) and what to do in the event of a whole host of problems.
But no one told you about or trained you to handle the fact that an overworked
and very tired technician has forgotten to remove some duct tape covering an
external sensor he was working on so the planes computer system ‘thinks’
nothing is wrong with the flight when something is very wrong. But you trust
the machine. You trust the screen and the data it displays – just long enough
to be put in a life or death situation that you might not be able to get out
of. Now imagine you’re the night manager at a nuclear power plant. You’ve read
the manuals and you have a pretty good idea of how everything works at the
plant. But training, especially refresher training, is expensive and your last ‘hands
on’ disaster training back at headquarters was almost 5 years ago. It was two
days well spent but you can only cover so much in that time and there’s little
utility in training for a once in a hundred year accident that even the most pessimistic
engineer can come up with to bust the trainees balls in the simulated control
room. So, as these things tend to do, when such an accident happens, when a
mechanical valve sticks open but registers closed, when a readout gives faulty
or ambiguous data, when a leak is invisible and you only have instruments to go
off you do the best that you can and, potentially at least, cover a vast area
in radioactive ash.
Accidents happen. They are a fact of life. No system is
perfect. But we can mitigate, we can have redundant systems (despite the
expense), we can have back-ups and failsafe’s and simulators and adequate
training and…… But that’s the point of this book. Advanced technology is,
potentially at least, very dangerous if we don’t look after it properly and
treat it with the respect it deserves. If we build it, or design it, or use it
we need to understand it enough to use it safely and wisely. We need to
understand it enough and respect its power enough not to be that guy who left
the bolts out of the compressor or didn’t turn the alarm back on or didn’t tell
the pilot that his left tanks gauges aren’t reading right.
The author certainly gets around and seems to know his stuff. From nuclear power stations to airplane cockpits to high-rise office buildings he looks at disaster after near-miss to show what happened, why it happened and what can be done about it. It’s a sobering narrative but it’s one that need to be faced, especially as our technology gets more powerful and (potentially at least) more dangerous year after year. But be warned – reading this might put you off flying or living downwind of a nuclear power plant or anywhere near a port handling fertiliser (Texas, 1947!). One last thing: in my 2002 edition there’s a new introduction which looks at the collapse of the World Trade Centre towers from a structural engineering viewpoint. More sensitive American (or other) readers might want to skip over this bit. Definitely recommended.
7 comments:
in the 1990's the gas company quit putting so much emphasis on equipment maintenance and fired a bunch of mechanics and fault fixers. the actual program was called (i'm not kidding) the 'Just in Time" scheme, where things were allowed to deteriorate until they were just about ready to explode, leak, or blow up before they were fixed. supposedly to save money (actually to increase the salaries of upper management). the next ten years showed a rapid increase in pipeline explosions, plant disasters of one sort or another, and field failures increasing on a logarhythmic scale. i retired just before things got really bad so i haven't heard if they were still that stupid, but i haven't heard much about towns blowing up or the equivalent, so maybe they came to their senses... just goes to show ya...
I love these kind of books looking at the nuts and bolts of things, what we can learn from past mistakes. Thanks for sharing I’m going to get this added to my list!
@ Mudpuddle: Was the gas field declining? I understand that companies - to save money/keep up profits - cut back on 'overheads' like safety and maintenance to reduce costs. Silly is LOTS of ways of course but that's Economics for you!
@ Heather: Thanks & Welcome. Although not a Book Blog 'per se' I mostly manage two book reviews a week at the moment (lots of time to read as I've recently retired) on a whole host of subjects. Fiction wise I've just finished a set of historical crime novels and am just about to move back to my fave area SF. In the middle of all that I read a lot of non-fiction which is mostly History but I have a butterfly mind so..... I hope that you enjoy what you find here & I look forward to your future comments.
it was turned into a storage facility while i was employed there, so gas was purchased from pipeline companies and stored underground until the price went up and resold to the public... it was mostly just greed but also allowed them to have a sufficient quantity for peak usage times...
Ooh, boy. This sounds sounds right up my alley.
All so true. When profit is all, such knowledge goes by the wayside.
@ Stephen: Most definitely. I think you'd find it very interesting.
@ Judy: Where profit is the only motive and is advanced at the expense of everything else there will be problems - and probably death too.
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