Publication | Closed Access
A risk consequence approach to open pit slope design
38
Citations
4
References
2006
Year
Unknown Venue
Rock SlideEngineeringRock SlopeDecision CriterionRisk AnalysisRisk Consequence ApproachGeotechnical EngineeringSlope StabilityGeotechnical ProblemRisk ManagementManagementSystems EngineeringEmbankment DamMine OwnersEarthquake EngineeringGeological HazardUnderground ConstructionEngineering GeologyAvailable Geotechnical InformationRisk AssessmentCivil EngineeringConstructionConstruction ManagementConstruction Engineering
Open pit slope design has conventionally been effected as a bottom up function utilising available geotechnical information. This results in a decision criterion based on Probability of Failure and Factor of Safety with a risk assessment being carried out on the proposed design slopes. The design approach recommended reverses the process using fault event tree decision methodology. The consequences of this approach are that acceptable risk criteria have to be determined by mine owners. Slopes are then designed by the technical staff to achieve these corporate goals. Benefits that arise from the process are that the owners take a proactive decision on the risk benefit relationship allowing the technical staff to optimise the geotechnical exploration programme and design.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1