Title: A risk management approach to opening and clearing roads
1A risk management approach to opening and
clearing roads
- Examples from Angola and Sudan
2MAG Angola
- Route Assessment and Road Threat Risk Reduction
3Background
- Regular requests for assessments of suspect roads
from UN and humanitarian agencies - Request from OCHA for standard description of
risk from mine action agencies - Repeated incidents of anti-vehicle mines and IEDs
on roads
4Problem 2004
- No internal methodology for measuring or
assessing risk on roads - No common agreed language for describing risk and
threat on roads - No external reporting format for presenting
information about roads
5Principles of key elements
- Traficability/Non-traficability
- Versus
- Red/Yellow/Green (UN)
- Mined/Suspect/Low risk (Halo Trust)
6Risk / Threat reduction
- If the road is classed as non-trafficable what
action do MAG take? - Determine the nature of the risk and the
appropriate action(s) in order to reduce the risk
to a tolerable level
7Risk reduction treatments
- Target clearance of high risk areas
- Known accident sites
- Approaches to bridges
- Potholes, broken roads etc
- Road widening and passing points
8Tools
- Dedicated Road Operations Team (12 staff per
team) - Armoured vehicle with Ebinger Large Loop
- Armoured John Deere with front mounted Roller
Pressure System
9Information Verification
- Expert Opinion - FAA, other mine action agencies
- Data Gathering - route assessment
- Local information civilian traffic, community
leaders - Internal Information MAG staff
- Note MAG will always seek to confirm the Route
Assessment Report with expert opinion prior to
general release
10The End Result
- In October 2004 MAG adopted
- Route Assessment statement
- Road usage guidelines
- Mine Incident report format
- Route Assessment report format
11Risk a tolerable level
- This statement of trafficability is NOT
- A guarantee of safety
- A declaration that the route is free of mines.
12MAG Road Usage Guidelines
- Trafficability means that the road can be used
if the users stick to the guidelines - These guidelines recommend how you may
- Reduce the risk of road travel
- Prepare for the journey with current information
- Prepare for the journey with appropriate
equipment - Be clear on procedures so will know how to
continue a journey or not - Prepare for a possible emergency
- The key message is stay in the tracks
13Summary for Angola approach
- It must be accepted that given the nature of the
mine problem in Angola that there is an inherent
risk involved in travelling on roads - The decision to use or not use a road must be
taken with the full knowledge that it is not
possible to declare any road completely risk-free
in terms of the mine threat. - However, if the guidelines are followed, the risk
of being involved in a mine incident in Angola
will be greatly reduced following the assessment
and action taken by the MAG team
14MAG South Sudan
- Risk AssessmentWFP Road Clearance Project
15MAG Concept of Operations presented to the
Nairobi conference on road verification in August
2005
- Information from UNRMAO
- IMSMA including maps and reported DAs
- Previous clearance / survey by other
organizations - REST information from MECHEM when assessing 8
meter corridor - NTSG and SOP
- Survey Procedures as per NTSG and SOP
- Road Assessment Forms as per NTSG and IMSMA
16MAG Concept of Operations presented to the
Nairobi conference on road verification in August
2005
- Road Traffic Census/Usage
- Information is gathered from a variety of sources
by MAG Community Liaison staff. Informants
included - People using the route
- Local community members
- Local administration staff
- Military personnel
- Ex-combatants
- Hospital/Health facility staff
- NGO, UN and other agency staff working in the area
17(No Transcript)
18Planning for release of road sections
- Emergency Road Survey is divided into the major
sections that the team operates on. The section
lengths were then divided into sub sections (the
default section length is being 100 metres).
However, if necessary this can be adjusted in
response to the following factors - Quality Assurance (QA) requirements
- Geography sections to coincide with key points
e.g. towns, bridges, junctions - Access points and detours
- Data gathering / intelligence information
- Risk ratings
19Planning for release of road sections (continue)
- The sub sections were assessed as
- Low risk
- Normally, a section of road corridor will only
be assessed as Low-risk where - Interviews have confirmed that it is outside the
conflict area, or - It has already been cleared, graded, farmed or
some form of reconstruction has already been
undertaken - High risk
- This will be given to the remainder of the road
(corridor) surveyed. Internally it will be
categorised as to whether it requires BAC only or
mine clearance. - In this way, sections of road classified as
low-risk were able to be released for use where
necessary and practicable
20For road corridors to be assessed as low risk and
where completions reports have to be compiled to
discredit a section of road at least ten of the
following criteria must be satisfied
- The history of the conflict must be ascertained
for that area - The road has been regularly trafficked
- Traffic census to be conducted to make sure at
least 3 vehicles pass every day - No reported animal, people, vehicle accidents in
the area. - Existing clearance records to be checked
- Minimum of two community members who have lived
in the community for a minimum of one year to be
interviewed - Local army commander to be interviewed
- Community leader to be interviewed
- At least two ex-combatants interviewed if
feasible - Local hospital and medical facilities casualty
records to be examined - Local cattle and/or goat herders to be
interviewed if available - Visually inspect the area for signs of mines and
UXO, packaging, fragments - Names of all interviewees to be recorded and
attached to completion reports. - These criteria must be accepted by the client.
- (MAG SUDAN SOP 1 Survey Operations, Para 17)
21Action Options Based on Risk Assessment
- In areas identified as Low risk areas are treated
with a large loop detection system attached to
the front of a Landcruiser or operated manually
(The large loop system can also be used on High
risk areas which have been trafficked) - Areas identified as High Risk from UXO only, are
cleared by a MAT (Mine Action Team) with BAC
clearance capacity supported by local labour to
clear the vegetation. Areas known to contain AT
mines only can also be cleared using this method. - Suspected or known mined areas are cleared by a
MAT supported by a Mechanical Clearance Machine.
MAG use Bozena 4 for this task where it clears
the vegetation first and flail the area to a
minimum depth of 15 cm. If mines are detonated by
the machine that area is manually searched as for
standard demining. Areas where there are no
evidence of mines after flailing is visually
checked by the manual team for remnants of any
mines and UXO and searched by the large loop for
deeply buried UXO. - Operations supported by the Community Liaison
team who liaise with and brief local authorities,
contractors, other agencies, road users and local
communities along the route where the work is
being done and on feeder roads. They are
responsible for gathering any new information
concerning the road status (new mines/UXO
reports, accidents, safe transits etc.). This
information is monitored and used to update the
risk assessment as necessary.
22Summary Risk Assessment
- All areas identified as High Risk will receive
technical follow up - All areas identifies as Low Risk receive no
technical follow up but the decision is backed up
by a formalized decision making process - All low risk areas are discussed with the client
and RMAO in order to make a quality control on
the decision - All high risk areas are QAd following technical
intervention as per RMAO procedures
23Summary
- Angola
- CL Driven process
- No pre- process clearanc
- Higher risk during processing
- Aim to provide access
- Trafficable non trafficable (advisory)
- MAG developed and accepted by end users
- No commitment to verify low risk areas
- Higher risk tolerance end users understand risk
and advised on risk reducing behaviour. Do not
require all hazard removed standards
- Sudan
- CL Driven Process
- Routes have 8m corridor completed by Mechem
(MEDDS) - Overall lower risk during process
- Aim to facilitate route reconstruction
- Safe Unsafe
- Formally accepted process by NMAO
- Formal QA/QC external with Client RMAO
- Low Risk Area verified by LL
- Lower risk tolerance, end user requires higher
degree of risk reduction, non acceptance of risk
want all hazards removed standards
24Lessons Learned Road Assessment
- Experienced Technical and Community Liaison field
staff are essential - Improvements could be made through the use of
technology to digitize the process i.e. DGPS/ GIS - Reinvention of the wheel- MAG needs to look at
off the shelf mapping and GIS packages - Recording and training of existing MAG road
assessment/ clearance procedures throughout the
organization
25Thank you for the opportunity to present our
approach