KarlwithaK
Nuclear
- Jul 14, 2018
- 8
I am asking if anyone has knowledge of a method, model, or "canned" process to address discovery issues that require fixes on the fly in an effort to protect the critical path on the far larger project.
Here is my situation. I am titled an "Emergent Issue Team Manager". I work in commercial nuclear power plants. Every 2 years we shut down the reactor, remove the oldest fuel and replace it with new. This "Refueling Outage" can last anywhere from 25 to 100 days and cost from $20M to $175M. My job is that if anything is found wrong with the plant that had not been expected and planned for is, as you suspect, fix it. I do this by forcing the creation, within an hour of discovery a cross-functional team from Engineering, Operations, Maintenance and Radiation Protection to come up with a data gathering plan, analyze the data and then make recommendations to senior leadership as to how to fix or at least remediate the worst of the problem. This is ordinarily done in the first 12 to 18 hours of discovery. The actual "fix" could be anything from replacing a little relay somewhere in an hour to a 3 week long major high voltage cable pull.
The Engineers have their part fairly well defined, using a Failure Modes Analysis tool based in Kepner-Tregoe model.
It is the TIME that give me trouble! Doing and getting the people to do what is required and recording all work, data, decisions, and all the rest as "One-Offs" eats up expensive time.
Has anyone run across a "Unified Theory of Crisis Management" book, class, execution model or whatever that is specific enough to be adapted to use in nuclear utility planned outages? But flexible enough to address anything from a broken valve stem to a blown printed circuit board to a failed tube in a heat exchanger?
I would be especially interested in hearing about a work planning tool that incorporates decision points as no-duration work into PERT charting to estimate the critical path in solving these unforeseen conditions. These "uncertainties" are bad-tasting poison to conventional waterfall project management techniques as they are NOT risks. Risks are known possibilities that could have contingency plans in place to handle the issue. These are not that. These are truly unknown ahead of time and had no plans to address them prior to the start of the outage.
Here is my situation. I am titled an "Emergent Issue Team Manager". I work in commercial nuclear power plants. Every 2 years we shut down the reactor, remove the oldest fuel and replace it with new. This "Refueling Outage" can last anywhere from 25 to 100 days and cost from $20M to $175M. My job is that if anything is found wrong with the plant that had not been expected and planned for is, as you suspect, fix it. I do this by forcing the creation, within an hour of discovery a cross-functional team from Engineering, Operations, Maintenance and Radiation Protection to come up with a data gathering plan, analyze the data and then make recommendations to senior leadership as to how to fix or at least remediate the worst of the problem. This is ordinarily done in the first 12 to 18 hours of discovery. The actual "fix" could be anything from replacing a little relay somewhere in an hour to a 3 week long major high voltage cable pull.
The Engineers have their part fairly well defined, using a Failure Modes Analysis tool based in Kepner-Tregoe model.
It is the TIME that give me trouble! Doing and getting the people to do what is required and recording all work, data, decisions, and all the rest as "One-Offs" eats up expensive time.
Has anyone run across a "Unified Theory of Crisis Management" book, class, execution model or whatever that is specific enough to be adapted to use in nuclear utility planned outages? But flexible enough to address anything from a broken valve stem to a blown printed circuit board to a failed tube in a heat exchanger?
I would be especially interested in hearing about a work planning tool that incorporates decision points as no-duration work into PERT charting to estimate the critical path in solving these unforeseen conditions. These "uncertainties" are bad-tasting poison to conventional waterfall project management techniques as they are NOT risks. Risks are known possibilities that could have contingency plans in place to handle the issue. These are not that. These are truly unknown ahead of time and had no plans to address them prior to the start of the outage.