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Technological advancements are changing the nature of how EHS professionals mitigate risk, make decisions and allocate resources.

Digital technology is changing our economies, our societies and our way of life. The management of environment, health and safety (EHS) stands to be significantly impacted by digital. Technological advancements are changing the nature of how EHS professionals mitigate risk, make decisions and allocate resources. From the automation of processes, through the proliferation of in-field sensors and the evolution toward predictive analytics, workers and organizations stand to experience a step change in EHS performance, if these opportunities can be grasped.

As the business environment moves further into the digital age, leading organizations are leveraging existing and emerging technologies to improve their EHS outcomes. However, the majority of organizations are still reconciling how to translate these technological changes into improved performance. 

This article explores the challenges associated with digital initiatives as it relates to EHS, and how EHS professionals can better leverage digital technology to better manage risks and improve EHS outcomes.

Current state of play

Compared with other functions such as marketing and finance, the EHS profession has been slow to embrace and adopt digital technology. This is because organizations do not always fully understand the problem they are trying to solve, resulting in systemic-, people- or technology-related gaps in the solutions implemented. And where digital technologies are employed, they are often poorly designed, disconnected and implemented to solve isolated problems. 

Other barriers that could explain the lack of digital technology progress in this field include:

Focus on incidents

Traditionally, the management of EHS places a strong focus on measuring incidents. In a broader organizational context, incident datasets are limited and restrictive. Often, digital traces of incident causal factors are not identified. Even for those rare instances where data related to causal factors are identified, the profession grapples with the integrity and statistical rigor of incident causation models.

Small datasets

Despite the growing digitization of traditional EHS activities (e.g., inspections and incident reports), EHS datasets are still comparatively small. Safety activities alone are unlikely to ever provide big data at the organizational level. Rather, to generate higher value insights, EHS systems and professionals increase the number of end-users and sensors providing data. Through thoughtfully designed user interfaces, greater, high-quality data can be used to reduce EHS risks.

Non-digital backgrounds

EHS is a multidisciplinary profession. Therefore, EHS professionals come from diverse and varied backgrounds; these backgrounds rarely include digital, data or statistics-intensive occupations, such as finance or IT.

Failing to demonstrate the business case

Quantifying the benefits of digital initiatives, decisions or operations that lead to healthy and safe workplaces can be challenging. By failing to identify “what success looks like,” ongoing support for initiatives is more difficult to secure. In other words, comprehensive integration can remain elusive.

The trust deficit

Big data analytics and the use of other digital technologies raises several key areas of concern, including privacy, discrimination, security and quality. These risks can hinder initiatives, particularly in low trust workplaces.

Examples of successful digital technology EHS initiatives are beginning to emerge.

It’s more than just technology

There are many examples of failed digital technology initiatives in the EHS industry. Poorly designed digital management systems that leave users frustrated or disappointed, automation that fails to yield efficiencies and shiny gadgets that quickly become redundant.

There is more to EHS digital technology initiatives than just the technology itself. Indeed, today many technologies have advanced so far that they are often not the weakest link. Instead, organizations are often burdened by “solution overload” or overwhelmed with “digital paralysis.” So many challenges today are met with an app designed to meet them. Today’s challenge is navigating, coordinating and integrating these multitude of solutions.

Furthermore, it is often other, non-digital factors that determine an initiative’s success, such as:

  • Full understanding of the problem to be solved, and therefore the requirements and acceptance criteria for new technologies
  • Business-led stakeholder consultation, involvement and education
  • Engagement of the required digital and subject matter knowledge and experience
  • Presence of a broader digital strategy that considers EHS needs and impacts
  • Procurement decisions (e.g., to hire or buy) that improve return on investment, to extract improved longevity and value from technologies

Navigating through these additional factors will increasingly become a core requirement for implementation of EHS technology or digital solutions, as EHS professionals strive to increase the benefits from, and limit the negative impacts of, digital technologies. 

What does successful EHS technology implementation look like? 

Successful EHS technology initiatives:

  • Fulfill key stakeholders’ expectations and objectives
  • Improve EHS performance
  • Effectively aid EHS risk management
  • Integrate into wider business operations
  • Yield responsive engagement and adoption across the organization

More specifically, this can result in outcomes such as:

  • Enhanced EHS risk management leading to lower injury rates and improved worker conditions
  • Increased efficiency and EHS process improvement, relieving resources to focus on more material matters
  • Improved decision-making, based on rigorous and real-time data to better allocate resources
  • Better workforce capability in EHS technology, resulting in transformative technology and problem-solving skills 

Where to from here?

It is a challenge for EHS functions to effectively harness digital technology for providing sustained improvements in EHS performance. But the EHS profession should do that to effectively contribute to the organizational success going forward.

With so many digital technologies emerging, knowing where to start can be difficult. There are no simple solutions; one size does not fit all and one shiny, new gadget is not going to lead to long-term improvement.

So, what should organizations do to successfully leverage digital technologies to better understand and manage EHS risks and reduce harm?

Organizations should: 

Have a clear understanding of the problem to be solved, and what “solved” looks like

Not unlike incidents, hazards or risks, without a clear understanding of the issue, the requirements cannot be effectively identified.

Assess their current EHS digital maturity

A leapfrog strategy rarely works in digital; without identifying the current state, it is difficult to map a clear, achievable progression plan. Mapping includes assessing the current digital systems as many organizations harbor unused, remnant software licenses and other legacy technologies.

Have a strategic view of digital technology

Design coordinated and integrated initiatives and effective change management processes that are designed to achieve organizational goals — not just solve a specific problem in isolation.

Seek integrated, automated EHS digital systems and solutions

These should support real-time, customizable and accurate data for informed decision-making. Systems need to be robust (so they can be trusted) and engaging (so the workforce wants to use them). 

Invest in digital capability and leverage external support

Nobody knows it all, and it is not the role of EHS professionals to know it all. Instead those seeking to leverage digital technology to improve EHS should  understand their needs and strategically engage support as required. This includes seeking out trusted advisors that understand the elements required for success. Accessing the right support to achieve successful initiatives, and to build an integrated digital architecture, is critical.

As this article shows, successful implementation of digital innovation requires more than just technology. It requires three elements — subject matter knowledge and experience, technology that works and a human-centered approach. 

EY EHS teams work with organizations to help adapt their approach and proactively leverage digital technology to improve EHS outcomes.

Certain services and tools may be restricted for EY audit clients and their affiliates to comply with applicable independence standards. Please ask your EY contact for further information.

Summary

Leading organizations are leveraging existing and emerging technologies to improve their EHS outcomes. However, the majority of organizations are still reconciling how to translate these technological changes into improved performance. This article explores the challenges associated with digital initiatives as it relates to EHS, and how EHS professionals can better leverage digital technology to better manage risks and improve EHS outcomes. 

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