Risk profile modeling for large scale projects : case study of a transmission line project

Over the next several years in North America, the power grid needs to be revitalized and extended to deal with aging infrastructure, capacity constraints, and the pursuit of renewable energy sources. In Canada, and particularly the province of BC, very significant complexity and risk is involved in...

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Main Author: Orozco Mojica, Diego
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/44280
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spelling ftcanadathes:oai:collectionscanada.gc.ca:BVAU./44280 2023-05-15T16:16:59+02:00 Risk profile modeling for large scale projects : case study of a transmission line project Orozco Mojica, Diego 2013-04-18T13:54:49Z http://hdl.handle.net/2429/44280 eng eng University of British Columbia http://hdl.handle.net/2429/44280 Electronic Thesis or Dissertation 2013 ftcanadathes 2013-11-23T21:57:49Z Over the next several years in North America, the power grid needs to be revitalized and extended to deal with aging infrastructure, capacity constraints, and the pursuit of renewable energy sources. In Canada, and particularly the province of BC, very significant complexity and risk is involved in the approval, design and construction of such projects given highly variable terrain and weather conditions, the multiplicity of the environmental, First Nations, and third part stakeholder issues involved, and challenging regulatory and procurement processes. Described in this research is a holistic approach to the identification of risk as a function of project context, the representation of which is made difficult in the context of transmission line projects because of their large spatial scope and the vast volume of data of different types to be distilled and analyzed. Central to the approach is the representation of a project within an integrated environment in the form of multiple views of a project – product, process, participant, environment and risk. Treatment of the first four views aids the identification of risk drivers for a risk event. Knowledge of risk drivers assists with expressing likelihood of occurrence of a risk event and the magnitude of impacts should it occur, and selecting the most appropriate risk response. Application of the approach to a 255 km 500 KV design-build transmission line project is featured and challenges involved in developing its risk profile highlighted. How data visualization can assist development of a project’s risk profile and facilitating insights into it is also demonstrated. The use of the holistic approach described for the development of a project’s risk register and mining its contents using data visualization to generate useful insights has proven to be of significant value to project personnel. Thesis First Nations Theses Canada/Thèses Canada (Library and Archives Canada) Canada
institution Open Polar
collection Theses Canada/Thèses Canada (Library and Archives Canada)
op_collection_id ftcanadathes
language English
description Over the next several years in North America, the power grid needs to be revitalized and extended to deal with aging infrastructure, capacity constraints, and the pursuit of renewable energy sources. In Canada, and particularly the province of BC, very significant complexity and risk is involved in the approval, design and construction of such projects given highly variable terrain and weather conditions, the multiplicity of the environmental, First Nations, and third part stakeholder issues involved, and challenging regulatory and procurement processes. Described in this research is a holistic approach to the identification of risk as a function of project context, the representation of which is made difficult in the context of transmission line projects because of their large spatial scope and the vast volume of data of different types to be distilled and analyzed. Central to the approach is the representation of a project within an integrated environment in the form of multiple views of a project – product, process, participant, environment and risk. Treatment of the first four views aids the identification of risk drivers for a risk event. Knowledge of risk drivers assists with expressing likelihood of occurrence of a risk event and the magnitude of impacts should it occur, and selecting the most appropriate risk response. Application of the approach to a 255 km 500 KV design-build transmission line project is featured and challenges involved in developing its risk profile highlighted. How data visualization can assist development of a project’s risk profile and facilitating insights into it is also demonstrated. The use of the holistic approach described for the development of a project’s risk register and mining its contents using data visualization to generate useful insights has proven to be of significant value to project personnel.
format Thesis
author Orozco Mojica, Diego
spellingShingle Orozco Mojica, Diego
Risk profile modeling for large scale projects : case study of a transmission line project
author_facet Orozco Mojica, Diego
author_sort Orozco Mojica, Diego
title Risk profile modeling for large scale projects : case study of a transmission line project
title_short Risk profile modeling for large scale projects : case study of a transmission line project
title_full Risk profile modeling for large scale projects : case study of a transmission line project
title_fullStr Risk profile modeling for large scale projects : case study of a transmission line project
title_full_unstemmed Risk profile modeling for large scale projects : case study of a transmission line project
title_sort risk profile modeling for large scale projects : case study of a transmission line project
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/44280
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/44280
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