A hazard in aviation risk management is a condition that poses danger to your organization and can lead to safety incidents if not mitigated. Hazards are central to the entire risk management process. Often, hazards are either confused with risks (i.e., accidents) or hazardous sources. In this article, we will explore what hazardous sources are and how they differ from hazards.
First, let’s distinguish what a hazard is. A hazard is a term that satisfies ALL the following real-life conditions:
For example, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) defines a hazard as,
“A condition that could foreseeably cause or contribute to an aircraft accident…”
(14 CFR § 5.5)
Though it is sometimes confused as other things, such as below, a hazard is NOT:
The only point where different organizations may disagree on a hazard for a given situation is what part of a safety event was the “dangerous condition.” We advise you to seek guidance from your compliance authority on this point.
Hazardous sources are the “raw material” that hazards arise from. Hazardous sources might be considered:
Benign objects (hazardous sources) can become hazards in the right context. For example, a tower is not a hazard. But a tall tower in proximity to a flight path is a hazard. Notice that in this case, a hazardous source (tower) became a hazard when given context (height, location).
It’s extremely important to note that hazardous sources:
Distinguishing the difference between a hazard and hazardous sources will help you build your classification scheme and analyze safety issues.
Hazardous sources should also not be confused with root causes. Hazardous sources are NOT root causes, nor can they ever be. Root causes describe an entirely different element of safety than hazardous sources.
Root causes are initiating mechanisms that give hazardous sources context. Consider the following example:
See the difference? The tall building posed no threat, but certain mechanisms (storm and leaving flight path) caused this source to become dangerous.
See how to conduct root causes analysis for more information about root causes.
Hopefully you see the difference between a hazard and hazardous sources. Let’s compare the main differences:
Last updated July 2024.