STEPPING STONES
-More people would learn
from their mistakes if they were not so busy denying them
It was in December 1988. It was just
one year after I had completed my Executive Trainee training at Singrauli and
Ramagundam. Ramagundam unit 4, first 500 MW power unit of South India was
commissioned in June 1988. Boiler water silica had been maintaining high and
condenser tube leakage was suspected. To check this , it was planned to isolate
condenser passes one by one. I was asked to stay at Cooling Water pump house
control room to take care of any eventuality in CW pumps. One CW pump was
stopped and one condenser pass was isolated as planned. After 15 minutes suddenly
running CW pump also had tripped on discharge pressure high protection and as a
result unit tripped. I was suspecting by mistake unit people might have closed
the other condenser valve also causing the pressure high trip. Similarly unit
people had suspected that I might have closed running pump discharge valve
resulting the pump trip. Suddenly two Japanese people had come running to me
from CW pumps which are located in other room and told me that they had
activated the protection to check its healthiness. Here I have to describe the
background of the event. CW pumps are Hitachi make and these people had
commissioned the pumps around one year before. Meanwhile NTPC commissioning
team had checked the protections and suspected the discharge pressure high
protection was not functioning properly and same was reported to Hitachi. These
people were experts of CW pumps but did not know the relevance of the pumps
with the rest of the plant. So they had tested the protection without informing
NTPC people as they thought that running the pump without this protection was
not good for the pump.
Immediately I told them what had happened due to their
action and explained about the loss of production. They were apologetic and
came to unit control room and tendered apologies to everyone present there. As
usual initially our people were very angry and scolded them. However later on
our people had told these things do happen during initial commissioning phase
and assured them that it would not be reported to Hitachi head office. But our
people were surprised to receive an apologetic letter from Hitachi Japan. When
contacted it had come to our knowledge that matter was reported by those two
people only to their company. When asked for the reason for their reporting the
answer given by them was indeed a lesson to me. Hitachi will take somebody’s
genuine confession in the right spirit whereas deliberate suppression of
wrongdoing will be viewed very seriously.
After six years
similar incident occurred. By the time I was unit controller of unit 6.
Generator stator is cooled by water. There are two primary water pumps for this
purpose. One pump runs continuously and other is a standby. Permit was given to
electrical maintenance for checking the module of one pump. While they were
working on the module, running pump tripped on supply failure causing the unit
to trip. When asked, our electrical maintenance immediately answered that fuse
of the running pump might have failed at
the same time. But when pump was started after putting back the same fuse it
was running normal. Even though everybody had suspected that it was too much of
a coincidence to believe the matter was left there.
I remembered above two incidents after reading the book “
The Power of Habit “ by Charles Duhigs given to me at corporate centre
recently. In that two incidents are described about the approach of Paul O Neil
when he was CEO of Alcoa. In one of the incidents a worker jumps the safety
rope and try to fix the problem of a machine. While he is attending suddenly
machine takes start killing the worker on the spot. Analyzing the incident Paul
concludes the following reasons. In his own words: “ We killed this man. It’s
my failure of leadership. I caused his death. And it’s the failure of all of
you in the chain of command.” The errors identified for the cause of the
accident includes two managers who had seen the worker jumping safety rope but
failed to stop him, a training program that hadn’t emphasized that he would not
be blamed for breakdown, lack of instructions that he should find a manager
before attempting to repair and absence of a system that automatically stops
the machine if someone steps into pit.
In another incident at Alcoa Mexico plant, there was build
up of fumes within one of the facilities causing temporary sickness to few
workers. The problem was immediately resolved. Workers also recovered fully in
two three days. But the plant manager failed to report the incident to headquarters
Incident came to Paul’s notice when a nun complained about it during a
shareholder’s meeting. Plant managers even though he was one of the most
valuable executives otherwise was fired immediately. The reason explained by
CEO was “ He got fired because he didn’t report the incident, so no one else
had the opportunity to learn from it. Not sharing an opportunity to learn is
cardinal sin”.
Primary water incident described earlier is not an isolated
incident. Many times all these years I am observing that people not only do not
accept their mistakes but also deny the
failure of even equipments in their area instead blame others and other
equipment for the problem. As a testimony to this we can see only very few near
misses are reported in the plant. This I feel is done because system rewards
the people who defend and cover better than others compared to learners and who
honestly admit their mistakes. In a country which taught the world about work
with detachment ( Karma Yoga ) people identify themselves with equipment and
failure of equipment is taken as person’s failure.
In one of the personality development books I read this :
When a little child tries to walk and falls an Indian mother will immediately
takes him into her lap curses the floor and kisses the child whereas an Israeli mother encourages him to try once more
telling him that these things do happen while learning a new thing. In her
anxiety to show her affection and love Indian mother prevents the child to see
the reality, teaches him to shift the blame,
denies the opportunity to learn and not allow him to try harder.
Mahatma Gandhi writes in My Experiments with Truth that
committing mistakes is not that bad, but not learning from them is disastrous.
He describes incidents like how he had learned from stealing some money from
his father’s pocket when he was child and some more incidents when he had tempted
(near misses ) to commit mistakes before
realizing the values he stood for. In one of the major events in
response to a violent incident in a remote
village of the then United
Provinces Chaurichaura he suspended a national movement only to demonstrate the
people that for him non violence is more important than freedom of the country
for which he dedicated his life.
We should have the courage to honestly accept our mistakes,
discuss them, analyze them dispassionately emphasizing more about issues rather
than persons and more importantly learn from them , spread the message so that entire organization
will benefit from it.
At the same time
organization also should empathize with employees who accept genuine mistakes
but punish willful and habitual
offenders. Not disclosing an incident should never be accepted and pardoned.
Management should emphasize more about the incidents rather than persons.
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