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Driving the EHS agenda forward

Industrial

In an exclusive interview with Health, Safety & Security Review Middle East, Dr. Waddah S. Ghanem, executive director – EHSSQ & Corporate Affairs at Dubai-based ENOC Group, highlights the need for EHS practitioners to be effective business executives with the management skills to drive the EHS agenda forward

“EHS practitioners need to have a thorough understanding and grounding in all aspects of the business and how it operates, at  a strategic as well as a cross-functional and operational level, and to be an effective business executive, “ says Dr Ghanem.  “In this way, EHS strategy can be aligned with the overall direction of the business.

“An EHS practitioner is someone who adds value by protecting the business – but how can you protect the business if you don’t understand how it works?” he continues. “If we don’t understand an ROI calculation or what drives the decision-making process, for example, we cannot be effective EHS practitioners.

He further points out that the forthcoming ISO 45001 safety systems management standard will increase the emphasis on OSH strategy and leadership.

There is also a need for EHS practitioners to develop all-round technical skills. “Generally people become HSE practitioners as a second career, and their technical skills depend on their background,” says Dr Ghanem, who is himself an environmental engineer by training. 

“Practitioners may have gaps in their technical knowledge of certain areas. After all, HSE encompasses many different aspects, such as fire prevention and safety, industrial hygiene, occupational health, process safety management, environment, sustainability.

“On the behavioural side, someone coming from an engineering background may have a very high IQ but a less developed EQ. They may be able to make a good technical case, but they also need to have the empathy and skills to sell safety to the CEO as a value proposition, for example.”

So how can EHS practitioners develop the requisite skills? “Read up, go on training courses, go to conferences, workshops, different groups, join communities such as the Emirates Safety Group and Emirates Environment Group, learn about yourself, focus on reflective learning and personal development; there are so many things practitioners can and need to do,” advises Dr Ghanem. “There is a big responsibility on practitioners to prove their net worth.”