Risk assessment for machinery in 5 steps

1. Define the limits of the machinery

This defines how and where the machine is to be used.

You need to determine:

  • intended use

  • reasonably foreseeable misuse

  • which users are involved (operators, service personnel, etc.)

  • the machine’s lifecycle (transport, operation, maintenance, etc.)

  • space requirements and interfaces with other machinery

  • materials used (e.g. hazardous substances)

  • time-related aspects (service life, maintenance intervals, etc.)

Common mistake: describing only normal operation - and missing the rest of the lifecycle.

2. Identify sources of risk

Traditionally, risks have been sought through checklists (mechanical, electrical, etc.).

The challenge with that approach?
Unique and system-related risks are often overlooked.

Another method is to analyze the machine based on the entire lifecycle:

  • design

  • transport

  • installation

  • adjustment

  • programming

  • operation

  • maintenance, cleaning

  • fault handling

  • decommissioning

Break it down into:

  • activities (what people do)

  • automatic processes (movements, pressure, sequences)

  • combinations of both

Ask the question:

What can go wrong in this exact situation - here and now?

Specify the source of the risk, what causes it, and the type of harm that may occur. 

This provides a more accurate and reality-based analysis.

You can also use legal requirements as support to ensure that you have not missed essential requirements that affect the risk assessment.  

Noex gives you the option to choose the approach that suits you best. 

3. Estimate the risk

Once the risks have been identified, you must estimate the risk.

Risk usually consists of:

  • Severity - how serious the harm could be

  • Likelihood - how probable it is that it will occur

In many cases, it is sufficient to identify that a risk can lead to serious harm - in that case, action is required.

Serious risks must always be addressed.

4. Evaluate the risk

Now you determine:

Is the risk acceptable - or must it be reduced?

This must not be a subjective assessment.

You should rely on:

  • standards (EN, ISO, IEC)

  • industry practice

  • technical guidelines

Important: what constitutes an acceptable risk varies between different machines and applications.

5. Eliminate or reduce risks

If the risk is not acceptable, measures must be taken.

You should always follow this priority order:

A - Eliminate the risk

Modify the design so that the hazard is removed.

Example:

  • remove the entrapment hazard

  • eliminate sharp edges

B - Implement technical safeguards

If the risk cannot be eliminated:

  • safeguards

  • enclosures

  • safety functions

  • light curtains

  • safety control systems

C - Inform about residual risks

As a last step:

  • warnings

  • instructions

  • personal protective equipment requirements

Important: information never replaces technical safeguarding.


Risk assessment in practice - where it often falls short

Too generic analysis

Risks are described without any connection to real situations.

Lifecycle is overlooked

Risks arising during maintenance, cleaning, troubleshooting, relocation, etc. are omitted.

Focus on “typical risks”

Unique risks in the system are not identified.

No link to measures

It is not possible to see how the risk and its measures are connected.

No verification

There is no evidence that the measures have had the intended effect.

Combined machinery - where risks increase

When multiple machines are integrated:

  • new risks arise

  • existing risks change

A new risk assessment is always required.

The focus should be on:

  • interfaces between machines

  • control systems

  • sequences

  • emergency stop

This is often where the most serious risks are found.

Do you want to read more about what applies to combined machinery? read more here →

Link to technical documentation

The risk assessment must show:

  • which requirements apply

  • which sources of risk have been identified

  • which measures have been implemented

  • which risks remain

It is a central part of the technical documentation.

Do you want to read more about technical documentation? see our article Technical documentation according to the Machinery Directive - requirements, content and responsibilities

Summary

Risk assessment is not a formality - it is the core of safe design.

It should:

  • be carried out early in the process

  • cover the entire lifecycle

  • identify real risks

  • lead to concrete measures

  • be verified and documented

Do you want to simplify risk assessment?

Many companies get stuck in:

  • manual Excel files

  • unstructured analyses

  • lack of traceability

With Noex, you can:

  • work consistently and in a structured way

  • maintain control over the entire process

  • link risk → measure → requirement

  • build technical documentation

Book a demo: https://noex.se/book-a-demo

Do you want to read more about why safety pays off? read our article Safety pays off

Do you want to read more about CE marking? you will find it in our article CE marking of machinery - requirements, process and technical documentation