Operational plan

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

An operating plan is a regulation that describes how an establishment is to be managed, monitored and controlled and which can be recorded as a document in an operating manual . Companies for which an operating plan is required are, for example, power plants , transport companies (e.g. railways), public utilities , dams , agricultural operations, mining operations, etc., i.e. all systems and facilities where something is operated.

The operating plan defines the options for action and the scope of action of the operating staff. It contains instructions for normal operation and also for malfunctions, unforeseen cases or even disasters. The document tells the operating personnel which actions are to be carried out under the prevailing operating conditions.

In addition, there are less comprehensive operating instructions and service instructions that regulate more limited cases.

The operating regulation consists of the operating plan and other documents, plans and operating rules. - “Operating regulation” is also understood to mean the same as “operating plan” elsewhere.

In mining there is the so-called operating plan procedure, see operating plan (mining law) .

Individual evidence

  1. ↑ Sample operating regulations for a flood retention basin with Annex 2: Operating plan ( Memento from October 24, 2015 in the Internet Archive )

literature

Web links