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Are You Investing in Risk Elimination or Risk Management?
April 16, 2026
Blogs
Safety budgets are going up. But incidents are not disappearing.
Across mining and heavy industry, organisations are increasing spending on safety programs, training and new technologies. Yet lost-time injuries and exposure risks continue to show up in the same areas, year after year.
That gap raises the question: Are organisations investing their safety budget in the right areas?
Safety Spending Trends and the Outcome Gap
Recent data around safety spending trends shows just how much investment is going into safety right now. One global survey found that 95% of safety leaders expect to maintain or increase their budgets and 97% see safety as critical to keeping operations running.

This reflects a shift in workplace safety investment, with more resources being directed toward: Training programs
Workforce engagement
Infrastructure improvements
New safety technologies
Internal safety advocacies
Each of these plays a huge role in site safety. However, what stands out is that the outcomes haven’t shifted at the same pace. Around 53% of incidents still result in lost time and many teams continue to notice a gap between what safety procedures say and how work gets done on site.
The Real Issue: Risk Elimination vs Risk Management
A lot of current safety efforts are built around control.
Procedures, permits, PPE. These are all necessary and useful. But they still assume that someone is going to be working close to the hazard.
That’s where the difference between risk elimination vs risk management starts to matter, particularly under Elimination of Live Work (ELW) requirements in Australian mining.
The hierarchy of controls makes this clear. Elimination sits at the top because the hazard is removed entirely. Further down, controls start to rely more on behaviour, consistency and conditions lining up the way they should. Most tasks in day-to-day operations still sit somewhere in that middle or lower range. Elimination removes most of the onus on managing the risk from the technician.
SafeAdjust directly addresses this gap by moving the task away from exposure altogether, rather than managing the risk around it.
Redesigning the Task to Reduce Exposure
At a certain point, improving procedures stops changing the outcome. The process itself needs to be completely changed.
This is where engineering controls for safety come in, as a practical adjustment to how work is done. Instead of asking technicians to gear up better before working near live systems, the job is set up so they no longer need to be exposed in the first place.
On site, that shows up quickly. Fewer tasks require working next to live systems. Less variation in how different crews approach the same job. Less reliance on getting every step right just to stay safe.
It also lines up more closely with how audits are assessed. Removing a hazard from the maintenance workflow completely carries more weight than showing it is being actively managed.
Hydraulic Maintenance Risk Doesn’t Go Away on Its Own
Hydraulic work is one of the clearest examples of this gap. In mining operations, hydraulic live work elimination is a defined compliance standard, not just an aspiration.
Hydraulic maintenance risk often involves high-pressure systems, stored energy, tight access and adjustments that need to be made while equipment is still live. For maintenance teams operating under ELW frameworks, this repeat exposure is precisely what elimination controls are designed to remove.
Even with strong procedures in place, technicians are often still required to work close to the system in the danger zone to complete tuning tasks.
That makes it a repeat exposure activity. It’s not occasional. It’s built into the workflow and that’s a problem.
What Risk Elimination Looks Like in Practice
Some of that exposure exists because of how the work has always been done because a better alternative wasn’t available, but it doesn’t mean it has to stay that way.
HydraTune’s SafeAdjust allows hydraulic tuning to be performed remotely. Instead of positioning technicians beside live systems, adjustments are completed wirelessly from a safe distance (a wireless hydraulic adjustment approach) while maintaining full control of the system response.
FlexAdjust supports that by allowing connection across different machines without changing tools or setup each time. On mixed fleets, that consistency makes a noticeable difference.
That’s where the difference shows up. The task moves away from managing exposure and toward removing the need for it, while making the adoption of the new process and technology easy with immediately visible benefits.
Implementing a Proactive Safety Strategy
The strongest proactive safety strategies need a review of existing procedures to get started.
That means looking beyond incident response and asking: Where does exposure still exist in routine work?
Can the task be redesigned to remove that exposure?
Are current controls sitting at the highest level of the hierarchy?
As safety expectations continue to evolve, this approach becomes more important.
Budgets may continue to grow but outcomes will depend on how effectively that investment is used to eliminate hazards, not just manage them.
The Question for Safety Leaders
Safety spending is rising. The intent is there. The harder question is where that investment is being directed.
Is it helping people work more safely around known hazards? Or can it be spent removing those hazards from the task altogether?
In areas like hydraulic maintenance, the investment shows up in reducing the need for someone to step in close, creating a predictable maintenance environment and delivering consistent execution and results.
Eliminate Risks with Hydratune
The next step forward in safety will not come from adding more controls to the same process. It will come from changing how the work itself is performed.
HydraTune’s SafeAdjust delivers: Wireless hydraulic tuning
Up to 100 metres operating distance
Reduced technician exposure
Improved workflow consistency
Alignment with elimination-level safety controls
Less exposure. More control. A safer way to perform hydraulic tuning without changing the outcome of the job.
Learn more about HydraTune’s SafeAdjust: https://hydratune.com/solutions/