=======================Electronic Edition========================

RACHEL'S ENVIRONMENT & HEALTH WEEKLY #420
---December 15, 1994---
News and resources for environmental justice.
==========
Environmental Research Foundation
P.O. Box 5036, Annapolis, MD 21403
Fax (410) 263-8944; Internet: erf@igc.apc.org
==========
The Back issues and Index are available here.
The official RACHEL archive is here. It's updated constantly.
To subscribe, send E-mail to rachel- weekly-request@world.std.com
with the single word SUBSCRIBE in the message. It's free.
===Previous Issue==========================================Next Issue===

THE MANY USES OF RISK ASSESSMENT

The computer industry revealed an illuminating use of risk assessment this month. On November 24th, the NEW YORK TIMES announced discovery of a bug in the Pentium computer chip, the flagship product of the giant Intel Corporation, the nation's premier chip maker. A few days later, Intel confirmed a flaw in its Pentium microprocessor, the chip that serves as brain for millions of the spiffiest desktop "PC compatible" computers. An estimated 6 million new desktop computers rely on the Pentium chip. Now it turns out that the Pentium cannot do arithmetic correctly. For example, the Pentium gets a wrong answer if you tell it to divide 4195835 by 3145727. [1]

A Pentium processor (the chip itself) sells for roughly $300. (The computer surrounding the chip sells for 6 to 15 times that much.) Since 6 million Pentium processors have been sold, that's about $1.8 billion worth of flawed chips already built into high-end desktop computers. (Of these, 3 to 4 million have been sold; the remainder are still in stores and warehouses.) Even for a large company like Intel, $1.8 billion is serious money. What should Intel do? Bite the bullet and offer to replace all those chips? You might think of that as the old fashioned approach. A more modern approach --the one Intel adopted --is to maintain silence and do a risk assessment.

Intel said it had discovered the problem in June but revealed nothing publicly (and continued selling Pentiums) until the NEW YORK TIMES broke the story November 24. [2] After the story got out, Intel waited a week, then published results of an internal risk assessment showing that "average" computer users would only get wrong answers once every 27,000 years of normal computer use. A "heavy user," such as an accountant or financial analyst, might see an error once every 270 years, Intel's risk assessment concluded. [3] "The flaw is not meaningful for the vast majority of commercial PC [personal computer] applications [computer programs]," Intel said in a press statement December 1.

On December 13, IBM announced it was halting all sales of IBM personal computers built around the Pentium chip. [4] IBM said its own risk assessment had shown Pentium could cause an error once every 24 days for average users, not once every 27,000 years. William R. Pulleybank, director of mathematical sciences at IBM's Watson Research Center in Yorktown, N.Y., said a large company running 500 Pentium-based computers might get 20 errors every day. [5] Thus IBM's risk assessment concluded that the Pentium problem was roughly 400,000 times worse than Intel said it was. (27000 years x 365 days divided by 24 days = 410,625; this calculation was performed on a $15 Radio Shack calculator, which does arithmetic flawlessly.) A scientist might say that the risk assessments by the two companies differed by more than 5 orders of magnitude --a large difference indeed.

In reporting this story, the NEW YORK TIMES acknowledged that both Intel's and IBM's risk assessments are possibly colored by what economist Thorstein Veblen used to call "pecuniary exigencies," the lure of loot. In announcing IBM's decision to halt sales of Pentium-based machines, the TIMES headline included this information: "I.B.M. Halts Sales of Its Computers With Flawed Chip; A Blow to Maker, Intel; But Industry Analysts Note I.B.M. Has Rival Product and See Mixed Motives." IBM will soon market its own microprocessor, called the Power PC, which will compete with the Pentium, so IBM has a business interest in making the Pentium look bad. (Recent Macintosh computers are already using the Power PC; no Macs have ever used Pentiums.) On the other hand, Intel has business reasons for wanting the Pentium to look good; they don't want to replace $1.8 billion worth of brain-damaged chips, so it just seems natural for them to deny the problem --and what better vehicle for denying a problem than a risk assessment? The TIMES quoted Professor Vaughan Pratt, a Stanford University computer scientist, who said he had investigated the Pentium independently and had found its error rate "significantly higher than what Intel had reported."

Who are we to believe? If two of America's most resourceful corporations, analyzing a well-defined arithmetic problem in a computer chip measuring about one inch square, get answers that differ by a factor of 400,000, what hope is there for reaching agreement on the hazards posed by a huge, complex machine like a solid waste incinerator, a nuclear power station, or a petrochemical processing plant? Clearly, risk assessment is not a tool for reaching true and reliable conclusions; it is just one more weapon that businesses can wield in their never-ending battle to increase market share and maintain profitability.

A similar conclusion must be drawn from a major study of risk assessment conducted by 11 European governments during the period 1988-1990, and published by the Commission of the European Communities as the BENCHMARK EXERCISE IN MAJOR HAZARD ANALYSIS in 1991. [6] Eleven European governments (Netherlands; Greece; Great Britain; Denmark; Italy; Germany; France; Belgium; Spain; Finland; and Luxembourg) established teams of their best scientists and engineers and set them to work on a single problem: analyzing the accident hazards of a small ammonia storage plant. Private companies like Rohm & Haas, Solvay, Battelle, and Fiat contributed experts as well. The results were stunning: the 11 teams varied in their assessment of the hazards by a factor of 25,000 --a difference of more than 4 orders of magnitude. Analyzing the hazards of a single, small plant handling only one chemical, these world-class experts reached wildly different conclusions. For example, the individual risk at the "refrigerated storage site" was calculated by one group of experts to be one-in-400, but by another group of experts to be one-in-10-million. (Figure 3.5, pg. 58 of the Benchmark study.)

The teams of experts disagreed on:

** Which kinds of accidents were most important to study. Some teams ignored as unimportant accidents that other teams modeled fully;

** Behavior of a plume of ammonia after release; the scientists reached different conclusions about where the chemical would go, and how fast;

** They disagreed about the possible consequences when ammonia left the plant site and entered the surrounding environment;

** They could not agree on how rapidly the ammonia plant operator would respond to the emergency. Some assumed response after a few minutes; others thought the response might take half an hour.

** They disagreed on the probability of success of mitigation measures, such as the ability of an operator to isolate a major ammonia release.

The experts analyzing this relatively simple problem reached vastly different conclusions and, for them, it was a sobering exercise.

Many of the differences between the teams' results could be summed up this way: differing assumptions. As their report said, "At any step of a risk analysis, many assumptions are introduced by the analyst, [and] it must be recognised that the numerical results are strongly dependent on these assumptions."

Meanwhile on capitol hill in Washington, the Republicans have just announced an entirely new use for risk assessment. As part of their "Contract With America," they have unveiled a piece of legislation called "The Risk Communication Act of 1995," which is Title III of their proposed "Job Creation and Wage Enhancement Act of 1995." [7] This legislation would require all government agencies to conduct a risk assessment and a cost/benefit analysis for every proposed regulation that would affect "more than 100 people" --in other words, just about every regulation.

The procedure for risk assessment is spelled out in the proposed legislation. As part of the procedure, government will be required to assemble a "peer review panel" made up of "scientific experts in the appropriate disciplines with recent professional experience with the substance for which risk assessment and cost/benefit analysis is conducted." In other words, only scientists employed by the regulated industries are likely to meet the selection criteria as peer reviewers. These "peer review panels" will analyze the risk assessments done by the government and, if the peer review experts disagree with the government's experts, the proposed regulation will be shelved until government can convince the independent peer reviewers that the government's analysis is right.

Let's see, now --what is the probability that industry-employed peer reviewers will find reasons to disagree with the government's risk assessors and thus bring the regulatory process to a standstill? Hint: to answer that, you probably will do not need to do a risk assessment. In all likelihood, common sense will suffice.

                                                                         --Peter Montague
===============
[1] For example, if you tell a Pentium to divide 4195835 by 3145727 it gives the answer 1.3337391 but the correct answer is 1.3338204. Likewise, the Pentium says 5505001 divided by 294911 = 18.66600093 but the correct answer is 18.66665197. The differences may seem small but if you then multiply the Pentium's wrong answers by any large number, you get a large error.

[2] John Markoff, "Flaw Undermines Accuracy of Pentium Chips," NEW YORK TIMES November 24, 1994, pg. D1.

[3] Intel, "Floating Point Flaw in the Pentium Processor," memo dated December 1, 1994, available from Intel Corporation's "FaxBACK service." Telephone 1-800-628-2283; in California, 1-916-356-3105. Request document #7999.

[4] Lawrence M. Fisher, "Pentium Flaw Creates Confusion for PC Buyers," NEW YORK TIMES December 14, 1994, pgs. D1, D18.

[5] Peter H. Lewis, "I.B.M. Halts Sales of Its Computers With Flawed Chip," NEW YORK TIMES December 13, 1994, pgs. A1, D6. And see IBM, "IBM Halts Shipments of Pentium-Based Personal Computers Based on Company Research," press release dated December 12, 1994; available from the office of IBM staffer Peter Thonis; phone (914) 766-3770.

[6] Commission of the European Communities, BENCHMARK EXERCISE ON MAJOR HAZARD ANALYSIS. 3 VOLUMES. (Luxembourg, Luxembourg: Commission of the European Communities, 1991). To get the 3-volume Benchmark study, send a fax to Mr. Caudio Carnivali in Ispra, Italy at telephone 011-39-332-789007; the price is $300.00 U.S. dollars.

[7] "Contract with America" documents, including the text of the 10 proposed laws, accompanied by explanations, can be found on the internet via gopher to una.hh.lib.umich.edu/socsci/Government/U.S. Government: Legislative Branch/Republican Contract With America.

Descriptor terms: computers; intel; ibm; pentium; risk assessment; thorstein veblen; new york times; power pc; ammonia storage; accidents; spills; republicans; contract with america; risk communication act of 1995; job creation and wage enhancement act of 1995; peer review;

Next issue