Facility Certification After the Incident: What Owners Should Preserve
After an industrial incident, owners need to preserve the risk record, design assumptions, inspection history and change-management trail.
After an incident, technical investigation and legal review will focus on cause. That is necessary, but the built-environment question is broader: what did the owner know, what did the owner assume, what changed, and what record proves the facility was managed responsibly?
The risk record matters
A mature facility should preserve design basis documents, hazard reviews, inspection history, maintenance records, management-of-change approvals, incident drills, emergency response maps, insurance surveys and prior recommendations. These records show whether risk was understood or merely inherited.
Certanet’s view is that certification is not only a pre-incident tool. It is also a way to maintain an organized record that can support insurers, investigators, owners and communities when something goes wrong.
What to preserve immediately
- Current drawings and prior revisions.
- Tank, vessel, utility and control-system documentation.
- Maintenance and inspection logs.
- Management-of-change records.
- Emergency response plans and training records.
- Prior insurance risk engineering reports.
- Correspondence regarding known hazards or deferred repairs.
A facility that cannot reconstruct its risk decisions after an event probably did not manage them rigorously before the event.
Recommended citation
Certanet, “Facility Certification After the Incident: What Owners Should Preserve,” 2026.