Risk that remains after the application of controls, and other risk reducing methods or techniques.
The potential for the occurrence of an adverse event after adjusting for the impact of all in-place safeguards (see Total Risk, Acceptable Risk, and Minimum Level of Protection).
The extent of health risk from air pollutants remaining after application of the Maximum Achievable Control Technology (MACT).
The health risk remaining after risk reduction actions are implemented, such as risks associated with sources of air pollution that remain after the implementation of maximum achievable control technology. Resource Conservation Recovery A ct (RCRA) RCRA is the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act. RCRA's primary goals are to protect human health and the environment from the potential hazards of waste disposal, to conserve energy and natural resources, to reduce the amount of waste generated, and to ensure that wastes are managed in an environmentally sound manner.
The risk remaining after control (i.e., Maximum Achievable Control Technology [Fed]; Toxic Best Available Control Technology [CA]) or risk reduction action has taken place. CA / Fed
The risk of operating a classified information system that remains after the application of mitigating factors. Such mitigating factors include, but are not limited to minimizing initial risk by selecting a system known to have fewer vulnerabilities, reducing vulnerabilities by implementing countermeasures, reducing consequence by limiting the amounts and kinds of information on the system, and using classification and compartmentation to lessen the threat by limiting the adversaries' knowledge of the system.
Another name for the negative predictive value. The risk of the disorder in an individual (or couple) with a negative test result.
the risk (annualised standard deviation) of the residual return
The remaining level of risk after all risk treatment measures have been taken.
In factor models, the remaining portion of return that is not 'explained' by factors.
Compare? The risk associated with pollutants after the application of maximum achievable control technology or MACT.
The level of uncontrolled risk remaining after all cost-effective actions have been taken to lessen the impact and probability of a specific risk or group of risks, subject to the organisations risk appetite. See: Inherent Risk, Risk Appetite.
The Risk that remains after [[Risk] management] and mitigation measures have been implemented. May include, for example, damage predicted to continue to occur during Flood Events of greater Severity that the 100 to 1 annual Probability Event.
The component of an asset's risk that cannot be explained by exposure to pervasive factors (the market), common factors (interest rates, industrial production), or by industry affiliation. Residual risk is analagous to unsystematic or diversifiable risk.
Remaining after implementation of risk treatment... AS/NZS 4360 Risk Management...
The risk (annualized standard deviation) of the residual return.
The risk in a position that is issue specific.
Related: unsystematic risk
The quantity of health risk remaining after application of the MACT (Maximum Achievable Control Technology).
The part of risk remaining after security measures have been implemented
Residual Risk refers to the risk that remains after safeguards have been implemented.
the degree of risk left after mitigation factors have been identified. Risk Reduction – A selective application of appropriate techniques and management principles to reduce either the likelihood of an occurrence or its consequences, or both.
The residual risk is the danger of an action, a method or a (technical) process that, although being abreast with science, still conceives these dangers, even if all theoretically possible safety measures would be applied (scientifically conceivable measures).