In the high-risk environments of the industrial, infrastructure, and skilled trade sectors—including construction, plumbing, HVAC, and logistics—safety is no longer viewed merely as a set of regulations. Instead, it is increasingly recognized as a core operational value essential for productivity, efficiency, and worker retention.
According to Sebastián López Vivas, a Specialist in Industrial Hygiene and Safety and Safety Manager at People’s Plumbing & Mechanical Inc., the future of workplace safety depends on shifting organizational mentality, embracing proactive supervision, and leveraging cutting-edge technology.
Drawing on over a decade of experience leading safety and operational systems, López Vivas outlined critical strategies for organizations aiming to achieve safety excellence.
Building Safety from the Top Down
The most significant factor in reducing incidents is fostering a robust safety culture embedded in daily operations. López Vivas emphasizes that this requires visible commitment from leadership.
“The best way to promote a culture of safety in the industrial sector is to lead by example, actively engage workers, and empower stop-work authority,” López Vivas states. “A positive safety culture makes safety a shared value, not just a compliance requirement.”
This philosophy translates into practical actions, ensuring that accountability and hazard awareness are fully integrated into every task, rather than being treated as separate administrative duties.
The Role of Daily Supervision and Audits
While a strong culture sets the foundation, stringent, on-the-ground management is necessary to maintain momentum. According to López Vivas, daily on-site supervision is the backbone of operational safety, ensuring plans are followed and hazards are continuously managed.
“Daily on-site supervision involves planning and preparing for tasks, identifying and controlling hazards, ensuring worker compliance, and taking corrective action,” he explains. “Supervisors lead by example and actively engage workers to maintain a safe, efficient, and productive work environment.”
Complementing daily supervision are systematic audits, which López Vivas identifies as indispensable for organizational integrity.
“Audits are critical because they provide a systematic way to identify hazards, ensure regulatory compliance, verify that safety controls are effective, and drive continuous improvement,” he notes. “They reinforce a strong safety culture, enable data-driven decisions, and prevent incidents, protecting both workers and organizational resources.”
Technology: Shifting Safety from Reactive to Predictive
The integration of technology and Artificial Intelligence (AI) is fundamentally transforming how organizations manage risk, moving the focus from reacting to accidents to predicting and preventing them.
In high-risk sectors like infrastructure and logistics, digital tools are making safety more precise and measurable.
“Technology and AI enhance workplace safety by detecting hazards in real time, predicting risks using analytics, monitoring compliance automatically, and supporting data-driven decision-making,” says López Vivas. “These tools allow organizations to prevent accidents proactively, protect workers, and maintain a strong safety culture.”
This technological shift includes drone inspections, wearable sensors that monitor worker fatigue or environmental hazards, and immersive VR training simulations.
Tailored Safety for Specialized Trades
Safety protocols must be tailored to the specific hazards faced by different trades. López Vivas offered targeted advice for construction and the specialized mechanical fields of HVAC and plumbing.
For Construction Workers: Protection starts with active participation and vigilance. Workers must use their stop-work authority when conditions are unsafe.
“Construction workers protect themselves by planning tasks, inspecting the worksite, using proper PPE, following safe work procedures, and reporting unsafe conditions,” he advises. “Consistently applying these safety protocols prevents injuries and saves lives.”
For HVAC and Plumbing Workers (Focus on 2026): These trades face unique risks, including confined spaces, electrical hazards, chemical exposure, and biological risks. López Vivas suggests that future improvements rely heavily on preparation and advanced tools.
“In 2026, HVAC and plumbing workers can improve safety by leveraging technology and AI for hazard detection, ensuring confined space and trench safety, undergoing continuous training, and managing ergonomics,” he concludes. “Integrating these measures proactively reduces injuries and supports a strong safety culture.”
Sebastián López Vivas brings a robust academic background, including a Specialist degree in Industrial Hygiene and Safety, complementing his strategic managerial experience. His proactive leadership has yielded significant results, including a 75% reduction in incident rates at his current organization through the implementation of behavioral safety programs and proactive risk management strategies. His work underscores the powerful connection between diligent safety practices and overall operational excellence.


