HSE roles explained: manager, coordinator, specialist, advisor

Picture of Søren Stig

Søren Stig

Project Manager

HSE Manager, Coordinator, Specialist, or Advisor: What’s the Difference?

HSE roles explained: manager, coordinator, specialist, advisor

Most project managers encounter HSE requirements in contract documents, safety plans, and tender specifications — and most have a working understanding of what the abbreviation covers. But when it comes to actually staffing an HSE role, the questions start quickly: What is the difference between an HSE manager and an HSE coordinator? When do you need an HSE specialist rather than an HSE advisor?

And what distinguishes HSE from HSSE, EHS, or QHSE? 

This guide answers those questions — without skipping the details that actually matter when you are setting up a project.

What does HSE mean?

HSE stands for Health, Safety, and Environment. The term covers the full body of work involved in preventing workplace accidents, protecting workers’ health, and minimizing a project’s impact on its surroundings.

In practice, HSE addresses three distinct areas:

Health: Preventing occupational illness, ergonomic strain, and psychological stress — including noise exposure, chemical hazards, and sustained pressure in demanding project environments. 

Safety: Preventing accidents and personal injury. This includes risk assessments, safety inspections, permit to work systems, and emergency procedures. 

Environment: Minimizing a project’s impact on its surroundings — from chemical handling and waste management to noise control and protection of natural habitats and wildlife. 

HSE is not just a regulatory requirement. In the vast majority of contracts across heavy industry — data center construction, offshore wind, cement, mining, energy production — documented HSE management and dedicated HSE personnel are an explicit contractual requirement from the client or end-client. 

HSE, EHS, HSSE, HSQE, and QHSE — what's the difference?

The abbreviations vary by industry and geography. Here is an overview of the most widely used variants:
Abbreviation
Full form
Typical context
HSE
Health, Safety, and Environment
Standard across European industrial projects — construction, energy, manufacturing
EHS
Environment, Health, and Safety
Predominantly the US and the pharmaceutical/chemical industry
SHE
Safety, Health, and Environment
An older variant, rarely used today
HSSE
Health, Safety, Security, and Environment
Offshore, oil and gas, mining — where physical security is a standalone focus area
HSQE / QHSE
Health, Safety, Quality, and Environment
Projects with integrated ISO quality management
Abbreviation
Full form / Typical context
HSE

Health,
Safety, and Environment

Standard across European industrial projects — construction, energy, manufacturing

EHS

Environment, Health, and Safety

Predominantly the US and the pharmaceutical/
chemical industry

SHE

Safety,
Health, and Environment

An older variant, rarely used today

HSSE

Health, Safety, Security, and Environment

Offshore, oil and gas, mining — where physical security is a standalone focus area

HSQE / QHSE

Health, Safety, Quality, and Environment

Projects with integrated ISO quality management

The practical difference for a project manager:

HSE is the standard term on most European industrial sites. HSSE adds security as a standalone area — relevant in offshore, oil and gas, and mining, where access control, threat assessment, and evacuation planning are mandatory elements beyond traditional safety management. QHSE and HSQE are used in projects where quality management (ISO 9001) is integrated with safety and environmental management under a single framework. 

All abbreviations cover the same core responsibilities. It is primarily industry tradition and client specifications that determine which one appears in your contract. 

The four HSE roles: coordinator, specialist, manager, and advisor

The four most common HSE job titles are frequently used interchangeably — but they represent different levels of experience and scope of responsibility.

HSE coordinator/supervisor

An HSE coordinator is typically a junior role focused on the day-to-day operation of safety processes—like making sure employees are wearing safety gear. Core tasks include documentation and record keeping, planning safety inspections and toolbox talks, and maintaining safety manuals and risk assessments. 

An HSE coordinator generally works under the guidance of an experienced HSE manager, handling processes rather than leading safety decisions. Backgrounds vary — many have a technical foundation supplemented by occupational health and safety courses.

HSE specialist

An HSE specialist has deeper technical expertise within one or more specific risk areas — for example chemical handling, lifting operations, working at height, confined spaces, or fire prevention. The role is more technical than the coordinator role and is typically used when a project requires specialist knowledge in a defined area rather than broad operational management.

HSE manager

An HSE manager carries overall responsibility for a project’s full safety management. Responsibilities include: 
An experienced HSE manager has the authority to stop work if safety procedures are not being followed. That requires more than technical knowledge — it demands strong interpersonal skills, the ability to build trust quickly, and the ability to communicate directly with everyone from tradespeople to client representatives. 

HSE advisor

An HSE advisor operates primarily as a consultant rather than an operational site lead. The role is used when a project needs external expertise to evaluate processes, advise on regulatory requirements, or support certification work —without necessarily carrying daily operational responsibility. In the offshore and oil and gas sectors, the title also describes an experienced field safety specialist with a broad remit. 

When do you need which role?

Project need
Recommended profile
New industrial site, full project duration
HSE manager
Short-term audit, compliance review, or site visit
HSE advisor
Specific technical risk area (confined space, chemicals, working at height)
HSE specialist
Ongoing documentation and coordination on a running project
HSE coordinator
Offshore, oil/gas, or mining with physical security requirements
HSSE manager or HSSE advisor
Projects with integrated ISO quality management
QHSE manager
Project need
Recommended profile
New industrial site, full project duration
HSE manager
Short-term audit, compliance review, or site visit
HSE advisor
Specific technical risk area (confined space, chemicals, working at height)
HSE specialist
Ongoing documentation and coordination on a running project
HSE coordinator
Offshore, oil/gas, or mining with physical security requirements
HSSE manager or HSSE advisor
Projects with integrated ISO quality management
QHSE manager
A practical rule of thumb: if there are more than 20 workers on site, the risk profile is high (working at height, confined spaces, flammable or explosive materials), or the client contract explicitly requires it — you need an HSE manager. For shorter project periods, lower risk profiles, or specific technical challenges, a specialist, coordinator, or advisor can handle the task.

HSE qualifications and certifications

There is no single educational path into an HSE career, but certain certifications are widely recognized across the international industrial sector:

NEBOSH (National Examination Board in Occupational Safety and Health)

Internationally recognized certification widely used in oil and gas, offshore, and construction. NEBOSH offers qualification levels from the General Certificate through to the advanced Diploma. For many clients in the energy and offshore sectors, a NEBOSH certificate is a minimum requirement for an HSE manager or advisor.

IOSH (Institution of Occupational Safety and Health)

A UK-based organization with courses ranging from introductory to professional level. “IOSH Managing Safely” is a widely used foundation course for project managers who are not HSE specialists but need a solid understanding of their safety responsibilities.

ISO 45001

The international standard for occupational health and safety management systems. An HSE manager on a larger project should know the standard and be able to work within its requirements — particularly on projects with ISO-certified clients.

National regulations

Beyond international certifications, HSE professionals need to understand the specific regulatory framework of the country where they are working Requirements around workplace risk assessments, permit-to-work systems, and mandatory safety documentation vary significantly between jurisdictions — what is standard procedure on a Scandinavian construction site may differ substantially from requirements in West Africa, Southeast Asia, or the Middle East. 

Work Environment Coordinator (Arbejdsmiljøkoordinator)

A legally required role on construction and assembly projects in Denmark and across the EU, established under the Construction Sites Directive (92/57/EEC). The role covers two phases: coordination during design (Coordinator B) and coordination during execution (Coordinator A). The coordinator is responsible for preparing and maintaining the Health and Safety Plan (PSS — Plan for Sikkerhed og Sundhed) and ensuring that HSE requirements are coordinated across all contractors on site. Certification is obtained through a dedicated training course recognized by the Danish Working Environment Authority (Arbejdstilsynet).

Working as a project consultant

For HSE professionals, contract-based work on time-limited projects tends to offer more attractive terms than a permanent position. Plant Supervision deploys HSE managers and specialists as interim consultants on project assignments, where rates reflect the level of expertise, the industry, and the operational conditions — including location, risk profile, and project duration. International assignments and roles in high-risk or remote environments typically carry an additional premium. In sectors such as offshore, oil and gas, and mining, where HSSE expertise is consistently in demand, the compensation reflects that ongoing scarcity. 

HSE on international industrial projects

HSE requirements are not uniform across countries and sectors. What is standard procedure on a Northern European industrial site differs significantly from requirements on a cement plant in West Africa, a data center project in the Nordics, or a mining operation in an emerging market. 

At Plant Supervision, we provide HSE specialists and managers for projects in more than 60 countries. A few patterns come up consistently: 

Permit to work systems are mandatory on most industrial projects globally, but the complexity of the systems and documentation requirements vary considerably. A capable HSE manager adapts to these requirements from day one. 

Safety inductions require locally adapted content. A standardized induction is insufficient on an international site with a multinational workforce. 

 

On a recent offshore wind cable installation in Denmark, the client’s Project Manager described the experience of working with one of our HSE managers: 

That project delivered zero workplace accidents over the full assignment and left behind a structured Control of Work system the client continues to use. 

In more urgent situations — such as when a contractor delivering a data center project was at risk of a full site shutdown without an HSE representative — we have gone from initial request to a qualified HSE manager on site in 48 hours. 

Contact us

If you have questions about which HSE profile your next project requires, or need a qualified HSE manager at short notice, get in touch. We can help you define the right profile — and typically have the right person on site within a week.

FAQ

HSE stands for Health, Safety, and Environment. It covers the full scope of work involved in preventing workplace accidents, protecting workers’ health, and minimizing a project’s environmental impact. In the US, the same discipline is often referred to as EHS Environment, Health, and Safety). 

HSSE adds security as a standalone focus area — meaning physical access control, evacuation planning, threat assessment, and coordination with security services. The abbreviation is used primarily in offshore, oil and gas, and mining, where risks from third parties are a real operational consideration. 

An HSE manager is responsible for daily site safety management: safety inspections, toolbox talks, permit to work administration, safety inductions for new arrivals, incident reporting, and coordination with the client and subcontractors. A competent HSE manager also has — and exercises — the authority to stop work when safety procedures are not being followed. 
An HSE specialist holds deeper technical expertise within a specific risk area, such as chemical handling, confined space entry, working at height, or fire prevention. The role is used when a project has a defined technical challenge that requires specialist knowledge, rather than broad day-to-day safety management. 
An HSE advisor typically works in a consultancy capacity — evaluating safety processes, advising on regulatory compliance, or supporting certification and audit work. In offshore and oil and gas, the title is also used for xperienced field safety professionals with broad on-site responsibility. 
An HSE advisor’s core responsibilities include reviewing and evaluating existing safety procedures, advising on compliance with national and international regulations, supporting audit and certification processes, and providing guidance to project and site management. In field roles, this often extends to conducting risk assessments, running toolbox talks, and monitoring to work compliance. 
NEBOSH (National Examination Board in Occupational Safety and Health) is the most widely recognized international certification and is often a contractual requirement in energy, offshore, and construction. IOSH certifications are widely used as a foundation. ISO 45001 familiarity is expected on larger projects with certified clients. Industry-specific certifications and national regulatory knowledge are typically on top of these. 

An HSE coordinator handles operational processes — documentation, inspections, toolbox talks — typically under the direction of a more experienced manager. An HSE manager carries full responsibility for a project’s safety management, including authority to stop work, reporting to the client, and overall accountability for safety outcomes. 

Yes — and it is common practice in heavy industry, particularly on time-limited projects. An interim HSE manager takes full operational responsibility for a project’s safety management for the duration of the contract and can typically start within days of the requirement being identified. Read more about when interim HSE support is the right solution in our article on HSE services. 

Are you struggling to find qualified workforce for your project?

Fill our form and and receive a call within 24 hours.

We respect your privacy and will only use your personal data to administer your account and provide requested products/services. We may contact you about our products/services and other content of interest. Please indicate below if you consent to being contacted.

Opt-out anytime. See our Privacy Policy for details on how to unsubscribe and how we protect your privacy. By submitting, you allow Plant supervision to process your info for requested content. By clicking submit below, you consent to allow Plant supervision to store and process the personal information submitted above to provide you the content requested.