Risk management is included in asset management because untreated risks can produce unplanned consequences that affect safety, production, cost, compliance, environmental performance, and business objectives. Asset management is not simply about reducing every risk to the lowest possible level; that would often be uneconomic and may waste resources on low-value controls. The correct asset-management approach is to understand risk, evaluate it against organizational objectives, and apply treatment where the risk is unacceptable. Option A is too absolute because some risks are accepted, transferred, mitigated, or monitored depending on context. Option B is also weak because risk management is not primarily a short-term cost-cutting tool; in many cases, proper risk treatment requires investment. ISO 31000 defines risk as the effect of uncertainty on objectives, and ISO 55000 frames asset management around realizing value from assets. This makes option C the best CRL-aligned answer: untreated risks can disrupt value delivery through failures, incidents, downtime, or uncontrolled lifecycle cost.
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