Because LOTO takes effort from the "operator", they have to get permission to LOTO, sort out any permits, get a lock, isolate the machine, lock it off, do the job and reverse the procedure, which takes time.
Additionally, the act of shutting down the machine might have knock-on effects elsewhere in the plant/on the line, so this will be unpopular with management.
Ergo, people take risks, it's easier to grab a hex key out of your pocket and remove a fixed guard with the power on and just do the job, stick the guard back on after with just one screw, loose. Makes it easier for next time.
Also, LOTO is procedural safety it is lower down the hierarchy of control than engineering controls which is what correctly implemented functional safety is.
I find the issue is that unfortunately, and I don't think that this statement is going to be popular here.
Many H&S practitioners do not understand the engineering behind functional safety and thus look at it as dangerous. Whereas a safety engineer who designs, validates and advises on such things sees it as much safer than procedures because it happens without human intervention and is self-diagnosing. It will prevent a machine from operating if it detects a failure.
This, however, does rely on the functional safety being done correctly, which relies on the end-user ensuring that the machine OEM does this correctly, which I why I ALWAYS advise end-users to verify the existence of the Technical File for the machine they are buying and to insist, by means of the contract if necessary to have a copy of the ISO 13849-2 validation on paper and in the native software method used to do the validation if any software is used.
The paper validation is great, but the software file can be sent to people like me to check if the validation is done correctly and advise you whether the safety functions have been designed correctly.
Also, to insist on the safety matrix used to derive the safety functions so that this can be looked at with the physical machine to ensure that the appropriate devices are having their energy removed.
Then the PLr needs to be checked to see that an appropriate PLr has been selected, this needs the PLr assessment to ISO 13849-1.
This is an important part of compliance with PUWER Reg 10. Without this, how can you be sure that the machine is safe?
Functional safety is a fundamental part of the safety built into the machine, its correct operation and suitability need to be verified by a competent safety engineer because it is the end-user whose personnel will get injured, and it is the end-user who suffers the losses in downtime from injuries or protracted LOTO procedures if they don’t accept the machine design is fundamentally safe.
We won’t even go into the controls over machinery electrical enclosures which are encroaching from the NEC world to the IEC world when the NEC designs are in my experience 20 years behind the IEC designs as far as safety and accessibility of exposed live parts.