The Fluidised Catalytic Cracker Unit (FCCU) was shut down on
the 29 th May 2000 following the power distribution failure and was being
restarted after an 11-day shutdown. On 10 th June 2000 during start-up a significant
leak of hydrocarbons was discovered, creating a vapour cloud which ignited
resulting in a serious fire. Workers escaped before the blast, nobody got
injured in the incident.
Key learning points
The leak was as a result of failure of a tee-piece connection at the base of
the debutaniser column which found a source of ignition nearby. The tee-piece
connection which had originally been installed in the 1950’s was correctly
specified but incorrectly fitted, and then hidden by lagging. There was no
subsequent amendment to the plant layout drawings to identify that change.
Since the 1950’s, sections of the FCCU had been significantly modified. Prior
to the modifications in 1986, changes had been made to the pipework at the base
of the column and a valve had been removed. This resulted in there being
inadequate support for the remaining pipework and the tee-piece connection. Between
1996 and 1998 the FCCU had been experiencing considerable difficulties and did
not operate consistently. This resulted in an increase in the number of
start-up/shutdown cycles for the plant and pipework.
An incident occurred in 1999 during a prolonged start-up on
the FCCU. It resulted in an ignition
of a torch oil vapour cloud. Contrary to plant operating instructions in the
master operating manual, the torch oil had been admitted to the regenerator
when the unit was at too low a temperature. As a result, ignition of the torch
oil did not occur in the regenerator. Although ignition had not been verified,
a considerable further quantity of torch oil was injected, and it is believed
that hot spots in the slumped catalyst bed vapourised the torch oil. The
provision of a temperature interlock had previously been considered and
discounted, as it was decided that operating procedures alone provided enough
control.
In the 11 weeks preceding the incident in 2000, 19 start-up attempts had been
made and only 7 were
successful. Failure of the tee-piece connection pipework was probably caused by
a combination of the incorrectly fitted tee-piece connection, the inadequately
supported pipework and the cyclic
stresses/vibration caused by the increased number of start-up/shutdown
activities on the plant. Eventually these led to fatigue failure of the
pipework in the vicinity of the welded connection. The company reviewed the
FCCU to find out why it did not operate properly but the findings were never
implemented or communicated properly. The safety report failed to reflect the
reality of the condition of the FCCU. The 1997/98 revision concluded that
“hardware and software controls in place on the FCCU are adequate to prevent
the occurrence of a major accident”.
Incidents with vibration of the transfer line had occurred
over the two years prior to the
explosion. These events were not reported or investigated. There were two
incidents preceded the blast on 10 th June, a power distribution failure on
29th May 2000 and the medium pressure steam main rupture on 7th June 2000.
Construction of a new facility had started in early 2000. The company hired a
sub-contractor for the underground works and the sub-contractor sub-contracted
the actual excavation work to an excavation contractor. The company also
engaged a main electrical sub-contractor for the electrical and instrumentation
work to be carried out. The electrical subcontractor further contracted the
laying of the cable in the excavated trench to a cable-laying contractor. The
schedule for the excavation and cable laying was very complicated and
supervision of the excavation work was limited. On the 25th May a cable-laying
operative from the cable-laying contractor observed a damaged tile and cable in
preparation for laying a cable but he did not report the damaged cable in the
belief that it was dead and it had already been reported. Before that, on 20th
April an excavation contractor had been found using a clayspade to the trench
at a depth greater than the instructions from the toolbox talks. The earth
fault was caused by physical damage to the cable from a clayspade. This case is
not a standalone event related to creeping changes. For example, the 2006 Royal
Air Force Nimrod crash, Texas City refinery explosion, Buncefield, Shell
Moerdijk, the Columbia space shuttle disaster, Bhopal or the Herald of Free
Enterprise are cases similar in nature.
Source:IChemE