A news item in the The Wall street Journal reports the following:
"BP PLC came within 1.4 inches or less of preventing the worst offshore oil  spill in U.S. history, say engineers studying the safety device that  failed in last year's Gulf of Mexico disaster.
 The device, known as a blowout  preventer, was a massive set of valves that sat on the sea floor nearly a  mile beneath the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig, which floated on the  surface. It was equipped with powerful shears designed to cut through  pipe and seal off the well in an emergency. Why the device failed has  been one of the central mysteries of last year's disaster.
 In a report released Wednesday,  engineers hired by U.S. investigators say they have solved it: The force  of the blowout bent the drill pipe, knocking it off-center and jamming  the shears. Rather than seal the well, the blades got stuck 1.4 inches  or less apart, leaving plenty of space for 4.9 million barrels of oil to  leak out.
 The investigators concluded the  blowout preventer failed as a result of a design flaw, not because of  misuse by BP or any of the other companies involved, and not because of  poor maintenance. The fail-safe device, the last line of defense against  a disaster, wasn't designed to handle a real-world blowout, according  to investigators, who called for further study of the devices.
The report doesn't address what caused the blowout itself. That has  been the subject of several other major inquiries, which all have found  that a series of decisions by BP and its contractors set the disaster in  motion.
 Even if the device had worked, it  wouldn't have saved the lives of the 11 rig workers killed in the  accident. That's because no one even tried to activate the shears until  after massive explosions killed the men and crippled the rig. But the  device could have mostly prevented the oil spill that began when the  Deepwater Horizon sank two days after the initial explosion".
How sure are you that your fail safe devices will work as intended? Today there are systems available to conduct a online partial stroke test of critical valves. But the test is done during normal operating conditions. In the case of a major upset or incident, conditions may prevent the fail safe devices from working.  
Read the article in this link.
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