July 12, 2015

Cracking issues

Cracking issues

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July 8, 2015

Six killed in tank explosion

News reports from South Korea indicate a waste water tank explosion when hot work was going on. It is suspected that a welding spark ignited methane, a biochemical gas. It appears that workers conducted a safety check and measured gas concentrations around the tank but not in the interior of the tank, which was sealed. It indicates the importance of analysing atmospheres inside tanks when hot work takes place outside.
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July 5, 2015

Pilots' brains can shut down during crisis | Business Standard News

This article has learnings for designers of plant control systems!

Pilots' brains can shut down during crisis | Business Standard News


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July 1, 2015

Testing of valves in cryogenic service (LNG etc)

When isolation valves in cryogenic service like LNG need to be tested after maintenance, the test should be carried out at the temperature at which the valve operates. Read an explanation of the test bench in this brochure.
Note: This is only for information.


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Hicks on biz: Human error is inevitable | Columnists | Opinion | Edmonton Sun

Hicks on biz: Human error is inevitable | Columnists | Opinion | Edmonton Sun

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June 30, 2015

Chemical Safety Alert: Safer Technology and Alternatives.by EPA

EPA has brought out a Chemical Safety Alert: Safer Technology and Alternatives. As per them, "This alert is intended to introduce safer technology concepts and general approaches, explains the concepts and principles, and gives brief examples of the integration of safer technologies into facility risk management activities."
Read the alert in this link.

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June 17, 2015

Fire in confined space incident

An interesting incident of a fire in a confined space in a ship has lessons for us in the Chemical industry. In this incident a technician was trying to use a cleaner spray to remove moisture from a junction box in a confined space. To speed up the process of drying, he then decided to use a heat gum. The moment the gun was switched on, the flammable vapours of the cleaner caught fire. Dont take anything for granted.
Read and see pictures of the incident in this link.


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June 13, 2015

Ammonia leak from road tanker kills 6

An ammonia road tanker apparently hit a low bridge in Ludhiana, causing damage to the tanker valves and subsequent release of ammonia gas that reportedly killed 6 people and sending 100 to hospital. Read about the accident in this link


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Advances in control systems

This 15 minute video from ABB is worth seeing to see clever uses of technology to make the operators job easier.  I would like your views on alarm shelving that is mentioned in the video. You can see the video in this link:
System 800xA with extended operator workplace

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June 11, 2015

Selection of Gaskets are important

During a process upset in a plant, a pressure transient took place. This led to two gaskets leaking in a pipeline carrying hazardous gases. Luckily the plant was shutdown and no untoward incident occurred. The investigation determined that improper gaskets were used.
1. Gasket failure
– A process shutdown lead to a transient pressure surge in the pipework which resulted in the failure of two gaskets, and a subsequent leak of hydrocarbons. The release activated the facility fire and gas
system, resulting in an emergency shutdown. Deluge was manually activated until the system had bled down and the release was confirmed to have ceased. There was no resultant fire or injuries.
2. Fuel line failure
– A fuel leak from a generator fuel line resulted in fuel being sprayed onto the generator exhaust resulting in a small pool fire. A Maintenance Engineer, working in an adjacent workshop, smelt
fuel and entered the generator room to investigate. He found a fuel oil mist around the generator and call ed the control room and notified of the leak. He then called for a ships generator to be put on line and left the generator room and shutdown the generator remotely. On his return to inspect the
engine, a small pool fire had started on the hot exhaust manifold covers. The fire was extinguished with a hand held extinguisher and there were no injuries.

What went wrong?
The incorrect installation of parts was a contributing factor in both incidents. Investigation of incident 1 found that a large number of installed gaskets did not meet the pipe specification. Two gaskets failed when exposed to an elevated pressure. Likewise for incident 2, the investigation found that incorrect hoses had been installed in a fuel supply service on the generator, which consequently leaked, resulting in a fire.

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June 8, 2015

Leadership Lessons from Retired Air Force General Charles V. Ickes from Crane Institute Certification.

 There are excellent leadership lessons to be learnt (applicable for process safety, too) in the following link:
Leadership Lessons from a Top Gun: Retired Air Force General Charles V. Ickes from Crane Institute Certification.

 
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June 5, 2015

Pipelne that spilled oil was badly thinned

There are excellent lessons to be learnt fom this incident. It reinforces what I have always been saying : Smart technology needs Smart people! It cannot function alone...

http://news.yahoo.com/pipeline-spilled-oil-california-coast-badly-corroded-073802050.html?soc_src=copy


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Lessons from the Maggi Noodles relevant to process safety!

I am keenly following the current crisis in Maggi Noodles being withdrawn temporarily in many states in India due to alleged high content of lead and mono sodium glutamate. What can we learn from this episode? CRISIS MANAGEMENT!

Are you ready for crisis management in your organization?

I cannot but draw attention to the tylenol crisis in the mid 80's in USA when some tylenol tablets were contaminated with cyanide by a miscreant. The way Johnson and Johnson handled that crisis is a text book case of Crisis Management.
Read about that in this link. Be prepared!


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June 4, 2015

Hydrogen safety

Good practical article on hydrogen safety. Worth reading in this link

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May 28, 2015

NTSB Safety Alert Urges Pilots to ‘See and Be Seen’ in the Air

NTSB Safety Alert Urges Pilots to ‘See and Be Seen’ in the Air

The safety alert has parallels in Process Safety. I feel that with overdependence on automation and technology, plant operators also are slowly forgetting how to run a plant!


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May 24, 2015

Piping failure incident

 Read about a case study of a piping failure incident due to external corrosion in this link


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May 18, 2015

Phosphoric acid tank explosion

The late Dr Trevor Kletz had written about this incident in a safety bulletin:

'Small quantities of hydrogen are usually produced when corrosion occurs. If the hydrogen cannot escape and accumulates in the plant, an explosive mixture may be formed. This has caused some fires or explosions in surprising places. Some years ago an explosion occurred in a storage tank of phosphoric acid due to hydrogen produced by corrosion. The tank vent discharged downwards near a walkway. A welding spark ignited the escaping hydrogen and blew the roof off the tank.

The tank was modified so that the vent was in the centre of the roof and the hydrogen could escape easily".

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May 12, 2015

Process Safety Challenge

PROCESS SAFETY CHALLENGE

A fertiliser plant burns natural gas in a hot air generator and uses the hot air to dry the product. The natural gas line inside the enclosed fertiliser plant building is getting corroded due to the corrosive atmosphere inside. Recently, a leak occured in the natural gas line due to corrosion. The NG line pressure is 2.5 barg. A suggestion to enclose the NG line inside the building with an enclosure and providing gas detectors within that enclosure has been raised. You are the MOC (management of change)  approving authority. Will you agree for this change? If not, please list down your comments.

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May 10, 2015

Firefighters, DuPont employees evaluated after leak at plant

Firefighters, DuPont employees evaluated after leak at plant


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Be careful while cleaning "empty" drums

During drum washing operations, a 45 gallon drum exploded due to a buildup of pressure inside the drum.The force of the explosion resulted in the drum flying out of the site onto the roof of a neighbouring building.The drum was one of a batch 70  "empty" drums delivered to the site to be cleaned.The drums all contained residues of acetyl-chloride (a water reactive substance).
Treat "empty" drums with great care! It may look innocent but can kill.


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May 4, 2015

LOPA and its usefulness

 I posted this question in a PSM group in LinkedIn:

"I am interested to know whether a comprehensive study has been done anywhere, after the introduction of LOPA in the late 90's, with the study objective - "Has LOPA actually led to a reduction in incidents?"
Thanks, in advance.."

William Bridges, one of the co inventors of the LOPA technique posted his comments as follows:

"I doubt seriously if such a study is possible as you have to hold ALL OTHER influences constant and then start doing LOPA after that. I think this would be useless graduate project as well (for the same reason).

As one of the co-inventors of LOPA, the greatest improvements I have seen from the introduction of a LOPA, are from using the definition of an IPL within PHA/HAZOPs and from maintaining all IPLs per their respective industry best practices.

At a macro scale, it does not appear that introduction of LOPA or even introduction of process safety best practices have reduced the number of catastrophic accidents. This is no fault of the methods or disciplines; this is because Most companies still choose to do the bare minimum. Some companies have made great strides due to implementing best practices in risk assessment and process safety management; the majority have NOT improved because (1) their PHAs/HAZOPs still fail to find scenarios during all modes of operation so they are missing IPLs they need for those modes of operation, or (2) they fail to maintain IPLs appropriately, or (3) they fail to implement effective steps against the effectives of corrosion, erosion, or external impacts (for which there are no IPLs)."


 
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May 1, 2015

Process safety and jugaad!

During my trips to Uttar Pradesh, I often see a "Jugaad" modification that highlights the innovativeness of India.  A people transporter, fitted with a agriculture pump set engine powers the vehicle. I was commenting about the vehicle to my driver, when he asked me a question "Do you know what is the brake fluid they use in that vehicle?". Then he told me that it was sachets of one rupee shampoo!!
I marvelled at the inventors ingenuity. Which brings me back to PSM and management of change. India should not loose its sense of innovation, while at the same time, it should manage the changes in a technically right way.....




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April 27, 2015

Hydrochloric acid handbook

Occidental Chemical Corporation (Oxychem), as part of their Responsible Care initiative have brought out a good handbook on hydrochloric acid including design and safety aspects. You can read it in this link. 

Link has been updated now.

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April 24, 2015

Chlorine gas leak incident in 1991

 A FEMA report about a chlorine gas release in 1991 (70 Mt of chlorine escaped) mentions the following:
"Chlorine release caused by leak of brine from heat exchanger mixing with liquefied gas. Mixture created corrosive acid which ate through pipes when product was transferred from storage tank.Leak increased as acid ate larger hole in pipe.
Plant employees believed they could contain the leak. Fire department notified by passer-by who was unsure of source. Response delayed until second call provided additional information. Further delay caused by long response distance and several possible sources to check for hazardous materials (Hazmat) release.
Firefighters and plant personnel overcome when chlorine cloud moved in unexpected direction.Command post had to be relocated three times to avoid moving cloud. Some residents exposed during evacuation; over 200 examined at hospitals; 30 admitted."


 Read about the incident in this link.

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April 18, 2015

April 16, 2015

New eyewash shower and stations standard

 The International Safety equipment association has published a standard for eyewash showers and stations. It is a useful document. Read it by logging in this link

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April 10, 2015

Safety features at Kudankulam nuclear power plant by NPCIL

A good presentataion of the safety features at Kudankulam nuclear power plant by NPCIL  is available in this link 

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April 7, 2015

Blast in China Chemical Factory

Blast in China Chemical Factory -RT.com

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Another pump accident

'On Monday, January 28, 2002, a clean coal filter drain pump exploded due to steam build up within the pump, inflicting fatal injuries to the fine coal operator at a preparation plant of an underground mine. The victim was standing approximately 8 feet away at the on/off switch when the pump cover struck him. The pump overheated after almost all liquids had been pumped from the filter drain tank causing the remaining fines to solidify, thus preventing flow. The inlet and discharge lines then became clogged with coal fines causing the pump to become a closed pressure vessel".Read about the accident in this link.



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April 1, 2015

Incomaptibile chemicals cost you!

A radiation leak from a drum containing radioactive waste at an underground nuclear waste dump in New Mexico was caused by “chemically incompatible” contents, including cat litter, that reacted inside a barrel of waste and caused it to rupture. It is reported that cat litter containing silicates is purposely used as a stabilizing agent in nuclear storage for stabilizing radioactive nitrate salts. A scientist inadvertently used an organic brand of cat litter which does not contain silicates. After some days, the nitrate salts in the barrel heated up, releasing hot gases, pressurised the drum and ruptured it.
 The damage caused a  radiation leak that will cost approx. USD 240 million to clean up!
Read the report in the Telegraph in this link


This is not an April Fools day joke!!!!!

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March 28, 2015

Access and Accidents

The German wings plane that crashed in the Alps on Tuesday killing all onboard is being attributed to the co pilot intentionally crashing the plane, when the pilot went out of the cockpit. The pilot was not able to regain access to the cockpit as the copilot is alleged to have locked the door from inside. There is an interesting video from popular science about how the cockpit door locking arrangement works.

Coming back to our industry, more and more electronic access systems are being installed in chemical plant control rooms and hazardous chemical storages to prevent unauthorized access. But have you thought about everything including emergency response or evacuation requirements in case of malfunction of these access control systems?

See the video about how the cockpit door locking arrangement works in this link.

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March 27, 2015

March 22, 2015

Could a Texas City blast happen again? Read the investigation at HoustonChronicle.com

Ten years after a Texas City refinery blast killed 15 and rattled a community, workers keep dying. The Houston Chronicle and The Texas Tribune investigate.
 http://www.houstonchronicle.com/texascity



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March 21, 2015

March 13, 2015

Golden Rules of Total

 Total, the oil and gas multinational has Golden rules for safety in its website which can be accessed in this link

 
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March 10, 2015

Confined space fatality in chemical tanker - lessons to learn

A confined space fatality incident in a chemical tanker highlights the dangers when we take safety precautions and permits lightly. This can happen to even the most experienced persons. Discuss this incident with your personnel and the lessons learnt. The incident case study is in this link.

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March 4, 2015

Chemical Safety Board Under Fire

Chemical Safety Board Under Fire



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Thermal expansion accident

Thermal expansion inside a valve caused the bonnet of the valve to fail. The safety alert mentions the following:

Pressure build-up occurs in the gate valve cavity from thermal expansion of fluids. Extreme pressure build-up from fluid expansion can occur if the valve body is completely full of fluids (e.g., a grease/oil/water mixture) and heated to elevated temperatures. Such pressure can exceed the rated working pressure of the valve.

A valve with the ability to isolate the body cavity from the flow line may be at risk.
Presence of grease or compounds designed to enhance sealing ability may exacerbate the condition.
Grease or a grease/oil/water mixture when heated in a sealed enclosure can exceed 7000 psi (48.5 MPa) at 250 °F (121 °C).
Gate valve body cavities that are not 100% full of fluids do not experience excessive pressure as the vessel was heated. Trapped air or gas allows room for thermal expansion.

Read the safety alert in this link. 

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February 27, 2015

Depending on ROV's for isolation is bad design

An accident in a refinery in 2007 that killed 4 contract workers highlights the dangers of depending only on ROV's (remotely operated valves) for isolation. A maintenance job was being carried out on a hot oil line. Operators closed a ROV in the line and issued the permit to remove a blind on the downstream flange of the ROV. Instrument air to the ROV was left open. (ROV is a fail to close valve) When the maintenance workers were fixing the chain block to remove the blind, it inadvertently hit the switch on the ROV control field panel and opened the valve, causing hot pressurised oil to spray, ignite and kill the 4 workers.  

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February 24, 2015

Blast in Hyderabad-two-die-13-hurt- Times of India

Blast in Hyderabad, two die, 13 hurt - Times of India

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Lessons from Fukushima

Read the lessosn learnt from Fukushima in this link  http://nas-sites.org/fukushima/files/2012/10/Kitazawa.pdf

It applies to us in the CPI, too!


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February 22, 2015

Management decision during crisis

Continuing with Fukushima, a very interesting read on Fukushima and management decisions!
http://www.nikkeibp.co.jp/rebuild/en/article_09/index_03.shtml

 
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February 16, 2015

Don't Normalise deviations!

 In 1994, a fatality caused by exposure to hydrogen sulfide occurred at a refinery. The accident  occurred while draining of a fuel gas knockout drum in a hydro treating unit. Normal work procedures included periodically opening a valve that carried a water-gas mixture to a separator which removed and vented hydrocarbon gases to a flare. During the preceding winter, the piping to the separator froze, and the drum was temporarily drained to the sewer. This deviation went unnoticed and the temporary practice of draining to the sewer continued. On the day of the incident, the operator opened the valve to the sewer believing it to be part of the draining procedure, resulting in the release of toxic amounts of hydrogen sulfide that killed the operator.

Source: osha.gov

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February 12, 2015

February 11, 2015

Explosion in pyrolysis plant

 Read case study of explosion in pyrolysis plant


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February 5, 2015

Explosion in Catalyst Vessel

 On June 3,2014, an explosion tool place at a plant June 3, in a catalyst vessel in a plant in Netherlands. The catalyst, it is reported, was being cleaned with warm, liquid methylbenzene. According to the investigation report, while the cleaning process was taking place, the temperature and pressure in the reactor rose quickly, which caused the explosion
Read about it in

 http://www.nltimes.nl/2014/09/18/explosion-shell-moerdijk-caused-excess-pressure-report/

 See a video of the explosion in:
 http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=404_1401831796

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February 4, 2015

PSV outlet pipe size reduction causes fireball incident

An incident where a PSV outlet pipe size was reduced from 4" to 3" caused an incident when the PSV popped. The resulting rupture caused a fireball. The personnel were protected as they were wearing fire retardant clothing. Read about this incident in this link

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February 1, 2015

NTSB findings on gas pipeline incidents

The NTSB has published a study report on the integrity management of gas transmission pipelines in high consequence areas. Their findings are:

1.There has been a gradual increasing trend in the gas transmission significant incident ratebetween 1994-2004 and this trend has leveled off since the implementation of the integrity management program in 2004.

2.From 2010–2013, gas transmission pipeline incidents were overrepresented on high consequence area pipelines compared to non high consequence area pipelines.

3. While the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration’s gas integrity management requirements have kept the rate of corrosion failures and material failures of pipe or welds low, there is no evidence that the overall occurrence of gas transmission pipeline incidents in high consequence area pipelines has declined.

4.Despite the intention of the gas integrity management regulations to reduce the risk of all identified threats, high consequence area incidents attributed to causes other than corrosion and material defects in pipe or weld increased from 2010–2013.

5.Despite the emphasis of integrity management programs on time dependent threats, such as corrosion, gas transmission pipeline incidents associated with corrosion failure continue to disproportionately occur on pipelines installed before 1970.

6.From 2010–2013, the intrastate gas transmission pipeline high consequence area incident rate was 27 percent higher than that of the interstate gas transmission pipeline high consequence area incident rate.

7.Approaches used during integrity management inspections of gas transmission pipelines conducted instate inspections vary among states and whether this variability affects the effectiveness of integrity management inspections

has not been evaluated.

8.The Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA)’s resources on integrity management inspections for state inspectors, including existing inspection protocol guidance, mentorship opportunities, and the availability of PHMSA’s inspection subject matter experts for consultation, are inadequate.

9.Federal to state and state tostate coordination between inspectors of gas transmission pipelines is limited.

10.The lack of high consequence area identification in the National Pipeline Mapping System limits the effectiveness of pre-inspection preparations for both federal and state inspectors of gas transmission pipelines.

11.There is a considerable difference in positional accuracy between interstate and intrastate gas trans

mission pipelines in the National Pipeline Mapping System, and this discrepancy, combined with the lack of detailed attributes, may reduce state and federal inspectors’ ability to properly prepare for integrity management inspections.

12.The discrepancies between the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration’s National Pipeline Mapping System, annual report database, and incident database may result in state and federal inspectors’ use of inaccurate information during pre-inspection preparations.

13.The lack of published standards for geospatial data commonly used by pipeline operators limits operators’ ability to determine technically sound buffers to increase the safety margin and also hinders integrity management inspectors from evaluating the buffer’s technical validity.

14.The lack of a repository of authoritative sources of geospatial data for identified sites may contribute to operators’ inaccurate high consequence area identification.

15.Inappropriate elimination of threats by pipeline operators can result in undetected pipeline defects.

16.The prevalence of inappropriate threat elimination as a factor in gas transmission pipeline incidents cannot be determined because the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration does not collect threat identification data in pipeline incident reports.

17.The inadequate evaluation of interactive threats is a frequently cited shortcoming of integrity management programs, which may lead to underestimating the true magnitude of risks to a pipeline.

18.The prevalence of interactive threats in gas transmission pipeline incidents cannot be determined because the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration does not allow operators to select multiple, interacting root causes when reporting pipeline incidents.

19.Inspectors lack training to effectively verify the validity of an operator’s risk assessment.

20.Many pipeline operators do not have sufficient data to successfully implement probabilistic risk models.

21.A lack of incident data regarding the risk assessment approach(es) used by pipeline operators limits the knowledge of the strengths and limitations of each risk assessment approach.

22.Whether the four approved risk assessment approaches produce a comparable safety benefit is unknown.

23.Sufficient guidance is not available to pipeline operators and inspectors regarding the safety performance of the four types of risk assessment approaches allowed by regulation, including the effects of weighting factors, calculation of consequences, and risk aggregation methods.

24.Professional qualification criteria for pipeline operator personnel performing integrity management functions are inadequate.

25.The use of inline inspection as an integrity assessment method for intrastate pipelines is considerably lower than for interstate pipelines (68percent compared to 96percent) in part due to the operational and configuration differences.

26.A much higher proportion of integrity assessments is conducted by direct assessment for intrastate pipelines than for interstate pipelines partly due to operational and configuration differences.

27.Of the four integrity assessment methods, inline inspection yields the highest per mile discovery of anomalies that have the potential to lead to failure if undetected.

28.In line inspection is able to inspect the integrity of the pipeline segments susceptible to multiple threats.

29.Improvements in in-line inspection tools allow for the inspection of gas transmission pipelines that were previously uninspectable by in-line inspection.

30.Operators may limit the use of in-line inspections due to operational complications.

31.There are many limitations to direct assessment, including that (1) it is limited to the detection of defects attributed to corrosion threats, (2) it only covers very short sub-segments of the pipeline, (3) it relies on the operator’s selection of specific locations for excavation and direct examination, and (4) it yields far fewer identifications of anomalies

compared to in-line inspection.

32.The selection of direct assessment by the pipeline operator as the sole integrity assessment method must be subject to strict scrutiny by the inspectors due to its numerous limitations.

33.Pipeline operators view geographic information systems as the preferred tool for effective data integration, as it can be used as a system of records and a source of authoritative data.


Read the full report with recommendations in this link.

 
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January 27, 2015

Walking the talk - the most effective way to sustain safety culture

I always say that if the behaviour of top management is right, the behaviour of the others will follow. This is beautifully articulated in an article by Don Ritz titled "Walking the talk on courageous safety leadership". This is worth reading by all senior management. I have been lucky to work in the Middle East where this was practiced in letter and in spirit. One day, when I was working in the plant, me and an operator were up on the compressor deck. The Vice President, Operations, was walking into the plant and he could not see us, as we were at second floor level. There was nobody else around. As we observed him, he paused by the lube oil console at the ground floor. The console floor was dirty. He took a service water hose, cleaned the area with the water hose and rolled back the hose on to its stand and carried on his walk. It made a big impact on both of us. Developing a good safety culture does not need consultants. It is simple and it needs deep rooted commitment.

Read the article by Don Ritz in this link.


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January 23, 2015

Case study of fire incident in VGO-HDT unit by OISD

Read the case study of fire incident in VGO-HDT unit by the Oil Industry Safety Directorate in this link


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January 22, 2015

Process safety incident investigation board - white paper by AIChE

Good paper on Process Safety Incident Investigation Boards by AIChE. India needs one like this.
 http://www.aiche.org/sites/default/files/docs/org-entity/process_safety_investigation_boards.pdf

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Wagon fire tamed, oil depot saved

Wagon fire tamed, oil depot saved


The incident again highlights the importance of facility siting.



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January 17, 2015

After string of jet crashes, a struggle to re-train pilots - Reuters

 After string of jet crashes, a struggle to re-train pilots
http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/01/09/us-indonesia-airplane-training-insight-idUSKBN0KI2B520150109

Shared from News on Flipboard, your personal magazine.
Get it for free to keep up with the news you care about.

 

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January 13, 2015

Rules for process incident investigation

The most important thing in communication is hearing what isn't said." -- Peter Drucker, Austrian-American writer and management consultant
Adapting the above to process incident investigation, I came up with this:
"The most important thing in process incident investigation is hearing what isn't said and seeing what isn't seen."
I have investigated a number of fatal accidents in the CPI and this is true in all cases!

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January 12, 2015

Nitrogen claims two more lives

Nitrogen has again claimed two more victims. This accident occurred at a TV Manufacturer in South Korea. Do not take any chance with nitrogen. It will not give you any warning.
Read about the incident in this link.

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January 11, 2015

Husky official says refinery fire under control | Dayton,OH News

 A major fire incident has taken place at a refinery in the USA. See the video and report in the following link:

Husky official says refinery fire under control | Dayton,OH News

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January 9, 2015

Elk River Chemical Spill incident investigation report

See the investigation report of the Elk River chemical spill in the following link. It is a classic case of ignoring multiple warnings


 http://www.ago.wv.gov/Documents/010815-ElkRiverChemicalSpill.PDF


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January 5, 2015

Refinery leak sealing incident investigation report

In November 2013, an accident during a leak sealing operation on a steam valve killed two technicians in a refinery in Europe. The lessons learnt from this incident are given  in this link
Share it will all relevant personnel. It may save a life.

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January 3, 2015

Online access to OISD standards

Recently, I was informed by a senior OISD official that the Oil Industry Safety Directorate has provided free online access to their standards and guidelines. To register for them, please go to oisd.gov.in and see "online access" under the OISD standards tab. Register yourself and after approval you will get online access.
Thanks to OISD for this initiative!

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New OSHA reporting requirements

 https://www.osha.gov/recordkeeping2014/OSHA3745.pdf

 
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January 2, 2015

Serious accident with a pump

An incident occurred in a slurry pump that has lessons for everyone. Treat ALL pumps with respect. Read about the incident in this link. 

Contribute to the surviving victims of Bhopal by buying my book "Practical Process Safety Management"

January 1, 2015

HAPPY NEW YEAR!

WISHING ALL MY READERS AND THEIR FAMILIES A VERY HAPPY, HEALTHY AND SAFE 2015!

Contribute to the surviving victims of Bhopal by buying my book "Practical Process Safety Management"