Your Quick Guide To Process Safety Management
Your Quick Guide To Process Safety Management
Your Quick Guide To Process Safety Management
GUIDE TO
PROCESS SAFETY
MANAGEMENT
Introduction
Major incidents are a constant threat to plants and
teams involved in hazardous materials; whether
its for extracting hydrocarbons, processing ore
variations or managing pipelines.
Companies need to constantly strive for ever-lower
injury rates as an objective. By ensuring their
process safety strategies continuously evolve, that
objective becomes far more achievable.
However, at the same time, its also important
not to have process safety undermine sustainable
business performance. A truly effective strategy
will overcome this potential issue and improve
reliability, support productivity, and reduce
operational expenditure.
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It is during design
that you have the
maximum chance
to deal yourself the
strongest safety hand,
because it is the very
starting point of your
new plant, and once
completed, it is seldom
practicable to go back.
Tony Pooley
Associate Professor,
University of South Australia,
& Former NOPSEMA Advisor
Paul Cholakos
GM PNG Operations, Oil Search
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Production
plant
Plant design/
modification
Design/
safety tools
Incident
cases
Incident
databases
Dissemination
Data
mining
Knowledge
& Learning
generation
Reviewing past
incidents is one
thing; learning from
them and building
practical solutions is
where you can make
a real difference for
process safety.
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RISK-BASED APPROACHES
The quantitative versus qualitative challenge in effective risk management
highlights a significant consideration for process safety.
Oil and gas companies have traditionally applied a quantified risk
assessment (QRA) through the development of fault and event trees.
However, a prominent limiting factor of this practice relates to data
collection and its usage.
If a consultant or operator uses the data which is collected from around
the world and averaged, theyll get a number representative of that global
average; but not representative of any one organisation or facility.
As a result, when you undertake a QRA, there is a chance that the site youre
dealing with might be much better or much worse than the worldwide
average. Some industries such as mining have used experience-based
quantification (EBQ), which is designed for hazardous facilities involving
substantial human interface and little or no statistics on failure rates.
The fault tree, because of its essential use as a mathematical model, can
usually only show the causes of an incident; whereas an EBQ model can
show both causes and their related controls by using a bowtie diagram. It is
not easy balancing the benefits of mathematical and statistical purity with
the benefits of plant-specific experience.
CONCLUSION
Safety has historically been treated as a separate focus from business
performance, but now there are more tools available than ever before to
change this.
Companies have an opportunity to weave together all the different technical
and cognitive elements to not only mitigate risk; but align PSM with business
objectives and make a real difference to the bottom line.
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