Process Safety - Recommended Practice On KPIs
Process Safety - Recommended Practice On KPIs
A s s o c i a t i o n
o f
O i l
&
G a s
Pr o d u c e r s
Process Safety
Recommended Practice on Key Performance Indicators
Report No. 456
November 2011
Table of Contents
Section 1
Section 2
Section 3
Section 4
29
33
In addition to the Appendices above, a supplement to this report is available which lists over sixty examples
of Process Safety Events (PSE) and will be updated with new examples from companies. It can be downloaded from the publications section of the OGP website (http://www.ogp.org.uk)
Disclaimer
Whilst every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of the information contained in this publication, neither the OGP
nor any of its members past present or future warrants its accuracy or will, regardless of its or their negligence, assume
liability for any foreseeable or unforeseeable use made thereof, which liability is hereby excluded. Consequently, such use
is at the recipients own risk on the basis that any use by the recipient constitutes agreement to the terms of this disclaimer.
The recipient is obliged to inform any subsequent recipient of such terms.
Copyright notice
The contents of these pages are The International Association of Oil and Gas Producers. Permission is given to reproduce
this report in whole or in part provided (i) that the copyright of OGP and (ii) the source are acknowledged. All other rights
are reserved. Any other use requires the prior written permission of the OGP.
These Terms and Conditions shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the laws of England and Wales.
Disputes arising here from shall be exclusively subject to the jurisdiction of the courts of England and Wales.
1.1 Introduction
Across the global oil & gas industry,
considerable effort has been focused
on the prevention of major incidents.
The International Association of Oil &
Gas Producers (OGP) has previously
published Asset Integrity the key to
managing major incident risks (OGP
Report No. 415, December 20081)
which provides advice on how to
implement an asset integrity management system for new and existing
upstream assets. It also includes
preliminary guidance on monitoring
and review, including how to establish
lagging and leading Key Performance
Indicators (KPIs) to strengthen risk
controls (barriers) in order to prevent
major incidents. This report is intended
as a companion document to Asset
Integrity the key to managing major
incident risks and describes the practical implementation of a KPI system.
The terms process safety and asset
integrity are both used throughout
the petroleum industry, often synonymously. From the definitions given
here, there are small differences in
scope as asset integrity can include all
structures in facilities and is not limited
to processes handling hazardous substances. However, it is clear that for
the oil & gas industry the emphasis
of process safety and asset integrity is
to prevent unplanned releases which
could result in a major incident. For
OGP
Definition
Asset integrity
Asset integrity is related to the
prevention of major incidents. It is an
outcome of good design, construction
and operating practice. It is achieved
when facilities are structurally and
mechanically sound and perform the
processes and produce the products
for which they were designed.
The emphasis in this guide is on
preventing unplanned hydrocarbon
and other hazardous releases that may
either directly or via escalation
result in a major incident. Structural
failures may also be initiating causes
that escalate to become a major
incident.
Major incident
An incident that has resulted in
multiple fatalities and/or serious
damage, possibly beyond the asset
itself. Typically initiated by a
hazardous release, but may also result
from major structural failure or loss of
stability that has caused serious
damage to an asset (note this is
intended to incorporate terms such as
Major Accident as defined by UK
HSE11).
n
ntio
rs
ie
arr
Hydrocarbons or
other dangerous
material
v
Pre
tion
a
cal
Es
rs
ie
arr
Leading indicators
maintain barrier strength, i.e. activities
to maintain risk control systems
LOPC event
Lagging indicators
measure barrier defects (holes),
events and consequences
Major incident
or other consequence
OGP
Near-miss events
a KPI gift!
A good example of a KPI which is both leading and
lagging is the reporting of near miss events. Near
misses include those events with consequences that do
not meet the companys criteria for recordable incidents
such as a spill of less than one barrel. Near misses also
provide simple observations of an unsafe condition with
no consequences. These are recognised as events which
had the potential in other slightly different
circumstances to result in consequences that would
have been recordable, particularly high potential
events where a major incident would have been a
realistic worst case scenario. Therefore, near miss
events provide leading information on the likelihood of
actual incidents and also provide lagging information
on barrier weaknesses. Near miss investigations can
contribute significantly to continuous improvement of
asset integrity and process safety, whether used to
identify barrier weaknesses or as a warning of a
potential catastrophe.
Improving reliability
Avoiding complacency
Communicating performance
OGP
2 Establishing
corporate and
facility KPIs
2.1 Applying industry recommended practice
In April 2010, API published Recommended Practice (RP) Number 7546 on
Process Safety Performance Indicators
for the Refining and Petrochemical
Industries, referred to here as RP 754.
This standard was developed using an
American National Standards Institute
(ANSI) multi-stakeholder process and
was based on preliminary guidance
on metrics from both API and the
Center for Chemical Process Safety
ing
rs
ato
c
indi
LOPC events of
greater consequence
g
Lag
Tier 1
Tier 2
Lea
ding
LOPC events of
lesser consequence
OGP
rs
ato
Tier 4
c
indi
Tier 3
Challenges to safety systems
Fatalities
Recordable injuries
First aid incidents and near misses
Management system failings/audit findings
OGP
PS risks
Reports
Barriers
PS KPIs
Procedures
Operations
Examples: Tier 1 and Tier 2 PSE , overdue asset integrity/process safety actions from
corporate audit findings (Tier 4), implementation of corporate safety initiatives (Tier 4)
Com
pany
Expl
Example: as above, plus near miss LOPC (Tier 3), demands on safety systems
(Tier 3), Process Hazard Analysis action closures (Tier 4), asset integrity
training (Tier 4), engineering standards implementation (Tier 4)
orat
Site
s, fa
ciliti
es, p
ion, produc
lant
, w
ssel
ve
nes,
peli
pi
ells,
lling
dri
tion,
OGP
Step 1
Step 2
Establish industry Tier 1 and Tier 2 KPIs to assess company performance
Step 3
Step 4
Select Tier 3 and Tier 4 KPIs to monitor critical barriers at facilities
Step 5
Collect quality data, analyse performance and use to set improvement actions
Step 6
Regularly review critical barriers, actions, performance and KPI effectiveness
OGP
Ensure management
ownership and establish
implementation team
na
,
ing
arn KPIs
e
l
de riers, e
-wi
tr y ol bar ractic
s
u
Ind contr od p
o
risk and g
er
Ext
ed
ntifi nts
ide ncide s
s
r
t
i
rrie grity even
ba
l
ak t inte entia
e
W asse pot
h
m
fro d hig
an
ctiv
Rea
ce
en
u
seq
Co
OGP
OGP
10
OGP
Corporate
More emphasis on Tier 1 and 2 KPIs,
greater aggregation, limited or no detail
at facility, plant or shift levels, more text on
high-level interpretation of data.
Business activity
Business unit
Facility
Plant
Shift
OGP
11
Note: Non-toxic and non-flammable materials (e.g., steam, hot water, nitrogen, compressed CO2 or compressed air) have no
threshold quantities and are only included in this definition as a result of their potential to result in one of the other consequences.
12
OGP
Definition
Secondary Containment
An impermeable physical barrier
specifically designed to prevent release
into the environment of materials that
have breached primary containment.
Secondary containment systems
include, but are not limited to, tank
dykes, curbing around process
equipment, drainage collection systems
into segregated oily drain systems, the
outer wall of double walled tanks etc.
For example:
Valves being left open
Tanks being overfilled
Flare or relief systems not operating as intended
Process upsets or errors that result in process
materials entering other process containment
systems with no provisions or design considerations
Corrosion of a pipe or a gasket failure where the
release over an hour exceeds thresholds
OGP
13
3.3 Normalisation
Both Tier 1 and Tier 2 PSEs can be
reported as normalised rates to aid
comparability over time and between
facilities or companies. As there is no
uniformly applicable normalisation
factor for process safety/asset integrity
indicators based on facility configuration, a general consensus was reached
to use worker exposure hours (as
used for personal injury rates), as a
Tier 1 PSER =
Tier 2 PSER =
14
OGP
At joint venture sites and tolling operations, the company should encourage the joint venture or tolling operation to consider applying Tier 1 and Tier 2 PSE KPIs
OGP
15
At joint venture sites and tolling operations, the company should encourage the joint venture or tolling operation to consider applying Tier 1 and Tier 2 PSE KPIs
16
OGP
More help
Determining whether an event is reportable as a Tier 1
or Tier 2 PSE can be complex and definitions open to
interpretation. For this reason, OGP has developed a
supplement to this report that lists over 60 example
events with interpretation. Over time, OGP intends to
update the list with new examples to aid interpretation
of the PSE definitions. The supplement can be
downloaded from the publications section of the OGP
website20 (http://www.ogp.org.uk).
OGP
17
18
OGP
OGP
19
20
OGP
Table 2: Examples of risk control barriers and associated dual assurance Tier 3 and 4 KPIs
Competence of personnel
(categorised as employees and
supervised contractors, also a)
operators b) first-line
supervisor, c) managers, and
d) technical authorities)
Number of recommendations/actions
unresolved by their due date
OGP
21
Table 2: Examples of risk control barriers and associated dual assurance Tier 3 and 4 KPIs
Plant design
Management of change
(MOC)
Contractor Management
22
Emergency management
OGP
Appendix A
1
Was the event the result of an
LOPC or PRD discharge from part of a
production or drilling process? (See Sections 3.4
and 3.5 and definitions in Appendix B)
No
Yes
2
Did the event (LOPC or PRD activation)
result in an incident with any of the harmful or
damaging consequences listed in Table 1?
Yes
No
3
If LOPC, as noted in Table 2, did the
amount of the material released exceed any
threshold in Tables 4-6?
Yes
No
If PRD
activation, did the
material release (either directly to
atmosphere or via flare or other destructive
device) exceed any threshold listed in Tables
4-6 as well as any of the four
consequences in Table
3?
Yes
No
Event is not a Tier 1 or Tier 2 PSE and not OGP recordable
but the Company may report the event within one of its
internal process safety KPIs (i.e. at Tier 3)
OGP
23
Appendix B
Table B1 (of 6): Thresholds for LOPC resulting in actual harm or damage
LOPC or PRD discharge is recordable as a
PSE when it results in one or more of the
consequences in this table (irrespective of
the amount of material released)
24
PSE Level
Tier 1
Tier 2
None
None
Fire or Explosion
OGP
PSE Level
Tier 1
Tier 2
PSE Level
Tier 1
Tier 2
Event results in a:
Event results in a:
liquid carryover, or
liquid carryover, or
OGP
25
Table B4 (of 6): Non-Toxic Material Release Threshold Quantities for LOPC
LOPC is recordable as a PSE only when
release is acute, i.e. exceeds a threshold
quantity in any one hour period. PSE Tier is
highest of all that apply
Material hazard classification
(with example materials)
Tier 1
(Categories below refer to API/ANSI standard RP 754)
Tier 2
(Categories below refer to API/ANSI standard RP 754)
Outdoor release
Indoor release
Outdoor release
Indoor release
50 kg (110 lb)
(Cat.5)
25 kg (55 lb)
(Cat.5)
50 kg (110 lb)
(Cat.5)
25 kg (55 lb)
(Cat.5)
50 kg (110 lb)
or
0.5 bbl (Cat.6)
50 kg (110 lb)
or
0.5 bbl (Cat.6)
50 kg (110 lb)
or
0.5 bbl (Cat.6)
Not applicable
Not applicable
26
OGP
Table B5 (of 6): Toxic Material Release Threshold Quantities for LOPC
LOPC is recordable as a PSE only when
release is acute i.e. exceeds a threshold
quantity in any one hour period. PSE Tier is
highest of all that apply
Material hazard classification
(with example materials)
Tier 1
(Categories below refer to API/ANSI standard RP 754)
Outdoor release
Indoor release
Outdoor release
Indoor release
50 kg (110 lb)
(Cat.3)
100 kg (220 lb
(Cat.4)
50 kg (110 lb)
(Cat.5)
50 kg (110 lb)
or
0.5 bbl (Cat.6)
Tier 2
(Categories below refer to API/ANSI standard RP 754)
OGP
27
Table B6 (of 6): Other Material Release Threshold Quantities for LOPC
LOPC is recordable as a PSE only when
release is acute i.e. exceeds a threshold
quantity in any one hour period. PSE Tier is
highest of all that apply
Material hazard classification
(with example materials)
Tier 1
(Categories below refer to API/ANSI standard RP 754)
Tier 2
(Categories below refer to API/ANSI standard RP 754)
Outdoor release
Indoor release
Outdoor release
Indoor release
50 kg (110 lb)
or
0.5 bbl (Cat.6)
50 kg (110 lb)
or
0.5 bbl (Cat.6)
None
None
28
OGP
Appendix C
Contractor employee
Fire
Destructive device
First Aid
A consequence of an event that required medical attention, often consisting of one-time, short-term treatment
and requiring little technology or training to administer.
First aid can include cleaning minor cuts, scrapes, or
scratches; treating a minor burn; applying bandages and
dressings; the use of non-prescription medicine; draining
blisters; removing debris from the eyes; massage; and
drinking fluids to relieve heat stress. A full list of 14
first aid treatments is provided by OGP in Reference 18.
First aid cases are not classified as recordable incidents
for the purpose of reporting to OGP but may be used by
companies as a criterion for reporting of events as Tier
3 KPIs.
Barriers
A functional grouping of safeguards, such as primary
containment, process equipment, engineered systems,
operational procedures, management system elements,
or worker capabilities designed to prevent LOPC and
other types of asset integrity or process safety events,
and mitigate any potential consequences of such events.
A set of barriers is also often referred to as a risk control
system.
Company
When designated with a capital C or the Company,
refers to the specific oil & gas industry company
reporting the KPIs. The Company may be an OGP
member and its reporting boundary should include its
divisions and its consolidated affiliates/subsidiaries. For
guidance on general reporting boundaries, please see
reference 17 (Oil and gas industry guidance on voluntary
sustainability reports), Appendix A (Detailed guidance on
developing a reporting boundary).
Company employee
Any person employed by and on the payroll of the
reporting Company, including corporate and management personnel specifically involved in exploration
and production. Persons employed under short-service
contracts are included as Company employees provided
they are paid directly by the Company.
Construction
Major construction, fabrication activities and also
disassembly, removal and disposal (decommissioning)
at the end of the facility life. Includes construction of
process plant, yard construction of structures, offshore
installation, hook-up and commissioning, and removal of
redundant process facilities.
Contractor
An individual or organization performing work for the
reporting company, following verbal or written agreement. Sub-contractor is synonymous with Contractor.
Direct cost
Cost of repairs or replacement, cleanup, material
disposal, environmental remediation and emergency
response.
Direct cost does not include indirect costs, such as business opportunity, business interruption and feedstock/
product losses, loss of profits due to equipment outages,
costs of obtaining or operating temporary facilities,
or costs of obtaining replacement products to meet
customer demand. Direct cost does not include the cost of
the failed component leading to LOPC, if the component
is not further damaged by the fire or explosion.
Drilling
All exploration, appraisal and production drilling and
workover as well as their administrative, engineering,
construction, materials supply and transportation
aspects. It includes site preparation, rigging up and
down and restoration of the drilling site upon work
completion. Drilling includes all exploration, appraisal
and production drilling.
Escalation
The process by which an initial sometimes small
event triggers a further sometimes larger event that
may be classified as a near miss or an incident
Event
An unplanned or uncontrolled outcome of a business
operation or activity that has or could have contributed
to an injury, illness or physical damage or environmental
damage.
Exploration
Geophysical, seismographic and geological operations,
including their administrative and engineering aspects,
construction, maintenance, materials supply, and
transportation of personnel and equipment; excludes
drilling.
Explosion
A release of energy resulting from an LOPC that causes
a pressure discontinuity or blast wave (e.g. detonations,
deflagrations, and rapid releases of high pressure
caused by rupture of equipment or piping).
OGP
Hospital admission
Formal acceptance by a hospital or other inpatient
health care facility of a patient who is to be provided
with room, board, and medical service in an area of the
hospital or facility where patients generally reside at
least overnight.
Treatment in the hospital emergency room or an
overnight stay in the emergency room would not by
itself qualify as a hospital admission.
Hours worked
The actual hours worked, including overtime hours, are
recorded in the case of onshore operations. The hours
worked by an individual will generally be about 2,000
per year.
For offshore workers, the hours worked are calculated
on a 12-hour work day. Consequently average hours
worked per year will vary from 1,600 to 2,300 hours per
person depending upon the on/off shift ratio. Vacations
and leaves are excluded.
For drilling, hours worked includes all activities whether
the operation is in hole or not in hole.
Incident
An event or chain of events that has resulted in recordable injury, illness or physical damage or environmental
damage.
29
Mitigation
Offshore work
Number of employees
Major incident
An incident that has resulted in multiple fatalities and/
or serious damage, possibly beyond the asset itself.
Typically a major incident is initiated by an LOPC event,
but may also result from major structural failure or loss
of stability that has caused serious damage to an asset.
(note this definition is intended to incorporate terms such
as Major Accident as defined by UK HSE).
30
Near miss
Number of fatalities
The total number of Companys employees and/or Contractors employees who died as a result of an incident.
Delayed deaths that occur after the incident are to be
included if the deaths were a direct result of the incident.
For example, if a fire killed one person outright, and a
second died three weeks later from lung damage caused
by the fire, both are reported.
Occupational illness
Any abnormal condition or disorder, other than one
resulting from an occupational injury, caused by
exposure to environmental factors associated with
employment. Occupational illness may be caused by
inhalation, absorption, ingestion of, or direct contact
with the hazard, as well as exposure to physical and
psychological hazards. It will generally result from
prolonged or repeated exposure. Refer to OGP/IPIECA
Report No. 393, Health Performance Indicators (2007).
Occupational injury
Any injury such as a cut, fracture, sprain, amputation,
etc. which results from a work-related activity or from
an exposure involving a single incident in the work
environment, such as deafness from explosion, one-time
chemical exposure, back disorder from a slip/trip, insect
or snake bite.
Officially declared
A declaration by a recognised community official (e.g.
fire, police, civil defense, emergency management) or
delegate (e.g. Company official) authorised to order the
community action (e.g. shelter-in-place, evacuation).
OGP
Onshore work
All activities and operations that take place within a
landmass, including those on swamps, rivers and lakes.
Land-to-land aircraft operations are counted as onshore,
even though flights may be over water.
Primary containment
A tank, vessel, pipe, truck, rail car, or other equipment
designed to keep a material within it, typically for
purposes of storage, separation, processing or transfer
of gases or liquids. The terms vessel and pipe are taken
to include containment of reservoir fluids within the
casing and wellhead valving to the surface. Note that
primary containment for a specified material may
comprise a vessel or pipe that is inside another vessel
that is also designed as primary containment for a different material; for example, a heating tube is primary
containment for fuel gas or fuel oil, even though the
tubes may be inside a firebox which is in turn within an
oil-water separator.
Process
Facilities used in drilling and production operations in
the oil & gas industry. This includes rigs and process
equipment (e.g. vessels, piping, valves, boilers, generators, pumps, compressors, exchangers, refrigeration
systems) and includes storage tanks, ancillary support
areas (e.g. boiler houses and waste water treatment
plants), on-site remediation facilities, and distribution
piping under control of the Company.
Process safety
Recordable
Production
Petroleum and natural gas producing operations,
including their administrative and engineering aspects,
minor construction, repairs, maintenance and servicing,
materials supply, and transportation of personnel
and equipment. It covers all mainstream production
operations including wireline. Gas processing activities
with the primary intent of producing gas liquids for sale
including;
secondary liquid separation (i.e. Natural Gas
Liquids [NGL] extraction using refrigeration
processing)
Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) and Gas to Liquids
(GTL) operations
Secondary containment
An impermeable physical barrier specifically designed to
prevent release of materials into the environment that
have already breached primary containment (i.e. an
LOPC). Secondary containment systems include, but are
not limited to: tank dykes, curbing around process equipment, drainage collection systems into segregated oily
drain systems, the outer wall of double walled tanks, etc.
Unsafe location
An atmospheric pressure relief device discharge point
or downstream destructive device (e.g. flare, scrubber)
discharge point that results in a potential hazard, such as
the formation of flammable, toxic or corrosive mixtures
at grade level or on elevated work structures, or ignition
of relief streams at the point of emission.
Work-related injury
See occupational injury.
Tier
One of the four levels of the OGP framework for asset
integrity KPIs as described in this report, which is in
turn based on the API/ANSI standard RP 754 (see
Reference 6).
Third party
A person with no business relation with the Company or
contractor.
OGP
31
Appendix D
List of Acronyms
ANSI
LTIF
RP
Recommended Practice
API
MOC
RWDC
Management Of Change
CCPS
MTC
SIA
E&P
MWE
S&S
HIRA
OECD
SOL
HSE-MS
Health, Safety and Environment Management System
IPIECA
International Petroleum Industry Environmental
Conservation Association
32
PHA
TIH
Toxic Inhalation Hazard
PRD
TRI
Total Recordable Incidents
US CSB
KPI
PS
Process Safety
LOPC
PSE
LWDC
PSER
LTI
PTW
Permit To Work
UK HSE
United Kingdom Health and Safety Executive
UNDG
OGP
Appendix E
OGP
33
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