How To Make A Bow Tie An Introduction To Process Safety
How To Make A Bow Tie An Introduction To Process Safety
Shailesh Purohit
Process Safety Engineer
CFIOSH/ AMIChemE
What do you think led to this incident?
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Filling Blind Animation: Courtesy: Chemical Safety Board US
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Bn4Krb-HoI
Objectives of the PSM Awareness (Process
Safety Management) Training
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5LCRsYVnEx4
What is Process Safety?
• Process Safety generally refers to the
prevention of unintentional releases of
chemicals, energy, or other potentially
dangerous materials during the course of
chemical processes that can have a serious
effect on the plant and environment.
• Process safety involves, for example, the
prevention of leaks, spills, equipment
malfunction, over-pressures, over-
temperatures, corrosion, metal fatigue and
other similar conditions.
• Process safety programmes focus on
design and engineering of facilities,
maintenance of equipment, effective
alarms, effective control points, procedures
and training.
• It is sometimes useful to consider Process
Safety as the outcome or result of a wide
range of technical, management and
operational disciplines coming together in
an organised way.
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Occupational Safety relates to personal safety of the
employees/ contractors/ visitors however, process
safety refers to the actual operational safety and
prevention of long term harm to environment.
Taken from ENFORM: The Safety Association for Canada’s Upstream Oil &
Gas Industry 10
Process safety incident results in a catastrophic event including
long term pollution. Occupational safety incident would affect
personal safety of an employee or a few of the colleagues.
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Outguess me
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Outguess me
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Courtesy: Risktec: http://www.risktec.tuv.com/ 20
Hazard
• Hazards are
shown as per the
figure in the right
hand side in a
Yellow/ Black Box
• An example for
this BowTie
Workshop is
“Product Storage”
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Top Event
• Release of a
“Hazard” leads to
a “Top Event”
which is usually a
loss of control
event.
• For your BowTie,
it is shown in the
right hand side in
a Red/ Yellow/ 22
Orange Circle
Threats
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Controls or Barriers
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Escalation Factors: Shown
inside Yellow Box
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Consequences
• Examples of a
consequence of the
Hazard being related due
to loss of control could
be:
- Pollution
- Fire
- Explosion
- Prosecution by
Competent Authority
• Consequences are shown
inside Red Boxes
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Summary: A Completed Bow Tie
looks like this
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Now a quick live demo of a
Car Accident Scenario
Action Plan for within 1 week, signed-off signed-off by the relevant best to improve the issues Provide positive feedback.
improvement required by relevant Senior Line Manager. and drive forward CIP Letter providing positive
within 3 days, signed-off by Manager and Line projects. feedback issued to all site
CE and relevant Line Manager. employees signed by the CE.
Manager.
fully met. May not preclude Good practice in most Good practice or above in all
Strategic Pillars
None of success criteria Majority of success criteria Many success criteria not met
Performance
close out depending on scope respects. Most success respects. All success criteria
met. not met or not fully met. or not fully met.
of improvements required criteria met. fully met.
and operator attitude.
60 50 40 30 20 10
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e
PILLAR 1 - Safety Management
System
• Evidence of PTW (permit to
work) , Operation & Maintenance
Procedures, Management of
Change, Hazard Recognition &
Reduction, Safety Reports, Bow
Tie Reports, HAZOPs, etc.
• Which of the following disasters
were a result of poor or total
lack of management of change?
• Flixborough 1974 – 28 dead
• Piper Alpha 1988 – 167 dead
• Bhopal Toxic Gas Tragedy 1984
– Estimated 8000 immediately
and up to 20,000 later on and
still affecting new-born
https://www.youtube.com/watc
h?v=HsuUQzhP2Ds
• Do you think your Organisation
is good at managing change?
Why?
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PILLAR 2 - Ageing Plant
• “Ageing is not about how old your
equipment is; it’s about what you
know about its condition, and how
that’s changing over time”.
• There are well known corrosion
mechanisms that Engineering
Departments deal with daily and take
actions to prevent/ minimise these so
as to prevent loss of containment.
• In case you are wondering what
causes plant to age, the following are
all reasons: Corrosion, stress, erosion,
fatigue, embrittlement, physical
damage, spalling (degraded concrete),
subsidence, weathering,
expansion/contraction due to thermal
changes, instrument drift, dry joints
and detector poisoning.
• These ageing mechanisms can affect
primary containment such as tanks
and pipelines as well as supporting
structures such as pipe bridges and
supports, electrical, control and
instrumentation systems and Tank has been decommissioned
safeguard systems.
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PILLAR 3 – Competence
• What is your understanding of
“Competence”
• Is it training and experience – ability
to do a task according to standard
procedures? Would you call ability to
respond under pressure competence?
• Competency aspect of operating a
COMAH Site includes many other
aspects such as Recruitment,
Performance Management. All these
and much more.
• The ability to carry out safety critical
tasks correctly every time is a key
process safety requirement. So,
which of the following do you think is
a “safety critical task”
Option 1: Safety induction of visitors
Option 2: Line breaking for
maintenance
Option 3: Wearing correct personal
protective equipment
Clips taken from “An Engineer’s View of Human Error- I ChemE -
Adventures of Joe Soap”
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PILLAR 4 - Safety
Instrumented Systems
• Prevention of loss of
containment and fire/
explosion is based on
reliability of Safety
Instrumented Systems (SIS)
• An example of such
equipment is shown here.
This is a level gauge which
alarms when pre-set levels
are reached and also may
take executive action by
closing inlet valves to
prevent overfilling.
• Another example is
Interceptor Pollution Probe
which alarms upon detecting
oil and in some cases- also
shuts the final valve leading
to public water courses.
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PILLAR 5: Overfill
• Overfill of the tanks is one of
the most common process
safety events that may lead
to fire/ explosion or severe
environmental contamination.
• Factors that we must get
right are:
• People – competent and
following route cards every
single time
• Use of Maintenance Systems
to inspect/ proof test all
safety critical plant and
equipment
• Use of Containment Policy
Score Cards to identify
improvement areas & Site
Improvement Plans Reproduced from CSB Incident
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Report on COPECO
PILLAR 6: Secondary & Tertiary
Containment
• Secondary Containment
refers to Bunds that
would catch any loss of
containment from
primary containment
such as steel tanks.
Concrete Jackets
surrounding the tanks do
not meet the criteria for
secondary containment.
• Tertiary Containment
refers to containment of
product that has
overtopped secondary
containment and usually
could be shown as
dams/ pools/ lagoons on
site
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PILLAR 8 – External Emergency Plans:
• The External Emergency plans are
prepared by the Local Authority and
has input from all emergency
responders such as the Fire Brigade,
Police, Ambulance, Public Health
England, HSE, Environment Agency,
Highways Authority, Water Authority
and so on
• Liaison Meetings are held regularly
with the Local Council to plan for and
execute External Emergency
exercises.
• These exercises are a legal
requirement and must be done every
3 years.
• At a recent External Emergency Plan
exercise, over 110 participants in
various roles such as players,
observers and umpires at strategic
and operational levels were present.
There was a hot and cold debrief after
the conclusion of the successful
exercise.
• The aim of these exercises is to
validate the External Emergency Plan
and continuously improve observed 39
deficiencies.
PILLAR 9 - Process Safety
Performance Indicators
• Process Safety Performance
Indicators (PSPI) provide assurance
to the stakeholders that process
safety issues are being managed to
prevent catastrophic incidents.
- Typically, these are risk control
barriers such as Operator
Competence, Operational
Procedures, Management of Change
and Permit to Work and so on.
• These can be pro-active which
indicate good practice such as
planned preventive maintenance
tasks or reactive which could be
number of loss incidents. They are
both useful in terms of continuous
improvement in process safety on
sites.
• Can you think of what else would be
a good process safety indicator?
From HSG 254: Developing Process Safety
Performance Indicators
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PILLAR 10 - Safety
Leadership
• Behaviour & Culture:
Process Safety leadership
is a must for any
successful Organisation
and Senior Leadership
Team (SLT) sets the
standard by personal
commitment
• O & M Team
Engagement: Senior
Leadership Team (SLT)
site visits to engage with
local staff, carry out two
way conversations to
understand their
concerns and promote
Process Safety Issues on
sites.
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Summary
• To recap, Process Safety is different as compared
to Occupational Safety.
• Process Safety relates to safe operation of the
plant to minimise the potential for fire/ explosion
and/ or severe environmental contamination.
• Process safety management involves a lot of
different aspects where competency of the
operators, understanding of control measures,
understanding what to do in abnormal process
conditions, safety critical maintenance are some
of the key issues that must be managed by all
employees and management to ensure safe
operation of the plant.
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I could have saved a life today – but
I chose to look the other way
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cDY2Imadffk
Final Thoughts: I CHOSE TO LOOK THE OTHER WAY
A poem by Don Merrill
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N Topic/ Link
References o.
1
description
Chemical Safety
Board YouTube
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Bn4Krb-HoI
- Specially if
you could
point us in the
direction of
Subject
Matter
Experts within
you own
Associations.