Day 5 - Hazop Procedure For Company
Day 5 - Hazop Procedure For Company
Day 5 - Hazop Procedure For Company
RISK = CONSEQUENCE (IMPACT) x FREQUENCY ( LIKELIHOOD) OF OCCURRENCE A measure of the consequence of a hazard and the frequency with which is likely to occur.
WHAT ? HAZOP is Hazard and Operability Analysis WHEN ? Hazop can be used at practically any stage. It is so widely used that almost any form of process hazards analysis is referred to as HAZOP ADVANTAGE ? HAZOP is very thorough , because you force yourself to examine most aspect DISADVANTAGE? HAZOP is very time consuming and costly. If not setup correctly and managed properly , it can be ineffective. Needs leadership by an Expert in the field of Hazop
A hazard and Operability ( HAZOP) analysis is the systematic identification of every credible deviation in the system or process , usually a chemical manufacturing process from the design intent. This method was used UK Imperial Chemical Industries in the 1960s The purpose of a Hazop is to review a process or operation systematically to identify whether deviations from the desired practices could lead to undesirable consequences Hazop is usually requires a series of meeting during which the team , using process drawings , systematically evaluates the impact of the deviations from the desired practices The risks of deviations are assessed and if deemed unacceptable , the a set of recommended action is determined
What Is PHA ?
Definition a system to identify, assess & mitigate potential hazards to a tolerable level by addressing not only technology but also facility and human using specific tools Objective :
To ensure that an adequate assessment of risk is carried out in order to meet the following :
1. 2. 3. 4. To To To To identify hazards and operability problems identify the consequences and evaluate the risk of hazard events analyse the adequacy of existing safeguards recommend additional safeguards to reduce the risks if necessary
PHA Tools
Which technique?
It depends on: The type of work you are doing and The type of potential hazards
HAZOP Process
Existing Safeguards
Procedure
explosive fuel gas Electric power High pressure steam of 54 bar High temperature superheated steam N2, O2, Argon Chemicals Tray collapsed Tubes leak, not properly weld Valve passing
Consequence & Hazard Risk
Alarm & operator intervention Interlock, LSHH, PSHH Lab analysis Scheduled DOSH inspection Preventive Maintenance
PEOPLE - Fatality, injury ENVIRONMENT - air, water, land, ecological ASSET: Equipment, asset damage/loss REPUTATION: Loss of business, national impact
Proper training program for new staff? Additional transmitter or alarm? Verification checklist? Review inventory of critical spare part?
Method Selection
FMEA
HAZOP
FTA
Assurance
Compliancy & Review Communicate any findings to affected employee
Planning
Identify area of study/set boundary Select Team comprises of PHA leader, scribe & members
Identify the potential source of leakages Type of event F, E,TR Size of release Effect to PEAR
Supporting Elements
Up-to-date Information and Documentation e.g. P&ID, O&M, MSDS, Area Classification
What is HAZOP?
HAZOP comes from the phrase HAZard and OPerability study It is a systematic method (team-based) for examining complex facilities or processes to find actual / potentially hazardous
Importance of HAZOP
How can we operate plants safety if we do not know the hazards? How can we control the hazards if we dont understand their potential of release and impacts. How can we be confident that we are controlling the hazards if we dont know how we expect our controls to perform? How can we improve on the safeguards to ensure that the hazards are adequately mitigated?
By considering the plant on section-by-section, line-by-line and item-by-item; develop suitable node By defining normal operation By considering deviations from normal operation By using a keyword matrix to initiate discussion
HAZOP Process
List Causes
Possible?
Yes
No
Consequence?
Yes
Yes
Existing
SAFEGUARD
sufficient?
No
Proposed Option
design intent
The boundary of the node should be selected such that it is manageable for the team to analyze Typical node: One major equipment (vessel/column/storage tank etc), associated minor equipment (pumps/valves etc), instrumentation and other ancillary equipment
Team must understand the design intent of the node specific information
on how the node is operated under design conditions (specific pressure, temperature, flow etc)
HAZOP Process Flow Normally, a node follows the process flow Start at an isolation point (valve or equipment item) of where the line enters the node being analyzed (INLET BOUNDARY) Continue to the next change of design intent OR Continue to where a critical parameter (e.g. flow, pressure, temperature)
changes
OR Continue to the next equipment item The point of where the node stops is known as OUTLET BOUNDARY
Practical Tips for Node Selection Aim for nodes which is planned to take no more than 1 2 hours to study Aim for not more than 5 causes for the first Guide Word If the team needs to analyze the node in parts, then break the node into smaller nodes HAZOP Leader and Scribe may choose the nodes before the study session
AGI
PV-1100
From V6-0207
From V6-0204
Guide Word
No/Less
Deviation
No/Less Flow More Flow Reverse Flow High Pressure Low Pressure High Temperature Low Temperature High Level Low Level More Reaction Other Reaction Off-specification Contamination Relief Sampling Power Failure Instrument Air Failure Cooling Water Failure Steam Failure Nitrogen Failure No Flushing Oil Maintenance
Consider other modes of operation Normal Operation Reduced Throughput / Turndown Routine Start Up
Routine Shutdown
Commissioning Emergency Special Modes of Operation
Instrument
: Sufficient for control / too many / correct location / consistent philosophy / separate tapping for alarm and IPF
Global Guide Words Toxicity Commissioning / start up Shutdown (isolation / purging) Breakdown (including services and utility failures) Effluent Noise
Fire / explosion
Safety equipment Materials of construction Quality, consistency & reliability Efficiency and reliability Ignition Engineering issues
Accessibility
Orientation Safety/ ESD Environmental
Viscosity
Examples of Causes for NO FLOW Wrong routing Blockage Incorrect blind plate insertion Isolation in error Burst pipe Large leakage Incorrectly installed check valve Equipment failure (fail-close valve, pump, filter etc)
Examples of Causes for MORE PRESSURE Surge problems Thermal overpressure Isolation of relief devices Positive displacement pump running Failed open PCV Incorrect design pressure Gas breakthrough (inadequate venting) Connection to high pressure system
Examples of Causes for OTHER COMPOSITION Phase change Settling of slurries Leaking isolation valves, exchanger tubes Incorrect feedstock specification Process control upsets Uncontrolled reaction by intermediate or by-products
Examples of Causes for RELIEF Wrong relief philosophy (process / fire etc) Unsuitable type of relief device, blocking Unsuitable relief device location Multi-phase flow Effect of debottlenecking on relief capacity Effect of inlet/outlet piping & manifold configuration
Examples of Causes for INSTRUMENTATION Wrong control philosophy Wrong fail-safe philosophy Unsuitable instrument location and response time Time available for operator intervention Panel arrangement and location Fire protection Unsuitable set points of alarms, trips and authorization of changes Alarm and trip testing, auto/manual switches and human error
Examples of Causes for SERVICE FAILURE Failure of Instrument air, steam, water & nitrogen Hydraulic power, electric power Telecommunications, computer and interfaces Heating and ventilation Contamination of Instrument air, steam, nitrogen
Examples of Causes for ABNORMAL OPERATION Purging Flushing Start up Normal shutdown Emergency operation Emergency shutdown Inspection of operating machines
Examples of Causes for IGNITION SUPPRESSION Grounding arrangement Insulated vessel/equipment Low conductance fluids Two liquid phases Splash filling of vessel Insulated components Dust and powder handling Electrical area classification
Flame arrestors
Hot work and hot surfaces Auto-ignition and pyrophoric materials
Examples of Causes for SAFETY EQUIPMENT Fire and gas detection Testing of emergency equipment Emergency shutdown First aid, medical resources Fire fighting response time Effluent disposal Emergency plan & training Hazards created by others
Examples of consequences
People First aid injury, minor injury, major injury, fatality Environment Local spillage, effluent discharge to river, black smoke Asset Equipment crack, valve damage, fire/explosion on storage tank Reputation Media attention, public inquiry, disrepute to international image
Safeguards for any system could be listed based on the systems Layers of Protection theory.
People (P)
Environment (E)
Reputation (R)
Negligible
E0 No effect E1 Slight effect E2 Minor Effect E3 Localised effect E4 Major effect E5 Massive effect
A0 No loss A1 Slight loss < 10k A2 Minor Loss 10k ~ 100k A3 Local Loss 100k ~ 0.5 M A4 Major Loss 0.5M ~ 10M A5 Extensive Loss > 10 M
R0 No Impact
L L L L L
L L L L M
L L L M M
L L M M H
L L M H H
R1 Slight Impact
R2 Limited Impact R3 Considerable Impact R4 National Impact
P4 Fatalities P5 Fatalities
R5 International Impact
If the team decided that the existing Safeguards are inadequate to prevent, detect or mitigate the Consequences, they may recommend additional safeguards to protect the system The Recommendations must address the issue and bring the risk to an acceptable level i.e. LOW The Recommendations must be clear and use 3Ws WHAT, WHY and WHERE A further study may also be recommended because HAZOP is not a tool to solve safety issues in detail
The team shall consist of o HAZOP leader to facilitate the study o Scribe to record the study o Operation personnel o Multi-disciplinary members, depending on the scope of the study (e.g. instrument, electrical, mechanical, inspection, piping, civil, HSE) Balance of skills, knowledge and experience Willing contributors, able to express thoughts clearly
Provide simple description of the system Provide design intention for each process unit
As built / latest P&ID of the plant PFD and material balances Design parameters: temperature, pressure, flow etc Operating parameters: temperature, pressure, flow etc Equipment data sheet / drawing Marked up P&ID / drawing of the system as reference Operating procedures Schedule of alarm/trip setting Cause & effect matrix
Everyone shall be involved o Encourage quiet people, manage loud people Maintain attention and motivation o Concentrate on the task Appropriate pace o Not too rush or too drawn out
Appropriate orientation
o Primarily process rather than content oriented
Occupational Safety & Health Administration( OSHA) process safety management ( PSM) regulation 29 CFR 1910.119 -Requires company to update or revalidate their PHA at least every 5 years -In addition , the US Environment Protection Agencys (EPA) risk management program rule , 40 CFR Part 68 requires companies to performe quatitative off-site consequences analysis
iv) What is the likelihood of an injury should a safety control system fail ?
1.
Preparation P&ID PFD plus material and energy balances Equipment specifications Layout drawing
2. Facilitator and Process Engineer Break P&ID down into nodes Nodes are equipment items If nodes are too small you can loose sense of analysis and incur excessive repetition If nodes are too large , hard to handle and becomes confusing
How to perform HAZOP process ? 3. Prepare HAZOP outline with List of Deviations 4. Assemble HAZOP team
5. Facilitators Explains The facilitator or one of the team members explains the purpose and scope of the HAZOP and sets the rules of the study
6. Process Engineer Explains Process in general Immediate Node being Hazoped 7. HAZOP Each Node Using Deviation Listed in Outline Working Through the P&ID Produce Hazop worksheet recording the following : Cause Consequence Safeguards Action & recommendation Remarks
8.At the End of HAZOP , the Facilitators Issues Preliminary HAZOP Report consisting of Attendance Outline Detail report Action/ recommendation Register. 9. Issues Final Report Giving Full Details
LC 7810A LT 7810
LALL 7809
Steam drum
BV
Water drum
FC 7810 FC 7810
Economizer
NC
BV
PI 7810
FT 7810
TI 7801
FY 7810
From BFW Header
FV 7810
TI 7801
BV
BV
NC
Demin Water
NODE 1
BW-3"-7801-D6103-H(N20B)
NC
TW-1"-7801-A1031-H(N20A)
HAZOP Worksheet
Design intent: Replacement of B/Valve at D/ Stream & U/ Stream FV 7801 DEVIATIO N CAUSES CONSEQUENC ES SAFEGUARD S REMARKS & RISK RANKING ACTION BY/ DATE:
STAT US
More Pressure
RECOMMENDATION S P PI 7801 To install L , PI vibration sensor 7802 to all ST pump and PI 7810 (indicati on only L
E L
A R M L 1.
MTA ( Q3 Fy 2010/11)
No
Pressure BV at U/stream or D/ Stream FV 7810 is fully close 1.,No water supply to steam drum leading to low level 2.Boiler tripped 3.Slow down the process LSLL 7809 To implement Tagging system to critical valve
Less
Less pressure
NA