Lessons Learned from Major Accidents Relating to Ageing of Chemical Plants

Major industrial accidents that occurred in the past and even recently, such as the Flixborough, UK in 1974, the ConocoPhillips, UK in 2001 and the Chevron, US in 2012 show that ageing is still a disturbing phenomenon present in chemical process industries. Further to these cases, it is estimated th...

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Main Authors: Zsuzsanna Gyenes, Maureen Heraty Wood
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AIDIC Servizi S.r.l. 2016-04-01
Series:Chemical Engineering Transactions
Online Access:https://www.cetjournal.it/index.php/cet/article/view/3408
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spelling doaj-45e287c7364c4dc18e4080b73ffb3f402021-02-20T20:58:56ZengAIDIC Servizi S.r.l.Chemical Engineering Transactions2283-92162016-04-014810.3303/CET1648123Lessons Learned from Major Accidents Relating to Ageing of Chemical PlantsZsuzsanna GyenesMaureen Heraty WoodMajor industrial accidents that occurred in the past and even recently, such as the Flixborough, UK in 1974, the ConocoPhillips, UK in 2001 and the Chevron, US in 2012 show that ageing is still a disturbing phenomenon present in chemical process industries. Further to these cases, it is estimated that 30 % of the major accidents reported in the eMARS accident database run by the Major Accident Hazards Bureau of the European Commission are connected to at least one ageing phenomenon. It is sometimes mistakenly believed that ageing is about how old the establishment or the equipment is. Some countries solely consider corrosion as a sign of ageing. However, ageing of chemical plants has a wider meaning which indicates the degradation of the equipment in use, its overall condition and the change in its condition over time, as it is defined in the study published by the UK Health and Safety Executive. People or written procedures could also be key features of ageing plants. Overall, ageing is related to keywords such as material degradation, fatigue, obsolescence. All these physical states, mechanisms and organisational elements can lead to major accidents. Having engaged in a number of studies relevant to ageing, the Major Accident Hazards Bureau of the European Commission’s Joint Research Centre (JRC) performed an analysis of keywords on accident reports in the eMARS database as well as reports on chemical accidents in the French ARIA database. The objective was to determine whether accidents associated with obsolescence and loss of competence due to ageing could be easily identified in the databases. This paper discusses the results of this analysis and makes recommendations on how future accident reports could put more focus on the ageing-related impacts of obsolescence and loss of knowledge and competence.https://www.cetjournal.it/index.php/cet/article/view/3408
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Zsuzsanna Gyenes
Maureen Heraty Wood
spellingShingle Zsuzsanna Gyenes
Maureen Heraty Wood
Lessons Learned from Major Accidents Relating to Ageing of Chemical Plants
Chemical Engineering Transactions
author_facet Zsuzsanna Gyenes
Maureen Heraty Wood
author_sort Zsuzsanna Gyenes
title Lessons Learned from Major Accidents Relating to Ageing of Chemical Plants
title_short Lessons Learned from Major Accidents Relating to Ageing of Chemical Plants
title_full Lessons Learned from Major Accidents Relating to Ageing of Chemical Plants
title_fullStr Lessons Learned from Major Accidents Relating to Ageing of Chemical Plants
title_full_unstemmed Lessons Learned from Major Accidents Relating to Ageing of Chemical Plants
title_sort lessons learned from major accidents relating to ageing of chemical plants
publisher AIDIC Servizi S.r.l.
series Chemical Engineering Transactions
issn 2283-9216
publishDate 2016-04-01
description Major industrial accidents that occurred in the past and even recently, such as the Flixborough, UK in 1974, the ConocoPhillips, UK in 2001 and the Chevron, US in 2012 show that ageing is still a disturbing phenomenon present in chemical process industries. Further to these cases, it is estimated that 30 % of the major accidents reported in the eMARS accident database run by the Major Accident Hazards Bureau of the European Commission are connected to at least one ageing phenomenon. It is sometimes mistakenly believed that ageing is about how old the establishment or the equipment is. Some countries solely consider corrosion as a sign of ageing. However, ageing of chemical plants has a wider meaning which indicates the degradation of the equipment in use, its overall condition and the change in its condition over time, as it is defined in the study published by the UK Health and Safety Executive. People or written procedures could also be key features of ageing plants. Overall, ageing is related to keywords such as material degradation, fatigue, obsolescence. All these physical states, mechanisms and organisational elements can lead to major accidents. Having engaged in a number of studies relevant to ageing, the Major Accident Hazards Bureau of the European Commission’s Joint Research Centre (JRC) performed an analysis of keywords on accident reports in the eMARS database as well as reports on chemical accidents in the French ARIA database. The objective was to determine whether accidents associated with obsolescence and loss of competence due to ageing could be easily identified in the databases. This paper discusses the results of this analysis and makes recommendations on how future accident reports could put more focus on the ageing-related impacts of obsolescence and loss of knowledge and competence.
url https://www.cetjournal.it/index.php/cet/article/view/3408
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