Chemical Process Safety: Learning from Case Histories - Couverture souple

Sanders, Roy

 
9781493303021: Chemical Process Safety: Learning from Case Histories

Synopsis

Gives insight into eliminating specific classes of hazards, while providing real case histories with valuable messages. There are practical sections on mechanical integrity, management of change, and incident investigation programs, along with a long list of helpful resources. New chapter in this edition covers accidents involving compressors, hoses and pumps.

Les informations fournies dans la section « Synopsis » peuvent faire référence à une autre édition de ce titre.

Revue de presse

"Given his extensive background in an industrial setting as a team leader at the PPG Chlor-Alkali Plant in Louisiana and the safety course that he taught for AIChE with the well-known safety expert Trevor Kletz, the quantity of information of a practical nature contained in this book is not surprising." - Gary Bennett, Journal of Hazardous Materials
"This third edition has been updated and expanded and offers major improvements. Five chapters have been expanded including up-to-date statistics and incidents. There is also more on nitrogen asphyxiation and new case histories. This edition also contains a brand new chapter covering chemical plant accidents involving compressors, and hoses, and pumps. Many new, useful references that can be found on websites and other sources have been added.

All of the chapters contain numerous references citing the origin of an idea, an incident, or a regulation discussed in that chapter. Also, most chapters contain many figures and photographs illustrating the conditions that caused the accidents and/or results of the accidents described. The many case histories can also be used as a sort of check list for potential accident causes to look for when performing a process hazard analysis.

In my opinion, this is an outstanding book that will be useful to any engineer involved with process safety/loss prevention, process design, project engineering, process operations, and chemical plant maintenance. The price of the book is also very reasonable, making it affordable for almost everyone."
- Stanley S. Grossel, Journal of Loss Prevention, March 2005
The third edition, recently published is further enlarged and is nearly twice as long as the first edition. The accounts of the individual incidents are brief, to the point and well-illustrated and should convince the most diehard engineer that no plant or process should be changed until there has been a systematic search for unforeseen hazards. The more trivial and harmless the change seems, the more important it is to look for the snags.

The book is not one of those made by cutting and pasting the investigators' original reports. Roy, an experienced investigator. has rewritten the original accounts, leaving out facts of only local interest and making the essential messages clear. Descriptions of procedures alone never convinced anybody to do anything, a point often overlooked by those who describe them in books and conference papers. The best way to convince people is to describe, as Roy does, the results of not following the procedures or recognized good practice.

Many companies are now publishing fewer case histories than they did twenty years ago, as with staff reductions employees have less time to prepare material for publication but also because many company lawyers advise against publication. Roy and his employer believe that if we have knowledge that can prevent accidents we have a duty to share it and we should thank them for doing so. The only reward Roy asks for is that we learn from his case histories and stop them happening again.

Many of the modifications he describes were deceptively simple, changes to the vent on a storage tank, for example, but resulted in death, injury or serious damage... you do not need any advanced knowledge to benefit from Roy's book; it is one for the foreman, the operator and the mechanic as well as the graduate engineer. Buy copies for your control room and workshop as well as one for your office and if you have the first edition it is time to replace by the third edition. However, expecting people to read and remember the book is not enough. The incidents should be discussed to determine if they could happen on your plant and, if so, what has been or should be done to prevent them happening. ."
- Trevor Kletz - Author of What Went Wrong and Still Going Wrong

Biographie de l'auteur

Roy E. Sanders, Chemical Engineer, is a Compliance Team Leader for the Chlor/Alkali Production facilities at PPG Industries, Lake Charles, Louisiana. He has specialized in Process Safety since 1974, and was Superintendent of Loss Prevention at PPG from 1982 to 1998. After graduating from Louisiana State University, in 1965, with a BS in Chemical Engineering, he held various operations and technical positions at PPG involving chlor/alkali and chlorinated hydrocarbons.

He has been the principal author of many practical articles published on chemical process safety that offer a within-the-fence look at that activity from an operations, maintenance and engineering standpoint. His book, Management of Change in Chemical Plants ,1993, received excellent peer reviews. His second book Chemical Process Safety: Learning from Case Histories was released in early 1999 and is sold so well that it was reprinted.

Mr. Sanders has served as Chairman of PPG Lake Charles' Emergency Response Planning Committee, and Chairman of the Technical Safety Review Board. He was responsible for process hazards analyses and has investigated numerous process accidents.

Les informations fournies dans la section « A propos du livre » peuvent faire référence à une autre édition de ce titre.

Autres éditions populaires du même titre

9780750677493: Chemical Process Safety: Learning From Case Histories

Edition présentée

ISBN 10 :  075067749X ISBN 13 :  9780750677493
Editeur : Gulf Publishing, 2004
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