Title: CONTROL OF MAJOR ACCIDENT HAZARDS (COMAH)
1CONTROL OF MAJOR ACCIDENT HAZARDS (COMAH)
- Discussion for IOSH Merseyside Branch
- 11 January 2011
- Mike Brown
- HSSE Manager
- Stanlow Manufacturing Complex
2Contents
- Background
- Who falls under the COMAH Regulations?
- Requirements of Top Tier sites
- Safety Report Structure
- ALARP demonstration
- How do we prevent Major Accidents at Stanlow?
- Assessment and On-going Monitoring
3Content
- Background
- Who falls under the COMAH Regulations?
- Requirements of Top Tier sites
- Safety Report Structure
- ALARP demonstration
- How do we prevent Major Accidents at Stanlow?
- Assessment and On-going Monitoring
4What is a Major Accident
- A major accident means an occurrence (including
in particular, a major emission, fire or
explosion) resulting from uncontrolled
developments in the course of the operation of
any establishment and leading to serious danger
to human health or the environment, immediate or
delayed, inside or outside the establishment, and
involving one or more dangerous substances - The aim of the COMAH Regs is to prevent major
accidents involving dangerous substances and
limit the consequences to people and the
environment of any accidents which do occur
5Briefly, the Legislative Background .
- Major accidents in 1970s, e.g. Flixborough,
Seveso - Seveso Directive (82/501/EEC)
- UK CIMAH Regulations 1984
- More accidents Bhopal, Basle
- CIMAH Regulations revised in 1988 1990
- Seveso II Directive (96/82/EC)
- UK COMAH Regulations 1999
- COMAH Amended in June 2005 to reflect changes to
Seveso II
6Briefly .
- More accidents
- BP Texas City
- Buncefield
- Future changes?
7Content
- Background
- Who falls under the COMAH Regulations?
- Requirements of Top Tier sites
- Safety Report Structure
- ALARP demonstration
- How do we prevent Major Accidents at Stanlow?
- Assessment and On-going Monitoring
8Application of the Regulations
- Establishments having any dangerous substance of
qualifying quantity specified in Schedule 1 - Named substances
- e.g. chlorine, hydrogen, LPG, methanol, petroleum
products etc. - Categories of substances according to CHIP Regs
- e.g. toxic, oxidizing, explosive, flammable,
carcinogens, dangerous for the environment etc. - Two thresholds lower-tier top-tier
- Why is Stanlow a Top Tier site?
9Named Substances
10Generic Substances
11Top Tier COMAH
- Not an award!
- So what does it mean?
12Content
- Background
- Who falls under the COMAH Regulations?
- Requirements of Top Tier sites
- Safety Report Structure
- ALARP demonstration
- How do we prevent Major Accidents at Stanlow?
- Assessment and On-going Monitoring
13Enforcing Authority
- Competent Authority (HSE and EA / SEPA)
- Duty on the CA to
- Examine COMAH Safety Reports and inform operators
on conclusions within a reasonable period - Inspect activities subject to COMAH (testing
claims made in Safety Report, so be honest!) - Prohibit operations where the measures in place
are seriously deficient
14Main Duties for COMAH Operators
- Notify the CA
- Take all measures necessary to prevent MAs
- Prepare a Major Accident Prevention Policy (MAPP)
- Additionally for Top Tier sites
- Prepare a COMAH Safety Report
- Maintain Safety Report as a living document
- Prepare and test onsite emergency plan
- Supply information to LA for emergency planning
purposes - Provide information to the public
15Purpose of COMAH Safety reports
- Topics
- MAPP SMS
- demonstrating that a Major Accident Prevention
Policy and a Safety Management System for
implementing it have been put into effect - Major Accident Hazards
- Safety and Reliability
- Emergency Plan
- Land Use Planning
16Purpose of COMAH Safety reports
- Topics
- MAPP SMS
- Major Accident Hazards
- demonstrating that major accident hazards have
been identified and that the necessary measures
have been taken to prevent such accidents and to
limit their consequences for persons and the
environment - Safety and Reliability
- Emergency Plan
- Land Use Planning
17Purpose of COMAH Safety reports
- Topics
- MAPP SMS
- Major Accident Hazards
- Safety and Reliability
- demonstrating that adequate safety and
reliability have been incorporated into the
design, construction, operation and maintenance
of any installation / equipment / infrastructure
which are linked to Major Accident Hazards (MAH)
within the establishment - Emergency Plan
- Land Use Planning
18Purpose of COMAH Safety reports
- Topics
- MAPP SMS
- Major Accident Hazards
- Safety and Reliability
- Emergency Plan
- demonstrating that on-site emergency plans have
been drawn up and supplying information to enable
the off-site plan to be drawn up in order to take
the necessary measures in the event of a major
accident - Land Use Planning
19Purpose of COMAH Safety reports
- Topics
- MAPP SMS
- Major Accident Hazards
- Safety and Reliability
- Emergency Plan
- Land Use Planning
- providing sufficient information to the
competent authority to enable decisions to be
made in terms of the siting of new activities or
developments around establishments
20Content
- Background
- Who falls under the COMAH Regulations?
- Requirements of Top Tier sites
- Safety Report Structure
- ALARP demonstration
- How do we prevent Major Accidents at Stanlow?
- Assessment and On-going Monitoring
21Safety Report Assessment Manual (SRAM)
- Most Safety Reports are structured around the
SRAM - SRAM Sections 1-8 Notes for assessors
- SRAM Section 9 Descriptive Aspects
- SRAM Section 10 Predictive Aspects
- SRAM Section 11 MAPP and SMS Aspects
- SRAM Section 12 Technical Aspects
- SRAM Section 13 Environmental Aspects
- SRAM Section 14 Emergency Response Aspects
22Section 9 - Descriptive Aspects
- Describes the potential for harm, i.e.
- Dangerous substances
- Natural and built environment
- Establishment
- Common infrastructure and utilities
23Section 10 - Predictive Aspects
- Risk assessment methodology, i.e.
- MAH identification (100s events)
- Selection of Representative Set (10s events)
- Likelihood
- Consequences
- Risk Assessment
- Demonstration of ALARP (As Low As Reasonably
Practicable)
24Section 11 - MAPP SMS Aspects
- Organisational measures in place
- Major Accident Prevention Policy (MAPP)
- Safety Management System (SMS)
- Procedures
- Roles and responsibilities
- Training and competence
- Management of change (plant/processes, procedures
and people) - Measurement of performance (emphasis now on
process safety KPIs) - Audit and review
25Section 12 - Technical Aspects
- Demonstration of hierarchical approach
- Inventory
- Layout
- Materials of construction
- Construction methods (e.g. stress relieving,
etc.) - Design for maximum foreseeable conditions
- Protective devices for extremes
- Primary / secondary / tertiary containment
26Section 12 - Technical Aspects (cont.)
- Need to show what more can be done
- Compliance with applicable codes and standards
represents the minimum (Good Practice) - Rationale for including / excluding additional
risk reduction measures (can take cost / benefit
into consideration) - Asset integrity is the key issue!
- Primary / Secondary / Tertiary Containment
- Linkage to MAH
27Section 13 - Environmental Aspects
- Overlaps with other sections
- Identify Source-Pathway-Receptor (EA like this!)
- Description of installation (containment, ETP
etc.) - Substances
- Hazard identification / Likelihood / Consequences
- Risk Assessment / ALARP Demonstration
- Emergency Response
28Section 14 - Emergency Response
- Should consider mobilisation of resources
- People, i.e. onsite and offsite
- Equipment available, e.g. fire fighting systems,
PPE, containment (air and ground), cleanup, etc. - Maintenance of equipment
- Training and competence
- Provision of information to neighbours
29Improvement Plan
- COMAH does not go away when SR is submitted
- SR preparation will identify areas for
improvement - CA expects an Improvement Plan
- Identify actions in text
- Collate into one document
- Timescales and responsible persons
- SR should be a living document
30Content
- Background
- Who falls under the COMAH Regulations?
- Requirements of Top Tier sites
- Safety Report Structure
- ALARP demonstration
- How do we prevent Major Accidents at Stanlow?
- Assessment and On-going Monitoring
31ALARP Demonstration - Summary
- Hazard Identification
- Risk Assessment of Representative Set of MAH
Scenarios - Consequences (Extent and Severity)
- Likelihood (Risk Reduction Measures)
- Tolerability of Risk
- What more can be done?
- Improvement Plan, or
- If not, why not?
- Cost Benefit Analysis is cost grossly
disproportionate to benefit?
32RISK BOUNDARIES CBA
- Be guided by
- HSEs R2P2 Reducing Risks, Protecting People
- SPC/Permissioning/12
- NB SPC/Permissioning/09 states
- When a number of options for risk reduction exist
all options, or combination of options, that are
reasonably practicable must be implemented. The
legal requirement to reduce risks to as low as is
reasonably practicable rules out HSE accepting a
less protected but significantly cheaper option
33Content
- Background
- Who falls under the COMAH Regulations?
- Requirements of Top Tier sites
- Safety Report Structure
- ALARP demonstration
- How do we prevent Major Accidents at Stanlow?
- Assessment and On-going Monitoring
34Understanding the Process Safety pyramid
Huge Focus on Process Safety
- Were all so familiar with the Personal Safety
pyramid. - The Process Safety pyramid follows the same
concept by focussing on and dealing with
weaknesses at the bottom of the pyramid we reduce
the likelihood of more serious incidents at the
top. - LOPCs are near the top of the process safety
pyramid. - Because of this an LOPC is a lagging
indicator. Its like an amber light - they tell
us something in our processes is failing and
warns us about more serious consequences - If we want to reduce our LOPCs we need to look
downwards in the pyramid to see whats going
wrong
lagging
leading
35Controls in a Bowtie
Barrier Thinking
Threat 1
Consequence 1
Hazard
Top Event LOPC
Threat 2
Consequence 2
Control Barrier
Recovery Barrier
Threat 3
Consequence 3
Relief valve IPF Start up procedure
Deluge High level alarm Emergency response
HSE Critical Activities
Ÿ
Engineering
Maintenance
Ÿ
Ÿ
Operations
36Barrier Thinking for all Staff
LOPCs are causedWhat Barriers do you have
responsibility for ?
API-754 Process safety incidents are rarely
caused by a single catastrophic failure, but
rather by multiple events or failures that
coincide
OPS Compliance with PCDM, operator rounds, ESP
limits proactive monitoring
ENG RCM, RBI, Inspection
TEC/ENG/OPS Management of Change
MNT/OPS Pre-Startup checks
Hazard/ Risk
TFS/OPS Emergency response
MNT Maintenance quality, trip RV systems
testing, maintenance schedule
TEC Design, Operating windows, control
ES Crude acceptance
OPS/MNT/ENG Permit To Work (Process Isolation)
Undesirable outcome
All Learning from Incidents
OCT (Excel)/All Training Skill Development
ENG/FIN (CP) Managing our Contractors
37Content
- Background
- Who falls under the COMAH Regulations?
- Requirements of Top Tier sites
- Safety Report Structure
- ALARP demonstration
- How do we prevent Major Accidents at Stanlow?
- Assessment and On-going Monitoring
38COMAH Safety Reports
- Assessment process
- SRAM (Safety Report Assessment Manual)
- Early predictive screen (HSE EA)
- Detailed assessment by specialist inspectors
- Further information request
- Conclusions letter
- Intervention
39Intervention Visits
- Do we do what we say we do (in our Safety
Report)? - Time spent by the Health Safety Executives
multi-disciplinary visits to Stanlow over the
past year - Q4 2009 246 hours 33 days
- Q1 2010 252 hours 34 days
- Q2 2010 328 hours 44 days
- Q3 2010 298 hours 40 days
- At a cost of 171 per hour!
- We have multi-disciplined resources spending
longer to prepare for and respond to the visits
40HSE Publication L111
Any Questions?