Analysis of Critical Risk Factors in Five Iconic Major Accidents in Petroleum and Chemical Industries
Emeka Maduabuchi *
Center for Occupational Health, Safety and Environment, University of Port Harcourt, Nigeria.
John N. Ugbebor
Center for Occupational Health, Safety and Environment, University of Port Harcourt, Nigeria.
Gogomari I. Oyet
Center for Occupational Health, Safety and Environment, University of Port Harcourt, Nigeria.
*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Abstract
This study determined the critical risk factors that influence the risk of major accidents in petroleum and chemical industries. The retrospective study assessed five iconic accidents using the tripod beta analysis methodology. Literatures on five iconic accidents were reviewed, and the immediate causes of the accidents, preconditions and latent failures were analysed using a focused group of process safety professionals. These failures were aggregated into critical risk factors for these major accidents. The findings of this study revealed empirically that there are broadly five critical risk factors that influence the risk of major accidents: (i) design flaws, (ii) site process safety management, (iii) barrier management / control, (iv) operating procedures, and (v) process safety culture. These findings highlight that major accident risks can accumulate “dangerous” from the impairment of safety-critical barriers and that the operators of petroleum and chemical facilities may be blind-sided to the cumulative risk of the impairments. The findings also highlight the need for a proactive risk assessment tool with the capability to check the health of safety-critical barriers on a real time basis, in an operating plant. The use of Tripod Beta as a tool in accident causation analysis is recommended.
Keywords: Petroleum and chemical industries, critical risk factors, major accidents