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Risk Analysis and Control for Industrial Processes - Gas, Oil and Chemicals
A System Perspective for Assessing and Avoiding Low-Probability, High-Consequence Events
Make safety a long-term investment against risk
Hans J Pasman (Author)
9780128000571, Elsevier Science
Hardback, published 15 June 2015
458 pages, 150 illustrations
23.4 x 19 x 2.8 cm, 1.18 kg
"...provides an easy-to-read account of some very important and interesting topics that need to be firmly understood when undertaking risk analysis and controls in the major accident hazard industries." --The Chemical Engineer
Risk Analysis and Control for Industrial Processes - Gas, Oil and Chemicals provides an analysis of current approaches for preventing disasters, and gives readers an overview on which methods to adopt. The book covers safety regulations, history and trends, industrial disasters, safety problems, safety tools, and capital and operational costs versus the benefits of safety, all supporting project decision processes. Tools covered include present day array of risk assessment, tools including HAZOP, LOPA and ORA, but also new approaches such as System-Theoretic Process Analysis (STPA), Blended HAZID, applications of Bayesian data analytics, Bayesian networks, and others. The text is supported by valuable examples to help the reader achieve a greater understanding on how to perform safety analysis, identify potential issues, and predict the likelihood they may appear.
1. Industrial processing systems, their products and the hazards2. Regulation to safeguard against high consequence industrial events3. Loss prevention history and developed methods and tools4. Trends in society and characteristics of recent industrial disasters5. Socio-technical systems, systemic safety, resilience engineering and deeper accident analysis6. Human factors, safety culture, management influences, pressures and more7. New and improved process and plant risk and resilience analysis tools8. Extended process control, operator situation awareness, alarm management9. Costs of accidents, costs of safety, risk-based economic decision making: risk management10. Goal oriented versus prescriptive regulation11. The important role of knowledge and learning12. Risk, risk perception, risk communication, risk acceptance: risk governance13. Conclusions: the way ahead
Subject Areas: Engineering: general [TBC]