Abstract

Organized into a global network of critical infrastructures, the oil & gas industry remains to this day the main energy contributor to the world’s economy. Severe accidents occasionally occur resulting in fatalities and disruption. We build an oil & gas accident graph based on more than a thousand severe accidents for the period 1970–2016 recorded for refineries, tankers, and gas networks in the authoritative ENergy-related Severe Accident Database (ENSAD). We explore the distribution of potential chains-of-events leading to severe accidents by combining graph theory, Markov analysis and catastrophe dynamics. Using centrality measures, we first verify that human error is consistently the main source of accidents and that explosion, fire, toxic release, and element rupture are the principal sinks, but also the main catalysts for accident amplification. Second, we quantify the space of possible chains-of-events using the concept of fundamental matrix and rank them by defining a likelihood-based importance measure γ. We find that chains of up to five events can play a significant role in severe accidents, consisting of feedback loops of the aforementioned events but also of secondary events not directly identifiable from graph topology and yet participating in the most likely chains-of-events.

Highlights

  • Global affairs have become increasingly complex, with intertwined networks known to be vulnerable to cascading failures [1, 2]

  • Severe accidents in the oil & gas energy sector derived from the ENergy-related severe accident database

  • Due to the complexity of the critical infrastructures involved, those accidents generally result from complex chains-of-events

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Summary

Introduction

Global affairs have become increasingly complex, with intertwined networks known to be vulnerable to cascading failures [1, 2]. Triggers can be natural perils, such as earthquakes, cyclones, or floods [3, 4], or anthropogenic in nature, such as events related to global warming [5]. Of all existing lifeline networks, energy flows (especially of the oil & gas sector) are the most critical for the good functioning of our modern society. Severe accidents in the oil & gas energy sector derived from the ENergy-related severe accident database. Singapore-ETH Centre (SEC), which was established collaboratively between ETH Zurich and Singapore’s National Research Foundation (FI 370074011) under its Campus for Research Excellence and Technological Enterprise programme

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