Abstract

OCI Nitrogen, one of Europe’s largest fertilizer producers, is investigating the extent to which it is possible to take targeted measures at an early stage and stop the development of major hazard accident processes. An innovative model has been developed and recently explained and elaborated in a number of publications. This current paper contains a validation of the model by looking at the BP Texas City incident in 2005. The bowtie metaphor is used to visually present the BP Texas City refinery incident, showing the barrier system from different perspectives. Not only is the barrier system looked at from its trustworthiness on the day of the incident but also from the perspective of the control room operator, and from a design to current standards of best practice. The risk reductions of these different views are calculated and compared to their original design. In addition, evidence and findings from the investigations have been categorized as flaws and allocated to nine organizational factors. These flaws may affect the barrier system’s quality or trustworthiness, or may act as ‘accident pathogens’ (see also Reason, 1990) creating latent, dangerous conditions. This paper sheds new light on the monitoring of accident processes and the barrier management to control them, and demonstrates that the BP Texas City refinery incident could have been foreseen using preventive barrier indicators and monitoring organizational factors.

Highlights

  • OCI Nitrogen, one of Europe’s largest fertilizer producers, faced several serious process safety related incidents in the period 2015 – 2020

  • The analysis can be used to update the risk profile in real-time, but can be used to remove the vulnerabilities, optimize the current safety barrier system, and improve the design of new safety barrier systems. This validation is based on a method which is described in two papers, one related to preventive barrier indicators (Schmitz et al, 2021b), and one regarding organizational factors (Schmitz et al, 2021c)

  • The concept of the relative risk reduction looks at the barrier status on the day of the incident, and secondly, the organizational factors look at system failures as part of the on-site culture which may have been present for many years

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Summary

Introduction

OCI Nitrogen, one of Europe’s largest fertilizer producers, faced several serious process safety related incidents in the period 2015 – 2020. The underlying aim of the internal investigation is to be able to take targeted measures at an early stage and stop the development of major accident processes. This paper offers a validation of the model by looking in retrospect at a major hazard accident, the 2005 BP Texas city incident, using two papers in particular: Schmitz et al (2021b,c) regarding preventive barrier indicators, and organizational factors respectively. It answers the following research question: To what extent could the BP Texas City refinery incident have been foreseen using preventive barrier indicators and monitoring organizational factors?

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