Wednesday, 13 January 2016
Friday, 9 October 2015
Process Piping & Pipelines System
One
of the most important components of the infrastructure in the
industrialized world is the vast network of pipelines and process
piping—literally millions and millions of miles. The term “pipelines”
generally refers to the network of pipelines that transport water,
sewage, steam, and gaseous and liquid hydrocarbons from sources (e.g.,
reservoirs, steam plants, oil and gas wells, refineries) to local
distribution centers (“transmission pipelines”), and to the network of
pipelines that distribute such products to local markets and end users
(“distribution” pipelines). The term “process piping” generally refers
to the system of pipes that transport process fluids (e.g., air, steam,
water, industrial gases, fuels, chemicals) around an industrial facility
involved in the manufacture of products or in the generation of power.
Pipelines and process piping are generally made of steel, cast iron,
copper, or specialty metals in certain highly aggressive environments,
but the use of plastic materials is growing, especially in
hydrocarbon-based distribution lines and in sewer lines. Very
large-diameter water transmission lines are often made of reinforced
concrete.
The most common method of joining the individual segments of pipe is by welding (or soldering in the case of copper, and gluing in the case of plastics), although bolted flanges or threaded connections are often used in smaller-diameter process piping. In low-pressure piping systems that transport non-hazardous fluids like water and sewage, mechanical joints (e.g., “ball and spigot,” compression) that rely on friction are commonly used. Pipelines and piping are usually constructed and maintained in accordance with national and local regulations and applicable industry standards. For example, the most commonly used industrial code for the transport of liquids is ASME B31.4. B31.8 is most commonly used for the transmission and distribution of gas, and ASME B31.3 most often applies to process piping. Once assembled, pipelines are usually buried, but process piping is usually above ground.
Pipelines and process piping are the safest means to transport gases and fluids across countries or across manufacturing facilities. However, given the extensive network of pipelines and piping, failures do occur, which can be quite spectacular and lead to extensive property damage and loss of life. Given their potential impact, it is important to investigate the cause(s) of such failures, which often involve input from many different engineering and scientific disciplines. As such, Exponent, with its broad range of skill sets, is uniquely positioned to investigate such failures, and has done so on hundreds of occasions, ranging from quarter-inch process tubing to 20-ft-diameter concrete water distribution pipelines.
Equally important, of course, is the prevention of pipeline and piping failures. Our scientists and engineers provide in-depth technical knowledge that has enabled us to make significant contributions to clients during the design, layout, and construction of pipelines and piping systems, and in the development and implementation of integrity and risk management programs. Exponent staff has brought their expertise to bear on preventive projects ranging in scope from reviewing the design and construction of the process piping at petrochemical plants to overall integrity reviews of long-distance oil and gas transmission pipeline systems.
Clients that have utilized Exponent’s pipeline and process piping expertise have included Fortune 500 manufacturing and petrochemical companies, utilities, pipeline companies, insurers, and capital project lending organizations.
The most common method of joining the individual segments of pipe is by welding (or soldering in the case of copper, and gluing in the case of plastics), although bolted flanges or threaded connections are often used in smaller-diameter process piping. In low-pressure piping systems that transport non-hazardous fluids like water and sewage, mechanical joints (e.g., “ball and spigot,” compression) that rely on friction are commonly used. Pipelines and piping are usually constructed and maintained in accordance with national and local regulations and applicable industry standards. For example, the most commonly used industrial code for the transport of liquids is ASME B31.4. B31.8 is most commonly used for the transmission and distribution of gas, and ASME B31.3 most often applies to process piping. Once assembled, pipelines are usually buried, but process piping is usually above ground.
Pipelines and process piping are the safest means to transport gases and fluids across countries or across manufacturing facilities. However, given the extensive network of pipelines and piping, failures do occur, which can be quite spectacular and lead to extensive property damage and loss of life. Given their potential impact, it is important to investigate the cause(s) of such failures, which often involve input from many different engineering and scientific disciplines. As such, Exponent, with its broad range of skill sets, is uniquely positioned to investigate such failures, and has done so on hundreds of occasions, ranging from quarter-inch process tubing to 20-ft-diameter concrete water distribution pipelines.
Equally important, of course, is the prevention of pipeline and piping failures. Our scientists and engineers provide in-depth technical knowledge that has enabled us to make significant contributions to clients during the design, layout, and construction of pipelines and piping systems, and in the development and implementation of integrity and risk management programs. Exponent staff has brought their expertise to bear on preventive projects ranging in scope from reviewing the design and construction of the process piping at petrochemical plants to overall integrity reviews of long-distance oil and gas transmission pipeline systems.
Clients that have utilized Exponent’s pipeline and process piping expertise have included Fortune 500 manufacturing and petrochemical companies, utilities, pipeline companies, insurers, and capital project lending organizations.
Analysis Pipeline Failure
Applied Technical Services performs
metallurgical pipe failure analysis and corrosion testing. Our
capabilities include root cause determination of component and material
failures incorporating analysis of engineering problems and
specifications.
Our assessment services include evaluating various process and water
pipe failures manufactured from steel pipe, PVC pipe, copper pipe,
ABS pipe, CPVC pipe, HDPE pipe, polyethylene pipe, cast iron pipe and
Kitec pipe. We perform scanning electron microscopy (SEM);
microstructural analysis; optical metallography; mechanical property
analysis; and scale and corrosion deposit analysis.
Our procedures assess, investigate and test engineered materials to
identify the causes of failure events. In addition to problem solving,
ATS assists in removing the root cause by systematically reviewing the
components and processes that led to failure. Our pipe failure analysis
material engineers reconstruct incidents, collect and analyze critical
data for detailed analysis and reporting.
Our goal is to provide thorough pipe failure analysis results in
compliance with industry standards by delivering economical and
technologically advanced solutions.
Failure theories provide techniques to calculate stresses, and damage
mechanisms describe material failures due to those stresses. Code
techniques provide safe, conservative rules for initial pipe design, but
the analysis of pipe failures requires added understanding of failure
theories, plastic deformation, fatigue cracks, and crack growth after
initial fracture.
Types of Pipe Failure Analysis:
- Pipeline Failure Analysis
- PVC Pipe Failure
- Copper Pipe Failure
- Water Pipe Failure
- ABS Pipe Failure
- CPVC Pipe Failure
- HDPE Pipe Failure
- Polyethylene Pipe Failure
- Cast Iron Pipe Failure
- KITEC Pipe Failure
Friday, 2 October 2015
Mechanical Failure Analysis
ATS’ mechanical failure analysis team is
dedicated to helping individuals, corporations and manufacturers
identify the root causes of component and system failures. Our
technically advanced labs enable our experts to perform accurate and
efficient tests, incorporated in precise and detailed reports. With
years of experience, our professionals perform daily inspections on a
wide variety of mechanical failures which may include common fatigue and
overstress failures to and unique failures.
Our services are prevalent among the automotive, aerospace, nuclear,
manufacturing and military industries. Testing is performed per industry
standards, including ASTM E2332, ASTM E3, ASTM E18, ASTM E384, ASTM
E112, ASTM E10, ASTM A247, ASTM B487, ASTM B748, equivalent ISO
standards, and applicable specialized procedures.
Tests Include:
- Optical Factography
- Scanning Electron Microscopy
- Energy Dispersive Spectoroscopy (EDS)
- Impact Testing
- Tensile Testing
- Shear Testing
- Torsion Testing
- Pressure Testing
- Hardness Testing
Results May Reveal Mechanical Failures Due To:
- Ductility Issues
- Brittle Products and Components
- Fatigue
- Overload
- Environmental Effects
- Manufacturing Defects
- Contamination
- Corrosion
Wednesday, 30 September 2015
Onshore & Offshore Structures & Systems
Onshore Structures and Systems
Exponent
is actively involved in providing risk assessment services for owners
and operators of onshore petrochemical process facilities. These
assessments focus on naturally occurring hazards such as hurricanes and
earthquakes, and also on man-made hazards like vapor-cloud explosions.
The scope of services provided by Exponent includes probabilistic and
deterministic hazard definitions, onsite inspections, structural and
material load and stress analyses using advanced modeling tools,
vulnerability determinations, probable maximum loss estimations for
property and business, and mitigation planning. The broad range of
expertise among our staff enables us to conduct such assessments in a
thorough and timely manner. The benefits of our multidisciplinary
approach include better understanding of employee exposures to
potentially hazardous situations, improved knowledge of asset
vulnerabilities, identification of opportunities for cost-effective
mitigation measures to reduce potential losses, and more thorough
assessment of loss exposures from an insurance perspective.
Offshore Structures and Systems
Exponent
can assist offshore oil and gas operators with determination of load
capacities and performance levels for a range of fixed and floating
production or storage systems. These services include using advanced
modeling tools to conduct structural analyses of platform systems or
components, from caisson wellheads to drilling derricks, in accordance
with the latest American Petroleum Institute best practices and
specifications. Our analytical expertise and capabilities also include
pipelines and well completion (casing and tubing). We have extensive
expertise in materials testing, modeling, and thermal load analysis,
which are important considerations when dealing with the extreme
operating environments often encountered by oil and gas operators.
Several of Exponent’s senior technical staff have previous work
experience with major energy companies, and therefore are familiar with
the needs and challenges faced by the offshore industry.
Sunday, 20 September 2015
Petrochemical Industry
Chemical process accidents are often the result of unexpected interaction between automated process equipment and operators. In the drive to improve safety and reliability, chemical process facilities tend to rely heavily on automation using sophisticated instrumentation, computers, and programmable logic controllers to run their plants. In an effort to improve energy efficiency and reduce pollution, various pieces of equipment are interconnected in ways that complicate their operation. Equipment failures or operator errors can lead to sudden and unexpected changes in the plant operation. If these disruptions to normal process operation exceed the capabilities of the operators or the capacity of the safety systems, a severe accident can occur, potentially producing a devastating fire, explosion, or toxic release.
The
petrochemical process industries represent a significant contribution
to the world economy. Companies in this industry produce a wide variety
of products, including ethylene, vinyl chloride, styrene monomer,
propylene, benzene, toluene, and xylene, which are the raw materials for
many plastics. Producing these chemicals involves handling hazardous
materials and managing large amounts of energy. Because of these
conditions, when something goes wrong at a petrochemical processing
facility, it can have catastrophic consequences.
With
more than 40 years of experience analyzing thousands of failures,
Exponent is a leader in loss investigation, including material failures,
fires, and explosions. These investigations range from high-loss
disasters to small incidents for major national and international oil
refiners. This experience provides Exponent engineers and scientists
unique insights in addressing various risk and reliability issues and
assessing environmental and health impacts, to help our clients increase
the safety of their personnel, processes, and facilities and minimize
operational disruptions and property loss. Additionally, our expertise
in risk assessment, release characterization, dispersion modeling, vapor
cloud explosion analysis, industrial hygiene, toxicology, and
epidemiology allows us to comprehensively examine the consequences of
both hypothetical and actual releases of toxic and flammable substances.
Exponent has a wide range of in-house expertise that integrates the
latest process, safety, risk, and environmental developments into our
work. As a result, we can address everything from small, focused
analyses to complex, multi-disciplinary projects. The capabilities of
our experts allow Exponent to offer the following services:
- Accident and incident investigation
- Root-cause analysis (RCA)
- Fire and explosion analysis
- Fire protection engineering
- Fitness-for-service evaluation
- Specification, corrosion control, and failure analysis of materials
- Evaluation of pressure relief systems, vessels, and piping
- Analysis of atmospheric releases, spills, and environmental fate
- Groundwater and soil remediation support
- Compliance with standards and regulations
- Risk and reliability analysis and quantitative risk assessment
- Process hazards analysis (PHA)
- Hazard and operability analysis (HAZOP)
- Failure modes and effects analysis (FMEA)
- Review of process safety management (PSM) and risk management program (RMP)
- Safety and health training
- Environmental impact and baseline assessments
- Site security and vulnerability analysis
- Site investigation and remediation
- Hydrology and groundwater monitoring
- Project management, performance, scheduling, and construction delay analysis
Further,
Exponent is actively involved in providing risk assessment services for
owners and operators of onshore petrochemical process facilities. These
assessments focus on naturally occurring hazards such as hurricanes and
earthquakes, and also on man-made hazards such as vapor cloud
explosions. The scope of services provided by Exponent includes
probabilistic and deterministic hazard definitions, onsite inspections,
structural and material load and stress analyses using advance modeling
tools, vulnerability determinations, probable maximum loss estimations
for property and business, and mitigation planning. The broad range of
expertise among various Exponent practices enables us to offer clients
the skills necessary to conduct such assessments in a thorough and
timely manner. The benefits include better understanding of employee
exposures to potentially hazardous situations, current knowledge of
asset vulnerabilities, identification of opportunities for
cost-effective mitigation measures to reduce potential losses, and
better knowledge of loss exposures from an insurance perspective.
Exponent engineers and scientists regularly publish in leading
technical journals, present at conferences, serve on National Fire
Protection Association (NFPA) and American Society for Testing and
Materials (ASTM) technical committees, chair American Institute of
Chemical Engineers (AIChE) conference sessions, and provide peer review
for journals such as Process Safety Progress, Journal of Petroleum Science & Engineering (JPSE), and Journal of Loss Prevention in the Process Industries (JLPPI).
Sunday, 30 August 2015
Oil and gas exploration, and production life cycle
Oil and gas exploration, and production life cycle
Cairn looks to create, add and realise value for
stakeholders, but not at the expense of the safety and well-being of
people and the environment. We manage the risks associated with our
business responsibly for all our activities and wherever we operate.
This means, we aim to behave professionally in our dealings with people
and within the environment from the very start of any project or
activity.
The oil and gas business is, by nature, long-term and our approach
covers every stage of the oil and gas life-cycle and is outlined below.
1. Due diligence
Before making an acquisition or investment, applying for an
exploration licence or farming-in to an existing project, Cairn carries
out an extensive risk-screening process which includes assessing whether
there are potential health and safety, social, human rights, political,
corruption, security or environmental impacts. This is used in
decision-making on whether or not to proceed and if investment goes
ahead it informs approaches to risk management going forward.
In 2014 we conducted due diligence on farm-in opportunities including
the Mesana blocks in Spain. We farmed-in to the PL420 block and
drilling project operated by Statoil in the Norwegian sector of the
North Sea. We also farmed out of UK sector blocks P2040 and P2086,
reducing our interests south of Catcher.
2. Prequalification
When we apply for an exploration licence, the necessary documents are
submitted to the relevant authorities. Typically this includes
information about our legal status, financial capability, technical
competence and plans to manage health, safety and environmental risks,
and contributions to local economic development.
In 2014 Cairn participated in the 23rd licensing round in the Barents Sea, Norway.
3. Exploration seismic
Once Cairn has been awarded the right to explore in a certain area,
we may carry out seismic surveys to develop a picture of geological
structures below the surface. This helps identify the likelihood of an
area containing hydrocarbons. Seismic surveys are usually preceded by an
assessment of environmental, social and human rights impacts, which are
managed through the Project Delivery Process (PDP).
During 2014 Cairn successfully completed seismic surveys offshore the
Republic of Ireland and Malta. As non-operator, we also participated in
seismic operations offshore Western Sahara. Application for seismic
surveys is pending offshore the Gulf of Valencia.
4. Site survey
Before commencing any drilling activity, site surveys are carried out
to gain more detailed information on the area where an exploration well
may be drilled, and to confirm that the selected drilling location is
safe and that any sensitive environments can be avoided.
The process normally involves taking geological samples from the
seabed and carrying out shallow seismic surveys. These activities have
low social and environmental impacts and therefore usually do not
require a separate Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) or Social Impact Assessment (SIA).
Pre- and post-drilling surveys were completed for wells offshore Senegal and following drilling offshore Morocco.
5. Exploration drilling
Exploration wells are drilled to determine whether oil or gas is
present. This phase can be accompanied by a step-change in activity and
visibility to local people as offshore exploration can involve a
drilling rig, supply vessels and helicopters for transporting personnel.
Exploration drilling is preceded by an assessment to understand
potential health, safety, environmental, social, security and human
rights impacts. These assessments identify appropriate steps to reduce
impacts, manage risks and assist in operating responsibly. Limited
community development programmes may also be put into place at this time
depending on the nature of the programme.
In 2014 we continued our exploration drilling campaign offshore
Morocco, and initiated and completed an exploration drilling campaign
offshore Senegal. We were also involved, as non-operator, in exploration
drilling in the UK and Norwegian North Sea. Drilling in the Cap
Boujdour block, offshore Western Sahara, commenced in December 2014.
6. Appraisal drilling
If promising amounts of oil and gas are confirmed during the
exploration phase, field appraisal is used to establish the size and
characteristics of the discovery and to provide technical information to
determine the optimum method for recovery of the oil and gas. The
potential social and environmental impacts associated with appraisal
drilling are comparable to exploration drilling, and similar assessments
are carried out in advance.
Due to the delay in refurbishment of the Blackford Dolphin rig, the
proposed Spanish Point appraisal well, offshore Republic of Ireland,
could not be drilled in 2014 during the safe weather window and was
therefore postponed. Plans are well advanced to drill this well, subject
to the necessary approvals. Preparation for anticipated appraisal
drilling in Senegal is also underway.
7. Development
If appraisal wells show technically and commercially viable
quantities of oil and gas, a development plan is prepared and submitted
to the relevant authorities for approval. This includes a rigorous
assessment of all the potential risks and a long-term assessment of
environmental and social impacts covering a timeframe of between 10 and
30 years. The plan will also detail projected benefits to local
communities, for example employment and supplier opportunities, as well
as proposing how to manage potential impacts such as an influx of
workers from outside the local community. At this stage good design is
important to remove and mitigate risks to an acceptable level as well as
managing construction and installation in a manner to likewise minimise
impacts.
We are participating as non-operator in two development projects, the Kraken and Catcher fields, in the UK North Sea.
8. Production
A variety of options are available for the production of oil and gas.
During this phase, which can last many decades, regular reviews are
made of social and environmental performance to ensure that impacts
identified in the assessments are mitigated. Changes in the risks
associated with activities are assessed throughout the production
period. Safe operations remain an ongoing requirement at this stage,
which means personnel are competent and good HSE behaviours are in place
and equipment is properly maintained and operated.
We currently have no operated production, but historically had
significant production through our Indian business, Cairn India Limited
(CIL), which we subsequently exited. Our involvement in exploration, and
latterly production in India, brought social and economic development
to a number of regions.
We anticipate production from our non-operated Catcher and Kraken fields from 2016/2017.
9. Decommissioning
This phase occurs when hydrocarbons can no longer be extracted safely
or economically at the end of any field life-cycle. Decommissioning
consists of closing operations in a manner that protects people and the
environment and to avoid unacceptable legacy issues for local
stakeholders and the Company. We are not engaged in any decommissioning
activities at this time.
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