2 - 6 Mar 2025
Cairo (Egypt)
Hotel : Holiday Inn & Suites Cairo Maadi, an IHG Hotel
Cost : 3575 € Euro
The ease of creating Distributed Control Systems (DCS) alarms has led to excessive and ineffective alarm monitoring. Poor alarm management, lack of policy, and human factors can result in ignored or missed critical alarms, increasing risks. This seminar focuses on improving alarm management by teaching concepts, performance assessment techniques, operator readiness evaluation, and strategies to enhance plant safety and performance.
Alarm Management will provide you with a collection of techniques, tools, standards, and procedures that will improve operations and overall effectiveness
Business Case Tools: Understand the costs of poor alarm performance or not implementing an alarm management philosophy by reviewing sample business case studies
Best Practice Alarm Management Strategies: Quickly and effectively integrate alarm management strategies by examining successful, working solutions
Alarm Management Performance: Understand the number of ways of measuring the performance of an alarm system and its users
Ensuring that Emergency Response systems are in place so if/when the system does fail the response can be efficient and effective
Delegates will be encouraged to fully participate in this non-technical program through the use of syndicate workshops and presentations, group discussions, and questionnaires. A hard-copy manual (and CD), PowerPoint slides, relevant DVD material, handouts, and case-studies will be fully utilized
Configured and correctly enforced, alarms need to be set at the right operating conditions
Identify possible causes for the alarm whether it’s legitimate (providing the information), spurious (misleading or a nuisance) or redundant (telling the operator something he already knows)
Such conditions will be a major tool allowing process operators to rapidly identify escalating abnormal situations and take action to recover
Avoid abnormal situations that can quickly lead to personnel danger, environmental issues, commercial loss and a damaged reputation.
DAY 1
Introduction, aims, and objectives of the course. Key Issues:
Guidance document EEMUA 191
Basic Alarm Management philosophy, what does it include?
5 Justifications for Alarm Management
Alarm Management, all plants need it!
Project Plan Outline – not a one-off project!
Benchmark & Assessment
Alarm Management Philosophy
Alarm analysis/rationalization
Implementation and execution
Continuous Improvement
Functional definitions of systems
Case Study – Milford Haven Texaco Refinery, 1994
DAY 2
Principles of an Alarm Management Programme
Managing an improvement program – who should be involved?
Personal and Team targets
Alarm proliferation
Alarm review and control of modifications
Increased hazards, use of alarms, control, and protection
Major commercial hazards will involve risks to people and the environment
Strategy and / or Culture of Improvement
Operator involvement and ‘no-blame’ reporting
Integrating Alarm Management to boost Plant Production
Case Study and DVD - Piper Alpha
DAY 3
Measuring Performance along with Human Factors
Alarms need people – human factor issues human Factors – International Standard IEC61508
Operator questionnaires, Improving operator procedures
Dealing with unwanted alarms
Logical processing of alarms
Case Histories – some examples of loss
Potential conflicts between various business needs
Case Study and DVD – Bhopal, India. Union Carbide (Dow Chemicals)
DAY 4
Legislation and Self Evaluation
Operator Interface. “Are there problems with your existing alarm system”? Take some measurements to find out - How many alarms are there? Are you overwhelmed by alarm ‘floods’?
Management Responsibilities – Legislation
Physical Assessment Trees
Learning from sample business cases studies
Is your organization prepared? Self Evaluating Activity and questionnaires
The Alerting process; Communications and Warnings
Equipping and identifying Emergency Operations/Communications Centres
Stress Levels of Control Room Operators & Emergency Responders
BP Case Studies – Texas 2005, Alaska 2006 & Gulf of Mexico 2010
DAY 5
Should the system catastrophically fail and a Major Incident follows:
Departmental Roles & Responsibilities
Role of First responders - Emergency Response Teams
Role of the Incident On-Scene Commander
Shelter or Evacuation workshop
Designing drills and exercises