Offshore inspections prompt alert on out-of-service safety equipment

Washington — Inspections of various offshore facilities recently conducted by the Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement identified a lack of proper documentation and tagging of temporarily out-of-service safety devices.

In a recently issued safety alert, BSEE says the “multiple incidents of noncompliance” were related to agency rules on platforms and time delays on pressure safety low sensors. 

A performance-based risk assessment found that although “multiple facilities and operators had internal policies to flag/tag temporarily out-of-service safety devices and track bypasses,” the facilities weren’t adequately documenting them.

- Digital Partners -

Additionally, BSEE reports that the data historian – a software application that analyzes data and provides histories for alarms, control actions and other operational events – wasn’t functional at several of the facilities.

The agency calls on operators to document “all authorized safety system bypasses, inhibits or overrides” in logs. Facilities should create a written process if data historians aren’t operational.

Other recommendations:

  • Document any changes to the ladder logic needed for construction and ensure these changes are reverted before the project’s completion.
  • Evaluate the offshore data historian and determine if it can record and store electronic data records when operator interventions occur.
  • Ensure a computer-based system’s human-machine interface can display all bypassed safety devices and operational conditions.
  • Develop systems to verify compliance with safety system bypass procedures.
- Digital Partners -

Next Webinar

Current Issue

What's Trending

From our Partners

Earn recertification points

Board of Certified Safety Professionals

Take a quiz about this issue of the magazine and earn recertification points from the Board of Certified Safety Professionals.