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PSM Covered Chemical Facilities National Emphasis Program

PSM Covered Chemical Facilities National Emphasis Program. PROCESS SAFETY MANAGEMENT. Purpose Prevention or minimization of the consequences of catastrophic releases of toxic, reactive, flammable, or explosive chemicals. PSM NATIONAL EMPHASIS PROGRAM. PSM Refinery NEP

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PSM Covered Chemical Facilities National Emphasis Program

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  1. PSM Covered Chemical Facilities National Emphasis Program

  2. PROCESS SAFETY MANAGEMENT Purpose Prevention or minimization of the consequences of catastrophic releases of toxic, reactive, flammable, or explosive chemicals

  3. PSM NATIONAL EMPHASIS PROGRAM PSM Refinery NEP • OSHA initiated the Refinery NEP in 2007 to address catastrophic releases of highly hazardous chemicals at refineries (SIC 2911) • Region VI has conducted 17 refinery NEP inspections • Region VI will conduct an additional 15 refinery NEP inspections over the next two years.

  4. Pilot Chemical NEP • Pilot National Emphasis Program (NEP) to reduce or eliminate the workplace hazards associated with the catastrophic release of highly hazardous chemicals. • Programmed inspections will take place in Regions I, VII and X. • Unprogrammed inspections OSHA-wide. • Pilot program will be effective for one year.

  5. PSM STANDARD (1910.119) Application • A process which involves a chemical at or above the specified threshold quantities listed in Appendix A (136) • A process which involves a flammable liquid or gas (defined in 1910.1200(c)) on site in one location, in a quantity of 10,000 pounds (4535.9 kg) or more (with some exceptions).

  6. PSM STANDARD • Process Safety Information (PSI) • Process Hazard Analysis (PHA) • Operating Procedures • Pre-startup Safety Review • Mechanical integrity

  7. PSM STANDARD • Contractor Evaluation/Performance • Management of change • Incident investigation • Emergency planning and response • Compliance Audits

  8. NEP Targeting Sources • OSHA will use four sources for targeting • U.S. EPA Chemical Accident Prevention Provisions, RMP 3 • Explosives manufacturing NAICS codes • OSHA’s IMIS database • OSHA Area Office knowledge of local facilities.

  9. SITE SELECTION • Regions I, VII and X will conduct programmed (target list) NEP inspections • Region VI Site Specific Targeting (SST) Plan inspections • Region VI Unprogrammed Inspections Complaints, Referrals, Accidents and Catastrophes

  10. AMMONIA and CHLORINE

  11. Chemical NEP Inspection Plan • OSHA will select one or more units and use a dynamic list of questions to review compliance. • OSHA will not publicly disclose the dynamic lists • OSHA will develop dynamic lists in 5 categories: PSM General, Ammonia Refrigeration, Storage, Water and/or Wastewater Treatment, and Chemical Processing. • Inspection emphasis on implementation over documentation.

  12. Chemical NEP Inspection Plan • OSHA to inspect host and contract employers • Contractors (including subcontractors) working on or adjacent to the Selected Unit • OSHA will use the applicable questions in the dynamic list to evaluate contractor compliance • Includes construction contractors working on or adjacent to the Selected Unit(s)

  13. Selection of Unit • OSHA shall select a PSM-covered process(es) • For large continuous processes, OSHA may select a portion of the covered process (the Selected Unit(s)) • Selection will be based on factors such as: • Risk of releasing flammables and toxic substances • Operating pressures/temperatures • Quantity of chemicals present • Incident reports and other history • Age of the process unit • Employee representative input

  14. Chemical NEP Outreach • The OSHA Training Institute will develop chemical plant PSM information and training materials. • OSHA to develop outreach programs that will support their enforcement efforts. • Outreach products and activities include: letters and news releases, seminars on chemical plant process safety topics, coordination with OSHA’s cooperative program participants, including Voluntary Protection Programs, Strategic Partnership, and Alliance. • OSHA will disseminate agency compliance assistance resources as well as work with Alliance Program participants to develop and disseminate additional resources to support Agency efforts.

  15. NANOTECHNOLOGY • Nanotechnology is the understanding, manipulation, and control of matter at dimensions of roughly 1 to 100 nanometers, • Nanomaterials are materials that have been purposefully manufactured, synthesized, or manipulated to have a size with at least one dimension in the range of approximately 1 to 100 nanometers and that exhibit unique properties determined by their size.

  16. NANOPARTICLE USES • Nanoscale structures have the potential to revolutionize electronics, medicine, and consumer products • Sunscreens and cosmetics; • Longer-lasting tennis balls/light-weight, stronger tennis racquets; • Stain-free clothing and mattresses; • Polymer films used in displays for laptops, cell phones, digital cameras; • Coatings for easier cleaning glass; • Bumpers and catalytic converters on cars • Protective/glare-reducing coatings for glasses and cars.

  17. RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT • NIOSH is the leading federal agency providing guidance and conducting research on the occupational safety and health implications. • NIST • AIHA Nanotechnology Working Group • EPA, Consortiums, NCI, Colleges, International

  18. OSHA General Duty Clause • Section 5(a)(1) of the Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970 (29 U.S.C. 654), often referred to as the General Duty Clause, requires employers to "furnish to each of his employees employment and a place of employment which are free from recognized hazards that are causing or are likely to cause death or serious physical harm to his employees."

  19. OSHA STANDARDS Standards that Apply • 1910.132, Personal protective equipment, general requirements • 1910.134, Respiratory protection • 1910.1200, Hazard communication • 1910.1450, Occupational exposure to hazardous chemicals in laboratories

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