Safety and Loss Prevention

Hazards 14

10-12 Nov 1998

(Published as IChemE Symposium series no. 144).

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1. The Control of Major Accident Hazards Regulations 1999

G. MacDonald and L. Varney

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2. The Regulators Approach to Assessing COMAH Safety Reports

T. J. Britton

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3. The Assessment of Technical Aspects of COMAH Safety Reports

R. F. Evans

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4. Assessment of COMAH safety reports: Emergency responses criteria

K. K. McDonald

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5. Safety Management System Assessment Criteria

Dr. David Snowball

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6. Assessment of the Predictive Aspects of COMAH Safety Reports

Dr. Shaun Welsh

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7. Industry Experience from the Pilot Exercise

Ian Hamilton

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8. Meeting the demands of the regulator and litigator: An internal approach

E. Blackmore

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9. Safety Implications of Self-Managed Teams

Ronny Lardner

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10. The impact of the new Seveso II (COMAH) regulations on industry

J. C. Ansell, J. Mullins and R. Voke

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11. The accident database: Capturing corporate memory

M. Powell-Price, J. Bond and B. Mellin

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12. Operational safety reviews

J. K. Broadbent and T. O. Donoghue

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13. Carman: A Systematic Approach to Risk Reduction by Improving Compliance to Procedures

David Embrey

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14. A methodology for assessing and minimising the risks associated with firewater run-off on older manufacturing plants

C. J. Beale

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15. More Effective Permit-to-Work Systems

R. E. Iliffe, P. W .H. Chung and T. A. Kletz

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16. A Qualitative Approach to Criticality in the Allocation of Maintenance Priorities to Manufacturing Plant

C. J. Atkinson

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17. European State-Of-The-Art Research: Integrating Technical and Management/Organisational Factors in Major Hazard Risk Assesment

Martin Anderson

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18. Design for Safety Applying IEC 6-1508

S. De Vries, M. Van den Schoor and R. Bours

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19. Thesis: The Health Environment and Safety Information System - Keeping the Management System 'Live' and Reaching the Workforce.

A. Lidstone

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20. Safety issues and the year 2000

R. Storey

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21. Information technology and training in safety

D. Fernando

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22. The Sensitivity of Risk Assessment of Flash Fire Events to Modelling Assumptions

P. J. Rew and H. Spencer

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23. Turbulent-Reynolds-Number and Turbulent-Flame-Quenching Influences on Explosion Severity with Implications for Explosion Scaling

C. L. Gardner, H. Phylaktou and G. E. Andrews

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24. Evaluation of CFD Modelling of Gas Dispersion Near Buildings and Complex Terrain

R. C. Hall

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26. VOC Abatement and Vent Collection Systems

Peter J. Hunt

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27. The Dangers of Grating Floors: Dispersion and Explosion

A. E. Holdo, Dr. G. Munday and D. B. Spalding

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28. Suppression of High Violence Dust Explosions Using Non-Pressurised Systems

Steve Cooper and Paul Cooke

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29. Managing Hazards and Risk in Fine Chemical and Peroxygen Operations

P. G. Lambert, J. Phillips and R. J. Ward

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30. Understanding Vinyl Acetate Polymerization Accidents

J. L. Gustin and F. Laganier

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31. A Methodological Approach to Process Intensification

M. Wood and A. Green

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32. Criteria for Autoignition of Combustible Fluids in Insulation Materials

J. Brindley, F. Griffiths, N Hafiz, A. C. McIntosh and J Zhang

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33. Assessment of the Thermal and Toxic Effects of Chemical and Pesticide Pool Fires Based on Experimental Data Obtained using the Tewarson Apparatus

Christian Costa, Guy Treand and Jean-Louis Gustin

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34. Top level risk study – A cost effective quantified risk assessment

R. I. Facer, J. A. S. Ashurst and K. A. Lee

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35. Application of Case-Based Reasoning to Safety Evaluation of Process Configuration

A. M. Heikkila, T. Koiranen and M. Hurme

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36. Index Method for Cost-Effective Assessment of Risk to the Environment from Accidental Releases

A. J. Wilday, M. W. Ali and Y. Wu

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37. Incorporation of Building Wake Effects into Quantified Risk Assessments

I. G. Lines, D. M. Deaves and R. C. Hall

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