Advanced Ammonia Safety


Overview
Advanced Ammonia (NH₃) Safety is a specialised course designed for professionals working with ammonia in production, storage, refrigeration, transport or use. The course will start with an overview of the role of ammonia in the energy transition. This will be followed by a detailed discussion of ammonia’s physical and hazardous properties (for both gaseous and liquefied NH3), in particular looking at the flammability and toxicity characteristics, the different ways to assess its impact on humans and how ammonia’s safety profile compares with other potential energy carriers.
The dispersion behaviour of ammonia will be explained, along with an overview of the different consequence modelling methodologies that can be applied to understand the impact of a loss of containment. The effect of NH3 on materials will also be discussed. The course covers specific design, control and mitigation measures applicable to facilities handling ammonia, including large-scale storage, ship bunkering and ship transport. Throughout the training, participants will also discuss real-world incidents to derive learnings on how these accidents could be prevented or mitigated. Finally, the course will cover an overview of regulations, codes, standards, and industry guidance to help build awareness of the regulatory expectations for ammonia projects.
Ideal for process safety engineers, HSE professionals, and plant operators, the course also covers ammonia’s role as a refrigerant, relevant regulatory frameworks such as DSEAR and COMAH, and the process safety lifecycle. By the end of the course, learners will be equipped with practical tools and insights to improve safety, compliance, and risk management in ammonia-handling operations.
Learning outcomes
By the end of this course, you will:
- understand the physical and hazardous properties of ammonia (both gaseous and liquid), including the latest knowledge from research programs, ammonia toxicity and the concept of probits
- recognise the dispersion behaviour of ammonia and the dispersion differences between liquefied and gaseous ammonia
- have developed an understanding of process safety incidents involving ammonia and the learnings that have been derived from past accidents
- be aware of the risks associated with the production, storage and transport of ammonia
- recognise the use of ammonia as a refrigerant
- have an awareness of the life cycle of process safety, from concept development to project execution, including an overview of the types of study that should be considered
- have developed an awareness of some regulations, and the regulatory expectations, namely:
- Dangerous Substances and Explosive Atmospheres Regulations (DSEAR)
- Control of Major Accident Hazards Regulations (COMAH)
- standards and industry guidance.
Who will benefit
- Process safety engineers, process engineers, HSE professionals, project engineers, plant managers and others involved in the design, operation, modification or maintenance of ammonia equipment and processes
Course outline
- Review the uses of ammonia in society and the importance of ammonia safety training
- Overview of ammonia production and the methods involved
- Understand the physical properties of ammonia including flammability and toxicity
- Learn about the ammonia storage, bunkering, loading and unloading
- Understand the past incidents involving ammonia and how they could’ve been avoided
- Overview of consequence modelling of ammonia
- General overview of risk assessment
- Learn about examples of ammonia release control and mitigation methods
- A brief introduction to regulatory framework surrounding ammonia
Course delivery
Online.
Live sessions are delivered via Microsoft Teams. If you don't already have this installed, you can join as a guest in order to access the training.
There will be some work to complete independently before the course and between the live sessions. More details will be provided after you have registered.
Dates
- Module one: 10 February 2026, 09:30–12:30 GMT
- Module two: 11 February 2026, 09:30–12:30 GMT
- Module three: 12 February 2026, 09:30–12:30 GMT
Not available then or looking for an alternative course delivery? Register your interest in future dates or request an in-company course quotation.
Fees
Book any live online or face-to-face training course before 31 August and save 20%! Simply use discount code MIDYEAR20 at checkout.
- IChemE member: £1,500 + VAT
- Non-member: £1,800 + VAT
Terms and conditions: offer applies to 2025 live online and face-to-face courses. Applies to bookings made between 1 July and 31 August 2025 and to both member and non-member prices. Cannot be used in conjunction with any other offer eg multi-place discounts. Registration must be confirmed and paid by 31 August 2025. This offer does not apply to IChemE approved courses or face to face courses in South Africa.
More than one person to train?
Multi-place discounts
Discounts are available to companies booking more than one place. Bookings must be made at the same time to receive the discount.
- 2 places – 10% discount
- 3 places –15% discount
- 4 or more places – 20% discount
In-company training
This course can be delivered to in-house teams, either on-site or online. This could be a cost-effective option if you have several people requiring the training. Content can be tailored to your specific requirements. Request a quotation.
Attendance certificate and CPD hours
An e-certificate will be issued at the end of the course to confirm attendance and CPD hours logged. Please note that you must attend the whole course to receive the certificate.
In the case of online courses, CPD hours should be used as an approximate guide and will vary depending on the preferred approach of the delegate and to what extent additional learning is completed.

Trainer
Karina Almeida
UK Energy Transition Lead / Business Development Manager, Gexcon UK
Karina has 20 years professional experience in the energy industry, the last 10 years in process safety. She holds a PhD in Chemistry which has enabled her to apply knowledge to the development of energy-efficient processes including the extraction of second-generation biofuels from marine algae. Her current role encompasses not only hydrogen safety, but also CCS, ammonia, biofuels and other technologies related to alternative energy.