Title: TURNAROUND PLANNING
1TURNAROUND PLANNING EXECUTION FORUM
CONSTRUCTION INDUSTRIES INSTITUTE of the GOLDEN
TRIANGLE BUSINESS ROUNDTABLE MAY 8, 2003
2AGENDA
- INTRODUCTION
- WALTER ALMON, DUPONT
- ANDY BULLOCK, HUNTSMAN
- THE FOUR HOUR HOUSE
- DISCUSSION/TEAM BUILDING
- SAFETY
- JOE SELF, HUNTSMAN
3AGENDACONTINUED
- WORKSCOPE DEVELOPMENT
- MIKE FORSE, PREMCOR
- PLANNING/SCHEDULING
- STEVE HENDERSON, ATOFINA
- BREAK!!
- MOBILIZATION ONBOARDING
- ANDY BRISENDINE, ECHO MAINT.
4AGENDACONTINUED
- WORK EXECUTION PERMITTING ISSUES
- BILL HARRINGTON, CONEX
- SKILLS ASSESSMENT
- WALTER ALMON, DUPONT
- CLOSING STATEMENTS
- WRAP-UP
- NOON LUNCH!
5PANELIST
- MARK BRITTAIN
- INTERNATIONAL MAINTENANCE CORPORATION
- 722-8031 x222
6TURNAROUND SAFETY
- JOE SELF
- HUNTSMAN
- 723-3979
7Items To Be Considered
Resources - People Planning Scheduling Safety
Contract Strategy
Information contained herein was taken from a
study conducted by the Construction Industry
Institute - 2002 Construction Project Improvement
Conference
8Resources - People
Prior To Shutdown, When Does The Hiring Of
Workers Begin?
Recordable Incident Rate Less Than 2 Weeks
Before 0.58 Two To Six Weeks Before 0.22
9Resources - People
Where Do Workers Come From?
Recordable Incident Rate Available Workers Not
Familiar With The Work 2.28 Transferred
Workers Familiar With The Work 0.47
10Planning Scheduling
Was Software Used To Schedule The Project?
Recordable Incident Rate No 2.92 Yes
0.72
11Planning Scheduling
What Unit Of Time Was Used On Project Schedule?
Recordable Incident Rate Days 1.51 Shifts
0.68 Hours 0.45
12People,Planning Scheduling
Combined Worker Familiarity Scheduling By The
Hour
Recordable Incident Rate Not Familiar, Not
Hours 1.75 Familiar Or Scheduled By
Hours 1.08 Familiar Scheduled By
Hours 0.28
13Planning Scheduling
Days Worked Each Week
Recordable Incident Rate 7 Days 0.96 6
Days 0.67
14Planning Scheduling
Typical Shutdown Duration
Recordable Incident Rate 2 To 8
Weeks 1.20 Less Than 2 Weeks 0.62
15Planning Scheduling
Combined Shutdown Duration Days Worked Each
Week
Recordable Incident Rate At Least 4 Weeks At 7
Days Per Week 1.34 Less Than 2 Weeks 6 Days
Per Week 0.38
16Planning Scheduling
Crew Size
Recordable Incident Rate Over 12
Workers 1.62 7 Or Less 0.55
17Safety Contract Strategy
Shutdowns, Turnarounds Outages With Safety
Incentive Contracts
Recordable Incident Rate No Contractual Safety
Incentive 1.73 Fee-Impacted Safety
Performance 0.71
18TURNAROUND SCOPE OF WORK DEVELOPMENT
- MIKE FORSE
- PREMCOR
- 985-1685
19- WORK SCOPE DEVELOPMENT IS ONE OF THE KEY ELEMENTS
IN THE TURNAROUND PROCESS -
- Cost
- Duration
- Execution/Contracting strategy
- Future Unit availability
- Turnaround frequency
20- WORK SCOPE DEVELOPMENT IS
- THE PROCESS
- Identifying mechanical jobs
- Process items
-
- Project work
21- REASONS TO EXCLUDE WORK ITEMS
- More effective and efficient to perform work
outside of the turnaround - Additional supervision and overhead cost
22- REQUIREMENTS OF A JOB REQUEST
- Have at least one sponsor
- Screened and challenged
- Support the business objective
-
- Approved by the unit turnaround team
23- PRIMARY SOURCES OF WORK
- Previous turnaround summary reports
- Work order backlogs
- Inspection Engineering
- Operations
- Regulatory inspections
- Process improvement projects
- Unit shutdown and startup preparation
24- MILESTONE CHART FOR SCOPE DEVELOPMENT
- Identify sources of information
- Date needed and why
- Establish and communicate a freeze date
25- ADDITIONAL WORK PROCEDURES
-
- Job cost / Manpower impact
- Job duration/Impact on schedule
- Job category-
- Management approval
26- MAJOR SCOPE CHANGES
- INCREASE COST
- Increase planning cost
- Engineering cost
- Material cost
- Manpower cost
27- THE WORK SCOPE HAS THE LARGEST IMPACT ON
TURNAROUND - Cost
- Unit down time
- Loss profit opportunity
28- MAJOR KEYS FOR A SUCCESSFUL TURNAROUND
- Good scope development
-
- Good extra work process
-
- Buy-in from all departments
29TURNAROUND PLANNING AND SCHEDULING
- STEVE HENDERSON
- ATOFINA
- 963-6888
30Turnaround Planning and Scheduling
- Long Range Planning
- Short Term Planning
- Planning and Scheduling during the Turnaround.
- Post Turnaround
31Long Range Planning
- Coordination with upstream and downstream
- Raw Materials Purchasing and Disposition
- Product Sales and Disposition
- Industry economics
- Set Turnaround Budget (Based on historical and
known work) - Integrate Capital Projects
- Develop Key Performance Indicators
- Contracting Strategies
- Develop Work Scope Criteria and Responsibilities
32Short Term Planning
- Risk rank Turnaround jobs
- Detailed work scopes and estimates
- Determine the length of the outage
- Detailed schedule including
- Operations turnover of equipment
- Pre/Post Turnaround
- Turnaround Execution
- Detailed field logistics (Where to put trailers,
laydown areas, etc.) - Organization structure for Turnaround execution
33Planning and Scheduling during the Turnaround
- Planning
- Track and forecast cost
- Provide field support for job scope, contract
issues and extras - Scheduling
- Track Critical Path
- Track status of equipment
- Project completion date
34Post Turnaround Planning
- Modify tracking steps based on actual
information - Review methodology used to determine if the work
could have been done more efficiently - Check logistics plans and other peripheral
components for needed modifications - Hold critique meeting with all areas involved to
determine areas for improvement
35TURNAROUND MOBILIZATION ONBOARDING
- ANDY BRISENDINE
- ECHO MAINTENANCE
- 724-1512
36Turnaround Mobilization
- Contractor
- Several Weeks In Advance
37Safety
- Contractor To Have Enough Time To Know And
Understand
38Permitting Procedures
- Contractor To Interface With Operations
39Scope
- Client To Have Definitive Scope
- Contractors Supervision To Be Onboard In Advance
40ISTC
- Contractor To Be Able To Apply For Scan Cards In
Advance
41Background Check
42Pre-Turnaround
- Contractor To Perform All Of The Work
43Job Site
44TURNAROUND WORK EXECUTION PERMITTING ISSUES
BILL HARRINGTONCONEX866-9888 X102
45EFFECTIVE STAFFING
1. Setting Contractor Milestones 2. Setting
Inspection Milestones 3. Critical Path
Management Productivity
46PRE-TURNAROUND PREPARATION
1. Team to Learn Scope Early 2.
Verification of Onsite Materials 3.
Identification of Potential Conflicts 4.
Review of Rigging Plans and Safety Procedures
47PERMITTING
Assuring Compliance
1. Supervision to Review Written Policy 2.
Pre-Turnaround Permit Meeting with
Supervision 3. Pre-Job Walkthrough (
Foreman Permit Issuer) 4. Mutual
Understanding
48SKILLS ASSESSMENT
WALTER ALMONDUPONT727-9129
49SKILL ASSESSMENTSBORN OF NECESSITY
- BEFORE OSHA 29 CFR 1910.119
- MANY INCIDENTS ALONG GULF COAST
- - PHILLIPS, ARCO, ARCADIA, CONOCO, CITGO
50OSHA REGULATIONSBORN OF NECESSITY
- PER OSHA 29 CFR 1910.119(h)(3)(i)
- CONTRACTOR EMPLOYER RESPONSIBILITIES
- THE CONTRACT EMPLOYER SHALL ASSURE THAT EACH
CONTRACT EMPLOYEE IS TRAINED IN THE WORK
PRACTICES NECESSARY TO SAFELY PERFORM HIS/HER
JOB.
51OSHA REGULATIONSBORN OF NECESSITYCONTINUED
- PER OSHA 29 CFR 1910.119(h)(2)(v)
- EMPLOYER RESPONSIBILITIES
- THE EMPLOYER SHALL PERIODICALLY EVALUATE THE
PERFORMANCE OF CONTRACT EMPLOYERS IN FULFILLING
THEIR OBLIGATIONS AS SPECIFIED IN PARAGRAPH (h)
(3) OF THIS SECTION.
52OBJECTIVE
- ENSURE THAT CRAFTSPERSONS ARE SKILLED IN THIS
REGION - MEET PROCESS SAFETY MANAGEMENT
- PER OSHA 1910.119
53OBJECTIVE- CONTINUED
- SYSTEM NEEDS TO BE COMMON
- OWNERS
- CONTRACTORS
- CRAFTSPERSONS
54COMMON METHOD FOR CRAFT SKILL ASSESSMENT
- IMPLEMENT A STANDARD SKILL ASSESSMENT PROGRAM
- USE NATIONAL CENTER FOR CONSTRUCTION EDUCATION
RESEARCH (NCCER) ASSESSMENTS
55COMMON METHOD FOR CRAFT SKILL ASSESSMENTCONTINUED
- RECIPROCITY
- CONTRACTORS
- DIFFERENT GEOGRAPHICAL REGIONS
56KEY SUCCESS FACTORS
- GTBR/CII PLAN AGREED TO BY
- CONTRACTORS
- PLANT MANAGERS OF OWNERS
- AUGUST 2002
- MANDATE USE OF NCCER SKILL ASSESSMENTS
57COMMON REQUIREMENTS - DOCUMENTATION!!
- UNION
- DEPT OF LABOR PROGRAMS
- MERIT SHOP
- NCCER
- SPECIALTY
- COMPANY OR INDUSTRY PROGRAMS
58IMPLEMENTATION TIMELINE - 2003
- 1Q03 - IMPLEMENT
- CONTRACTORS
- OWNERS
- ALL CORE CRAFTSPEOPLE SKILL ASSESSED - 1 APRIL
2003 - WRITTEN
- HANDS-ON BY CONTRACTOR
- DOCUMENTED
59IMPLEMENTATION TIMELINE - 2004
- BY JANUARY 2004
- ALL CRAFTSMAN SKILL ASSESSED
- WRITTEN
- HANDS-ON BY CONTRACTOR
- DOCUMENTED
60SUMMARY
- Q A SUMMARY
- EMAILED LATER
- CRITIQUE FORM
- FILL OUT
- ADDITIONAL COMMENTS
- RETURN BEFORE LEAVING!
61PHASE II
- SAFETY
- ENGINEERING CHG/SCOPE CREEP
- CONTRACTING STRATEGIES
- COST CONTROL
- DOCUMENT CONTROL
- OTHER TOPICS
- FALL 2003