Title: Laws and Regulations
1Laws and Regulations
- Laws and regulations are major tools for
protecting people and the environment. - Congress is responsible for passing laws that
govern the United States.
2Creating a Law in US
- A law is created with a three-step process
- Step 1 A member of Congress proposes a bill. A
bill is a document that, if approved, become a
law. - Step 2 If both houses of Congress approve the
bill, it is sent to the president, who has the
option to either approve it or veto it. If
approved, it becomes a law that is called an act. - Step 3 The complete text of the law is published
in the United States Code (USC). The code is the
official record of all federal laws.
3Creating a Regulation or Standard
- To make the laws work on a day-to-day level,
Congress authorizes governmental organizations,
including the EPA and OSHA, to create regulations
and/or standards. After the regulation is in
effect, the EPA or OSHA has the responsibility
(1) to help citizens comply with the law and (2)
to enforce the regulation.
4Regulation/Standard Creating Procedure
- The process for creating a regulation and/or
standard has two steps - Step 1 The authorized organization or agency
decides when a regulation is needed. The
organization then researches, develops, and
proposes a regulation. The proposal is listed in
the Federal Register (FR) so that the public can
evaluate it and send comments to the
organization. These comments are used to revise
the regulation. - Step 2 After a regulation is rewritten, it is
posted in the Federal Register as a final rule,
and it is simultaneously codified by publishing
it in the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR).
5History
- Before 1936 regulations concerning occupational
health were poorly administered by state and
local governmental agencies. During this era,
staffs and funds were to small to carry out
effective programs. - In 1936 the federal government enacted the
Walsh-Healy Act to establish federal safety and
health standards for activities relating to
federal contracts. - The concepts promulgated by the Walsh-Healy Act,
although not adequate by todays standards, were
the forerunners of our current occupational
health and safety regulations. - Between 1936 and 1970 a number of states enacted
their own safety and health regulations. - The OSHAct of 1970 was developed to solve these
problems and to give a nationally consistent
program with the funding necessary to manage it
effectively.
6OSHA and NIOSH
- As a result of the OSHAct, sufficient funding was
committed to create and support the Occupational
Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), which
manages and administers the governments
responsibilities specified in the OSHAct, and the
National Institute for Occupational Safety and
Health (NIOSH), which conducts research and
technical assistance programs for improving the
protection and maintenance of workers health. - Examples of NIOSH responsibilities include (1)
measuring health effects of exposure in the work
environment, (2) developing criteria for handling
toxic materials, (3) establishing safe levels of
exposure, and (4) training professionals for
administering the programs of the act. - NIOSH develops data and information regarding
hazards, and OSHA uses these data to promulgate
standards.
7- Some laws and regulations particularly relevant
to the chemical industry are shown in Table 3-1. - As illustrated in this table, the distinction
between laws (USC) and regulations (CFR) is
global versus detail.
8Table 3-1 A Few Laws (USC) and Regulations (CFR)
9- Highlight of OSHA enforcement rights are
illustrated in Table 3-2. - Table 3-3 provides a summary of relevant safety
legislation, and Figure 3-1 shows how the amount
of legislation has increased.
10Table 3-2 Highlights of OSHAS Right of
Enforcement
11Table 3-3 Federal Legislation Relevant to
Chemical Process Safety (1)
12Table 3-3 Federal Legislation Relevant to
Chemical Process Safety (2)
13Table 3-3 Federal Legislation Relevant to
Chemical Process Safety (3)
14Table 3-3 Federal Legislation Relevant to
Chemical Process Safety (4)
15Figure 3-1 Number of federal laws relevant to
chemical process safety.
16OSHA Process Safety Management
- On February 24, 1992, OSHA published the final
rule Process Safety Management of Highly
Hazardous Chemicals. (PSM) Process safety
management (PSM) was developed after the Bhopal
accident (1985), to prevent similar accidents.
The standard is performance oriented, that is, it
sets general requirements for management of
hazardous chemicals.
17- The PSM standard has 14 major sections (1)
employee participation, (2) process safety
information, (3) process hazard analysis, (4)
operating procedures, (5) training, (6)
contractors, (7) pre-startup safety review, (8)
mechanical integrity, (9) hot work permits, (10)
management of change, (11) incident
investigations, (12) emergency planning and
response, (13) audits, and (14) trade secrets. - (1) Employee participation requires active
employee participation in all the major elements
of PSM. Employers must develop and document a
plan of action to specify this participation.
18- (2) Process safety information is compiled and
made available to all employees to facilitate the
understanding and identification of hazards. This
information includes block flow diagrams (BFD) or
process flow diagrams (PFD), process chemistry,
and process limitations, such as temperatures,
pressures, flows, and compositions. Consequences
of process deviations are also required. This
process safety information is needed before
training, process hazards analysis, management of
change (MOC), and accident investigations.
19- (3) Process hazard analysis (PHA) must be
performed by a team of experts, including
engineers, chemists, operators, industrial
hygienists, and other appropriate and experienced
specialists. The PHA needs to include a method
that fits the complexity of the process, a
hazards and operability (HAZOP) study for a
complex process, and for less complex processes a
less rigorous process, such as what-if scenarios,
checklists, failure modes and effects analysis,
or fault trees. Every PSM process needs an
updated PHA at least every five years after the
initial analysis is completed.
20- (4) Operating procedures that facilitate the safe
operation of the plant must be documented. - They need to cover, at a minimum, initial
startup, normal operations, temporary operations,
emergency shutdown, emergency operations, normal
shutdown, startup after normal and emergency
shutdowns, operating limits and consequences of
deviations, safety and health considerations,
hazardous properties of the chemicals, exposure
precautions, engineering and administrative
controls, quality control specifications for all
chemicals, special or unique hazards, and safety
control systems and functions. - Safe work practices also need to be documented,
such as hot work, lockout/tagout, and confined
space. - These operating procedures are updated
frequently, with the frequency being set by the
operating personnel.
21- (5) An effective training program helps employees
understand the hazards associated with the tasks
they perform. Maintenance an operation personnel
receive initial training and refresher training.
Operators need to understand the hazards
associated with every task, including emergency
shutdown, startup, and normal operation.
Refresher training is given every three years and
more often if necessary the operators decide on
the frequency of the refresher training.
22(6) Contractors are trained to perform their
tasks safely to the same extent as employees.
Even when selecting contractors, the employees
need to consider the contractors safety
performance in addition to their skills. (7) A
pre-startup safety review is a special safety
review that is conducted after a modification to
the process or operating conditions has been made
and before the startup. In this review a team of
reviewers ensures that (1) the system is
constructed in accordance with the design
specifications, (2) the safety, maintenance,
operating, and emergency procedures are in place,
(3) the appropriate training is completed, and
(4) the recommendations from the PHA are
implemented or resolved.
23- (8) The mechanical integrity section of the PSM
standard ensures that the equipment, piping,
relief system, controls, and alarms are
mechanically sound and operational. The
requirements include (1) written procedures to
maintain functioning systems, (2) training
regarding preventive maintenance, (3) periodic
inspections and testing based on vendor
recommendations, (4) a process to correct
deficiencies, and (5) a process to ensure that
all equipment and spare parts are suitable.
24(9) The PSM standard ascertains that a system is
in place to prepare and issue hot work permits
before conducting hot work activities (welding,
grinding, or using spark-producing equipment).
The permit requires dates authorized for hot
work, the equipment involved in the work, a
system to maintain and document certification,
identification of openings where sparks may drop,
the types and numbers of fire extinguishers,
identification of fire watches, an inspection
before the work, authorization signatures,
identification of flammable materials in the
area, verification that the surrounding area is
not explosive, verification that combustible
materials are removed or covered appropriately,
identification and closure of open vessels or
ducts, and verification that welded walls are not
flammable.
25- (10) Under the management of change section of
the PSM standard employees are required to
develop and implement documented procedures to
manage changes in the process chemistry, process
equipment, and operating procedures. Before a
change occurs (except for replacement-in-kind),
it must be reviewed to ascertain that it will not
affect the safety of the operation. After the
change has been made, all the affected employees
are trained, and a pre-startup review is
conducted.
26- (11) The PSM standard mandates incident
investigation. - Employers must investigate all incidents that
have or could have resulted in a major release or
accident within 48 hours of the event. - The regulation requires an investigation team
composed of people, including operators, who are
knowledgeable about the system. - After the investigation, the employers are
required to appropriately use the investigation
recommendations.
27(12) The intent of the PSM element for emergency
planning and response is to require employers to
respond effectively to the release of highly
hazardous chemicals. Although the regulation
requires this activity for companies with more
than 10 employees, this element should be part of
a program for even the smallest organizations
that handle hazardous chemicals.
28(13) Under the audits section of the PSM standard
employers are required to certify that they have
evaluated their compliance with the standard at
least every three years. The recommendations from
the audit must be followed. The audit reports
need to be retained as long as the process
exists. (14) The trade secrets section of the PSM
standard ensures that all contractors are given
all the information relevant to operating in the
plant safely. Some personnel may need to sign
secrecy agreements before they receive this
information.
29EPA Risk Management Plan
- On June 20, 1996, the EPA published the Risk
Management Plan (RMP) as a final rule. This
regulation is also a response to the Bhopal
accident.
30- It is recognized by industry and the government
as an excellent regulation that will reduce the
number and magnitude of accidents if it is
understood and practiced as intended. - The RMP regulation is aimed at decreasing the
number and magnitude of accidental releases of
toxic and flammable substances. - Although the RMP is similar to the PSM regulation
in many respects, the RMP is designed to protect
off-site people and the environment, whereas PSM
is designed to protect on-site people.
31- The RMP is required for plant sites that use more
than a specified threshold quantity of regulated
highly hazardous chemicals. - The RMP is a site responsibility (the site may
have several processes), whereas PSM covers every
covered process on the site.
32Elements of RMP
- hazard assessment,
- prevention program,
- emergency response program,
- documentation that is maintained on the site and
submitted to federal, state, and local
authorities. This information is also shared with
the local community. The RMP document is updated
when the process or chemistry changes or when a
governmental audit requests an update.
33Hazard Assessment
- Hazard assessment is a consequence analysis for a
range of potential hazardous chemical releases,
including the history of such releases at the
facility. - The releases must include the worst-case scenario
and the more likely but significant accident
release scenarios. A risk matrix can be used to
characterize the worst-case and more likely
scenarios.
34EPA-Required Consequence Analyses
- A single worst-case release scenario is analyzed
for all covered flammable materials on the site,
and only one flammable substance is analyzed for
other more likely scenarios - A single worst-case release scenario is analyzed
for all toxic substances on the site, and more
likely releases are analyzed for each toxic
substance covered by the rule.
35- The worst-case scenario is based on releasing the
entire contants of a vessel or piping system in a
10-minute period under worst-case meteorological
conditions (F stability and 1.5 m/s wind speed). - Passive mitigation measures (for example, dikes)
can be used in the calculation process therefore
the release rate for liquid spills corresponds to
the evaporation rate. - Alternative release cases for toxic substances
cover scenarios with toxic concentrations beyond
the fence line. - Alternative cases for flammable substances cover
scenarios that may cause substantial damage off
site and on site. - The release scenarios that have a potential to
reach the public are of the greatest concern. - Those with no off-site potential damage are not
required to be reported.
36- Dispersion model calculations are normally used
to estimate downwind concentrations these
concentrations are the basis for determining the
consequences resulting from toxicity, fires,
and/or explosions. - For those not interested in using dispersion
models, the standard includes lookup table for
all the listed substances to help a facility
determine the impact distances for specific
release scenarios. - The RMP requires only an analysis of the
consequence and not the probability. Therefore
the results are not a true determination of risk,
because risk is composed of both consequence and
probability.
37Prevention Program
- The second requirement of the RMP is a prevention
program. The prevention program has 11 elements,
compared to the 14 elements of the PSM standard. - As shown is Table 3-4, many of these elements are
duplicated. Fortunately, the EPA made a
deliberate attempt to retain the same
requirements wherever possible, although
differences exist because the EPA and OSHA have
different responsibilities.
38Table 3-4 Comparison of the PSM and RMP
Prevention Programs (1)
39Table 3-4 Comparison of the PSM and RMP
Prevention Programs (2)
40Emergency Response Program
- This program delineates the steps to be taken by
the facilitys employees in response to
accidental releases of hazardous materials. - It also establishes procedures for notifying the
local community and the appropriate emergency
response agencies. Training is for all employees
on the topics relevant to emergency response. - The requirements include drills to test the plan
and to evaluate its effectiveness, and the plan
must be revised based on the findings of these
drills.
41- The plan must be coordinated with local emergency
response plans developed by Local Emergency
Planning Committees (LEPCs) and local emergency
response agencies. - As with similar OSHA regulations, the Resource
Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA), and the
Spill Prevention Control under the Clean Water
Act, the emergency response plan must be
maintained at the facility and must include
descriptions of all mitigating system.