Chemical safety board calls for modernization of PSM regulations in US
12/2/2014 12:00:00 AM
The Chemical Safety Board formally announced today that modernizing US process safety management regulations is one of the board's most wanted safety improvements, concluding that implementation of key federal and state CSB safety recommendations will result in significant improvement of process safety management (PSM) regulations in the US.
Over the last two decades, the CSB has made a number of recommendations related to OSHAs PSM program and EPAs risk management program (RMP), many of which have not been fully implemented.
By adding the modernizing of US process safety management regulations to the CSBs Most Wanted Safety Improvement list, the agency is identifying this issue as one of the boards most important recommendations-related goals.
As chairperson of the CSB I see this as an important opportunity to advance national process safety management reform by advocating for this issue as part of the boards Most Wanted Chemical Safety Improvements Program," said CSB chairperson Rafael Moure-Eraso. "My hope is that reform will help to prevent future catastrophic accidents.
The CSB notes that despite some positive improvements in PSM regulations in the US, regulations have undergone little reform since their inception in the 1990s. Of particular interest are the boards recent investigations of major refinery incidents that found that PSM and RMP, although written as performance-based regulations, appear to function primarily as reactive and activity-based regulatory frameworks that require extensive rulemaking to modify.
This potentially results in stagnating risk levels, even as industry-recommended best practices and technology continue to advance in the US and overseas.
Specifically, the CSB says its investigations of recent major refinery accidents found that there was no requirement to reduce risks to As Low As Reasonably Practicable (ALARP); there was no mechanism to ensure continuous safety improvement; no requirement to implement inherent safety or the hierarchy of controls; that there should be an increased role for workers and worker representatives in process safety management; and that there needs to be a more proactive, technically qualified regulator.
As a result of these findings, the CSB made recommendations at the federal, state, and local levels to prevent major incidents by adopting a more rigorous regulatory system that requires covered facilities to continuously reduce major hazard risks.
Modernizing PSM regulations is an issue rooted in critical safety recommendations made over the last two decades to prevent recurrence of catastrophic industrial accidents," CSB board member Mark Griffon said. "Recent activities have provided the board with a unique opportunity to advocate for these much needed reforms."
In particular, President Obamas Executive Order 13650 on August 1, 2013 -- Improving Chemical Facility Safety and Security -- has resulted in both OSHA and the EPA issuing requests for information (RFI), and both agencies may soon initiate rulemaking to revise the existing regulations, according to CSB officials.
The CSB says it submitted a comprehensive response to each RFI detailing needed improvements to the existing regulations, which are supported by a number of CSB ongoing and completed investigations.
For PSM, the CSB recommended that OSHA:
- Expand the rules coverage to include the oil and gas exploration and production sector
- Cover reactive chemical hazards
- Add additional management system elements to include the use of leading and lagging indicators to drive process safety performance and provide stop work authority to employees;
- Update existing Process Hazard Analysis requirements to include the documented use of inherently safer systems, hierarchy of controls, damage mechanism hazard reviews, and sufficient and adequate safeguards;
- Develop more explicit requirements for facility/process siting and human factors, including fatigue;
For RMP, in addition to PSM program related enhancements mentioned above, the CSB recommended that EPA:
- Expand the rules coverage to include reactive chemicals, high and/or low explosives, and ammonium nitrate as regulated substances and to change enforcement policies for retail facilities;
- Enhance development and reporting of worst case and alternate release scenarios; and
- Add new prevention program requirements, including automated detection and monitoring, contractor selection and oversight, public disclosure of information, and, for petroleum refineries, attributes of goal-setting regulatory approaches.
The CSB has a statutory, Congressionally-mandated task to address the sufficiency of OSHA and EPA regulations," Dr. Moure-Eraso said. "That is a key obligation of the CSB, and I intend to continue pursuing this mandate vigorously.
More details on the accidents listed above and the boards recommendations are available on CSB's website in completed investigations and recommendations.
The CSB is an independent federal agency charged with investigating serious chemical accidents. The agency's board members are appointed by the president and confirmed by the Senate. CSB investigations look into all aspects of chemical accidents, including physical causes such as equipment failure as well as inadequacies in regulations, industry standards, and safety management systems.
The board does not issue citations or fines but does make safety recommendations to plants, industry organizations, labor groups, and regulatory agencies such as OSHA and EPA.
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