This publication is a reference guide for operational and commercial staff in the LPG shipping and terminal industries. It is supported by photographs and diagrams that illustrate safe transportation and storage of gas odourants. It also includes a table that outlines material compatibility with ethyl mercaptan odourant.
These guidelines were produced following notification to the SIGTTO Secretariat of several potentially dangerous incidents involving odourants. Detail is given on personal, environmental and business risk management. The capabilities and limitations of odourant injection equipment are also included. These guidelines should be written into charter parties when shipboard odourisation is to take place.
A
number
of
incidents
involving
potentially
dangerous
practices
aboard
ship
have
been
brought
to
the
attention
of
the
SIGTTO
Secretariat.
These
incidents
required
crew
to
introduce
an
‘odourant’
into
‘unstenched’
LPG
cargoes.
Examples
of
cases
reported
by
SIGTTO
members
can
be
found
below.
In
1987,
a
member
of
the
working
group
that
produced
these
guidelines
was
visiting
a
small,
pressurised
LPG
carrier
in
the
Far
East.
During
his
visit
he
had
to
persuade
the
Chief
Engineer
of
the
ship,
clad
only
in
shorts,
not
to
decant
odourant
from
a
drum
and
inject
it
into
the
cargo
tank
with
a
semi-rotary
pump,
through
a
plastic
hose.
In
1993,
at
a
small
LPG
terminal
in
North
West
Europe
that
imported
feedstock
for
a
butane-air
plant
supplying
domestic
and
industrial
consumers,
a
drum
of
ethyl
mercaptan
odourant
started
to
leak.
The
utility
company
was
inundated
with
reports
of
gas
leaks,
to
the
extent
that
their
inspection
teams
could
not
cope.
This
incident
was
complicated
by
the
fact
that
during
this
period,
a
house
in
the
area
suffered
a
gas
leak
that
resulted
in
an
explosion,
luckily
without
fatalities.
In
1997,
a
ship
owning
member
of
the
Society
was
asked
to
carry
out
cargo
odourisation
on
one
of
his
ships,
with
ethyl
mercaptan
being
supplied
by
the
receiver.
The
odourant
was
supplied
in
standard
40
gallon
(209
litre)
drums
and
the
discharge
port
was
in
the
tropics.
Within
a
short
period
of
time
the
high
ambient
temperature
caused
the
drums
to
bulge
due
to
the
build-up
of
internal
pressure.
Only
prompt
action
by
the
ship’s
staff,
in
rigging
a
water
spray
to
cool
the
drums,
prevented
them
from
rupturing.
In
1998,
the
Master
of
an
LPG
carrier,
time
chartered
to
a
major
oil
company,
was
asked
permission
for
terminal
staff
to
board
the
ship
and
odourise
the
cargo
during
discharge.
A
senior
manager
of
the
company
was
concerned
about
the
equipment
intended
for
use
and
vetoed
the
operation.
The
cargo
was
discharged
un-odourised.
As
a
result
of
these
and
other
incidents
being
drawn
to
the
attention
of
the
SIGTTO
Secretariat,
a
fact
finding
meeting
was
convened.
This
meeting
consisted
of
concerned
members
of
the
LPG
shipping
industry.
Their
investigations
revealed
that
the
practice
of
requiring
ships’
crews
to
undertake
odourisation
was
widespread
and
frequently
undertaken
with
little
or
no
understanding
of
the
potential
hazards
to
personnel
and
the
environment.
It
should
further
be
recognised
that
the
practice
of
shipboard
odourisation
often
exposes
the
cargo
owners
and
receivers
to
considerable
business
risk.
1. Background
2. Types of Odourant
3. Transportation and Storage of Odourant
4. Risk Management and Safety
5. Design, Operation and Maintenance of Odourant Injection Equipment
6. Training
7. Glossary of Terms
Appendix 1 Chemical Data Sheets
Appendix 2 List of Training Organisations
Appendix 3 Incident Scenarios and Consequence Analyses
Appendix 4 Informative References
SIGTTO
The
Society
of
International
Gas
Tanker
and
Terminal
Operators
(SIGTTO)
is
an
international
body
established
for
the
exchange
of
technical
information
and
experience,
between
members
of
the
industry,
to
enhance
the
safety
and
operational
reliability
of
gas
tankers
and
terminals.
- Number of Pages:
- 28
- ISBN:
- 9781856092098
- Binding Format:
- Paperback
- Book Height:
- 300 mm
- Book Width:
- 210 mm
- Weight:
- 0.4 kg
- Author:
SIGTTO
- Published Date:
- September 2000
- Preview:
- Yes