(182a) Waste Solvents to Trash Haulers: Lessons Learned from Hazardous Waste Accidents | AIChE

(182a) Waste Solvents to Trash Haulers: Lessons Learned from Hazardous Waste Accidents

Authors 

Morrison, D. - Presenter, Exponent, Inc.
Stern, M., Exponent
Process safety management (PSM) of hazardous chemicals is a core tenet of the chemical, oil, and gas industries. Organizations in these industries have increasingly woven the elements of PSM into their strategic vision, day-to-day operations, and interactions with contractors and vendors. This cultural evolution has, in part, been driven by major accidents in these fields. In these industries, the chemicals, their hazardous properties, and their potential interactions, are usually either well-defined or capable of being well-defined. Control and mitigation strategies for those chemicals can be developed based on this available knowledge. In contrast, companies that handle wastes have experienced catastrophic accidents due to the ill-defined nature of the hazards. This industry handles the cast-offs, dregs, and refuse, which makes identification of the hazards and prevention of incidents more challenging. How do you implement a PSM program when your input streams can vary due to processes at a plant you do not control or monitor? Does the EPA Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA) provide sufficient guidance to safely handle wastes? The overriding theme in the incidents is that PSM is more complex to apply to unknown, mixed, and uncontrolled chemicals, both solid and liquid. To assist companies that handle wastes, this paper provides several case studies of fires and explosions involving multiple waste material handling processes at different facilities. The incidents involved numerous matrices from solid industrial wastes, EPA RCRA hazardous wastes, to waste solvents. An analysis of the lessons learned will be presented and used to provide realistic guidelines to reduce safety risks based on a pragmatic implementation of process safety management principles. The paper will also compare OSHA PSM with EPA RCRA approaches to characterizing wastes versus managing the hazards, and will emphasize those elements that played critical roles in the accident case studies.

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