Lee's loss prevention in the process industries hazard identification, assessment, and control.

Lees' is industry's first stop for process safety information. Lees' 4e is the comprehensive and scaleable source of professional industrial process safety and loss prevention information. Available in print and electronic formats, and online with additional new tools and an annual up...

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Other Authors: Mannan, Sam., Lees, Frank P., ScienceDirect (Online service)
Format: eBook
Language: English
Published: Boston : Amsterdam : Butterworth-Heinemann ; Elsevier, 2012.
Physical Description: 1 online resource (3 volumes in 1 (xli, 3642 pages) :) : illustrations.
Subjects:
Table of Contents:
  • Front Cover; Lees' Loss Prevention in the Process Industries; Copyright Page; Preface to Fourth Edition; Preface to Third Edition; Preface to Second Edition; Preface to First Edition; Acknowledgements; Terminology; Notation; Use of References; List of Contributors; Contents for Volume 1; Contents for Volume 2; Contents for Volume 3; 1 Introduction; 1.1 Management Leadership; 1.2 Industrial Safety and Loss Trends; 1.3 Safety and Environmental Concerns; 1.4 Loss Prevention
  • 1; 1.5 Large Single-Stream Plants; 1.6 Loss Prevention
  • 2; 1.7 Total Loss Control; 1.8 Quality Assurance.
  • 1.9 Total Quality Management1.10 Risk Management; 1.11 Safety-Critical Systems; 1.12 Environment and Sustainable Development; 1.13 Responsible Care; 1.14 Academic and Research Activities; 1.15 Overview; 2 Incidents and Loss Statistics; 2.1 The Incident Process; 2.1.1 The Houston Model; 2.1.2 The Fault Tree Model; 2.1.3 The MORT Model; 2.1.4 The Rasmussen Model; 2.1.5 The ACSNI Model; 2.1.6 The Bellamy and Geyer Model; 2.1.7 The Kletz Model; 2.2 Standard Industrial Classification; 2.3 Injury Statistics; 2.3.1 United States of America.
  • 2.3.1.1 National Response Center's (NRC) Incident Reporting Information System (IRIS)2.3.1.2 EPA's Risk Management Program (RMP) Rule's 5-Year Accident History Database; 2.3.1.3 EPA's Accidental Release Information Program (ARIP) Database; 2.3.1.4 Bureau of Labor Statistics' (BLS) Databases for the US Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA); 2.3.1.5 U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's (CDC) Wide-ranging On-line Data for Epidemiological Reporting (WO ...
  • 2.3.1.6 U.S. Department of Health and Human Services' Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry's (ATSDR) Hazardous ... 2.3.2 United Kingdom; 2.4 Major Disasters; 2.5 Major Process Hazards; 2.5.1 The Inventory; 2.5.2 The Energy Factor; 2.5.3 The Time Factor; 2.5.4 The Intensity-Distance Relationship; 2.5.5 The Exposure Factor; 2.5.6 The Intensity-Damage and Intensity-Injury Relationships; 2.6 Fire Loss Statistics; 2.7 Fire and Explosion; 2.8 Causes of Loss; 2.9 Down-Time Losses; 2.10 Trend of Injuries; 2.11 Trend of Losses; 2.12 Case Histories; 3 Legislation and Law; 3.1 US Legislation.
  • 3.2 US Regulatory Agencies3.3 Codes and Standards; 3.4 Occupational Safety and Health Act 1970; 3.5 US Environmental Legislation; 3.6 US Toxic Substances Legislation; 3.7 US Accidental Chemical Release Legislation; 3.8 US Transport Legislation; 3.8.1 Natural Gas; 3.8.2 FERC History; 3.8.3 USCG and MARAD History; 3.9 US Security Legislation; 3.10 US Developing Legislation; 3.11 EU Legislations; 3.12 Other Legislation; 3.13 Regulatory Support; 3.14 US Chemical Safety Board; 4 Major Hazard Control; Foreword by Jerry Havens; 4.1 Superstar Technologies; 4.2 Hazard Monitoring; 4.3 Risk Issues.