A Guide to Develop a Cold Start Readiness Procedure, After Turnarounds & Shutdowns
In A Guide to Develop a Cold Start Readiness Procedure, After Turnarounds & Shutdowns, you'll learn ...
- How to write a startup readiness procedure
- How to create your own startup readiness checklist
- Pitfalls of the startup readiness process
Overview
The two most high-risk events for a manufacturing plant are Startups and Shutdowns. This is even riskier with manufacturing plants that have Highly Hazardous Chemicals (HHCs). This course serves as a companion course to “A Best Practice for Managing Process Safety During Turnarounds & Routine Business Cycles.” This course will benefit those in the manufacturing industry and will specifically benefit any user that has HHC but is also applicable to food, drug, or any other plants you can think of. Why? This course will teach you how to use Process Safety Management, Environmental, and Personal Safety regulations to construct your own procedure.
This course will also guide you through some of the applicable regulations. Further, the course will cover required training, planning, managing change, roles & responsibilities, procedures and will provide a sample Startup checklist. The sample will be for a petroleum-chemical plant but can be modified to meet the needs of, say, a pharmaceutical plant or a food processing plant. The basics of constructing a Startup procedure do change with the industry, so the details about the manufacturing plant will be known by you, allowing you to construct your own process.
Specific Knowledge or Skill Obtained
This course teaches the following specific knowledge and skills:
- Procedure writing basics
- Startup readiness purpose and scope
- Organization and team formation in order to write a procedure
- Some pitfalls and historical issues to avoid
Certificate of Completion
You will be able to immediately print a certificate of completion after passing a multiple-choice quiz consisting of 12 questions. PDH credits are not awarded until the course is completed and quiz is passed.
This course is applicable to professional engineers in: | ||
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