A Lesson for Learning from the Lemoore City Water Tank and Other Hot-Work Related Tank Explosions
In A Lesson for Learning from the Lemoore City Water Tank & Other Hot-Work Related Tank Explosions, you'll learn ...
- How certain hot-work incidents happened that took the lives of 24 people and caused life-altering injuries to others
- OSHA regulations around hot-work, LoTo, training and the general duty clause
- How to identify and plan for potential hot-work hazards and testing shortfalls in your procurement, design, planning and execution of project work and documents
- The lessons for learning from key industry incidents pertaining to hot-work
Overview
Learning about the Lemoore City Water Treatment Tank Explosion in June 2021 will be beneficial for any Professional Engineer that designs, plans, or executes engineering services. As a Project Engineer, Project Lead, or Designer, you may be asked to participate in projects that either have above-ground storage tanks or work that is adjacent to above-ground storage tanks. As this course will demonstrate in great detail, even a city water tank can explode during hot-work.
Professional Engineers gain a lot from reviewing past incidents. These lessons sharpen their skills like steel sharpens steel. Learning from past incidents from others is far less painful than relearning them on your own. This course provides the terminology, definitions, and knowledge the Professional Engineer requires to avoid these same mistakes. Further, you will be made aware of hot-work, LoTo, and other related pitfalls and limitations.
General incident learning courses are more appealing to Professional Engineers, and not necessarily in the field the course is educating you about. They provide broad-based knowledge, definitions, and vocabulary to expand your knowledge without major time investments and lengthy internet research. If you ever wanted to know more about preventative measures for hot-work-related tank explosions, then choose this course.
Specific Knowledge or Skill Obtained
This course teaches the following specific knowledge and skills:
- The perils of hot-work around storage tanks
- Basic preventative measures that need to be in place prior to performing hot-work
- The Professional Engineer’s role within the hot-work process
- The value of supervision and project work oversight
- The lessons for learning from key industry incidents pertaining to hot-work at municipal city plants, food manufacturing, paper mills, oil field, refining and chemical plants
Certificate of Completion
You will be able to immediately print a certificate of completion after passing a multiple-choice quiz consisting of 20 questions. PDH credits are not awarded until the course is completed and quiz is passed.
This course is applicable to professional engineers in: | ||
Alabama (P.E.) | Alaska (P.E.) | Arkansas (P.E.) |
Delaware (P.E.) | District of Columbia (P.E.) | Florida (P.E. Area of Practice) |
Georgia (P.E.) | Idaho (P.E.) | Illinois (P.E.) |
Illinois (S.E.) | Indiana (P.E.) | Iowa (P.E.) |
Kansas (P.E.) | Kentucky (P.E.) | Louisiana (P.E.) |
Maine (P.E.) | Maryland (P.E.) | Michigan (P.E.) |
Minnesota (P.E.) | Mississippi (P.E.) | Missouri (P.E.) |
Montana (P.E.) | Nebraska (P.E.) | Nevada (P.E.) |
New Hampshire (P.E.) | New Jersey (P.E.) | New Mexico (P.E.) |
New York (P.E.) | North Carolina (P.E.) | North Dakota (P.E.) |
Ohio (P.E. Self-Paced) | Oklahoma (P.E.) | Oregon (P.E.) |
Pennsylvania (P.E.) | South Carolina (P.E.) | South Dakota (P.E.) |
Tennessee (P.E.) | Texas (P.E.) | Utah (P.E.) |
Vermont (P.E.) | Virginia (P.E.) | West Virginia (P.E.) |
Wisconsin (P.E.) | Wyoming (P.E.) |