Ioc jaipur oil storage depot incident
what has happened?
timelines
Factors effecting
Vapour cloud explosion(VCE)
source of ignition
summary
a video on incident
references
Size: 11.01 MB
Language: en
Added: Jul 04, 2021
Slides: 15 pages
Slide Content
IOC JAIPUR OIL STORAGE DEPOT INCIDENT .
INTRODUCTION The Jaipur oil depot fire broke out on 29 October 2009 at 7:30 PM (IST) .T he i ncident took place at Indian Oil Corporation (IOC) oil depot 's giant tank 401 A, t hat holds 8,000 kiloliters (280,000 cu ft) of petrol, situated in Sitapura Industrial Area on the outskirts of Jaipur , Rajasthan ; killing 12 people and injuring over 300. The blaze continued to rage out of control for over a week after it started and during th is period , half a million people were evacuated from the area. The oil depot is about 16 kilometers (9.9 mi) south to the city of Jaipur .
What Has Happened? The fire accident was a major disaster in terms of deaths, injury, loss of business, property and man-days, displacement of people, environmental impact in Jaipur , the capital city of the Indian state of Rajasthan and a popular tourist destination. As per eyewitnesses having factories and hotels around Indian Oil's Sitapura (Jaipur) Oil Terminal they felt presence of petrol vapour in the atmosphere around 7 :00 p.m. on 29 October 2009. Within the next few hours the concentration of petrol vapour intensified making it difficult to breathe. The Ayush Hotel in the vicinity of the terminal asked all its guests to vacate the hotel to avert any tragedy. Adjacent to the terminal wall was the workshop of Morani Motors (P) Limited where as per eyewitnesses cars parked on the roof top were thrown up into the air to about 10 feet and 35 new Hyundai brand cars were completely destroyed. The police, civil administration and fire emergency services were oblivious to the situation developing in the Indian Oil Terminal .
Around half past six the staff in the terminal who had contained the leak and flow of petrol panicked and reported the matter to nearby Sanganer Sadar Police Station . Within the next 30 minutes the local police chief and District Collector were on the spot along with the terminal's general manager , but with no plan to deal with the situation. The nearby industries, which were running second shifts, were cautioned to vacate the area. At 7:35 p.m. a huge ball of fire with loud explosion broke out engulfing the leaking petrol tank and other nearby petrol tanks with continuous fire with flames rising 30–35 m (98–115 ft) and visible from a 30 km (19 mi) radius. The traffic on adjacent National Highway No.12 was stopped leading to a 20 km (12 mi) long traffic jam . The Jaipur International Airport is just 5 km (3.1 mi) away from the accident site.
The fire still raged on 31 October. By then, the accident had already claimed eleven lives and seriously injured more than 150 people. The District Administration and Indian Oil Corporation had no disaster management plan to deal with this kind of calamity. The local fire officers were ill-equipped to deal with fire accidents of this magnitude. They remained onlookers and no efforts were made to breach the terminal wall to get closer to kerosene and diesel tanks to cool them with water jets. The fire was blamed on non-observance of normal safety procedures. The depot fire raged for 11 days, killed 11 people in all and resulted in losses worth Rs 2.80 billion. Hammer Operated valve HOV MOV
FACTORS CONTRIBUTING TO THIS INCIDENT : Non – availability of one of the shift work man, who was supposed to be on duty. Control room being unmanned due to above. Absence of specific written down procedures for the works to be undertaken and, therefore, reliance on practices. Opening of HOV before completion of hammer blind reversal operation. Not checking the MOV for its open/close status an not locking it in closed position. Not using proper protective equipment while attempting rescue work. Non-availability of second alternate emergency exit.
Vapor Cloud Explosion (VCE) A consequence in form of a VCE can be seen as a combination of many factors. The overpressures generated due to VCE (with regard to the incidents considered here) are primarily influenced by the following parameters. Flammability and quantity of fuel Degree of confinement/congestion Source and strength of ignition Weather conditions
SOURCE OF IGNITION A vapour cloud spread in such large area, the source of fire can be anything inside or outside the installation. The Non flame proof electrical fittings in administration block located in the south western direction of the terminal or Spark during starting of the vehicle at the installation are probable cause of source of fire.
A SIMILAR INCIDENT AT IOC TERMINAL HAZIRA, GUJARAT A major fire broke out at a petrol storage tank of state—owned Indian Oil Corp's (IOC) Hazira terminal in Gujarat. No casualties were reported immediately. Local authorities and the company rushed fire tenders to douse the fire. Officials said the fire was reported in the afternoon at one of IOC's five petrol storage tanks at the Hazira depot. The tank had held almost 5,000 kiloliters of petrol, half of its capacity, when it caught fire. Senior IOC officials rushed to Hazira to supervise operations and an inquiry was ordered to ascertain its causes. The depot was a so-called 'white-oil terminal', housing a tank farm to store petrol and five diesel tanks. Fire brigade personnel from Surat and nearby cities. IOC sent fire tenders from its Koyali refinery to help douse the fire. "The fire has been isolated", a company official said. "A high-level team has been constituted to investigate the cause of the fire but our first priority is to put out the fire...efforts are on at war footing". This was the second major fire at an IOC storage depots in three years.
VISUALS FROM HAZIRA IOC INCIDENT
SUMMARY The basic or root causes that led to this tragedy are absence of site-specific written operating procedures, absence of leak-stopping devices from a remote location and insufficient understanding of hazards, risks and consequences. The state and local civil authorities were alerted by IOC officials . W ithin 30-45 minutes, personnel and agencies in the city and around , had gathered at the site. However, the non-availability of self-contained breathing apparatus and fire suits left the entire response team helpless. Petrol leakage at the depot continued for one hour and 20 minutes from tank no. 401A . IOC personnel present at the site could not switch off the tank valve as petrol vapours suffocated them, while the switch at the control room remained non-functional . After th is in cident , BHEL has designed a project on oil storage monitoring systems in 2013.
Video on the incident
REFERENCES 1.IOC Fire Accident Investigation Report 2.Characteristics of the Vapour Cloud Explosion Incident at the IOC Terminal in Jaipur, 29th October 2009, D. M. Johnson www.fabig.com/publications-and-videos/publications-available-through-fabig/gl-noble-denton-11510 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jzp2C6xMY6o