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DISCUSSION GROUP 1 on TURBOMACHINERY OPERATION and MAINTENANCE
DISCUSSION GROUP 1 on TURBOMACHINERY OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE Charles R. (Charlie) Rutan, Coordinator, is an Engineering Fellow for Lyondell/Equistar Chemicals, LP, at the Chocolate Bayou Chemical Complex, in Alvin, Texas. Initially, he was a Project Engineer for Monsanto Company, then moved into equipment specification, installation, startup, and problem solving. After Monsanto, Mr. Rutan worked for Conoco Chemicals, DuPont, and Cain Chemicals. He was a Mechanical Area Maintenance Manager at the Chocolate Bayou facility prior to being promoted to his present position. Mr. Rutan received his B.S. degree from Texas Tech University (1973). He was appointed to the Texas Tech University Department of Mechanical Engineering Academy of Mechanical Engineers and is a member of the Turbomachinery Symposium Advisory Committee. He has been active in ASME, the Turbomachinery and the International Pump User’s Symposia, the Southern Gas Compression Conference, the Hydraulic Institute, and AIChE. Richard Beck, Coordinator, has been the Equipment Reliability Group Supervisor at Chevron Phillips Chemical Company, Cedar Bayou Plant, in Baytown, Texas, since 1990. He has been employed with Chevron since May 1980, primarily in the equipment inspection and machinery reliability fields. Mr. Beck serves as the team leader of the Chevron Phillips Chemical Machinery Best Practice team and is one of the implementation coordinators for a company-wide reliability software system. His previous Chevron assignments include work at the Pascagoula, Mississippi, refinery; the Belle Chasse, Louisiana, chemical plant; and the Maua, Brazil, chemical facility. Mr. Beck completed his undergraduate studies at Mississippi State University (Education, 1979) and taught high school mathematics prior to his career with Chevron. -
The Shell Oil Strike of 1962-1963
LABOR’S LAST STAND IN THE REFINERY: THE SHELL OIL STRIKE OF 1962-1963 BY TYLER PRIEST Unless otherwise indicated, all photos from USW Local 4-1, Pasadena, TX. Pasadena, 4-1, Local USW from photos all indicated, otherwise Unless Striking OCAW Local 4-367 employees outside the gate of the Shell Oil Deer Park ❒ Individual: ❒ $15 – 1 yr refinery in 1962. “The true majesty of the oil industry is best seen in a modern along soaring platforms, catwalks, and ladders, the ❒ $30 – 2 yrs refinery,” wrote oil journalist Harvey O’Connor in 1955. catalytic cracking unit affords one of the magic ❒ Student (please include copy Few monuments of industrial architecture could compare to sights of twentieth century technology.”1 of student id): ❒ $10 – 1 yr a refinery’s giant crude oil tanks, topping plants, distilling Today, when driving over the Sam Houston Tollway ❒ Institution: ❒ $25 – 1 yr columns, fractionating towers, platformers, extraction plants, Ship Channel Bridge, even long-time residents of Houston lubricating oils units, and de-waxing units. The centerpiece cannot help gawking at a spectacle that includes not merely Donation: $ of the modern refinery, however, was that “sublime industrial one refinery, but dozens stretching along the Houston cathedral known as a ‘cat-cracker’,” where petroleum Ship Channel and around Galveston Bay. Conspicuous molecules were from this vantage point is Shell Oil’s Deer Park complex. Tyler Priest is Clinical Professor Return to: broken down and Built in 1929 and expanded with a giant cat cracker after Center for Public History and Director of Global Studies rearranged to form at the C.T. -
1 Magellan Crude Oil Pipeline Project* Permian and Eagle Ford
Magellan Crude Oil Pipeline Project* Permian and Eagle Ford Basins to Corpus Christi and Houston, Texas Background Magellan Midstream Partners, L.P. (together with its affiliates, “Magellan”), either through an existing affiliate or a newly formed entity, which new entity may include one or more unaffiliated members (in either case, “Carrier”) intends to develop a new pipeline system to transport crude oil and condensate from the Permian and Eagle Ford Basins to destinations in the Corpus Christi and Houston, Texas area, with an initial planned design capacity of at least 350,000 barrels per day (“bpd”) with the ability to expand up to 600,000 bpd to each destination (the “Pipeline System”). Carrier may elect to adjust the initial design capacity of the Pipeline System based on shipper demand in the open season. Carrier is seeking long-term revenue or revenue/acreage dedication commitments for the Pipeline System (in the form of Transportation Services Agreements or “TSAs”) through a binding open season (the “Open Season”), in exchange for which committed shippers would secure contract capacity rights at incentive tariff rates. Subject to obtaining sufficient commitments from shippers and the receipt of all necessary permits and approvals, the Pipeline System could be operational within 24 months of Carrier’s determination to proceed with the project. Pipeline System *1/31/2018 Version 1 Pipeline System Carrier would develop a new Pipeline System for transporting crude oil and condensate from the Permian and Eagle Ford Basins to the Corpus Christi and Houston Gulf Coast areas. Specifically, the Pipeline System would include the following assets, which could be newly constructed, existing or leased assets, or a combination of such, in each case, as supported by sufficient shipper interest: 1. -
1 Refinery Events June 8, 2012
Refinery Events June 8, 2012– June 14, 2012 The following events were obtained from the Department of Energy (DOE) website: Update: Motiva Continues to Address Corrosion Issue in Fuel Gas System at Its 600,000 b/d Port Arthur, Texas Refinery Motiva Enterprises on Friday provided an update on its progress addressing previously announced corrosion issues on some piping in the plant’s fuel gas system in a filing with the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality. To remedy the corrosion issue and perform necessary repairs, operators were planning to temporarily place into service three compressors at the West Side Gas Plant (WSGP). The use of the WSGP compressors will help maintain fuel gas system reliability and reduce the potential for a fuel gas flaring event during the maintenance work, the filing said. Motiva submitted a similar notification for the compressors on April 23, 2012, and the follow-up filing today was submitted because the maintenance work identified in the prior notice has not been completed. http://www11.tceq.state.tx.us/oce/eer/index.cfm?fuseaction=main.getDetails&target=169426 Posted to DOE website 6-8-12. Citgo Reduces Rates Due to SRU Upset at Its 163,000 b/d Corpus Christi, Texas Refinery June 7 Citgo reported a sulfur recovery unit (SRU) upset at its West Plant Thursday morning, according to a filing with the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality. Operators reduced West Plant unit rates to reduce the production of sour gas as they worked to stabilize the amine system and SRU unit. http://www11.tceq.state.tx.us/oce/eer/index.cfm?fuseaction=main.getDetails&target=169414 Posted to DOE website 6-8-12. -
AFPM 2019 National Occupational and Process Safety Conference
Safety Awards Gaylord Texan April 24-25, 2019 afpm.org/conferences Program Grapevine, Texas #AFPMNSC National Occupational and Process Safety Conference Preparing for Tomorrow AFPM congratulates all of this year’s award recipients on their outstanding achievements. Best wishes for a safe 2019. Masters of Ceremonies Distinguished Safety Award Master of Ceremonies Presentation of Awards AFPM’s most prestigious award, the Distinguished Randy Patton Joseph Gorder Safety Award (DSA) recognizes those member Vice President, Chairman, President and company refineries and petrochemical plants Health and Safety Chief Executive Officer that have attained a sustained, exemplary level of HollyFrontier Corporation Valero Energy Corporation safety performance in the domestic refining and AFPM Safety & Health Chairman, petrochemical manufacturing industries. Recipients Committee Chair AFPM Board of Directors are chosen by a selection committee composed of members of the AFPM Safety & Health Committee. Sean Horne Chet Thompson It is the DSA Selection Committee’s responsibility to Vice President, Safety President and CEO carefully examine the safety performance records Valero Energy Corporation AFPM of individual plant locations using the specific AFPM Safety & Health screening and selection criteria detailed below. Committee Vice-Chair Elite Gold Safety Award AFPM Safety Awards Program This award is typically presented to the top one percent of member company refineries and The presentation of the AFPM Safety Award plaques petrochemical plants that have -
Federal Register/Vol. 65, No. 202/Wednesday, October 18, 2000
62348 Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 202 / Wednesday, October 18, 2000 / Notices milestones, some of which may be slots and gaps that provide a pathway controls are or will be installed on their combined to expedite processing: for evaporative product losses and slotted guidepoles. Experience to date Notice of application has been accepted volatile organic compound (VOC) suggests that credits and offsets will be for filing emissions which can exceed 25,000 generally available under these Notice of NEPA Scoping (unless scoping pounds per year. EPA reaffirmed its circumstances, but identifying these has already occurred) position that uncontrolled slotted tanks and installing controls does not Notice of application is ready for guidepoles do not comply with the ``no guarantee that emission credits and environmental analysis visible gap'' requirements of NSPS offsets are available. This is an issue Notice of the availability of the draft Subparts Ka and Kb, see 65 FR 2336 that must be determined by applicable NEPA document (January 14, 2000). The Storage Tank state and local authorities, consistent Notice of the availability of the final Emission Reduction Partnership with the requirements of federally NEPA document Program, however, provided companies approved state implementation plans. Order issuing the Commission's with an opportunity to resolve these Dated: October 4, 2000. issues by entering into agreements with decision on the application Eric V. Schaeffer, Final amendments to the application EPA to control slotted guidepole emissions at their NSPS Subpart Ka/Kb Director, Office of Regulatory Enforcement, must be filed with the Commission no Office of Enforcement and Compliance later than 30 days from the issuance tanks. -
National Occupational & Process Safety
NATIONAL OCCUPATIONAL GRAND HYATT SAN ANTONIO & PROCESS SAFETY MAY 17 – 18, 2016 CONFERENCE AND EXHIBITION SAFETY AWARDS EVENT 2016 AFPM SAFETY AWARDS PROGRAM The presentation of the AFPM AFPM CONGRATULATES ALL Safety Award plaques is part of a comprehensive safety awards program OF THIS YEAR’S AWARD which the Association’s Safety & Health RECIPIENTS ON THEIR Committee has developed to promote safety performance achievements in OUTSTANDING ACHIEVEMENTS. the petroleum refining, petrochemical manufacturing, and contracting industries and to publicly recognize the excellent BEST WISHES FOR A SAFE 2016. record of safety in operations which the industries and contractors have achieved. AFPM Safety Awards are based on records kept for employees in accordance with OSHA record keeping requirements as defined by law and entered on the OSHA 300A summary form and API RP 754, Process Safety Performance Indicators for the Refining and Petrochemical Industries. TABLE OF CONTENTS 1 Distinguished Safety Award The Safety Awards Program honors Elite Gold Safety Award AFPM Regular member companies Elite Silver Safety Award operating U.S. refineries and petrochemical manufacturing plants as 2 Merit and Achievement Awards well as Associate member contractors working in those facilities. The program 9 Contractor Merit Awards consists of the following awards. 27 Quick Reference Alphabetical 29 AFPM Safety and Health Committee 33 News Release MASTERS OF Master of Ceremonies CEREMONIES Robert Bahr Global Process Safety & Risk Manager – Exxon Mobil Corporation, AFPM Safety & Health Committee Chair Ronald Meyers Principal EHS Professional – Axiall Corporation, AFPM Safety & Health Committee Presentation of DSA Awards Gregory Goff Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer – Tesoro Corporation AFPM Chairman of the Board 2 Cover photograph ©Shutterstock. -
Shell Deer Park Refinery Benefits from Advanced Process Control Application on Gas Oil Hydro Treater Unit
Success Story Shell Deer Park Refinery Benefits from Advanced Process Control Application on Gas Oil Hydro Treater Unit Project Name: Gas Oil Hydro Treater Unit APC Location: Deer Park, Texas, USA Completion: December 2013 Industry: Refining “Shell Deer Park Management was completely satisfied with the way the project was implemented and the results achieved.” About Shell Deer Park Challenges and Actions Taken Shell Deer Park is located about 20 miles east of The Advanced Process Control (APC) application is downtown Houston, Texas. In 1993, Shell Oil Company implemented on the reactor/recycle gas heater, six pack and PMI Norteamerica, S.A. de C.V., a subsidiary exchangers, stripper/main fractionator heater, and main of Petroleos Mexicanos (Pemex), formed a 50/50 fractionator, with the core objectives of maximizing ULSD joint venture, resulting in Deer Park Refining Limited production, controlling WABT tightly, and pass balancing of Partnership (DPRLP). The assets of the refinery are flow and temperature for the main fractionator heater. The managed and operated by Shell Oil Company through APC application is always operated in optimization mode to Shell Deer Park Refining Company, a division of Shell meet the objectives with the operation parameters controlled Oil Products Company (a Shell Oil subsidiary). within the specified operation limits. Today, Shell Deer Park is home to the sixth largest One key product of the Gas Oil Hydro Treater (GOHT) refinery in the United States with a crude oil capacity of unit is diesel, and sulfur in the refinery diesel pool was 340,000 barrels a day. The Deer Park Refining complex very difficult to control since the pool has diesel coming has a variety of processing units, including a distillation from various units. -
D:\Documents and Settings\Ghales\My Documents
ANALYSIS OF PROPOSED CONSENT ORDER TO AID PUBLIC COMMENT In the Matter of Shell Oil Company and Pennzoil-Quaker State Company File No. 021 0123, Docket No. C-4059 I. Introduction The Federal Trade Commission (“Commission” or “FTC”) has issued a complaint (“Complaint”) alleging that the proposed merger of Shell Oil Company (“Shell”) and Pennzoil- Quaker State Company (“Pennzoil”) (collectively “Respondents”) would violate Section 7 of the Clayton Act, as amended, 15 U.S.C. § 18, and Section 5 of the Federal Trade Commission Act, as amended, 15 U.S.C. § 45, and has entered into an agreement containing consent orders (“Agreement Containing Consent Orders”) pursuant to which Respondents agree to be bound by a proposed consent order that requires divestiture of certain assets (“Proposed Consent Order”) and a hold separate order that requires Respondents to hold separate and maintain certain assets pending divestiture (“Hold Separate Order”). The Proposed Consent Order remedies the likely anticompetitive effects arising from Respondents’ proposed merger, as alleged in the Complaint, and the Hold Separate Order preserves competition pending divestiture. II. Description of the Parties and the Transaction Shell Oil Company, headquartered in Houston, Texas, is the United States operating entity for the Royal Dutch/Shell Group of Companies (collectively referred to as “Shell”). Shell is engaged in virtually all aspects of the energy business, including exploration, production, refining, transportation, distribution, and marketing. As part of the relief ordered by the Commission in Chevron/Texaco, Docket C-4023 (Jan. 2, 2002), Texaco divested its interest in Equilon Enterprises LLC to Shell and its interest in Motiva Enterprises LLC to Shell and Saudi Refining Company. -
Microtargeting™ Electrodes Non Sterile Directions for Use
microTargeting™ Electrodes Non Sterile Directions For Use L011-51-02 (Rev B0, 2020-07-28) Contains directions for the following products: 22335Z, 22635L, 22635Z, 25335Z, 34325Z, 34625L, 34625Z, 35325Z, 44335Z, 44930R, 44935L, 44935Z, 45335Z, 5030R, 5035L, 5035Z, 5730R, 5735L, 5735Z, mTB (Length 100mm – 300mm)(Exposure 2mm - 50mm), mTD (Electrode Length 100mm – 293mm)(Differential Length 1mm – 50mm) (Protective Tube Length 100mm –300 mm), mTF (Length 100mm – 300mm)(Reach 90mm – 290mm), mTS (Electrode Length 100mm – 295mm)(Electrode Reach 1mm – 50mm) (Pro- tective Tube Length 100mm – 300 mm) (Range of Motion 2mm – 75mm) www.fh-co.com FHC, Inc. FHC Europe 1201 Main Street (TERMOBIT PROD srl) Bowdoin, ME 04287 USA 42A Barbu Vacarescu Str, 3rd Fl Fax: +1-207-666-8292 Bucharest 020281Sector 2 Romania 24 hour technical service: FHC Latin America 1-800-326-2905 (US & Can) Calle 6 Sur Cra 43 A-200 +1-207-666-8190 Edifi cio LUGO Ofi cina 1406 Medellín-Colombia Contents English 4 French - Français 7 German - Deutsch 10 Italian - Italiano 13 Spanish - Español 16 Portuguese - Português 19 Dutch - Nederlands 22 Finnish - Suomi 25 Swedish - Svenska 28 Danish - Dansk 31 Norwegian - Norsk 34 Czech - Čeština 37 Hungarian - Magyar 40 Romanian - Română 43 Slovakian - Slovenčina 46 Greek - Ελληνικά 49 Turkish - Türkçe 52 Polish - Polski 55 Russian - Русский 58 Chinese - 61 中文 Korean - 64 한국어 Japanese - 日本語 67 L011-51-02 (Rev. B0, 2020-07-28) 3 microTargeting™ Electrodes Directions For Use Indications for use The FHC, Inc. microTargeting™ Electrodes are intended for use in intra-operative recording of single unit neuronal activity or intra-operative stimulation of neural elements in the brain. -
Qry Current FA Jobsite List
Current FA Jobsite List Site City State First Exposure Abitibi Consolidated Paper Mill / Champion International Corp. Lufkin TX 1/1/1965 ALCOA (Aluminum Co. of America) Newburgh IN 1/1/1983 ALCOA (Aluminum Co. of America) Point Comfort TX 1/1/1962 ALCOA (Aluminum Co. of America) Rockdale TX 1/1/1954 Allied Chemical Plant / McCarthy Winnie TX 1/1/1956 Ameirpol-Synpol / Texas U.S. Chemical / Texas Butadiene / Texaco Chemical Port Neches TX 1/1/1954 Corp. (North Plant) American Norit (see also Darco) Marshall TX 1/1/1957 Ameripol-Synpol / B.F. Goodrich Orange TX 1/1/1957 Ameripol-Synpol / B.F. Goodrich / Michelin USA (South Plant) Port Neches TX 1/1/1954 AMOCO (American Oil Co.) / Standard Oil Co. Alvin TX 1/1/1960 AMOCO (American Oil Co.) / Standard Oil Co. Angleton TX 1/1/1966 AMOCO (American Oil Co.) / Standard Oil Co. Mandan ND 1/1/1952 AMOCO (American Oil Co.) / Standard Oil Co. - Chocolate Bayou Angleton TX 1/1/1966 AMOCO (American Oil Co.) / Standard Oil Co. / Pan American Refinery Texas City TX 1/1/1956 Andrews Gas Plant Andrews TX 1/1/1952 Anheuser - Busch Houston TX 1/1/1983 ARCO (Atlantic Richfield Company) / Sinclair / Atlantic Richfield Corpus Christi TX 1/1/1951 ARCO (Atlantic Richfield Company) / Sinclair / Atlantic Richfield Freeport TX 1/1/1985 ARCO (Atlantic Richfield Company) / Sinclair / Atlantic Richfield Houston TX 1/1/1967 ARCO (Atlantic Richfield Company) / Sinclair / Atlantic Richfield Pasadena TX 1/1/1955 ARCO (Atlantic Richfield Company) / Sinclair / Atlantic Richfield Pledger TX 1/1/1952 ARCO (Atlantic Richfield Company) / Sinclair / Atlantic Richfield Sinclair WY 1/1/1964 Asamera Oil Commerce City CO 1/1/1980 Atlantic Gas Plant Riverton WY 1/1/1963 Atlantic Oil / O.L. -
Analysis of Proposed Consent Orders to Aid Public Comment
63100 Federal Register / Vol. 67, No. 197 / Thursday, October 10, 2002 / Notices comments will be considered by the The Commission’s complaint charges Education regarding such activity shall Commission and will be available for that the proposed respondents falsely be controlling. inspection and copying at its principal represented that information collection Part III of the orders prohibits the office in accordance with section from high school students through the proposed respondents from using or 4.9(b)(6)(ii) of the Commission’s Rules survey is shared only with colleges, disclosing for any noneducational- of Practice, 16 CFR 4.9(b)(6)(ii)). universities, and other entities related marketing purpose any providing education-related services personally identifiable information that Analysis of Proposed Consent Orders when, in fact, such information is also was collected through surveys To Aid Public Comment shared with commercial entities for distributed prior to the date of service The Federal Trade Commission has marketing purposes. The complaint also of the orders. In addition to the accepted agreements, subject to final alleges that the proposed respondents educational purposes excepted from the approval, to (1) a proposed consent falsely represented that the survey is definition of ‘‘noneducational-related order from the National Research Center funded solely by educational marketing purpose,’’ Part III also for College and University Admissions, institutions when, in fact, the survey permits the proposed respondents to use Inc. (‘‘NRCCUA’’) and its officer Don M. also receives substantial funding from such information for the purpose of (a) Munce (‘‘Munce’’), and (2) a proposed ASL, a commercial entity.