Leak detection
German oil refinery to use gas detection cameras
Jul 21 2009
Bayernoil, the largest refinery in southern Germany, has decided to employ the cameras made by Swedish firm FLIR due to a lack of regulations specifying the frequency and degree to which firms should find, repair and report leaks of unstable organic compounds.
The company hopes to discover the optimum levels for monitoring leaks by collating feedback from other users of gas detection cameras.
John Stapleford, health, security and environment manager at the Bayernoil plants, said the main reason for adopting the gas detection technology was to minimise hydrocarbon gas discharges from piping systems - and especially leaks near flange baskets.
"The gas detection camera contributes to reassuring process safety," he said. "It is particularly interesting to inspect high pressure systems as they are the most susceptible to leaks".
Meanwhile, a gas leak shut down portions of a US highway in Snellville, Atlanta, earlier this week after a construction crew broke a gas line.
Written by Claire Manning
Digital Edition
AET 28.4 Oct/Nov 2024
November 2024
Gas Detection - Go from lagging to leading: why investment in gas detection makes sense Air Monitoring - Swirl and vortex meters will aid green hydrogen production - Beyond the Stack: Emi...
View all digital editions
Events
Jan 12 2025 Abu Dhabi, UAE
Jan 14 2025 Abu Dhabi, UAE
Jan 20 2025 San Diego, CA, USA
Carrefour des Gestions Locales de L'eau
Jan 22 2025 Rennes, France
Safety, Health & Wellbeing LIVE
Jan 22 2025 Manchester, UK