A proactive approach, coupled with properly planned and implemented safety and risk management systems can help you comply with local, state and federal PSM regulations, as well as minimize loss of life, environmental impact, equipment damage, citations and litigation.
ioMosaic pioneered many of the current risk assessment techniques for processes that handle hazardous chemicals.
Our experts support every aspect to ensure that your facility runs safely and efficiently.
Expertise to help you minimize your exposure to fire, injury, property damage, and litigation.
Integrating best practices with cost-effective solutions to address program deficiencies.
Helping manage risk with facility siting studies, assessments and recommendations.
Senior knowledgeable engineers facilitate PHAs or DHAs in nearly all sectors of the process and processing industries.
Decades of experience leading incident investigations for process industry companies.
We prepare expert opinion reports and provide expert testimony for process incident cases.
Experienced engineers who have performed LOPAs on a wide range of facilities and terminals.
Our experts are at the forefront of pipeline Process Safety Management proficiency.
Proven track record of performing QRAs for facilities, pipelines and transportation routes.
Well versed in assisting global companies with their sustainability reporting communications.
Decades of experience mitigating hazards for the chemical and pharmaceutical industries.
The chemical company of a large integrated energy company was developing a corporate standard for LOPA, which incorporated a risk ranking matrix. The company was interested in obtaining an independent review of the design of the risk matrix, and in benchmarking the underlying risk tolerability criteria with generally accepted industry norms.
A major pulp and paper manufacturing company in Mississippi determined that its process safety management (PSM) program had to do more than merely follow OSHA regulations; they wanted it to also be effective in preventing accidents.
If your facility uses, stores, manufactures, handles, or moves flammable or highly hazardous chemicals on site above the threshold quantity (TQ), OSHA does require PSM implementation. Learn the facts about process safety management.
Ms. Shinkawa has over 12 years of experience managing and executing pressure relief and flare system design and analysis for large chemical and petrochemical companies in the United States. She is well-versed in the design and evaluation of pressure relief systems using Process Safety Office® SuperChems™ with reactive and non-reactive, batch, semi-batch, and continuous process considerations. Her capabilities include both steady state and dynamic system responses to overpressure events.
Experienced in process safety management (PSM), hazard identification techniques, quantitative risk assessment (QRA), and facility siting.
Performs pressure relief system evaluations and design projects of various processes, including chemical reactions and deflagration venting, for clients in the petrochemical and chemical industries.
Performs flare analysis including identification of global scenarios, hydraulic evaluation of flare header, consequence modeling (radiation, dispersion, noise), and development of mitigation options.
Conducted advanced dynamic simulations for PRFS design of reactive systems, including fire-induced thermal decomposition reactive cases and two-phase dynamic modeling.
Leads, scribes and assists in PHAs, LOPAs, What-Ifs, checklist analysis, and risk assessments (e.g. blast panels risk assessment) using various hazard identification techniques.
Conducted process safety management (PSM) and Risk Management Plan (RMP) audits for a major chemical facility.
Performed offsite consequence analysis using RMP*Comp software and MARPLOT® mapping application.
The New EPA RMP Rule Workshops
Process Safety Office® and the New EPA RPM Requirements at the 19th Annual Global Software Users Group Meeting.
SuperChems™ Deficiency Qualification at the 16th Annual Global Software Users Group Meeting.
Heat Exchanger – Tube Rupture at the 15th Annual Global Software Users Group Meeting.
Process Safety Office® - SuperChems™ Tips & Tricks – Part 2 at the 14th Annual Global Software Users Group Meeting.
University of Pittsburgh B.S., Chemical Engineering
Today, the process industries need to be certain that their stakeholders have confidence in how they manage the environmental, health, security, and safety implications of industrial activities. Read this white paper for a systematic, risk-based approach to safe design that can help to eliminate hazards that pose high risks from the process and help mitigate.
Dec 1, 2024
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