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Safety & Environmental Management Systems (SEMS)
The Bureau of Ocean
Energy Management, Regulation and Enforcement (BOEMRE) held a SEMS workshop on March
15, 2011 to discuss the new regulatory requirements for
operators to develop and implement SEMS for oil and gas and
sulphur operations in the Outer Continental Shelf (OCS). This
workshop was designed to provide an overview and background of
the final rule, review and summarize responses to frequently
asked questions, receive and respond to new questions
pertaining to implementation, and describe BOEMRE audit
methodologies for compliance reviews.
The SEMS Power Point presentation is available
for viewing
online.
Transcription of Audio:
The
SEMS is a nontraditional, performance-focused
tool for integrating and managing offshore operations. The purpose of
SEMS is to
enhance the safety and cleanliness of operations by reducing the frequency and severity of
accidents. The Bureau of Ocean Energy, Management, Regulation and
Enforcement (BOEMRE) has asked industry to voluntarily adopt
SEMS.
The BOEMRE has four principal SEMS objectives:
- focus attention on the influences
that human error and poor organization have on accidents;
- continuous improvement in the
offshore industry's safety and environmental records;
- encourage the use of
performance-based operating practices; and
- collaborate with industry in
efforts that promote the public interests of offshore worker safety and environmental
protection.
Detailed Background
The SEMS was developed in response to the 1990 finding of the National Research Council's
Marine Board that BOEMRE's prescriptive approach to regulating offshore operations had forced
industry into a compliance mentality. The Marine Board found further that this
compliance mentality was not conducive to effectively identifying all the potential
operational risks or developing comprehensive accident mitigation. As a result, the
Marine Board recommended and the Bureau concurred that a more systematic approach to managing
offshore operations was needed.
In response to the Marine Board findings,
the API, in cooperation with the Bureau, developed Recommended Practice 75 - Development of a
Safety and Environmental Management Program for Outer Continental Shelf Operations and
Facilities. The API also produced a companion document, RP-14J, for identifying
safety hazards on offshore production facilities. The API RP-75 was published in May
1993. In 1994, the Bureau published a Notice in the Federal Register that
recognized implementation of RP-75 as meeting the spirit and intent of
SEMS. The
RP-75 was updated in July 1998 to focus more on contract operations, including operations
on mobile offshore drilling units.
Since API RP-75 was first
published, BOEMRE
has used public meetings, seminars, letters, research, and Federal Register
notices to promote SEMS and to encourage voluntary implementation. Four OCS-wide,
SEMS implementation surveys have been done by the API. The BOEMRE has co-sponsored five
widely-attended SEMS performance measures workshops, and we meet regularly with the
principal industry trade associations to promote SEMS.
The SEMS is
a process for coordinating OCS oil and gas operations that recognizes
worker safety and pollution control are largely dependent on proper
human behavior. The Bureau has asked OCS
operators to voluntarily make SEMS the way they do their business.
On May 22, 2006, BOEMRE, published an Advance
Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (ANPR) in the Federal Register (71
FR 29277), to seek comments and information on how to improve
the regulatory approach to safety and environmental management
for operations conducted in the OCS. The purpose of this ANPR
was to acquire information necessary to advance the objective of
improving the regulatory system and industry performance through
a requirement for an integrated management system focused on
improving safety and environmental performance. Based on
incident investigation findings and performance reviews with
operators, BOEMRE had identified a need for performance
improvement in the following areas at a minimum: hazards
analysis, operating procedures, mechanical integrity, and
management of change. These areas were part of what BOEMRE and
industry had recognized as necessary to an effective Safety and
Environmental Management System (SEMS). The ANPR discussed
several options for implementing a SEMS; one of the options was
a comprehensive safety and environmental management approach
comprised of all elements of API RP 75. supplemented
On June 17, 2009, the BOEMRE published a
Notice of Proposed Rule (NPR) in the Federal Register (74 FR
28639) based on industry and public feedback from the 2006 ANPR.
The BOEMRE proposed to require operators to develop and
implement a SEMS to address integrated management of oil and gas
operations in the Outer Continental Shelf. The proposed SEMS
requirement was to consist of the four elements: hazards
analysis, management of change, operating procedures, and
mechanical integrity. The BOEMRE analyzed accident panel
investigation reports, incident reports, and incidents of
noncompliance and determined that the root cause of most OCS
accidents and incidents was failure of one or more of these four
elements. The BOEMRE believed that requiring operators to
implement a SEMS would result in reducing the risk and number of
accidents, injuries, and spills during Outer Continental Shelf
activities. In response to this Proposed Rule, BOEMRE
received 61 sets of comments, of which 57 were from individual
entities (companies, industry organizations, or private
citizens). Some of the 61 comments were duplicates, not related
to the proposed rule, or the same company submitting multiple
comments. All of the
comments received are posted on the BOEMRE web site.
In response to several requests, BOEMRE
issued a National Notice to Lessees and Operators (NTL No.
2009-N05) on August 12, 2009, announcing a public meeting on
September 2, 2009, in New Orleans, Louisiana, to discuss the
proposed rule.
On October 15, 2010, the BOEMRE published the
Final Rule for 30 CFR Part 250 Subpart S - Safety and
Environmental Management Systems, in the Federal Register (75 FR
63610). This Final Rule incorporates by reference, and makes
mandatory, the American Petroleum Institute’s Recommended
Practice for Development of a Safety and Environmental
Management Program for Offshore Operations and Facilities (API
RP 75), Third Edition, May 2004, reaffirmed May 2008. This
recommended practice, including its appendices, constitutes a
complete Safety and Environmental Management System. API RP 75
consists of 13 sections, one of which is a ‘‘General’’ section.
This relates to the 12 elements identified in the ANPR and
states the overall principles for the SEMS and establishes
management’s general responsibilities for its success. This
General element is critical to the successful implementation of
the SEMS in API RP 75, and BOEMRE is incorporating this standard
by reference with some BOEMRE prescriptive requirements. BOEMRE
believes that adoption of API RP 75 in its entirety is
consistent with the direction of the National Technology
Transfer and Advancement Act of 1996, which directs agencies,
whenever possible, to adopt private standards. This Final Rule
becomes effective on November 15, 2010 and needs to be
implemented by November 15, 2011. This final rule applies to all
OCS oil and gas and sulphur operations and the facilities under
BOEMRE jurisdiction including drilling, production,
construction, well workover, well completion, well servicing,
and DOI pipeline activities |