Lessons Learned: Offshore Spill Due to Open Strainer Vent Cock

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During offshore operations, a contamination leak occurred due to an open strainer vent cock, causing liquid spillage onto the vessel’s deck and into the sea, reports an alert from Marine Safety Forum.

What Happened

During offshore operations, the vessel was lined up to receive Offshore Contaminated Bulk Liquid (Slops) from the rig. When the transfer started, the bridge crew noticed a spray/mist from the strainer on the port side. An “All stop” was called, and the rig quickly stopped the transfer. Approximately 4 liters were estimated to have leaked onto the vessel’s deck through an open strainer vent cock, and 1 liter is estimated to have been sprayed into the sea.

Why Did it Happen

After recent strainer checks and maintenance, the vent cock had not been closed. Pre-start checks for the bulk transfer did not capture the fact that the vent cock was open.

Recommendations

  • A Time Out For Safety was held by both shifts.
  • The wet bulk transfer risk assessment, toolbox talk, and checklist have been updated to include checks of the strainer vent cocks.
  • An experience transfer was raised to share findings with other vessels within the fleet.
  • The Planned Maintenance System task was updated to include confirming that all valves are in the correct position on completion of maintenance.

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Source: Marine Safety Forum