The ACS Statement on Inherently Safer Technology for Chemical and Related Industrial Process Operations describes federal support of developing IST and greater use of IST in reducing risk.
Inherently safer industrial technologies for the production, transport, and use of industrial and agricultural chemicals, pharmaceuticals, and both commodity and advanced materials is a vital concept that is currently the focus of significant activity in a wide range of forums in the industrial, academic, and governmental arenas. While many industrial processes and sectors use various definitions of this term, collectively, they capture a group of processes and technologies that improve safety by greatly reducing or eliminating hazards through a permanent and inseparable element of the process. Thus, safety is built into the process, not added on, and hazards are reduced or eliminated, not simply controlled.
Where feasible, inherently safer process technology can greatly reduce potential threats to public and worker safety, health, the environment and plant and public infrastructure from a variety of scenarios that might result in the release – fugitive or otherwise – of hazardous and toxic materials.
Many organizations involved in the chemical, pharmaceutical, and related process industries have strongly advocated and advanced inherent safety, supporting the work of professional societies and academic institutions, utilizing the concept in training chemists and engineers, and incorporating it into internal process safety management programs. Inherent safety is a well recognized engineering process concept that is based on the belief that a hazard can be moderated or eliminated, thereby reducing risk and possibly removing the risk altogether. Certainly an inherently safer system or technology can make hazardous events less likely and less intense if there is an accident.
Change in “technology” is one aspect of inherent safety. The term inherently safer technology (IST) has received considerable attention in recent years, but it is only one of many approaches that may be employed to achieve risk reduction. A successful approach to changing technology in this area will come about through a holistic application of safety analysis that extends from the top to the bottom of the organization, designing safer systems which include safer practices and an organizational prejudice toward safety.
ACS has consistently supported research and development initiatives that promote advancements in inherent safety and risk reduction. For example, ACS is a strong supporter of the Green Chemistry Research and Development Act, which is now being considered by Congress. The Act seeks to promote green chemistry by authorizing a coordinated green chemistry research and development program at the National Science Foundation, the Department of Energy, and other agencies. Such a program would enhance green engineering, which is the practical application of green chemistry to develop simpler, more cost-efficient, and generally safer and environmentally benign processes. It also recognizes that the elimination of all hazardous industrial materials and processes is not currently feasible, but that methods to minimize the risks associated with their use can be employed.
The federal government has made homeland security, including the protection of the public and critical infrastructure, a priority. To achieve that goal, it is necessary to make research, development, and technology investments that would help secure the nation’s chemical infrastructure and safeguard against the consequences of a terrorist attack.
The chemical enterprise has considerable experience in developing and implementing inherently safer systems and should welcome creative approaches for encouraging additional IST research and development. Several recent industry association security codes require member companies to conduct vulnerability assessments of their facilities. These codes recommend consideration of inherently safer and more secure technologies, especially during facility design or redesign.
The American Chemical Society is a nonprofit scientific and educational organization, chartered by Congress, with more than 160,000 chemical scientists and engineers as members. The world’s largest scientific society, ACS advances the chemical enterprise, increases public understanding of chemistry, and brings its expertise to bear on state and national matters.