Speakers:
Ray Coker, Marathon Petroleum Corporation
Vikram Gokhale, Chevron U.S.A.
Karen Kuhn, Cenovus Energy Inc.
Yangdong Pan, Delek US
Patrick Robinson, Phillips 66
Johnny Serafin, Phillips 66
Abi Mukund, Imubit
Rajan Rathinasabapathy, Phillips 66
This interactive alarm related session is provided for attendees that are not familiar with alarm management and why alarms are a challenge. We expect attendees to ask basic (and advanced) questions in an open and inviting session. We welcome attendees that don’t have alarm management as their primary responsibility to better understand how their roles can impact the console operators experience with alarms (e.g. refinery personnel may want more alarms than needed thinking more is better). Participants will:
Learn a basic understanding to why alarm management is so important to safe and effective operation (regardless of discipline)
Be able to ask any question related to alarms
Facilitator:
Arnold Austin, Emerson Automation Solutions
Panel:
Michael Barham, Marathon Petroleum Corporation
Troy Jones, Motiva Enterprises LLC
Patrick Robinson, Phillips 66
A significant component in winning the energy transition challenge comes down to managing and reducing the emissions from manufacturing activities of the energy-intensive industries. In most of the facilities in oil & gas production, refining and petrochemical industries, flare is used to burn off waste gases, and typically a manual work process is adopted to ensure complete and smokeless combustion. The work process requires the facility operators to monitor camera feed that shows real-time status of flare operations and make control changes on the DCS to optimize combustion ensuring smokeless flaring.
To automate this manual work process and further enhance operator efficiency and environmental performance in flare operations, we present in this work an end-to-end flare smoke detection, alerting and DCS control solution that leverages existing flare CCTV cameras used at many facilities. The core of this solution is a deep-learning computer vision model that we have developed leveraging an extensive and diverse data set and the model has shown fit-for-use performance in wide-ranging conditions.
We will present results of this application implemented in the plant to further demonstrate the end-to-end solution and its positive impact on sustainable operations.
Facilitator: Adi Punuru, ExxonMobil Technology and Engineering Company
Speaker:
Ye Hu, ExxonMobil Technology and Engineering Company