VOLATILE ORGANIC COMPOUNDS SAFETY LEVELS DURING CRUDE OIL SPILLS
VOLATILE ORGANIC COMPOUNDS SAFETY LEVELS DURING CRUDE OIL SPILLS
Author(s): Dobrin Milev, Todor Koritarov
Subject(s): Economy, Energy and Environmental Studies, Business Ethics, Transport / Logistics
Published by: Национално издателство за образование и наука „Аз-буки“
Keywords: maritime transport; Crude Oil Volatile Compounds; safety; oil spills
Summary/Abstract: During crude oil spills the personnel involved in the Oil industry and the emergency responders may be exposed to Crude Oil Volatile Compounds (VOC) following their release from the rig or the transportation vessel and migration through the water column to the ocean surface. In order to be prepared in case of such incidents, hand-held instruments are readily available and capable of measuring VOC in isobutylene units. Currently there’s no VOC emergency levels for crude oil vapors or developed correction factor for which to extrapolate the concentration of general VOC as isobutylene to the concentration of Crude Oil Volatile Compounds in the air. Therefore these levels must be set out as a recommendation for initial health and safety decision making immediately after an oil spill incident and for time framing during oil spill response. In this regard, the article explores the factors that influence the VOC concentration in crude oil following an accidental release and the subsequent risks associated with inhaling these vapors.
Book: Proceedings of 3-rd International Scientific Conference „Industrial Growth Conference 2024“
- Page Range: 112-117
- Page Count: 6
- Publication Year: 2025
- Language: English
- Content File-PDF
