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IChemE offices

Start your professional development journey

Gain instant access to the exclusive member benefits


Be recognised and rewarded for your success

Global headquarters

t: +44 (0)1788 578214


e: info@icheme.org
Find your nearest IChemE office:
www.icheme.org/contactus

Australia

Contact the membership team:


t: +61 (0)3 9642 4494
members@icheme.org
e: austmembers@icheme.org

Personal Development and


Leadership

Training Course
Catalogue 2016

www.icheme.org/joinnow
UK Rugby

Process
Plant

IChemE is a Malaysia
registered charity in England and Wales, and a charity registered in Scotland (SC039661)
t:
+603 2283 1381
www.icheme.org
e: malaysianmembers@icheme.org

New Zealand

Safety

t: +64 (4)473 4398


e: nzmembers@icheme.org

Singapore
t: +65 6471 5043
e: singaporemembers@icheme.org

UK London
t: +44 (0)20 7927 8200
e: info@icheme.org

Process
Operations

IChemE is a registered charity in England and Wales (214379) and a charity registered in Scotland (SC 039661)

Commercial and Project


Management

www.icheme.org

Sustainability

Global
AWARDS
2016

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Registration form

For courses organised by IChemE


Complete and return this form by email or fax to the relevant IChemE office:
UK, Singapore, Abu Dhabi, US or Canada courses email: ar@icheme.org or fax +44 (0)1788 534403
Australian and New Zealand courses email austcourses@icheme.org or fax: +61 (0)3 9642 4495
Malaysian courses email: malaysiancourses@icheme.org or fax: +603 2283 1382
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To register on any non-IChemE course see individual contact details.
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Entry is free and you can apply online at www.icheme.org/globalawards

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www.icheme.org

IChemE is committed to supporting the professional


development of chemical and process engineers...

Whether youre a recent graduate or a seasoned professional, Im confident that we can help you further develop your
skills and become even more effective in your current and future roles.
In 2016, were launching a range of new process safety training including courses on emergency planning, risk
assessment and accident consequence modelling techniques. Weve also revamped our flagship process safety course,
Fundamentals of Process Safety, and were taking some of our established UK courses to South-East Asia and Australia
for the first time, including our popular communication skills courses and Chemical Engineering for Non Engineers.
All of our courses can also be run in-house, at a time and place that suits you. Many organisations already partner with
IChemE as their preferred international training provider.
In-company courses provide a cost-effective training solution if you have several employees requiring similar training.
They also provide organisations with the opportunity to work with our experts to develop customised courses to meet
specific development needs. Contact courses@icheme.org to request a quotation or to further discuss your training
requirements.
Throughout this catalogue you will see a reference to CPD duration next to each course listing. Our mycareerpath tool
is available free-of-charge to all IChemE members and will help you to record your CPD activity. Manage your CPD at
www.icheme.org/cpd
Dont forget, if you are recording mandatory CPD you should refer to your own regulators requirements as recognition
of CPD hours may vary.

How to book
For courses run by IChemE, you can register online via the web link provided. Or complete the registration form at the
back of this catalogue.
For all other courses, contact the course provider to register your interest and to find out how to book.
Finally, if you dont see what youre looking for, do let me know. Our training portfolio is growing each year and we
regularly develop bespoke courses to meet the needs of our members and customers.

Matt Stalker
Head of training and events
mstalker@icheme.org

Courses at a glance

By topic area

By location

Safety
UK & Europe
Personal Development and Leadership
Process Operations
Process Plant
Commercial and Project Management

Australasia
Malaysia & Singapore
Rest of the world
South Africa

Sustainability

Safety
UK & Europe

Area Classification
Asset Integrity Management in the Process Industries Managing Ageing Assets
Comprehensive Explosion Science
Consequence Modelling Techniques
Dust Explosions Webinars
Emergency Planning Principles
Establishing and Maintaining a Safety Culture
Expert Hazard Awareness
Fundamentals of Process Safety
Fundamentals of Nuclear Safety
Gas Explosion Hazards on LNG Facilities
Gas Explosion Hazards on Offshore and Onshore Facilities
Hazard Study Awareness
Hazard Identification Techniques
HAZOP Awareness
HAZOP Applied Hazard and Operability Study
HAZOP Study, Leadership and Management
HAZOP Study for the Offshore Oil and Gas Industry
HAZOP Study for Team Leaders and Team Members
Human Factors in Health and Safety
Inherent Safety in Design
Introduction to Risk Assessment
Layer of Protection Analysis (LOPA)
Leading Incident Investigations
Managing the Hazards of Flare Systems
Process Safety Awareness
Process Safety Key Performance Indicators and PSM Auditing
SIL Determination and Hazard Assessment
SIL Determination and IEC 61508/61511

page
10
10
11
11
12
12
13
13
14
17
17
18
20
18
19
20
21
21
22
25
27
27
28
29
30
32
33
33
34

Australasia

Fundamentals of Process Safety


Hazard Identification Techniques
HAZOP Study for Team Leaders and Team Members

14
20
22

Human Factors in Health and Safety


Inherent Safety in Design
Introduction to Risk Assessment
Layer of Protection Analysis (LOPA)
Managing the Hazards of Flare Systems
Pressure Relief: Protecting Equipment and Personel from Over Pressure
Process Safety and the Board
Process Safety Awareness

25
27
27
28
30
31
32
32

Malaysia & Singapore

Fundamentals of Process Safety


HAZOP Study for Team Leaders and Team Members Chemical and Pharma
HAZOP Study for Team Leaders and Team Members Oil and Gas
Layer of Protection Analysis (LOPA)
Managing the Hazards of Flare Systems

14
23
23
28
30

Rest of the world

Fundamentals of Process Safety


Fundamentals of Process Safety Management
Layer of Protection Analysis (LOPA)

14
16
28

Personal Development and Leadership


UK & Europe

Creativity for Chemical Engineers


Effective Communication for Engineers
Effective Technical Writing
Managing Cross-Cultural and Virtual Teams
Mentoring for Chemical Engineers
New to Management

35
36
35
37
38
38

Australasia

Effective Communication for Engineers


Marketing for Engineers

36
37

Malaysia & Singapore

Effective Communication for Engineers

36

Process Operations
UK & Europe

Chemical Engineering for Other Engineers


Chemical Engineering for Scientists
Practical Distillation Technology

40
40
41

Australasia

Chemical Engineering for Non-Chemical Engineers


Heat Integration

39
41

Malaysia & Singapore

Chemical Engineering for Non-Engineers


Practical Distillation Technology

39
41

Process Plant
UK & Europe

Control and Operation of Centrifugal Gas Compressors


Control and Operation of Reciprocating Gas Compressors
Design and Operation of FPSOs
Design and Operation of Piping Systems
Effective Alarm Management
Essentials of Pressure Systems
Managing Deterioration of Plant Equipment
Practical Aspects of Process Control and Instrumentation
Pressure Relief
Process Design Practices
Production, Process and Emergency Systems on Oil and Gas Installations

43
44
44
45
45
46
46
47
47
48
48

Australasia

Control and Operation of Centrifugal Gas Compressors


Control and Operation of Reciprocating Gas Compressors
Design and Operation of FPSOs
Practical Aspects of Process Control and Instrumentation
Production, Process and Emergency Systems on Oil and Gas Installations

43
44
44
47
48

Rest of the world

Control and Operation of Centrifugal Gas Compressors


Control and Operation of Reciprocating Gas Compressors

43
44

Commercial and Project Management


UK & Europe

Chemical Plant Commissioning


Engineering Procurement
Engineering Project Management
IChemE Forms of Contract
What Engineers Need to Know About Contracts

49
49
50
51
51

Sustainability
UK & Europe

Leading an ESOS Assessment


Water Minmisation with Process Integration

53
54

Australasia

Energy Cost Reduction Efficiency and On-Site Generation


Environmental Sustainability and Waste Reduction for Manufacturing
Process Modelling for Water Treatment Professionals

www.icheme.org

52
52
53

New IChemE training


courses coming soon

Process Safety Culture and


Leadership
Effective Incident Investigation
Fundamentals of Process Design
Process Control and
Instrumentation
Fundamentals of Chemical
Engineering a refresher for
experienced practitioners

To register your interest


or find out more email
courses@icheme.org

Consequence Modelling
Techniques

Consequence modelling
is used to predict accident
effects and the impact this
could have on people, the
environment and property.
This course will introduce the
concept of loss of containment
scenarios and guide you
through which models are
available and their suitability
for different situations.

UK
Date / Location
2123 September 2016
Rugby

Fees
IChemE member
1000 + VAT
Non-member
1200 + VAT

Contact

There are exercises on


scenarios definition, selection
of input parameters, simple
modelling and results
interpretation.

Courses department
IChemE, UK

Learning outcomes

CPD 18 hrs

+44 (0)1788 534431


courses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/cmt

how to identify a set of


major accident scenarios
understand which types of models are available for
different scenarios and which are appropriate at
different stages of plant design or operation
understand the limitation of the various model
types
how to define the possible outcomes of hazardous
material release eg fire, explosions and toxic effects
understand the requirements for modelling these
hazards

Managing crises and major


incidents will affect an entire
organisation. All normal
operations cease, priorities
change and employees
and teams and are put in
situations they may never
have experienced before. In
the hazardous chemical and
process industries, detailed
emergency planning is
essential.

how to specify a range of hazard studies and


interpret the output

how to interpret model results and how they are


used in quantified risk analysis

understand the UK and EU regulatory requirements


for consequence modelling

project and plant managers


anyone who needs to understand the potential
scale of accidents and the consequences

Non-member
1200 + VAT

Contact
Courses department

the regulatory requirements (eg 1995 PFEER)


pertaining to the protection of people during major
accidents
identify all foreseeable integrity threats (Major
Accident Hazards)
the risk analysis required for both onshore and
offshore major accident response planning
to describe the components of emergency
procedures from minor incidents to major accidents
explain the effectiveness of the plants protection
and procedures, including temporary refuges
appreciate the requirement for emergency
response planning and communications
clearly describe the various roles within emergency
response and incident management

Who will benefit

anyone involved in the prevention of major accidents


or incidents
project and plant managers

Course presenters

Mark Yates, FIChemE, Intergrity Engineering Oil and Gas


Peter Waite, Professional Process Safety Engineer,
FIChemE, Astrid Consulting

Course presenters

www.icheme.org

Fees
IChemE member
1000 + VAT

By the end of the course delegates will understand:

1113 October 2016


Rugby

Learning outcomes

the importance of defining source terms (initial


conditions), including uncertainty

those new to the field of process safety

Date / Location

Delegates will be led through the fundamentals of


emergency response requirements using a mixture of
presentation and practical involvement..

UK

IChemE, UK
This course looks at the key
aspects of planning including
+44 (0)1788 534431
procedures, training,
courses@icheme.org
testing and how to review
www.icheme.org/ep
performance. It focuses
heavily on measures to protect CPD 18 hrs
life and avoid serious injury,
including the provision of
shelter and refuges, escape routes, evacuation equipment,
fire fighting and shut-down systems.

understand the possible impact of these hazards on


people, the environment and property

Who will benefit

Emergency Planning Principles

Peter Waite, Professional Process Safety Engineer,


FIChemE, Astrid Consulting
Craig Menzies, consultant

Environmental Sustainability
and Waste Reduction for
Manufacturing

Case study examples,


simulation problem solving
and useful operating
examples will feature
throughout.

Learning outcomes

Australia
Date / Location
3031 August 2016
Melbourne

Fees
IChemE member
AUD$1980 (GST inc)
Non-member
AUD$2300 (GST inc)

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, Australia
+61 (0)3 9642 4494
austcourses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/esm

CPD 12 hrs

By the end of the course delegates will understand:

environmental concerns global warming, greenhouse gas, climate change, disasters increase,
water shortages, consumer demands, carbon
emission systems

This course provides the skills


and knowledge to prevent
and protect employees from
injuries and ill health, plus
minimise loss to property,
environment and efficient
production. It introduces
many of the most important
hazard identification
techniques, their advantages
and disadvantages, and when
to apply them.

Learning outcomes
By the end of the course
delegates will:

learn about key hazard


identification techniques
apply appropriate
techniques for different
situations, scenarios and
projects

environmental economics costs of wastes,


environmental cost centre management,
investment pay-back, green purchasing and carbon
footprint

cleaner production versus waste treatment, life


cycle approaches

environmental management systems assessments


(Environmental Impact Assessment), ISO 14001
and in-house systems

waste minimisation assessments (eco-audit)


detailed how-to steps, including new technology
assessment

Who will benefit

preventative maintenance programs and reject


reduction
environmental action plans
eco-labeling, total product stewardship and
environmental benchmarking
environmental regulations and trends
government environment, water, fire, safety and
poisons authorities

Who will benefit

Hazard identification requires


a systematic and methodical
approach to ensure all risks
are recognised, prioritised and
managed.

engineering staff, including operations, quality


control, design, maintenance
managers at all levels within an organisation

Course presenter

understand limitations of
each technique
when and how to use
assessment as part of
hazard identification

UK
Date / Location
2022 June 2016
Rugby

Fees
IChemE member
1000 + VAT

New

The course will assist


engineers in continual
environmental and efficiency
improvement. Delegates will
develop their knowledge in
the new areas of resource
efficiency, recovery and re-use
in manufacturing industries
as well as understanding the
developing environmental
standards and compliance.

Hazard Identification
Techniques

Non-member
1200 + VAT

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, UK
+44 (0)1788 534431
courses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/hit

CPD 18 hrs
Australia
Date / Location
2729 June 2016
Brisbane

Fees
IChemE member
AUD$2640 (GST inc)
Non-member
AUD$3080 (GST inc)

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, Australia
+61 (0)3 9642 4494
austcourses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/
managers, supervisors
hitaus
and engineers
CPD 18 hrs
responsible for design,
commissioning,
decommissioning,
construction, installation and modification of plant
plant/process operators including maintenance
functions
process safety engineers and loss prevention
specialists
chemical engineers working towards Chartered
status

Course presenter
Phil Eames, FIChemE, Professional Process Safety
Engineer, consultant

Darrell Reeve, MIEAust CPEng, MIMF,


Cleaner Production Australia
7

Inherent Safety in Design and


Operation Development

Significant resources
are invested in the daily
management, control
and mitigation of risks in
the chemical and process
industries. However,
avoiding or reducing
hazards is inherently safer
than controlling them and
benefits and efficiencies can
be achieved by promoting,
understanding and creating a
more inherently safer working
environment for new and
existing facilities.
This course provides a
greater understanding of
inherent safety including the
main principles, tools and
measures for a safer, efficient
and more profitable plant and
operations.

Learning outcomes
By the end of the course
delegates will:

identify the principles of


inherent safety
have skills to promote an
inherent safety message
throughout organisations
be able to measure
inherent safety
understand how
inherent safety forms
part of a wider safety
management system

UK
Date / Location
1416 June 2016
Rugby

Fees
IChemE member
1000 + VAT
Non-member
1200 + VAT

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, UK
+44 (0)1788 534431
courses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/is

CPD 18 hrs
Australia
Date / Location
68 December 2016
Brisbane

Fees
IChemE member
AUD$2640 (GST inc)
Non-member
AUD$ 3080 (GST inc)

Introduction to Risk Assessment

Controlling and reviewing


risks in the workplace
helps protect employees,
property and overall business
performance. In most
countries it is also a legal
requirement.
The course helps develop
skills and knowledge to
identify and assess actual
and potential hazards in
the workplace. It includes
ways to control the risks,
including the use of
documentation and systems
to improve communication
and awareness throughout
organisations.

Learning outcomes
By the end of the course
delegates will:

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, Australia
+61 (0)3 9642 4494

austcourses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/
isaus

CPD 18 hrs

staff responsible for design, commissioning,


decommissioning, construction and installation of
plant
plant/process operators including maintenance
functions

safety engineers and loss prevention specialists

environmental engineers

chemical engineers working towards Chartered


status

Course presenter
Andrew Hudson, MIChemE, Hudson Consultants

www.icheme.org

understand the different


types of assessment and
when to apply
identify and develop risk
controls
implement appropriate
documentation and
administrative systems

Who will benefit

Who will benefit

know how to risk assess


using the 5-stage
process

UK
Date / Location
2324 June 2016
Rugby

Fees
IChemE member
850 + VAT
Non-member
1000 + VAT

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, UK
+44 (0)1788 534431
courses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/ra

CPD 12 hrs
Australia
Date / Location
30 June 1 July 2016
Brisbane

Fees
IChemE member
AUD$2090 (GST inc)
Non-member
AUD$2420 (GST inc)

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, Australia
+61 (0)3 9642 4494
austcourses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/
raaus

CPD 12 hrs

staff involved in the


risk assessment process including supervisors,
managers and directors
plant/process operators including maintenance
functions
process safety engineers and loss prevention
specialists
chemical engineers working towards Chartered
status

Course presenter
Phil Eames, FIChemE, Professional Process Safety
Engineer, consultant

Marketing for Engineers

The course will cover


understanding market
potential, marketing research,
analysis and metrics, market
and customer segmentation
and the engineers role
drawing it all together and
how to put into practice.

Learning outcomes

Australia
Date / Location
2 November 2016
Sydney

Fees
IChemE member
AUD$979 (GST inc)
Non-member
AUD$1265(GST inc)

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, Australia
+61 (0)3 9642 4494
austcourses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/mfe

CPD 6 hrs

How the engineering function, across various industries,


must integrate with other aspects of the business in todays
competitive environment.

Who will benefit


Individuals with an engineering background moving into
management and/or working closely with the marketing/
product development team.

An interactive course built


around forecasting water
quality and addressing
treatment plant performance
issues arising from changing
feed water conditions.
Delegates will learn to
understand the influence of
water chemistry on process
design and how to use this
knowledge to optimise
performance. Delegates will
also design new treatment
plants and size equipment
using comprehensive software
that integrates material and
heat balancing, equipment
sizing, stream property and
solubility prediction.

Australia
Date / Location
28 April 2016
Brisbane

Fees
IChemE member
AUD$1100 (inc GST)

New

This course will provide


participants with a general
understanding of the key
principles and approaches to
market based management,
particularly as they relate to
the engineering environment.

Process Modelling for Water


Treatment Professionals

Non-member
AUD$1430 (GST inc)

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, Australia
+61 (0)3 9642 4494
austcourses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/
pmwtp

CPD 7 hrs

Each module includes


realistic scenarios for advanced water treatment
applications including boiler feedwater, cooling water
blowdown, industrial wastewater, seawater desalination,
mine dewatering and brine management. Up to 21
technologies in water treatment will be explored during
the sessions. A three month free subscription to AqMB
process simulation software for water treatment is also
included.

Learning outcomes
By the end of the course delegates will have an
understanding and overview of:

configuring process flow shets for design or


modelling purposes

sizing equipment for vendor pricing

creating a process design report

Who will benefit

process engineers
consultants and operators involved in concept
design, sizing and/or operation of existing
physico-chemical water treatment plants involving
conventional (settling, filtration), membrane, resin,
electrolytic or thermal technologies

Course presenters
Darren Szczepanski CEng, MIChemE, MIEAust, and
Matthew Brannock CEng, CSci, MIChemE, RPEQ

Area Classification
ACCREDITED
Training course

The classification of hazardous


areas is an integral part of
the overall risk assessment
process required under
the Dangerous Substances
Explosive Atmospheres
Regulations 2002 (DSEAR).
Its purpose is to define
the extent, frequency and
duration of any occurrence
of an explosive atmosphere
(the zone). The zone in turn
defines the requirements for
the selection of equipment
and protective systems so as
to prevent sources of ignition.
Compliance with the DSEAR
regulations is mandatory
for any operator handling
dangerous substances.

Learning outcomes

UK
Dates / Locations
2627 April 2016
Edinburgh
1112 October 2016
Manchester

Fees
IChemE member
1160 + VAT
Non-member
1220 + VAT

Contact
Jackie Kendall
ABB Consulting, UK
+44 (0)1642 372121
jackie.kendall
@gb.abb.com

www.abb.com

CPD 12 hrs

On completion delegates should be able to:

understand why area classification is


carried out

Asset Integrity Management


in the Process Industries
Managing your Ageing Assets
Many of the process plants
and offshore installations
in the UK and worldwide
are operating beyond their
nominal design life, raising
concerns for potential loss
of hazardous materials and
adverse business impact. So
how can operating companies
more rigorously demonstrate
suitability for continued long
term operation?

identify the grades of release and how they relate


to zoning

Who will benefit

www.icheme.org

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, UK

competence understand how to identify the


core areas of competence to retain in-house and
understand what is needed to act as intelligent
customers for outsourced services

join an area classification meeting and work under


the direction of an experienced practitioner

Mike Ellis and Peter Hodgson, ABB Consulting

IChemE member
1150 + VAT
Non-member
1300 + VAT

organisational arrangements understand how


risks can be managed in a fragmented/outsourced
organisational regime

Course presenter

Fees

risk management understand how to


determine the SHE and business threats from
ageing equipment (eg equipment degradation,
obsolescence, loss of technical support), and how
to manage them

understand the requirements for selection of


equipment to be installed in potentially explosive
atmospheres

Recent graduates and experienced staff with operations,


process, engineering and safety responsibilities.

1011 May 2016


London

Learning outcomes

appreciate the industry codes available that can be


used to establish the extent of zones

Who will benefit

Date / Location

The findings from the HSE


+44 (0)1788 534431
KP4 and COMAH ageing
courses@icheme.org
plant initiatives indicate that
while many companies have
www.icheme.org/
good practices for day to
assetintegrity
day integrity management,
CPD 14 hrs
a specific approach is
required for the key business
considerations of ageing and life extension.

understand the principles of area


classification
understand the steps in the area classification
procedure

UK

investment requirements learn how to determine,


justify and prioritise the big ticket items

Suitable for senior managers and engineers in operating


companies who are responsible for authorising,
developing and implementing strategies for ageing plant
and asset life extension.

Course presenters
Laza Krstin and Neil Henry, ABB Consulting

Comprehensive Explosion
Science

The course covers gas and


dust explosion theory, DSEAR
and ATEX regulations, ignition
theory, hazardous area
classification, risk assessment
and protection concepts.

Learning outcomes
By the end of the course
delegates will better
understand:

UK
Dates / Locations
12 March 2016
Rugby
1112 October 2016
London

Fees
IChemE member
1150 + VAT
Non-member
1300 + VAT

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, UK
+44 (0)1788 534431
courses@icheme.org

CPD 14 hrs

explosion science;
conditions causing and consequences

understanding and controlling ignition sources


explosion protection and isolation concepts and
design
the requirements of UK and EU regulations
for equipment for use in potentially explosive
atmospheres and for explosion protection
equipment (the ATEX directive)
past incidents and why study them, statistics

Who will benefit

hazardous area classification and explosion risk


assessment techniques

the role of CFD in explosion consequence analysis

those who are responsible for industrial premises


that fall under the DSEAR(UK) / ATEX(EU)
regulations
engineers who are responsible for designing
new process plants and maintaining existing
installations
OEMs who are required to design equipment and
process according to the ATEX directive employees
working in hazardous areas

Course presenter

UK
Date / Location
2123 September 2016
Rugby

Fees
IChemE member
1000 + VAT
Non-member
1200 + VAT

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, UK
+44 (0)1788 534431
courses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/cmt

CPD 18 hrs

Learning outcomes

the requirements of UK and EU regulations relating


to health and safety in potentially explosive
atmospheres

material explosibility properties and test methods

There are exercises on


scenarios definition, selection
of input parameters, simple
modelling and results
interpretation.

www.icheme.org/ces

Consequence modelling
is used to predict accident
effects and the impact this
could have on people, the
environment and property.
This course will introduce
the concept of loss of
containment scenarios and
guide you through which
models are available and
their suitability for different
situations.

Safety

Gain a comprehensive
understanding of the
phenomenon of explosions,
consequences, prevention
techniques and current
regulatory requirements for
a safe and compliant working
environment.

Consequence Modelling
Techniques

how to identify a set of major accident scenarios


understand which types of models are available for
different scenarios and which are appropriate at
different stages of plant design or operation
understand the limitation of the various model
types
how to define the possible outcomes of hazardous
material release eg fire, explosions and toxic effects
understand the requirements for modelling these
hazards
understand the possible impact of these hazards on
people, the environment and property
the importance of defining source terms (initial
conditions), including uncertainty
how to specify a range of hazard studies and
interpret the output
how to interpret model results and how they are
used in quantified risk analysis
understand the UK and EU regulatory requirements
for consequence modelling

Who will benefit

those new to the field of process safety

project and plant managers

anyone who needs to understand the potential


scale of accidents and the consequences

Course presenters
Mark Yates, FIChemE, Intergrity Engineering Oil and Gas
Peter Waite, FIChemE, Astrid Consulting

Dave Price, AFIChemE, and Barry Pomford, GexCon

11

Emergency Planning Principles

Dust Explosions

Explosive atmospheres can be


caused by flammable gases, mists
or vapours or by combustible
dusts. Explosions can cause loss of
life, serious injuries and significant
damage.
ATEX is the name commonly given
to the two European Directives for
controlling explosive atmospheres:
Directive 99/92/EC (also known as
ATEX 137 or the ATEX Workplace
Directive) covers the minimum
requirements for improving the
health and safety protection of
workers potentially at risk from
explosive atmospheres.
Directive 94/9/EC (also known as
ATEX 95 or the ATEX Equipment
Directive) covers an approximation
of the laws of Members States
concerning equipment and
protective systems intended
for use in potentially explosive
atmospheres.
This series of four, one-hour
webinars examine the causes
and prevention of explosive
atmospheres and the requirements
of the European directives (ATEX).

Learning outcomes

understand current EU
directives (ATEX) and required
standards

UK
Date / Webinar
Introduction to Dust
Explosions
21 June 2016
Hazardous Area
Classification
30 June 2016
Minimising Sources of
Ignition
5 July 2016
Reducing the Risk
and Mitigating the
Consequences
7 July 2016

Fees
Webinar 1: 45 + VAT
Webinars 2, 3 and 4:
85 + VAT
Four webinars:
235 + VAT

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, UK
+44 (0)1788 534431
courses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/
dust

CPD hrs:
1per webinar
CPD hrs:
4 total

understand approaches for hazard area classification

professionals based outside of the EU seeking different


approaches to managing explosive atmospheres

www.icheme.org

Non-member
1200 + VAT

Contact
Courses department

the regulatory requirements (eg 1995 PFEER)


pertaining to the protection of people during major
accidents
identify all foreseeable integrity threats (Major
Accident Hazards)
the risk analysis required for both onshore and
offshore major accident response planning
to describe the components of emergency
procedures from minor incidents to major accidents
explain the effectiveness of the plants protection
and procedures, including temporary refuges
appreciate the requirement for emergency
response planning and communications
clearly describe the various roles within emergency
response and incident management

Who will benefit

anyone who would like to develop an understanding of


aspects of process safety

Keith Plumb CEng, CSci, FIChemE, BPE consultant

Fees
IChemE member
1000 + VAT

By the end of the course delegates will understand:

Course presenter

1113 October 2016


Rugby

Learning outcomes

apply methodology for risk assessing explosive


atmospheres

engineers who are responsible for designing new process


plants and maintaining existing installations

Date / Location

Delegates will be led through the fundamentals of


emergency response requirements using a mixture of
presentation and practical involvement..

those who are responsible for industrial premises that fall


under ATEX (EU) regulations

UK

This course looks at the key


IChemE, UK
aspects of planning including
+44 (0)1788 534431
procedures, training,
courses@icheme.org
testing and how to review
www.icheme.org/ep
performance. It focuses
heavily on measures to protect CPD 18 hrs
life and avoid serious injury,
including the provision of
shelter and refuges, escape routes, evacuation equipment,
fire fighting and shut-down systems.

learn about the five components necessary for explosive


atmospheres

Who will benefit

Managing crises and major


incidents will affect an entire
organisation. All normal
operations cease, priorities
change and employees
and teams and are put in
situations they may never
have experienced before. In
the hazardous chemical and
process industries, detailed
emergency planning is
essential.

anyone involved in the prevention of major accidents


or incidents
project and plant managers

Course presenters
Peter Waite, Professional Process Safety Engineer,
FIChemE, Astrid Consulting
Craig Menzies, consultant

Establishing and Maintaining


a Safety Culture
UK
Dates / Locations
2526 April 2016
London

Fees
IChemE member
950 + VAT
Non-member
1100 + VAT

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, UK

Learning outcomes

+44 (0)1788 534431

understand what is
meant by safety culture
and why it is important

www.icheme.org/
emsc

courses@icheme.org

CPD 11.5 hrs


understand how to
measure safety culture
and assess whether it needs to be changed /
improved
understand how to change / improve safety culture

Who will benefit

anyone involved in the leadership of an


organisation

Aims to provide delegates


with an understanding of
the potential effects and
consequences of hydrocarbon
releases in the oil and gas
industry. Delegates will
develop their understanding
of dispersion, fires and
explosions through a series
of classroom sessions and
discussions led by industry
experts. They will also get
the opportunity to witness
live practical demonstrations
which reinforce the learning
experience.

Learning outcomes
Fires

characteristics of jet and


pool fires

ACCREDITED
Training course

UK
Dates / Location
12 March 2016
56 July 2016
1617 November 2016
Cumbria

Fees
IChemE member
1525 + VAT

Contact
Karen Armstrong
+44 (0) 16977 47404
spadeadamhac@
dnvgl.com

www.dnvgl.com/
training/experthazard-awarenesstraining-2-days--9723

CPD 9.5 hrs

how fires cause damage and injury

how the potential for damage can be assessed

mitigation of the effects of fire

Dispersion
characteristics of vapour dispersion following liquid
spills

those in a managerial position involved in process


operations

professionals involved in HR, process safety, HSE


and manufacturing support functions

potential effects from delayed ignition

gas accumulation in confined structures

anyone who would like to develop a broad


understanding of safety culture

Course presenters
Stephen Watson, FIChemE, and Marcus Beard,
Arthur D Little

Safety

It is now widely accepted that


an organisations culture has
a major impact on its safety
performance. Accident and
incident investigations have
repeatedly demonstrated the
importance of safety culture,
and how failure to establish
and maintain an appropriate
safety culture impacts the
probability and potential
severity of disasters.

Expert Hazard
Awareness

dispersion of releases in offshore facilities and


pipelines

Explosions

mechanism for pressure generation in congested


process regions

effect of congestion and confinement on explosions

deflagration to detonation transition

methods for estimating the explosion loading


generated in real conditions and risk based
approach to setting design targets
explosion mitigation

Who will benefit


Suitable for those who require a greater knowledge
regarding hydrocarbon releases including safet managers/
representatives and hazard assessment engineers.

Course presenters
Paul Cronin and Mike Johnson, DNV GL

13

Fundamentals of Process Safety

Our flagship process safety course has been revised and


updated for 2016. The content includes new case studies,
latest information and current best practice. The course
references the framework of the IChemE Safety Centre:
knowledge and competence, engineering and design,
systems and procedures, assurance, human factors and
culture. It is essential for anyone who is involved in the
design, modification, operation and maintenance of a
major hazard or process plant.
Process safety incidents constantly highlight the
importance of having a clear understanding of the
principles of process safety management throughout
an organisation. This must include staff at all levels from
board members through engineers and other technical
staff to plant and shift managers and supervisors. This
intensive course covers the fundamentals and aims to
provide an understanding of the key principles of process
safety and its management.

Learning outcomes

understand the human, environmental and


business consequences of poor process safety
be aware of and understand the key factors
influencing the basis for process safety
understand the hazards associated with process
plant and how the risks can be controlled
understand the key process safety requirements
at each stage in the life cycle of process plant
understand the ways in which your work
depends on the knowledge and expertise of
others
understand your own limitations and know how to
acquire further knowledge and understanding of
process safety management

Delegates who pass the assessment receive an IChemE


pass certificate in the Fundamentals of Process Safety.

Who will benefit

managers, supervisors, safety personnell,


engineers and others involved in the design,
operation, modification or maintenance of major
hazard or other process plant
graduates, chemical and other engineers en-route
to achieving chartered status
anyone who would like to develop an
understanding of process safety
professionals who want to expand their knowledge
of process safety

www.icheme.org

Course presenters
Peter Neal, Premier Safety Associates
Andrew Hudson, MIChemE, Hudson Consultants
Tracey Kelly, FIChemE, Professional Process Safety
Engineer, Process Safety Consultant
Phil Eames, FIChemE, Professional Process Safety
Engineer, consultant
Mark Yates, FIChemE, Integrity Engineering Oil and Gas
Steve Cooper, MIChemE, Advisian
Lex Seto, Registered Professional Engineer Queensland
Tony Collins, FIChemE, TC Consulting and Training
Iain Murray, MIChemE, PSOEEng
Paul Feltoe, FIChemE, Safety Solutions
Dr Jens Stein, AIChemE, Safety Solutions
John Atherton, FIChemE
Hisham Saadawi, FIChemE

Australia

New Zealand

Abu Dhabi

Dates / Locations

Dates / Locations

Date / Location

Date / Location

2226 February 2016


Cork

1115 April 2016


Perth

tbc
Abu Dhabi

2529 April 2016


Grimsby

1115 July 2016


Brisbane

29 August2 September
2016
Hamilton

1317 June 2016


Aberdeen

Fees

1014 October 2016


Melbourne

37 October 2016
Manchester

IChemE member
NZD$3465 (GST inc)

Fees

Non-member
NZD$3990 (GST inc)

IChemE member
1725
Non-member
1920

59 December 2016
Reading

Fees
IChemE member
1725 + VAT
2430 + 23% VAT
Non-member
1920 + VAT
2702 + 23% VAT

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, UK
+44 (0)1788 534431
courses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/fps

CPD 34 hrs

IChemE member
AUD$3465 (GST inc)

Contact

Non-member
AUD$3990 (GST inc)

Courses department
IChemE, Australia

Contact

+61 (0)3 9642 4494


austcourses@icheme.org

Courses department
IChemE, Australia
+61 (0)3 9642 4494
austcourses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/
fpsperth
www.icheme.org/
fpsbris
www.icheme.org/
fpsmel

www.icheme.org/
fpsnz

CPD 34 hrs

Singapore

Malaysia

Date / Locations

Date / Location

Date / Location

tbc
Calgary, Canada

913 May 2016


Singapore

59 September 2016
Kuala Lumpur

tbc
Houston, US

Fees

Fees

Fees

IChemE member
1725

IChemE member
MYR 8880 + GST

IChemE member
1725

Non-member
1920

Non-member
MYR 9800 + GST

Non-member
1920

Contact

Contact

Courses department
IChemE, UK

Courses department
IChemE, Malaysia

+44 (0)1788 534431

+603 2283 1381

courses@icheme.org

malaysiancourses@
icheme.org

Courses department
IChemE, UK
+44 (0)1788 534431
courses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/
fpssing

www.icheme.org/
fpscan

CPD 34 hrs

www.icheme.org/
fpsus

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, UK
+44 (0)1788 534431
courses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/
fps_abu_dhabi

CPD 34 hrs

CPD 34 hrs

Canada/ US

Contact

Fees

Safety

UK/Ireland

www.icheme.org/
fpsmal

CPD 34 hrs

CPD 34 hrs

15

Fundamentals of Process Safety


Management

Our flagship process safety course has been revised and


updated for 2016. The content includes new case studies,
latest information and current best practice. The course
references the framework of the IChemE Safety Centre:
knowledge and competence, engineering and design,
systems and procedures, assurance, human factors and
culture. It is essential for anyone who is involved in the
design, modification, operation and maintenance of a
major hazard or process plant.
Process safety incidents constantly highlight the
importance of having a clear understanding of the
principles of process safety management throughout
an organisation. This must include staff at all levels from
board members through engineers and other technical
staff to plant and shift managers and supervisors. This
intensive course covers the fundamentals and aims to
provide an understanding of the key principles of process
safety and its management.

Learning outcomes

understand the human, environmental and


business consequences of poor process safety
be aware of and understand the key factors
influencing the basis for process safety
understand the hazards associated with process
plant and how the risks can be controlled
understand the key process safety requirements
at each stage in the life cycle of process plant
understand the ways in which your work
depends on the knowledge and expertise of
others
understand your own limitations and know how to
acquire further knowledge and understanding of
process safety management

Delegates who pass the assessment receive an IChemE


pass certificate in the Fundamentals of Process Safety
Management.

Who will benefit

managers, supervisors, safety personnell,


engineers and others involved in the design,
operation, modification or maintenance of major
hazard or other process plant
graduates, chemical and other engineers en-route
to achieving chartered status
anyone who would like to develop an
understanding of process safety
professionals who want to expand their knowledge
of process safety management

www.icheme.org

Course presenters
Rod Prior, MIChemE, Professional Process Safety
Engineer, SHExcellence and Nigel Coni, FIChemE,
consultant

South Africa
Dates / Location
913 May 2016
711 November 2016
Boksburg

Fees
R14000

Contact
Rod Prior
+27 (0)82 554 0010
r.prior@mweb.co.za

www.icheme.org/
fpsm

SAIChE
CPD Credits: 4

Fundamentals of Nuclear
Safety

This needs to include staff


at all levels from board
members through engineers
and other technical staff to
plant and shift managers
and supervisors. This
interactive course provides
an understanding of the
theoretical, engineering,
management, operational and
regulatory basis of safety in
the nuclear industry.

UK
Date / Location
31 October
4 November 2016
Preston

Fees
IChemE member
1725 + VAT
Non-member
1920 + VAT

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, UK
+44 (0)1788 534431
courses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/fns

CPD 33.75 hrs

Learning outcomes

understand the basic science and engineering


principles underlying the nuclear fuel and cycle
and nuclear reactors

An advanced course on the


analysis of explosion and
other hazards for liquefied
natural gas (LNG) facilities. It
addresses multiple hazards
associated with onshore
and offshore LNG facilities
including LNG release
and dispersion, explosion
modelling, cryogenic spills,
prevention and mitigation,
probabilistic risk assessments,
legislation and accidents.
Practical case studies and
demonstrations on the
application of 3D modelling to
LNG explosion safety are also
included.

be aware of and understand the key factors


influencing the basis for nuclear safety

understand the importance of safety culture and


the consequences of poor nuclear safety
understand ways in which their work depends on
the knowledge and expertise of others and how to
acquire knowledge and understanding of nuclear
safety management
understand the safety case and how it should be
the basis of decisions
importance of authority and accountabilityof
metrics needed to demonstrate compliance
understand the regulatory environment in which
they operate

Date / Location
1314 October 2016
London

Fees
IChemE member
1150 + VAT
Non-member
1320 + VAT

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, UK
+44 (0)1788 534431
courses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/lng

CPD 11.5 hrs

Learning outcomes

understand the hazards of the nuclear industry


and how the risks can be controlled

understand the key nuclear safety requirements


at each stage in the life cycle of a nuclear plant
from conceptual design through to operation,
maintenance and modification

UK

Safety

Recent and historical


incidents in the nuclear sector
highlight the importance of
having a clear understanding
of the principles of process
safety management
throughout an organisation.

Gas Explosion Hazards on


LNG Faciilities

understand the parameters governing LNG release


and dispersion
be aware of LNG release and accident statistics
understand the parameters governing vapour cloud
explosions (VCEs)
understand the accident chain of events
understand various preventive measures to reduce
the occurrence of accidents and various mitigation
and control techniques to reduce explosion
consequences

Who will benefit

safety engineers

safety consultants

structural and design engineers

oil and gas HSE

investigation team leaders

process safety coordinators

Course presenters
Dr Filippo Gavelli and Prankul Middha, GexCon

Delegates who pass the assessment receive an IChemE


pass certificate in the Fundamentals of Nuclear Safety.

Who will benefit


Aimed at early-career professionals in the nuclear
industry. It can also act as a refresher for more
experienced practitioners as well as engineers and
scientists in other disciplines wishing to enter the nuclear
industry.

Course presenters
Bob Skelton, FIChemE, Cambridge University,
Andy Trimble, FIChemE and Geoff Gill, safety consultant

17

Gas Explosion Hazards on


Hazard Identification
Offshore and Onshore Facilities Techniques

This wide-ranging course


covers the basics of gas
explosions, risks, prevention
and mitigation. A major
part of the course examines
key statistics and analysis,
explosion modelling
techniques and lessons from
previous accidents. Specific
hazards explored include
vapour cloud explosions
including ignition processes,
release and dispersion,
explosion mechanisms and
blast loads.

Learning outcomes

UK
Date / Location
2425 November 2016
London

Fees
IChemE member
1150 + VAT
Non-member
1320 + VAT

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, UK
+44 (0)1788 534431
courses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/
gasexp

understand the
CPD
basics and important
parameters governing
vapour cloud explosions (VCEs)

13 hrs

be aware of offshore release and accident statistics


and some important offshore accidents
understand the accident chain of events and the
important parameters affecting the gas release and
dispersion
understand the various preventive measures to
reduce the occurrence of accidents and the various
mitigation and control techniques to reduce gas
explosion consequences
learn the various explosion modelling techniques
that may be applied and understand the
importance of using advance 3D modelling for gas
explosion analyses
learn the various gas explosion analysis
methodologies and when they may be applied

Hazard identification requires


a systematic and methodical
approach to ensure all risks
are recognised, prioritised and
managed.
This course provides the skills
and knowledge to prevent
and protect employees from
injuries and ill health, plus
minimise loss to property,
environment and efficient
production. It introduces
many of the most important
hazard identification
techniques, their advantages
and disadvantages, and when
to apply them.

Learning outcomes
By the end of the course
delegates will:

understand how gas explosion loads can be


integrated with the response of structures

safety engineers, managers, supervisors

personnel involved in the design, operation or


modification of an offshore oil and gas facility
(platforms, FPSOs, etc)

accident investigators

anyone who would like to develop an


understanding of gas explosion safety

Course presenter
Dave Price, AFIChemE, GexCon

www.icheme.org

apply appropriate
techniques for different
situations, scenarios and
projects
understand limitations of
each technique
when and how to use
assessment as part of
hazard identification

Who will benefit

Who will benefit

learn about key hazard


identification techniques

UK
Date / Location
2022 June 2016
Rugby

Fees
IChemE member
1000 + VAT
Non-member
1200 + VAT

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, UK
+44 (0)1788 534431
courses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/hit

CPD 18 hrs
Australia
Date / Location
2729 June 2016
Brisbane

Fees
IChemE member
AUD$2640 (GST inc)
Non-member
AUD$3080 (GST inc)

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, Australia
+61 (0)3 9642 4494
austcourses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/
managers, supervisors
hitaus
and engineers
CPD 18 hrs
responsible for design,
commissioning,
decommissioning,
construction, installation and modification of plant
plant/process operators including maintenance
functions
process safety engineers and loss prevention
specialists
chemical engineers working towards Chartered
status

Course presenter
Phil Eames, FIChemE, Professional Process Safety
Engineer, consultant

HAZOP Awareness

This course has been developed to provide an


understanding of the HAZOP technique and to assist in
deciding when a full HAZOP might be applicable.

Learning outcomes
By the end of the course, delegates will understand:

the principles of a HAZOP study

the resources required for a study

how a study progresses

the benefits of HAZOP and know when a full


HAZOP would be appropriate

Who will benefit


Suitable for all those involved in safety and loss
prevention and anyone who would like to develop a broad
understanding of HAZOPs. Also engineers, scientists,
project managers and senior managers.

UK

Singapore

Date / Location

Date / Location

4 April 2017
Rugby

19 July 2016
Singapore

Fees

Fees

IChemE member
400 + VAT

IChemE member
400

Non-member

Non-member

500 + VAT

500

Contact

Contact

Courses department
IChemE, UK

Courses department
IChemE, UK

+44 (0)1788 534431

+44 (0)1788 534431

courses@icheme.org

courses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/
hazopawareness

www.icheme.org/
hazopawasing

CPD 6 hrs

CPD 6 hrs

Safety

HAZOP has become a mainstay in a wide variety of


chemical and process industries over the last 40 years. It
uses a systematic application of guidewords to identify
potential hazardous events, the consequences of them
taking place and assesses whether there are adequate
safeguards in place. It can be applied to both continuous
and batch processes of any capacity or complexity and
helps address health, safety and environmental risks,
as well as help to avert business loss and contribute to
product quality.

Malaysia
Date / Location
17 October 2016
Kuala Lumpur

Fees
IChemE member
MYR 2800 + GST
Non-member
MYR 3900 + GST

Contact

Course presenter UK

Courses department
IChemE, Malaysia

Nigel Bowker, FIChemE, Blackhall Consulting

+603 2283 1381


malaysiancourses@
icheme.org

www.icheme.org/
hazopawamal

CPD 6 hrs

19

Safety

HAZOP Applied Hazard


and Operability Study

This course provides an


understanding of the common
causes of incidents and how
a HAZOP study enables the
recognition of such causes
and leads to their elimination
from the design or process.
It includes simulation of a
HAZOP study meeting, as
well as substantial exercises
and case studies to illustrate
the HAZOP technique and
ensure understanding of the
procedure.

Learning outcomes
This course will help
delegates understand:

UK
Date / Location
1517 June 2016
London

Fees
IChemE member
1510 + VAT
Non-member
1680 + VAT

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, UK
+44 (0)1788 534431
courses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/
appliedhazard

CPD 17.75 hrs

the HAZOP
methodology and terminology

how and why HAZOP works

how to follow the HAZOP procedure

the roles of individuals within the team

how to challenge the expertise of other members


of the team, and to have your own expertise
challenged
how to interpret a HAZOP record and understand
why a recommendation was made

Who will benefit


All personnel who are to take part in HAZOP study
meetings, or are expected to interpret and implement the
findings of a HAZOP study. Both junior and experienced
personnel will benefit.

Hazard Study
Awareness

A hazard study is a teambased exercise and the


quality of the result is highly
dependent on the standard
of leadership and the
contribution of study team
members. Whilst the need for
the study leader to be suitably
trained and experienced is
well recognised, the study will
be greatly enhanced by team
members who are fully aware
of their role and contribution.
This practical course aims
to provide improved
awareness of hazard study
team participants.

ACCREDITED
Training course

UK
Dates / Locations
16 March 2016
Manchester
2 November 2016
Edinburgh

Fees
IChemE member
620 + VAT
Non-member
650 + VAT

Contact
Jackie Kendall
ABB Consulting, UK
+44 (0)1642 372121
jackie.kendall@
gb.abb.com

Learning outcomes

www.abb.com

Delegates will have a greater


awareness of:

CPD 6.5 hrs

the range of hazard study techniques


available and how these fit into a
typical project programme
key assumptions and limitations of
hazard studies
your role in the hazard study process
problems that can arise during hazard studies and
how the team can help to resolve them
related topics such as inherent safety, risk
assessment, instrumented protective systems and
human factors

Who will benefit

project managers/engineers

Course presenter

chemical and process engineers

Steve Whitty, JENBUL

plant supervisors/operators

chemists

SHE advisors

functional engineers, eg C/E, mechanical

Course presenter
Graeme Ellis, ABB Consulting

www.icheme.org

Safety

HAZOP Study, Leadership


and Management

Learning outcomes
At the end of the course
delegates will have an
understanding of:

how to prepare for a


HAZOP study meeting
including defining the
scope of the study and
choosing of the team

UK
Dates / Locations
13 June 2016
2123 November 2016
79 February 2017
London
1315 September 2016
46 October 2016
1820 April 2017
Rugby

Fees
IChemE member
1550 + VAT
Non-member
1745 + VAT

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, UK
+44 (0)1788 534431
courses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/
hazopstudy

CPD 17.75 hrs

how to choose nodes


(parts of the drawing or operation for HAZOP
study)

This course is specifically


tailored to meet the needs
of the offshore oil and gas
industry and based around
well-established integrated
modules to provide effective
training in the HAZOP
technique for both team
leaders and team members.
As well as presentations
covering all the essential
aspects of the method there
are workshops on HAZOP
for continuous processes,
sequential operations and
computer-controlled plant.
The relationship between
HAZOP, other hazard
identification methods
and hazard studies is also
discussed.

UK
Date / Location
710 June 2016
Aberdeen

Fees
IChemE member
1590 + VAT
Non-member
1760 + VAT

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, UK
+44 (0)1788 534431
courses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/
hazopoil

CPD 25.50 hrs

Delegates with experience in HAZOP should consider


applying as a team leader, whilst newcomers to the
technique will benefit from attending as a team member.

Learning outcomes
Team leaders will learn:
how to be a good leader, emphasised by practice
and reviews

how to estimate the programme requirements for


the successful completion of a study

the importance of motivating the team and keeping


them on task

how to manage HAZOP studies

the importance of pre-study preparation

how to avoid common problems encountered


during study meetings
how to formulate the HAZOP study report
the team leaders role in the implementation of
recommendations and the management of the
process

Who will benefit


All personnel who are required to lead HAZOP studies.
They must have experience as a team member and
understand the HAZOP methodology. Experience as a
HAZOP scribe would also be useful.

how to work effectively with team members and


the team secretary

Team members will learn:

how HAZOP study works

the role and responsibilities of a team member

how to become a valuable team member

Who will benefit

Course presenter
Steve Whitty, JENBUL

Safety

A successful HAZOP study


is only possible if the study
is effectively led. This course
gives greater understanding of
the HAZOP methodology and
why it works. Case studies
will be used to understand
the requirements of HAZOP
leadership, and give delegates
the opportunity to fulfil roles
of leader and scribe during
workshops and to practise
guiding a team through the
HAZOP process.

HAZOP Study for the Offshore


Oil and Gas Industry

experienced HAZOP team members who are


moving on to team leadership
those who need to refresh and update their
HAZOP experience
engineers and other technical personnel who are
new to HAZOP study
those with safety and project management
responsibilities

Course presenter
Phil Aspinall, AMIChemE
21

Safety

HAZOP Study for Team Leaders and Team


Members

An integrated course which uses examples drawn


from a range of operations, including the petroleum,
petrochemicals, fine chemicals and pharmaceutical
industries, to provide effective training in the HAZOP
technique for both team leaders and team members.
As well as presentations covering all the essential
aspects of the method, there are workshops on HAZOP
for continuous processes, sequential operations and
computer-controlled plant. The relationship between
HAZOP, other hazard identification methods and hazard
studies is also discussed.
Delegates with experience in HAZOP should consider
applying as a team leader, whilst newcomers to the
technique will benefit from attending as a team member.

Learning outcomes
Team leaders will learn:

how to be a good leader, emphasised by practice


and reviews

how to manage HAZOP studies

the importance of pre-study preparation

how to work effectively with team members and


the team secretary

Team members will learn:

how HAZOP study works

the role and responsibilities of a team member

how to become a valuable team member

Who will benefit

experienced HAZOP team members who are


moving on to team leadership
those that need to refresh and update their HAZOP
experience
engineers and other technical personnel who are
new to HAZOP study
those with safety and project management
responsibilities

Course presenter UK
Phil Aspinall, AMIChemE

Course presenters Australia


Robert Jorgensen, FIChemE, RKEJ Pty and
Lex Seto, Registered Professional Engineer Queensland

www.icheme.org

UK

Australia

Date / Location

Dates / Locations

29 November
2 December 2016
Manchester

2729 April 2016


Brisbane

Fees
IChemE member
1590 + VAT
Non-member
1770 + VAT

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, UK

68 July 2016
Melbourne

Fees
IChemE member
AUD$3465 (GST inc)
Non-member
AUD$3990 (GST inc)

Contact

+44 (0)1788 534431

Courses department
IChemE, Australia

courses@icheme.org

+61 (0)3 9642 4494

www.icheme.org/
hazopteam

austcourses@icheme.org

CPD 26 hrs

www.icheme.org/
hazopbris
www.icheme.org/
hazopmel

CPD 26 hrs

Safety

HAZOP Study for Team


Leaders and Team Members
Chemical and Pharma
Singapore
Date / Location
14 August 2016
Singapore

Fees
IChemE member
1590
Non-member
1770

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, UK
+44 (0)1788 534431
courses@icheme.org
www.icheme.org/
hazopteamsing

CPD 26 hrs

Participants with experience in HAZOP should consider


applying as a team leader, whilst newcomers to the
technique will benefit from attending as a team member.

Learning outcomes
Team leaders will learn:

how to be a good leader, emphasised by practice


and reviews

how to manage HAZOP studies

the importance of pre-study preparation

how to work effectively with team members and


the team secretary

Team members will learn:

how HAZOP study works

the role and responsibilities of a team member

how to become a valuable team member

Who will benefit

experienced HAZOP team members who are


moving on to team leadership

An integrated course which


uses examples drawn from
a range of operations,
including the petroleum and
petrochemicals industries,
to provide effective training
in the HAZOP technique
for both team leaders and
team members. As well as
presentations covering all
the essential aspects of the
method, there are workshops
on HAZOP for continuous
processes, sequential
operations and computercontrolled plant. The
relationship between HAZOP,
other hazard identification
methods and hazard studies is
also discussed.

2629 July 2016


Kuala Lumpur

Fees
IChemE member
MYR 7600 + GST
Non-member
MYR 8800 + GST

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, Malaysia
+603 2283 1381
malaysiancourses@
icheme.org

www.icheme.org/
hazopteammal

CPD 26 hrs

Learning outcomes
Team leaders will learn:

how to be a good leader, emphasised by practice


and reviews

how to manage HAZOP studies

the importance of pre-study preparation

how to work effectively with team members and


the team secretary

Team members will learn:

how HAZOP study works

the role and responsibilities of a team member

how to become a valuable team member

Who will benefit

engineers and other technical personnel who are


new to HAZOP study

those with safety and project management


responsibilities

Phil Aspinall, AMIChemE

Date / Location

Participants with experience in


HAZOP should consider applying as a team leader, whilst
newcomers to the technique will benefit from attending as
a team member.

those that need to refresh and update their HAZOP


experience

Course presenter

Malaysia

Safety

An integrated course which


uses examples drawn from a
range of operations, including
the fine chemicals and
pharmaceutical industries,
to provide effective training
in the HAZOP technique
for both team leaders and
team members. As well as
presentations covering all
the essential aspects of the
method, there are workshops
on HAZOP for continuous
processes, sequential
operations and computercontrolled plant. The
relationship between HAZOP,
other hazard identification
methods and hazard studies is
also discussed.

HAZOP Study for Team Leaders


and Team Members Oil and
Gas

experienced HAZOP team members who are


moving on to team leadership
those that need to refresh and update their HAZOP
experience
engineers and other technical personnel who are
new to HAZOP study
those with safety and project management
responsibilities

Course presenter
Phil Aspinall, AMIChemE
23

IChe

m
E

re

Safet

Ce

ISC Case Studies


IChemE Safety Centres essential training resource,
developed to advance process safety worldwide
Our interactive Case Studies provide a rare opportunity to experience
a series of process safety incidents as they unfold, in a real-time setting,
without any prior knowledge of the outcome.
Throughout the training session users will make crucial safety decisions,
and discover how each of their decisions influences the incident.
The engaging nature of our Case Studies helps to embed the lessons
learnt from the training sessions, enabling users to greatly enhance their
understanding and application of process safety procedures.
Visit IChemEs stand to find out more about the collection and claim your
exclusive 10% show discount.

www.ichemesafetycentre.org/isc-case-studies
Great insight into a
terrible incident. It really
puts you in the position
of the line manager and
makes you consider
some diffcult decisionss
Leah Fitzgerald, Process
Engineer, Santos

1386_16 Safety centre FP_May.indd 1

17/05/2016 10:25

Safety

Human Factors in Health and


Safety
ISC
Australia

Dates / Location

Dates / Locations

Managing Human Failure


89 June 2016
2627 April 2016
Edinburgh

An introduction to Human
Factors
78 September 2016
Brisbane

Human Factors in Health and Safety provides modular


training designed specifically for the process industries
by IChemE and the Keil Centre, a leading practice of
chartered psychologies and ergonomics and human
factors specialists. This one-year programme consists of
four modules which, supported by pre-course reading,
together provide a broad human factors educational
programme. Delegates can complete the whole
programme, or just attend single modules, and modules
can be completed in any order.

Strengthening the Human


Element
1415 September 2016
2728 September 2017
Edinburgh

Human Reliability and


Failure
1617 November 2016
Melbourne

Human Factors in Design


1415 December 2016
67 December 2017
Edinburgh

Learning outcomes
The programme aims to develop an understanding of
the core human factors issues in the process industries
and how to manage them to improve safety and business
performance.

UK modules

Managing Human Factors


89 February 2017
Edinburgh

Fees
1300 + VAT per module
1150 + VAT
for the series of 4 modules

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, UK
+44 (0)1788 534431

Module One Managing Human Factors

courses@icheme.org

Module Two Managing Human Failure

Module Three Strengthening the Human Element

www.icheme.org/
humanfactors

Module Four Human Factors in Design

Australian modules

Module One An introduction to Human Factors

Module Two Human Reliability and Failure

Module Three Organisational Issues

Module Four Human Factors in Design

CPD hrs:
12.50
per module
CPD hrs:
50 total

Safety

UK

Major accidents around the world have highlighted the


importance of human factors how the people, the job
and the organisation interact as a whole in the safety
performance of a business. Yet many of the safety and
organisational professionals responsible for managing
human factors have no formal training in the human and
behavioural sciences.

Organisational Issues
89 February 2017
Brisbane
Human Factors and
Design
34 May 2017
Melbourne

Fees
AUD$2200 + GST
per module
AUD$2000 + GST
for the series of 4 modules

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, Australia
+61 (0)3 9642 4494
austcourses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/
humanfactors

CPD hrs:
12.50
per module
CPD hrs:
50 total

Who will benefit

internal human factors advisors/focal points

operations managers

HSE advisors and specialists

industry regulators

Course presenters
All sessions are delivered by recognised human factors
professionals with significant process industry experience.

25

10:25

ACCREDITED
Training course

Accredit your training


and learning programmes
IChemE provides an international accreditation service for many types of shortcourse learning programmes, including open and in-house training, webinars,
e-learning and professional development initiatives.
The service is available to independent training providers, consultancies,
universities, institutes, colleges, employers and other types of learning providers.
For more details visit: www.icheme.org/accredityourtraining or email
courses@icheme.org

Inherent Safety in Design and


Operation Development

This course provides a


greater understanding of
inherent safety including the
main principles, tools and
measures for a safer, efficient
and more profitable plant and
operations.

Learning outcomes
By the end of the course
delegates will:

identify the principles of


inherent safety
have skills to promote an
inherent safety message
throughout organisations
be able to measure
inherent safety
understand how
inherent safety forms
part of a wider safety
management system

UK
Date / Location
1416 June 2016
Rugby

Fees
IChemE member
1000 + VAT
Non-member
1200 + VAT

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, UK
+44 (0)1788 534431
courses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/is

CPD 18 hrs

Date / Location
2324 June 2016
Rugby

Fees
IChemE member
850 + VAT
Non-member
1000 + VAT

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, UK
+44 (0)1788 534431
courses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/ra

CPD 12 hrs

Learning outcomes

Australia

Date / Location

By the end of the course


delegates will:

Date / Location

68 December 2016
Brisbane

Fees
IChemE member
AUD$2640 (GST inc)
Non-member
AUD$ 3080 (GST inc)

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, Australia

+61 (0)3 9642 4494


austcourses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/
isaus

CPD 18 hrs

staff responsible for design, commissioning,


decommissioning, construction and installation of
plant
plant/process operators including maintenance
functions

safety engineers and loss prevention specialists

environmental engineers

The course helps develop


skills and knowledge to
identify and assess hazards
in the workplace. It includes
ways to control the risks,
including the use of
documentation and systems
to improve communication
and awareness throughout
organisations.

UK

Australia

Who will benefit

Controlling and reviewing


risks in the workplace
helps protect employees,
property and overall business
performance. In most
countries it is also a legal
requirement.

chemical engineers working towards Chartered


status

know how to risk assess


using the 5-stage
process
understand the different
types of assessment and
when to apply

30 June 1 July 2016


Brisbane

Fees
IChemE member
AUD$2090 (GST inc)
Non-member
AUD$2420 (GST inc)

identify and develop risk


controls

Contact

implement appropriate
documentation and
administrative systems

+61 (0)3 9642 4494

Who will benefit

Safety

Significant resources
are invested in the daily
management, control
and mitigation of risks in
the chemical and process
industries. However,
avoiding or reducing
hazards is inherently safer
than controlling them and
benefits and efficiencies can
be achieved by promoting,
understanding and creating a
more inherently safer working
environment for new and
existing facilities.

Introduction to Risk Assessment

Courses department
IChemE, Australia
austcourses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/
raaus

CPD 12 hrs
staff involved in the
risk assessment process
including supervisors, managers and directors
plant/process operators including maintenance
functions
process safety engineers and loss prevention
specialists
chemical engineers working towards Chartered
status

Course presenter
Phil Eames, FIChemE, Professional Process Safety
Engineer, consultant

Course presenter
Andrew Hudson, MIChemE, Hudson Consultants

27

Loss Prevention
Bulletin
Loss

Impr

oving

The leading source of case


studies in process safety, with
an archive of lessons learnt
spanning over 40 years.
Subscribe to the Loss Prevention
Bulletin today and learn vital
process safety lessons without
repeating the same costly
mistakes.
For more information or to take
out a subscription contact our
sales team on
+44 (0)1788 534481 or
sales@icheme.org
www.icheme.org/lpb

proc

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2013

LOPA is a semi-quantitative tool for analysing and


assessing risk that looks at the safeguards on a process
plant to see if the protection provided is adequate for
known hazards.

2013

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Augus

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This course covers the basic and more advanced


methodology of LOPA and the detailed stages of its
application. Delegates are shown how significant scenarios
are categorised and tolerable frequencies assigned for
identified hazardous events, as well as how to assign
risk categories and hence determine the number of
independent protection layers (IPLs) that should be in
place. The specification and requirements for a protection
layer to be accepted as an IPL are discussed. All the
essential steps in this method are practised in workshops,
including the use of software tools in LOPA.

Learning outcomes
By the end of the course delegates will have an
understanding of:

ADV
CHE ANCING
ENG MICAL
WOR INEERING
LDW
IDE

the methodology of LOPA


how to decide if a process needs a safety
instrumented system (SIS)

what safety integrity level (SIL) is required

how to define an independent protection layer (IPL)

how to implement a process to manage these


systems through the life cycle of an installation
how to lead a LOPA study

UK/Ireland
Dates / Locations
1516 March 2016
London
2021 September 2016
Manchester
89 November 2016
Cork

Fees
IChemE member
1350 + VAT
1721 + VAT at 23%
Non-member
1480 + VAT
1886 + VAT at 23%

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, UK
+44 (0)1788 534431
courses@icheme.org

Site licences are


available for this
essential resource

www.icheme.org

New Zealand/
Australia
Dates / Locations
1718 May 2016
Hamilton
2021 June 2016
Perth

Fees
IChemE member
NZD$2470 (GST inc)
AUD$1955 (GST inc)
Non-member
NZD$2755 (GST inc)
AUD$2185 (GST inc)

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, Australia
+61 (0)3 9642 4494
austcourses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/lopa
www.icheme.org/
lopaireland

www.icheme.org/
lopaperth
www.icheme.org/
lopanz

CPD 11.5 hrs

CPD 11.5 hrs

Leading Incident
Investigations

Who will benefit

process design
engineers

Dates / Location
1516 November 2016
Kuala Lumpur

Fees

project engineers

IChemE member
MYR 6680 + GST

process programmers

Non-member
MYR 7380 + GST

instrument control
designers

Course presenter
UK, UAE, Malaysia
and Singapore
Richard Gowland, consultant

Course presenters
Australia and
New Zealand

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, Malaysia
+603 2283 1381
malaysiancourses@
icheme.org

www.icheme.org/
lopamal

CPD 11.5 hrs


Singapore

Paul Feltoe, FIChemE,


and Nick Diamond, Safety
Solutions

Dates / Location

Course presenter,
South Africa

Fees

Rod Prior, MIChemE,


Professional Process Safety
Engineer, SHExcellence

Non-member
1480

1718 November 2016


Singapore

ChemE member
1350

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, UK
+44 (0)1788 534431

Fees
IChemE member
1350
Non-member
1480

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, UK

Dates / Locations
29 September 2016
Melbourne

Fees
AUD$2095

The concentrates on teaching


Contact
participants about bias, active
Nicchia Schutt-Toleman
listening and interviewing
ACT Australia and New
skills. The techniques are
Zealand Pty Ltd
communicated, practiced
+61 406678976
and refined through activities
Nicchia.schutt@
and work with actors. The
actaustralia.net.au
interactive interview sessions
enhance the participants skills www.actaustralia.
and understanding of what
net.au
makes a successful interview.
CPD 6 hrs
The skills can be easily
translated into the workplace
to enhance team work and assist with conflict resolution.

Learning outcomes
On completion delegates should be able to:

understand how to lead an investigation team

understand bias

understand active listening

gain proficiency in the Free Call Technique

Who will benefit


Anyone who leads or participates in incident
investigations, including:
OHS professionals

operators

chemical engineers

CPD 11.5 hrs

managers

South Africa

Course presenter

Dates / Location

Nicchia Schutt-Toleman, Acting Training Consulting


Australia and New Zealand Pty Ltd

www.icheme.org/
lopasing

Dates / Location
tbc
Abu Dhabi

Australia
No matter what root cause
analysis system your business
is using, ACTs interactive
training experience will allow
your staff to improve their
investigation skills.

courses@icheme.org

Abu Dhabi

Training course

2526 October 2016


Boksburg

Safety

production engineers

Malaysia

ACCREDITED

Fees
R5700
Contact
Rod Prior

+44 (0)1788 534431

+27 (0)82 554 0010

courses@icheme.org

r.prior@mweb.co.za

www.icheme.org/
lopa_abu_dhabi

www.icheme.org/
lopasa

CPD 11.5 hrs

CPD 11.5 hrs


29

Managing the Hazards of Flare Systems

This course will comprehensively review the operations


and equipment on all types of offshore and onshore flare
systems. It will categorise the key hazards which must be
controlled and review these hazards individually, making
use of past industry accidents and incidents, and errors in
design only revealed in operation.

Learning outcomes
The course will help delegates to have a working
knowledge and understand:

Australia

Date / Location

Date / Location

78 June 2016
Rugby

2425 May 2016


Melbourne

Fees

Fees

IChemE member
850 + VAT

IChemE member
AUD$1980 (GST inc)

Non-member
1000 + VAT

Non-member
AUD$2310 (GST inc)

Contact

the components of a flare system, how they work,


why these components, which make up a flare
disposal system, are there and how they can fail or
be rendered ineffective

Courses department
IChemE, UK

key principles for ensuring flare system safety

www.icheme.org/
flare

the key types of incidents and accidents and be


able to use this knowledge in the design, operation,
modification and maintenance
the regulatory requirements from safety and
environmental regulations such as COMAH and
PPC regulations

Who will benefit

UK/Ireland

engineers, operations and maintenance personnel


and managers and safety advisors who have
responsibility for designing, operating, maintaining
and/or modifying flare systems
personnel from operating companies, consultancies
and EPCM companies, as well as regulatory bodies
who may be responsible for regulating assets
which contain flare systems

Course presenters UK and Ireland


Paul Denham, MIChemE, GMS Technical Safety and
Alan Donnelly, MIChemE, Donnelly Process Engineering

+44 (0)1788 534431


courses@icheme.org

Courses department
IChemE, Australia
+61 (0)3 9642 4494
austcourses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/
flareaus

CPD 11.5 hrs

CPD 11.5 hrs

Malaysia

Singapore

Date / Location

Date / Location

89 March 2016
Kuala Lumpur

tbc

Fees
IChemE member
MYR 6680 + GST
Non-member
MYR 7380 + GST

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, Malaysia
+603 2283 1381
malaysiancourses@
icheme.org

www.icheme.org/
flaremal

CPD 11.5 hrs

www.icheme.org

Contact

Fees
IChemE member
850
Non-member
1000

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, UK
+44 (0)1788 534431
courses@icheme.org
www.icheme.org/
flaresing

CPD 11.5 hrs

Safety

Pressure Relief: Protecting Equipment


and Personnel from Over Pressure

This course puts all of the knowledge you need into one
comprehensive course, giving the delegates the task of
sizing and selecting a valve themselves.

Learning outcomes

what is pressure relief and


over pressure protection?
understand the safety function
of protective devices
what are pressure relieving devices and how to
they function?
defining the boundary for a pressure relieving
system: what is protected?
safe sizing and selecting of protective devices
(pressure relief valve, bursting discs and pilot
operated valves)
understand upstream and downstream pressure
drops and design constraint
safe and successful transport, installation and
inspection
safe atmospheric discharge and interactions with
vent systems and flare headers
the dangers of reaction hazards and two phase
flow

UK
Dates / Locations
1921 April 2016
Warrington
2628 April 2016
London
46 May 2016
Aberdeen

Fees
IChemE member
1620 + VAT
Non-member
1925 + VAT

Contact
Brett Mahar
Process Safety Verification
(PSV)
+61 481 161861
bmahar@processafety
verification.com.au

Training course

Australia /
New Zealand
Dates / Locations
13 March 2016
Melbourne
1517 March 2016
Brisbane
31 May2 June 2016
Gladstone
1416 June 2016
Perth

Safety

Pressure relief is the last line of defence in the process


industry, and there are many standards and engineering
calculations required to ensure the system is safe. It can
be quite daunting and confusing, but if you break it down
to the fundamentals and understand some of the core
principles the successful application of the principles can
successfully protect equipment and personnel from the
hazard associated with over and under pressure.

ACCREDITED

911 August 2016


Auckland

Fees
Australia:
IChemE member
AUD$2675 (GST inc)
Non-member
AUD$3175 (GST inc)

www.processsafety
verification.com.au/
icheme

New Zealand
IChemE member
AUD$2911(GST inc)
Non-member
AUD$3456 (GST inc)

CPD 24 hrs

Contact
Brett Mahar
Process Safety Verification
(PSV)
+61 481 161861
bmahar@processafety
verification.com.au

www.processsafety
verification.com.au/
icheme

CPD 24 hrs

Who will benefit

graduate chemical engineers who have entered


the work force
engineers who are required to undertake or check
pressure relief calculations
managers who are responsible for the plant and
personnel
engineers who are responsible for checking and
approving relief valve sizing, and want to refresh
on the standards and methodology

Course presenter
Brett Mahar, MIChemE, Process Safety Verification

31

Process Safety and the Board

This course is designed to


help board members and
senior executives explore the
real issues and decisions they
face with expert input from
process safety practitioners.
Facilitated discussions enable
delegates to consider their
understanding of major issues,
review their access to key
information and their ability
to make informed and timely
decisions that respond to the
concerns of the public, the
regulator, the staff, contractors
and investors
This course is most effective
as an in-company programme,
with a bespoke agenda to
meet the needs of a particular
organisation in a confidential
setting.

Learning outcomes
To enhance the safety
assurance of the business by:

Australia/
New Zealand
Dates / Locations
3 August 2016
Perth
20 July 2016
Auckland

Fees
IChemE member
AUD$1045 (GST inc)
NZD$1090 (GST inc)
Non-member
AUD$1210 (GST inc)
NZD$1265 (GST inc)

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, Australia

Process Safety Awareness

IChemE member
1000 + VAT

Learning outcomes

courses@icheme.org

+61 (0)3 9642 4494


austcourses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/
psbaus
www.icheme.org/
psbnz

CPD 7 hrs

understand the business implications of process


safety
understand due diligence as it applies to process
safety

identify the role of leadership in promoting and


sustaining good process safety management
understand the functional aspects of an
organisation that require leadership to provide
assurance that process safety risks are being
correctly managed
develop personal action plans to enhance your
contribution to process safety in your business

Course presenter

UK

This course has been


developed primarily for those
who are not in a process safety
line management position but
whose activities influence the
process safety performance
of their organisation. This
can include staff engaged in
corporate, R&D, commercial,
HR and IT activities. This
course will provide a broad
understanding of the tools and
problem-solving techniques
used in process safety.

understand what process


safety is and the human,
environmental and
business consequences
of poor process safety
understand how to
apply a simple model for
analysing process safety
incidents
have a broad
understanding of
process safety hazards
and risks
learn how process
safety management is
organised and what
are the elements of a
modern process safety
management system
understand your role
in promoting process
safety

Date / Location
56 July 2016
Rugby

Fees

Non-member
1150 + VAT

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, UK
+44 (0)1788 534431

www.icheme.org/psa

CPD 13.75 hrs


Australia
Date / Location
1415 2016
Brisbane

Fees
IChemE member
AUD$1970 (GST inc)
Non-member
AUD$2100 (GST inc)

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, Australia
+61 (0)3 9642 4494
austcourses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/
psaaus

CPD 13.75 hrs

Who will benefit

Trish Kerin, FIChemE, IChemE Safety Centre

anyone involved in a role which does not have


direct line responsibility for process safety
anyone who would like to develop a broad
understanding of process safety

Course presenters UK
Dr Ken Paterson, Synthomer and Andrew Hudson,
MIChemE, Hudson Consultants

Course presenter Australia


Tony Collins, FIChemE, TC Consulting and Training

www.icheme.org

Safety

Process Safety Key


Performance Indicators and
PSM Auditing
UK
Dates / Location
2829 June 2016
1314 December 2016
London

Fees
IChemE member
1150 + VAT
Non-member
1300 + VAT

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, UK
+44 (0)1788 534431
courses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/
pskpis

CPD 14 hrs

The course provides delegates with information and skills


to improve the effectiveness of PSPIs and PSM audits. It
examines the guidance published by the HSE and others
to help create and implement an effective process safety
performance programme.

Learning outcomes

Designed for those who need


to understand the causes
and sequence of failure
that can lead to significant
hazardous events occurring,
and be able to identify the
key contributors to the
level of risk. The course
discusses how to quantify
hazardous event likelihood
using a range of techniques,
in order to assess whether
the level of risk is sufficiently
low and, if not, where to
focus attention for costeffective improvement. It
also considers instrumented
protective systems and other
risk reduction measures, and
assesses their actual benefit.

Learning outcomes

understand the benefits of planning and


preparation for PSM audits
learn about the different PSM audit types,
protocols and techniques that can be employed

Managers, engineers and safety personnel who are


responsible for conducting PSM audits or are involved
in establishing and implementing a safety performance
indicators programme within their own organisation.

Course presenters
Graeme Laughland, FIChemE, Contrad Ellison, FIChemE,
and Graeme Ellis, FIChemE, ABB Consulting

UK
Dates / Locations
1620 May 2016
Frodsham
711 November 2016
Edinburgh

Fees
IChemE member
2200 + VAT
Non-member
2320 + VAT

Contact
Jackie Kendall
ABB Consulting, UK
+44 (0)1642 372121
jackie.kendall
@gb.abb.com

www.abb.com

CPD 35.5 hrs

logical analysis using fault tree


techniques for scenarios leading to
hazardous events
use of data and its application to predict the
likelihood of a hazardous event

development of practical hazard criteria

handling of dependent or common mode failures

basic human error assessment

practical workshops aimed at improving PSM


auditing skills

Who will benefit

Training course

You should be able to


demonstrate a working
knowledge of SIL
and hazard assessment including:

improve awareness and understanding of PSPIs


understand how to select and use effective
leading and lagging PSPIs using the HSEs six stage
approach

ACCREDITED

Safety

Major incidents continue to


occur in the process industries
yet many investigations reveal
shortcomings where effective
management oversight, using
process safety performance
indicators (PSPIs) and PSM
audit programmes, could
have reduced the risk of such
an occurrence. Developing
effective safety performance
indicators is not always
straightforward. A balanced
approach that considers
leading as well as lagging
indicators is the best way to
manage major hazards, whilst
avoiding the pitfall of creating
an unwieldy system where
counting becomes more
important than action.

SIL Determination and


Hazard Assessment

applying basic SIL and hazard assessment in


a variety of situations to help in making more
effective cost and effective decisions

Who will benefit

process design engineers

electrical, control and instrument engineers

safety managers and advisers

works or technical managers with responsibility


for managing risk
leaders of HAZOP studies

Course presenter
Alan King, ABB Consulting

33

SIL Determination and


IEC 61508/61511

ACCREDITED
Training course

UK
Practical training in the appreciation of safety integrity
level (SIL) determination to the technical requirements of
IEC 61508/61511. It is aimed at responsible managers,
engineers and designers, and provides an introduction
to the standard, the basics of risk, methodologies for SIL
determination, and some of the important factors involved
including common pitfalls.

Learning outcomes
On completion delegates should be able to:

understand the concepts of SIL determination and


the principles of IEC 61508 / 61511
explain the key terms and concepts which underpin
a systematic consideration process for safety and
protective systems in respect to SIL

Who will benefit

process design engineers


electrical, control and
instrument engineers
and designers
safety managers and
advisors
works or technical
managers with
responsibility for
managing risk

Course presenter
Alan King, ABB Consulting

understand the importance of SIL


determination
determine where present practice is
in line with the requirements of these
standards and identify where improvements
are necessary

Dates / Locations
23 March 2016
Frodsham
1516 June 2016
Edinburgh
1415 September 2016
York
2324 November 2016
Cardiff

Fees
IChemE member
1160 + VAT
Non-member
1220 + VAT

Contact
Jackie Kendall
ABB Consulting, UK
+44 (0)1642 372121
jackie.kendall@
gb.abb.com

www.abb.com

CPD 35.5 hrs

implement the SIL determination

Professional Process Safety Engineer


Demonstrate your professional competence in process safety
The benefits of registration:
global recognition of competence
demonstration of commitment to process safety profession
demand from employers for engineers with a formal process

safety qualification
enhanced career opportunities
confidence from peer-review process
Find out more at:
www.icheme.org/process-safety

www.icheme.org

Creativity for Chemical


Engineers

Effective Technical Writing

UK
Dates / Location
24 May 2016
16 November 2016
Rugby

Fees
IChemE member
420 + VAT
Non-member
525 + VAT

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, UK
+44 (0)1788 534431

This course brings the


courses@icheme.org
concept of creative thinking
www.icheme.org/
directly to the chemical
creativity
engineer, aiming to equip
CPD 6 hrs
delegates with sufficient
background and techniques
to improve their creative
thinking in their professional lives. The main creative
problem-solving tools will be introduced including
Synectics, CPS, TRIZ, and the work of de Bono. The
course will complete the picture by covering the
selection, implementation and evaluation of solutions.

Learning outcomes

understand the role of creative thinking


appreciate the importance of environment and
team dynamics in creative problem-solving
be able to apply criteria to help define the real
problem
be able to recognise mental blocks and initiate
their removal by blockbusting techniques
appreciate a range of creative processes for
identifying solutions to the real problem

Suitable for anyone needing


to produce accessible written
materials on a technical topic,
this practical course will take
delegates through each step
from identifying the target
audience and their needs,
planning, structuring and
writing your report, through
to presenting the final
document.

Learning outcomes
The course will help delegates
to:

be introduced to the Kepner-Tregoe (KT) approach


for selecting an appropriate solution

understand the process of implementing a solution


effectively

be able to evaluate a solution against the criteria of


effectiveness, safety and ethics

Who will benefit

Technical reports are often


used as the basis to support
critical decision making within
an organisation, so the ability
to communicate new ideas,
information, proposals or
recommendations efficiently
and accurately to others is
vital. Many engineers and
technical personnel lack
confidence in their ability
to write about technical
concepts and ideas in a
language that will be properly
understood by the reader;
yet the tools and techniques
associated with this skill can
be learned and developed.

junior engineers who want to gain the skills and


experience required for chartered status
senior engineers who want to release the creative
potential of their extensive engineering experience

identify and understand


your audience
use best practice in
structuring and writing
your document
present your final report
with confidence

Dates / Location
4 May 2016
3 November 2016
Rugby

Fees
IChemE member
400 + VAT
Non-member
500 + VAT

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, UK
+44 (0)1788 534431
courses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/
etw

CPD 6 hrs
Australia
Date / Location
3 November 2016
Perth

Fees
IChemE member
AUD$970 (GST inc)
Non-member
AUD$1100 (GST inc)

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, Australia
+61 (0)3 9642 4494
austcourses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/
etwaus

CPD 6 hrs

communicate your ideas efficiently and accurately


to others in a language that will be properly
understood by the reader

Who will benefit

Personal Development and Leadership

Many chemical engineers do


not consider their work to be
creative. Much of the day-today work involves established
methods, protocols and
design codes, built on years
of experience of what is most
effective and safe. However,
even within the constraints of
these established procedures
there is scope to adopt a
creative approach to solving
problems, and great potential
benefit in doing so.

UK

Engineers or technical personnel at all levels who are


required to produce written work and reports.

Course presenter UK
Dr Jamie Cleaver, FIChemE, consultant

Course presenter
Dr Jamie Cleaver, FIChemE, consultant
35

Effective Communication for


Engineers

Technical competence is at the core of your success


in engineering but it is crucial to also consider your
ability to communicate your concepts and plans to
others effectively. This interactive course reviews the
fundamental principles behind effective communication
of all types, providing guidance on communication and
presentation strategies for the engineering workplace.
It gives practical advice on the different modes of
communication, including formal writing, email, telephone
and face-to-face interactions, and examines how to design
and deliver an effective presentation. A large part of
the course is devoted to developing assertiveness and
confidence, and overcoming presentation nerves.

Learning outcomes
The course will help delegates to:

understand the different ways in which we


communicate

UK

Singapore

Dates / Location

Date / Location

2526 May 2016


1718 November 2016
Rugby

11 October 2016
Singapore

Fees
IChemE member
750 + VAT
Non-member
860 + VAT

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, UK
+44 (0)1788 534431
courses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/
interpersonal

CPD 13 hrs

Fees
IChemE member
750
Non-member
860

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, UK
+44 (0) 1788 534431
courses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/
ecesing

CPD 11.5 hrs

understand the importance of building rapport

Malaysia

Australia

Date / Location

Date / Location

10 October 2016
Kuala Lumpur

18-19 October 2016


Perth

Fees

Fees

IChemE member
MYR 3800 + GST

IChemE member
AUD$2200 (GST inc)

Non-member
MYR 4600 + GST

Non-member
AUD$2530 (GST inc)

Contact

Contact

Courses department
IChemE, Malaysia

Courses department
IChemE, Australia

+603 2283 1381

+61 (0)3 9642 4494

use your voice effectively to enhance the


presentation

malaysiancourses@
icheme.org

austcourses@icheme.org

deal with questions more effectively

use visual aids such as PowerPoint more effectively

www.icheme.org/
ecemal

select the most effective mode of communication


for a given situation
listen effectively
understand the huge impact of body language in
communication

develop effective communication strategies

communicate with increased assertiveness

structure a presentation effectively for a given time


and given audience

use techniques to enhance your physical presence

improve the control of your nerves

Who will benefit


Engineers working at all levels who want to improve their
communication and presentation skills.

Course presenter UK, Malaysia and


Singapore
Dr Jamie Cleaver, FMIChemE, consultant

www.icheme.org

CPD 11.5 hrs

www.icheme.org/
eceaus

CPD 13 hrs

Managing Cross-Cultural and


Virtual Teams

Virtual teams are now


commonplace in the process
industry. Managers are
increasingly responsible
for teams across a broad
range of cross-cultural and
virtual environments, and
are required to deal with the
specific challenges that this
brings in order to maintain
and develop good working
relationships.

Date / Location
27 September 2016
Rugby

Fees
IChemE member
400 + VAT
Non-member
500 + VAT

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, UK
+44 (0)1788 534431
courses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/
crosscultural

CPD 6 hrs

This course will provide


participants with a general
understanding of the key
principles and approaches to
market based management,
particularly as they relate to
the engineering environment.
The course will cover
understanding market
potential, marketing research,
analysis and metrics, market
and customer segmentation
and the engineers role
in product development,
drawing it all together and
how to put into practice.

Learning outcomes

Australia
Date / Location
2 November 2016
Sydney

Fees
IChemE member
AUD$979 (GST inc)
Non-member
AUD$1265 (GST inc)

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, Australia
+61 (0)3 9642 4494
austcourses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/mfe

CPD 6 hrs

This course introduces the


common barriers and pitfalls associated with managing
virtual and international teams, with a particular focus on
the chemical and process industries, and will provide you
with a range of tools and techniques to help you manage
these teams effectively.

How the engineering function,


across various industries, must integrate with other aspects
of the business in todays competitive environment.

Learning outcomes

Individuals with an engineering background moving into


management and/or working closely with the marketing/
product development team.

Upon successfully completing the course, delegates will:

have an introduction to virtual and


cross-cultural teams in a global organisation the
challenges and barriers
understand characteristics of a successful virtual/
cross-cultural team
understand cultural awareness and effective
communication with international audiences
know how to develop successful relationships with
remote colleagues
be able to, using your leadership, effectively
manage remote teams
understand the principles of remote team
working and using technology and other remote
management tools

Who will benefit

Who will benefit

Personal Development and Leadership

Successful teams with strong


virtual leadership have a
common purpose, and
feel involved and engaged
this leads to improved
performance and fewer
misunderstandings.

UK

Marketing for Engineers

Managers, team leaders, engineers and project managers


who manage virtual, remote or international teams

Course presenter
Michael Lane, FIChemE, consultant

37

Mentoring for Chemical


Engineers

Mentoring is a process of
supporting and encouraging
someone to manage their own
learning in order that they
may maximise their potential,
develop their skills and
improve their performance.
Mentors empower the
individual by asking and
listening, rather than by
instructing and advising.
This practical course will
introduce and help delegates
to apply mentoring concepts,
approaches and tools, with
an emphasis on developing
the mentoring skills of each
individual.

UK
Dates / Location
15 March 2016
6 December 2016
Rugby

Fees
IChemE member
400 + VAT
Non-member
500 + VAT

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, UK
+44 (0)1788 534431
courses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/
mentortraining

Mentors can help at any


CPD 6 hrs
stage along a career path,
supporting new recruits
or junior engineers to map out their career paths and
guiding them towards becoming chartered engineers,
or supporting more senior engineers as they undergo
changes in job roles and responsibilities.

Learning outcomes
Upon successfully completing the course, delegates will:

New to Management

A manager must display skills


and behaviours which are very
different from those required
of a member of a team and
the transition needed to
succeed is probably greater
for someone moving into their
first managerial role than it will
be at any future point in their
career. Unfortunately for many
new managers and their
employers the training they
receive does not recognise
the fundamental changes they
need to make. With guidance
however, most new managers
can quickly understand and
start to put into practice
the necessary skills and
behaviours.

have an improved understanding of how to build


and establish a strong mentor/mentee relationship,
to the benefit of both individuals and the
employer(s)

Who will benefit


Chemical and process engineers looking to develop
their skills as a mentor. Delegates will likely be new to
mentoring or looking to further develop their skills.

Course presenter
Dr Jamie Cleaver, FIChemE, consultant

www.icheme.org

1819 October 2016


London

Fees
IChemE member
950 + VAT
Non-member
1100 + VAT

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, UK
+44 (0)1788 534431
courses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/ntm

CPD 11.5 hrs

Learning outcomes

be familiar with a range of different approaches to


mentoring and the suitability of each approach in
different scenarios

be equipped with a range of tools and tactics to


manage the mentor/mentee relationship in the
event of difficulties arising

Date / Location

This interactive course is tailored specifically for chemical


engineers moving from a hands-on, technical role to their
first management position. It addresses the skills shift
required when making the transition to team leader and
focuses on the skills and behaviours needed to lead a
team effectively.

have a better understanding of the role of a mentor


and the skillset required

have participated in a range of practical and roleplay scenarios and received personal feedback on
how to further improve their skill-set as a mentor

UK

understand the key shifts in behaviour and attitude


that are essential in order to be a successful
manager
develop specific skill areas: time management,
effective communication, delegation, motivation,
providing effective feedback, developing people
action planning take a clear individual action plan
back to the workplace

Who will benefit

anyone currently in a first level management


position
staff who lead teams but might not yet have a
formal management position
staff who will shortly be promoted into a
management position

Course presenter
Fiona Carter, MIChemE, consultant

Chemical Engineering for


NonChemical Engineers

An intensive course aimed


at engineers and scientists
working in the chemical
and process industries, at
government agencies who
work in close collaboration
with chemical engineers,
and at companies who
employ chemical and process
engineers. It offers an
introduction to some of the
main subject areas involved
in chemical engineering
disciplines and will broaden
the technology base of
participants with a view
to promoting improved
communication with chemical
engineers.

Learning outcomes

Dates / Locations
1618 August 2016
Perth
30 November
2 December 2016
Brisbane

Fees
IChemE member
AUD$2415 (GST inc)
Non-member
AUD$2940 (GST inc)

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, Australia
+61 (0)3 9642 4494
austcourses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/
chemaus

CPD 19 hrs

overview and introduction to chemical engineering


(including virtual plant tours)

material balances

phase behaviour

energy balances

process safety

heat and mass transfer

fluid mechanics

separation processes

process control

reactor engineering

sustainable development

Who will benefit

mechanical, production, civil and control engineers

chemists

human resource managers

department managers

environmental scientists

Course presenter
Dr David Shallcross, FIChemE, University of Melbourne

This course reveals the mindset of chemical engineering to


people with a non-technical
background, paving the way
for improved collaboration and
communication with chemical
engineers. It will convey the
key principles of chemical
engineering in a conceptual,
easy-to-understand way,
with no mathematics other
than you might use in simple
financial accounting. The
course experience is interactive,
involving problem-based
learning techniques to convey
key concepts.

Learning outcomes

Singapore
Date / Location
1214 October 2016
Singapore

Fees
IChemE member
1400
Non-member
1650

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, UK
+44 (0)1788 534431
courses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/
chemothersing

CPD 20.50 hrs

At the end of the course,


delegates should:

know what chemical engineering is


know the factors that distinguish chemical
engineers from scientists and other engineers
be aware of the operating principles for common
unit operations
be aware of the importance of chemistry in
chemical engineering
appreciate the principles of heat transfer, mass
transfer and fluid flow
grasp basic conceptual process design and flowsheet development
understand the principles of mass and energy
balances
appreciate the concepts of reactor design and
distillation column design
appreciate the various approaches to process
safety

Process Operations

Delegates will have a good


understanding of chemical
engineering practice including:

Australia

Chemical Engineering for


NonEngineers

have considered how their new knowledge will


benefit them in the future

Who will benefit


Non engineers of all backgrounds who require an
appreciation of chemical engineering because it benefits
their job function, or because they want to relate to
chemical engineers.

Course presenter
Dr Jamie Cleaver, FIChemE, consultant

39

Chemical Engineering for


Other Engineers

The course is intended for


engineers from varying
backgrounds who want to
improve the breadth and
depth of their chemical
engineering knowledge, and
will convey the important
concepts and unique features
that are specific to chemical
engineering.

UK
Dates / Locations
1719 May 2016
London
810 November 2016
Rugby

Fees
IChemE member
1400 + VAT
Non-member

1650 + VAT
The course will help
prepare delegates to take
Contact
on a professional role that
Courses department
involves aspects of chemical
IChemE, UK
engineering and enable
+44 (0)1788 534431
them to communicate and
courses@icheme.org
collaborate more effectively
with chemical engineers. The
www.icheme.org/
chemeng
experience will be interactive,
involving problem-based
CPD 20.5 hrs
learning techniques to convey
key concepts, which can serve
as a platform for further professional development.

Learning outcomes

Chemical Engineering
for Scientists

This course reveals the mindset of chemical engineering


to people with a science
background, paving the way
for improved collaboration
and communication with
chemical engineers. It will
also enable scientists to take
on a professional role that
might be more orientated
towards chemical engineering.
The course experience is
interactive, involving problembased learning techniques to
convey key concepts.

factors that distinguish chemical engineers from


other engineers

Learning outcomes
At the end of the course,
delegates will understand:

concept of mass and energy balances and solve


simple problems
principles of heat, mass, and momentum transfer,
and be able to solve simple problems

principles of reactor design

conceptual process design and flow-sheeting

key aspects of process control

various approaches to process safety

essential principles of chemistry, and be able to


apply them to solve simple problems
operating principles for the common unit
operations

concept of process equipment scale-up and apply


this to simple problems

Who will benefit


Mechanical, production, control, civil, instrumentation,
electrical, safety, maintenance, plant and project engineers
as well as technicians and operators.

Course presenter
Dr Jamie Cleaver, FIChemE, consultant
www.icheme.org

Dates / Location
2123 March 2016
1214 July 2016
2224 November 2016
Rugby

Fees
IChemE member
1400 + VAT
Non-member
1650 + VAT

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, UK
+44 (0)1788 534431

At the end of the course, delegates should understand


the:

UK

courses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/
chemsci

CPD 20.5 hrs

the factors that


distinguish chemical engineers from scientists
how appreciate how their scientific knowledge
relates to chemical engineering
be aware of the operating principles for common
unit operations.
appreciate, and be able to demonstrate an
engineers problem-solving approach
appreciate the principles of heat, mass, and
momentum transfer, and be able to solve simple
problems
understand basic conceptual process design and
flow-sheeting
understand the principles of mass and energy
balances and be able to solve simple problems

appreciate the principles of reactor design

appreciate key aspects of process control

appreciate the various approaches to process


safety
appreciate the concept of process equipment scaleup and apply this to simple problems

Who will benefit


Chemists, physicists, biologists, pharmacists, research
scientists and environmental scientists

Course presenter
Dr Jamie Cleaver, FIChemE, consultant

Practical Distillation
Technology

Heat Integration

With the rising cost of utilities,


energy efficiency has become
key in the drive to reduce
a plants production costs
and cut down on its waste
treatment bills. Standard
measures such as good
housekeeping, frequent
preventive maintenance,
and improved utility systems
are implemented by most
companies, but may only
achieve minimal energy
savings. Are there other
energy saving measures that
could be taken to provide a
clear competitive advantage?

Australia
Date / Location
24 February 2016
Melbourne

Fees
IChemE member
AUD$2525 (GST inc)
Non-member
AUD$2725 (GST inc)

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, Australia
+61 (0)3 9642 4494
austcourses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/
heatint

This course introduces the


CPD 21 hrs
basics of pinch analysis a
systematic procedure for the
design and improvement of process systems for optimum
energy usage and minim simulation.

Recognised specialist
Henry Kister presents this
comprehensive coverage of
distillation technology,
with particular emphasis on the
problems that can occur and
how to solve them.
Special feature of the course:
in addition to the manual, every
delegate will receive a copy
of Distillation Operation and
Distillation Troubleshooting text
books.

Learning outcomes
Develop a working knowledge
of key techniques that can
promote trouble-free operation
and reduce distillation cost,
including:

Learning outcomes

a thorough understanding of the heat pinch


analysis and the concept of energy targeting

the ability to predict the energy requirements for a


specific process prior to design or simulation
the ability to design the heat exchange network for
a process which meets the energy requirements
predicted

an understanding of the interaction between


energy costs and the capital costs associated with
heat recovery
the ability to identify value adding changes in the
process with minimum effort
the ability to identify key non-technical commercial
issues that can/could/will be an impediment to
successful energy management

Who will benefit

trouble-shooting a
distillation column and
determining what may
cause poor performance
evaluating existing
performance and
developing new designs
validating your tower
simulation
avoiding common
causes of capacity
bottlenecks, tray damage,
downcomer sealing
problems, packed tower
distributor malfunctions
and many other operating
difficulties

UK
Date / Location
1214 September 2016
London

Fees
IChemE member
1600 + VAT
Non-member
1750 + VAT

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, UK
+44 (0)1788 534431
courses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/
pdt

CPD 23.25 hrs


Singapore
Date / Location
2527 July 2016
Singapore

Fees
IChemE member
1600
Non-member
1750

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, UK
+44 (0)1788 534431
courses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/
pdtsing

19 PDUs

de-bottlenecking a column
to improve capacity and/
or separation
controlling and operating a distillation column

Chemical, process, or environmental engineers involved


with the design or operation of an energy intensive
resource processing, minerals processing, food processing
manufacturing processes, or an electricity generator, the
design companies that support them, and government
agencies.

Who will benefit

Course presenter

Course presenter

John Westover, CEng, FIChemE, John Westover Pty

Henry Z Kister, FIChemE, Fluor

Engineering and supervisory personnel who are


involved in operating, designing, trouble-shooting, debottlenecking, or start-up of distillation processes and
equipment.

41

AZARDS HAZARDS
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International
Workshop
on Process
Intensification
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HAZARDS HAZARDS HAZARDS HAZARDS HAZARDS
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bringsHAZARDS
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speakers
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Diane
Smith Gander,
chairman,
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Keith
Spence,
non-exeuctive
director,
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Wayne Vernon, general manager, High


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WorkSafe
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Australiasia2016

www.icheme.org/hazardsaus2016
Conference partner

IChe

E
t

re

Safet
Ce

ISC

Control and Operation of Centrifugal Gas Compressors


ACCREDITED
Training course

A hands-on course which uses dynamic simulation


models to give a practical introduction to centrifugal
gas compressors and their operation in process plants.
The practical exercises and workshops will use dynamic
simulation models of compression systems running on
PCs. They will be easy to use and delegates will require no
prior knowledge of dynamic simulation.

Learning outcomes
By the end of the course delegates should have a good
understanding of:

UK

US/Canada

Dates / Locations

Dates / Locations

2224 February 2016


2628 April 2016
810 June 2016
79 September 2016
57 December 2016
Aberdeen

57 October 2016
Houston

2527 January 2016


1012 May 2016
1416 November 2016
London

13 June 2016
Kelowna
2628 October 2016
Calgary

Fees US
US$3509 plus taxes

compression principles

Fees

Fees Canada

process and control description

2231 + VAT

C$3509 plus taxes

compressor operations

CPD 21 hrs

CPD 21 hrs

mechanical design centrifugal compressors

instrumentation and control

simple anti-surge control

Australia

Europe

recycle valve sizing

Dates / Locations

Dates / Location

24 March 2016
57 September 2016
911 November 2016
Brisbane

24 March 2016
1719 October 2016
Norway

compressor protection and complex anti-surge


control

compressor operations

case studies

Who will benefit


Engineers with little previous knowledge of compressors
who are involved in the design, control, operation or
commissioning of process plants.

Mark Dixon, ESD Simulation Training


Contact
ESD Simulation Training
+44 (0)1467 634934
aberdeen@
esd-simulation.com

www.esdsimulation.com

Fees
2231 + VAT

CPD 21 hrs

1719 October 2016


Melbourne

Fees
AUD$3770 (GST inc)

CPD 21 hrs

Process Plant

Course presenter

911 March 2016


35 October 2016
1416 November 2016
Perth

43

Control, Operation
and Design of
Reciprocating Gas
Compressors
Offers delegates a
comprehensive overview
of the design, construction,
control and operation of
reciprocating compressors.
The course describes the
principles of operation of the
compressor and how the design
is adapted to a number of
different configurations to meet
numerous needs. A fundamental
understanding of gas behaviour
will be an asset but not
mandatory.

Learning outcomes

ACCREDITED
Training course

US/Canada
Dates / Locations
34 October 2016
Houston
3031 May 2016
Kelowna
2425 October 2016
Calgary

Fees US
US$2475 plus taxes
Fees Canada
C$2475 plus taxes

CPD 14 hrs

compressor selection

Australia

compression process

Dates / Locations

theory of operation

compressor operation

29 February
1 March 2016
Brisbane

compressor cylinder
assembly

31 August
2 September 2016
Perth

frame assemblies and


compressor configurations

2021 October 2016


Melbourne

cooling and lubrication

Fees

capacity control

AUD$2512 (GST inc)

performance & design


calculations
case studies and
compressor
applications

Who will benefit

Provides a comprehensive study


into the subject of modern
floating, production, storage and
off-loading facilities (FPSOs).
The subject matter is presented
in a manner to reflect what
might be considered a standard
project development path
and encompasses the areas of
technology, engineering, project
management and legislation.

Learning outcomes
Delegates should have a good
understanding of:

CPD 14 hrs
UK
Dates / Location

ACCREDITED
Training course

UK
Dates / Location
29 February 2016
2 March 2016
79 November 2016
Aberdeen

Fees
2231 + VAT

CPD 21 hrs
Australia
Date / Location
1214 October 2016
Perth

introduction to floating
production systems

Fees

field development

CPD 21 hrs

fpso system

mooring and turret design

subsea system

marine systems

Delegates will understand:

Design and Operation


of FPSOs

AUD$3770 (GST inc)

Who will benefit


A wide range of personnel whose work scope involves
the specification, design, management or operation of
FPSO projects.

Course presenter
Bob Hodder, ESD Simulation Training

56 September 2016
Aberdeen

Fees

Operations personnel of a nonmechanical background who are


either supervisors or responsible
for the day-to-day operation
and maintenance of reciprocating
compressor installations,
including process operators,
supervisors, technicians.

Contact

Contact

ESD Simulation Training

ESD Simulation Training

+44 (0)1467 634934

+44 (0)1467 634934

aberdeen@
esd-simulation.com

aberdeen@
esd-simulation.com

Course presenter

www.esdsimulation.com

www.esdsimulation.com

Mark Dixon,
ESD Simulation Training

www.icheme.org

1722 + VAT

CPD 14 hrs

Design and Operation


of Piping Systems

Aims to explain why it is


necessary to pay attention to
piping systems at all stages
throughout their life cycle to
prevent loss of containment and
thereby maintain a license to
operate. The course identifies
the principles and methods of
piping design together with the
requirements for layout and
routing, testing, commissioning
and safe operation, taking into
account the whole life cycle of
piping systems.

Learning outcomes
Delegates will understand how
to:

Training course

UK

A practical approach to alarm


Dates / Locations
management taking you through
89 March 2016
the full alarm lifecycle covering
Edinburgh
the projects, operations and
maintenance phases. As well
1112 October 2016
York
as offering guidance for alarm
specification and design, the
Fees
course will help delegates to
identify and solve problems
IChemE member
with existing systems such as
1390 + VAT
nuisance alarms.
Non-member
1460 + VAT

Contact

Learning outcomes

Jackie Kendall
ABB Consulting, UK

On completion delegates should


be able to:

+44 (0)1642 372121


jackie.kendall@
gb.abb.com

www.abb.com

CPD 17.75 hrs

improve business productivity by reduced


maintenance and capital costs
recognise the need for, and the importance of,
design codes and registration of critical piping
systems
have an awareness of the technical aspects of
piping that must be considered when designing,
constructing, modifying or maintaining piping
systems, highlighting the need to control
modifications
identify the modes of failure of piping systems
due to inadequate design, flexibility, supporting or
routing

Who will benefit

participants who require an increased awareness


and understanding of the design features and the
causes of piping failures and how to resolve the
problems that can occur
anyone who is involved in design,construction,
inspection, operation or maintenance of piping
systems or who needs a design appreciation or to
be aware of safer piping practices

Course presenter
Laza Krstin and Howard Robson,
ABB Consulting

ACCREDITED
Training course

UK
Dates / Locations
2325 February 2016
Manchester
1820 October 2016
Edinburgh

Fees
IChemE member
1665 + VAT
Non-member
1750 + VAT

Contact
Jackie Kendall
ABB Consulting, UK
+44 (0)1642 372121

understand why your


alarm system should be
managed

jackie.kendall@
gb.abb.com

identify and evaluate the


associated benefits

CPD 23.25 hrs

www.abb.com

have a good awareness of ISA 18.2 requirements


and recommendations and the guidance contained
in EEMUA 191
better understand the value and role of alarms
develop an alarm philosophy and design and
implement an alarm schedule/database
apply requirements and good practice to the
identification, specification and design of new
alarms
have an understanding of the need and benefits
of performance measurement and what tools are
available
have an understanding of the continuous
improvement cycle for alarm management
identify nuisance alarms and assemble a toolkit that
helps reduce them
understand the process, inputs and deliverables
from an effective alarm rationalisation exercise

Who will benefit

Process Plant

manage the safe


operation, maintenance
and commissioning of
piping systems

ACCREDITED

Effective Alarm
Management

Anyone involved in the specification, design, operation


and maintenance of control systems or anyone who has an
interest in improving their current alarm system.

Course presenter
Joan Evans and tony Atkinson,
ABB Consulting

45

Essentials of Pressure
Systems

Aims to provide the


fundamental understanding
required for managing the
integrity of pressure systems
equipment, highlighting some
of the problems that may be
encountered and how to avoid
them. The course covers design
issues, significant deterioration
mechanisms and failure modes
that can affect the integrity
of pressure equipment, and
provides an overview of the UK
legislative framework relating to
pressure systems.

Learning outcomes

understand the statutory


requirements and industry
good practice for safe
and reliable design and
operation of pressurised
equipment

ACCREDITED
Training course

UK

Provides guidance on how


Dates / Locations
to achieve safe and reliable
23 February 2016
operation of process equipment
York
by design and beyond its
design life. An effective plant
2728 September 2016
integrity system delivers
Edinburgh
benefits for safety, reliability
and operational performance
Fees
whilst optimising maintenance
IChemE member
and inspection costs.
1390 + VAT
Implementing such a system
Non-member
requires proactive management
1460 + VAT
of deterioration mechanisms
Contact
and a whole team approach,
as equipment integrity is not
Jackie Kendall
solely the responsibility of the
ABB Consulting, UK
maintenance and inspection
+44 (0)1642 372121
functions. The course covers
Jackie.kendall@
the essential elements of
gb.abb.com
an equipment integrity
www.abb.com
management system including
CPD 17.75 hrs legislative compliance.

appreciate the problems that can occur with


pressure systems and how to prevent them
understand the significant deterioration
mechanisms that affect pressure equipment

Who will benefit

Managing Deterioration
of Plant Equipment

anyone who requires an overview or refresher


of the essential elements of design and integrity
management of pressure systems equipment
engineers and managers in design, construction,
operations and maintenance roles

Course presenter

Training course

UK
Dates / Locations
1920 April 2016
York
2223 November 2016
Edinburgh

Fees
IChemE member
1390 + VAT
Non-member
1460 + VAT

Contact
Jackie Kendall
ABB Consulting, UK
+44 (0)1642 372121
jackie.kendall@
gb.abb.com

www.abb.com

CPD 17.75 hrs

Learning outcomes

appreciate the requirements of an integrity


management programme and the benefits of
focused inspection
appreciate the main forms of deterioration and the
best ways to look for them
appreciate how to meet legislation and implement
good practice
identify the key issues associated with ageing plant

Who will benefit


Anyone who is involved in the development and
implementation of integrity management strategy and
procedures, particularly involving ageing plant.

Laza Krstin and Paul Jackson, ABB Consulting

Course presenter
Laza Krstin and Neil Henry, ABB Consulting

www.icheme.org

ACCREDITED

Practical Aspects of
Process Control and
Instrumentation
A practical introduction to the
principles of measurement
and control of process plant.
It is a hands-on course and
participants will have the
opportunity to explore the
set-up and tuning of control
loops using simulation and
other computer-based training
packages.

Learning outcomes
Delegates should have a good
understanding of:

Pressure Relief
ACCREDITED

Dates / Locations
13 February 2016
1517 November 2016
Aberdeen
2527 October 2016
London

Fees
2337 + VAT

CPD 17.75 hrs


Australia
Dates / Locations

the principles of control

measurement principles

PID control

1214 July 2016


Melbourne

control tuning

Fees

CBT exercises

AUD$3870 (GST inc)

control techniques

CPD 17.75 hrs

Contact

control valves

+44 (0)1467 634934

ESD Simulation Training


aberdeen@
esd-simulation.com

www.esdyoung graduates who


simulation.com
require a practical
introduction to
measurement and control systems on process plant
anyone working in the process industries who
would like to understand the techniques used in
measurement and control and who have not had
the opportunity to learn about them before

Pressure relief can be caused by


a number of events including
fire, reaction runaway, thermal
expansion and process
abnormality. Incorrect design
of pressure relief systems
continues to result in major
safety and environmental
incidents with resultant business
consequences. Incidents can
occur as a result of failure to
provide relief, inadequate
relief capacity, disposal system
failure or incorrect design
and installation. A structured
approach to pressure relief
design is vital to ensure
protection of plant from
excessive over and under
pressure. This course is based
on ABBs extensive experience
of design installation and
maintenance of relief systems,
and covers a state-of-the-art
methodology, based on a life
cycle approach to pressure
relief. The format consists of two
core days with a third specialist
day.

Mark Dixon, ESD Simulation Training

Dates / Locations
1517 March 2016
London
79 June 2016
Liverpool
2022 September 2016
Leeds
1517 November 2016
Edinburgh

Fees
IChemE member
1890 + VAT
Non-member
1990 + VAT

Contact
Deborah Law
ABB Consulting, UK
+44 (0)1642 372029
deborah.law@
gb.abb.com

www.abb.com

CPD 17.75 hrs

Learning outcomes

Course presenter

UK

improve your companys overall business safety


and environmental performance
get pressure relief design right first time and avoid
costly mistakes
discover the potential cost effective alternatives to
pressure relief
master a structured approach to pressure relief

Who will benefit


Anyone involved in the design and operation of relief
systems.

Course presenter

Process Plant

1012 May 2016


Perth

computer control systems


DCS, SCADA, PLCs

Who will benefit

Training course

UK

ACCREDITED

Training course

Sarah Harrison, ABB Consulting

47

Process Design
Practices

Cilliers Kruger has a life


time experience in process
engineering ranging from
process design, construction,
commissioning, production,
operation support and
troubleshooting. This course
illuminates the fundamentals
and practical tricks-of-thetrade of process equipment
design, it puts it within the
context of real operational
environments unlocking
the ability of troubleshooting
and problem solving from a
fundamental understanding of
how equipment works.

ACCREDITED
Training course

UK
Dates / Locations
2024 June 2016
London

Fees
IChemE member
1800 + VAT
Non-member
1950 + VAT

Contact
andries@
proceng.co.uk

Dates / Location
1416 March 2016
2426 October 2016
Perth

Fees
AUD$3870 (GST inc)

CPD 17.75 hrs


UK
Dates / Location

www.proceng.co.uk

disposals

CPD 30 hrs

30 March1 April 2016


911 May 2016
2123 September 2016
2325 November 2016
Aberdeen

An understanding of the role of process engineers,


emphasising calculation methods and techniques
to troubleshoot and design process equipment.
What set engineers apart from operators and
managers is our ability to do calculations. If all you do
is analyse process trends and talk in meetings, then
you add no value. Make time to do calculations, check
them, verify them against plant data and then believe
them. Cilliers Kruger
A working knowledge of practical design
including design conditions, plant and equipment
simulation, hydraulics, piping, flow orifices, control
valves, vessels, towers, pumps, compressors,
heat exchangers, fired heaters, relief valves and
metallurgy

operational support (start-up, optimisation,


troubleshooting) or
process design (new or de-bottlenecking of
existing equipment)

Course presenter
Cilliers Kruger, Korf Technologies, ProcEng

www.icheme.org

Delegates will have a good


understanding of:

Australia

Who will benefit

Learning outcomes

Training course

hydrocarbon engineering

Learning outcomes

An intensive course offering


both an introduction to, and a
comprehensive overview of,
the production, processing and
emergency systems on offshore
facilities.

ACCREDITED

Comprehensive course material summarise the process


equipment knowledge and information focused on the
design of new equipment as well as the optimiation,
troubleshooting and problem solving of equipment in
operation.

Production, Process
and Emergency
Systems on Oil and Gas
Installations

reservoir characteristics
and well fluids
reservoir drive and
artificial lift

well design

oil and gas separation

produced water

Fees
2337 + VAT

CPD 17.75 hrs

gas compression and


treatment

Contact

water injection

+44 (0)1467 634934

utility systems

aberdeen@
esd-simulation.com

emergency shutdown
systems

ESD Simulation Training

www.esdsimulation.com

fire and gas systems

Who will benefit

process personnel who may be transferring to a


primary production area
engineers who have made a career move to the
regulatory bodies which oversee the industry

Course presenter
Bob Hodder, ESD Simulation Training

Chemical Plant
Commissioning

Learning outcomes

Training course

UK
Date / Location
29 June1 July 2016
Leeds

Fees
Available on request

Contact
CPD Unit,
Faculty of Engineering,
University of Leeds, UK
+44 (0)113 343
2494/8104
cpd@engineering.
leeds.ac.uk

www.engineering.
leeds.ac.uk/shortcourses

CPD 17.75 hrs

Delegates will have a good overview of the many different


aspects involved with the commissioning and start-up of
process plants, both large and small.

Who will benefit

graduate process engineers about to take on their


first major commissioning responsibility
process engineers who want to strengthen
their knowledge in commissioning in order to
commission a new plant

Course presenter
Professor Mike Fairweather, University of Leeds

Procurement is one of the


core business processes, and
successful procurement can
be the difference between
a profitable and loss-making
project or product. The
decisions leading to successful
procurement are made
throughout the business, from
technical specifiers to financial
managers and of course
procurement managers.
This course presents the core
concepts and approaches
to successful engineering
procurement, helping delegates
apply business processes that
increase value from suppliers,
reduce costs and improve oveall
commercial performance.

UK
Date / Location
28 September 2016
London

Fees
IChemE member
500 + VAT
Non-member
550 + VAT

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, UK
+44 (0)1788 534431
courses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/
procurement

CPD 6.25 hrs

Learning outcomes

understand how to adopt appropriate procurement


approaches for different categories of materials
and services
understand the relationship between price, cost
and value
appreciate the benefits of a whole life-cycle cost
approach
understand how suppliers segment their customer
base

Commercial and Project Management

Deals with the commissioning


and start-up of process plants,
both large and small. Many
different aspects are covered
including the planning and
managerial aspects of major
plants, and the start-up of small
plants, with an emphasis on
the technical problems, and
dealing with the documentation
associated with commissioning.
Lecture materials are delivered
by a number of specialists in
the field, all of whom have
been associated with start-ups
themselves. There is substantial
emphasis on tutorial exercises
in both commissioning and precommissioning.

ACCREDITED

Engineering
Procurement

draw up action plans to take back to the workplace

Who will benefit

procurement managers

engineering managers

project managers

commercial managers

buyers

technical specifiers

engineers responsible for the commissioning


of equipment or services

Course presenter
Dr Paul A Wright, PAWA Consulting

49

Engineering Project
Management

Chemical
Engineering
Regeneration, Recovery
and Reinvention

Introduces the systems, tools


and techniques that can be
used to manage an engineering
project, allowing participants to
take an informed view on how
best to successfully deliver,
control and manage a project
from start to finish.
The course clearly demonstrates
the range of techniques that can
be used, providing a structured
approach to delivery and for
managing the many issues that
inevitably arise throughout the
project life cycle.

Learning outcomes

UK
Date / Location
35 October 2016
Manchester

Fees
IChemE member
1350 + VAT
Non-member
1500 + VAT

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, UK
+44 (0)1788 534431
courses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/
epm

understand the range of


CPD
project management tools
and techniques available
and how to use them effectively

19.5 hrs

understand how to recognise poor practice and


how to restore adverse situations
understand best practice when managing a project
learn how to take a structured approach to project
delivery

Who will benefit

engineers new to project and construction


management

project managers with some years of experience

construction engineers and managers

line managers

Course presenter
David Andrews, consultant

25 28 September 2016
Adelaide Convention Centre
Adelaide, Australia
Chemeca is the annual conference for the Australasian
community of chemical and process engineers and industrial
chemists to learn and share industry knowledge, experience,
ideas and insights that help the industry continue to grow.
Network with up to 450 of your peers in Adelaide for Chemeca
2016 and explore this years theme, Chemical Engineering
Regeneration, Recovery and Reinvention.
For all information including technical programme,
sponsorship and delegate registration visit
www.chemeca2016.org

IChemE Forms of Contract

UK

Engineers need to understand


Date / Location
the basis and practicalities
1314 June 2016
of contract law in order to
London
deliver successful projects and
supplier relationships. On a
Fees
day-to-day basis they are dealing
IChemE member
with suppliers and managing
1000 + VAT
contracts, and need to be able
to make decisions without
Non-member
1100 + VAT
spending time consulting with
legal specialists. And failure to
Contact
understand the basics can prove
Courses department
very expensive.
IChemE, UK

+44 (0)1788 534431

Learning outcomes

courses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/
By the end of the course
foccourse
delegates will have a good
CPD 11.5 hrs
understanding of the structure,
main provisions and features
of the IChemE Forms of Contract, and the key differences
between them.

Who will benefit


Those who will prepare and tender a contract using the
forms or those who will manage such a contract as a
client, consultant or contractor, including:

project and contract managers

contract administrators

engineers

consultants, consulting engineers, quantity


surveyors
graduate engineers

This course will provide a


grounding in contract law for
engineering and construction
contracts, and how it is used to
help deliver successful projects
and supplier relationships. It
will give you the knowledge
you need about contracts and
will serve as a good link to our
separate course on the IChemE
Forms of Contract.

UK
Dates / Locations
2122 June 2016
London
2930 November 2016
Rugby

Fees
IChemE member
1000 + VAT
Non-member
1100 + VAT

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, UK
+44 (0)1788 534431
courses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/
contracts

CPD 13.5 hrs

Learning outcomes
On completion of the course delegates will understand:

the role and purpose of contracts for engineering


the role of engineers in contract formation and
management
how contracts are formed and ended

Commercial and Project Management

IChemEs Forms of Contract


are drafted as performancebased contracts for the design
and construction of process
plants and other output-based
projects. This course examines
both the UK and international
contract suites: their approach
to risk and payment, their
structure, how they govern
work from initial requirements
through design to fully
commissioned and operational
plant, and party liabilities.

What Engineers Need to Know


About Contracts

the terms and conditions and obligations placed on


each party to the contract

how risk is allocated in different types of contract

processes for dispute and conflict resolution

Who will benefit

project and contract managers

contract administrators

engineers and administrators

consultants, consulting engineering, quantity


surveyors

sales and purchasing managers/personnel

general managers

graduate engineers

Course presenter
Dr Paul A Wright, PAWA Consulting

51

Energy Cost Reduction


Efficiency
and On-Site Generation
Dramatically rising energy
prices means that Australian
businesses need to find
efficiency gains or cheaper
energy sources to remain
competitive. This course
will outline strategies for
dealing with both sides
of energy costs: reducing
energy demand and lower
cost energy options. Both
power and thermal heat
will be addressed against
the backdrop of the current
market landscape and
technology options that are
proven and economically
viable.

Learning outcomes

Australia
Date / Location
20 October 2016
Perth

Fees
IChemE member
AUD$970 (GST inc)
Non-member
AUD$1100 (GST inc)

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, Australia
+61 (0)3 9642 4494
austcourses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/
energyaus

CPD 6 hrs

By the end of the course delegates will have an


understanding of:

The course will assist


engineers in continual
environmental and efficiency
improvement. Delegates will
develop their knowledge in
the new areas of resource
efficiency, recovery and re-use
in manufacturing industries
as well as understanding the
developing environmental
standards and compliance.
Case study examples,
simulation problem solving
and useful operating examples
will feature throughout.

Learning outcomes
By the end of the course
delegates will understand:

technology options for energy efficienty and


on-site generation
energy markets overview: simple economic
analysis tool

risks, emissions and future trends

Who will benefit

Environmental Sustainability
and Waste Reduction for
Manufacturing

engineers looking to understand the economic


impacts of energy efficiency and on-site power and
thermal heat systems
individuals interested in operational efficiency and
cost reduction
those with responsibility for energy systems,
strategy or energy procurement

Course presenter
Gareth M Forde, FIChemE, All Energy Pty

Australia
Date / Location
3031 August 2016
Melbourne

Fees
IChemE member
AUD$1980 (GST inc)
Non-member
AUD$2300 (GST inc)

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, Australia
+61 (0)3 9642 4494
austcourses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/
esm

CPD 12 hrs

environmental concerns global warming, greenhouse gas, climate change, disasters increase,
water shortages, consumer demands, carbon
emission systems
environmental economics costs of wastes,
environmental cost centre management,
investment pay-back, green purchasing and carbon
footprint
cleaner production versus waste treatment, life
cycle approaches
environmental management systems assessments
(Environmental Impact Assessment), ISO 14001
and in-house systems
waste minimisation assessments (eco-audit)
detailed how-to steps, including new technology
assessment
preventative maintenance programs and reject
reduction
environmental action plans
eco-labeling, total product stewardship and
environmental benchmarking
environmental regulations and trends
government environment, water, fire, safety and
poisons authorities.

Who will benefit

engineering staff, including operations, quality


control, design, maintenance
managers at all levels within an organisation

Course presenter
Darrell Reeve, MIEAust CPEng, MIMF,
Cleaner Production Australia
www.icheme.org

Leading an ESOS Assessment

All large organisations in the


European Union are required
to conduct mandatory energy
audit assessments every
four years to comply with
the new Energy Savings
Opportunities Scheme (ESOS)
regulations. These audits must
be conducted by a registered
ESOS Lead Energy Assessor
and IChemE has been named as
an approved authority to award
this status.
This course is a prerequisite to
registration as an ESOS Lead
Energy Assessor with IChemE.

Learning outcomes
Delegates will have gained a
thorough knowledge of:

UK

An interactive course built


Date / Location
around forecasting water
8 June 2016
quality and addressing
London
treatment plant performance
issues arising from changing
Fees
feed water conditions.
IChemE member
Delegates will learn to
850 + VAT
understand the influence of
Non-member
water chemistry on process
1100 + VAT
design and how to use this
knowledge to optimise
Contact
performance. Delegates will
Courses department
also design new treatment
IChemE, UK
plants and size equipment
+44 (0)1788 534431
using comprehensive software
that integrates material and
courses@icheme.org
heat balancing, equipment
www.icheme.org/
sizing, stream property and
esostraining
solubility prediction.

CPD 7 hrs

the processes of leading, reviewing and approving


an energy assessment according to ESOS and PAS
51215
the competency requirements of lead energy
assessor according to PAS 51215
using data analysis as a basis to scope the energy
assessment and to inform opportunities of
improvement
the common variables that changes energy
consumption

Who will benefit


Chartered Members (MIChemE) or Fellows (FIChemE)
of IChemE that wish to become a registered ESOS Lead
Assessor in order to provide energy audits for their
company or to undertake external consulting work.

Admission criteria
Chartered Membership (MIChemE) or Fellow (FIChemE)
of IChemE and experience in carrying out energy
management and energy auditing activities (typically no
less than 5 years)

Date / Location
28 April 2016
Brisbane

Fees
IChemE member
AUD$1100 (inc GST)
Non-member
AUD$1430 (GST inc)

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, Australia
+61 (0)3 9642 4494
austcourses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/
pmwtp

CPD 8 hrs

Each module includes realistic


scenarios for advanced water treatment applications
including boiler feedwater, cooling water blowdown,
industrial wastewater, seawater desalination, mine
dewatering and brine management. Up to 21 technologies
in water treatment will be explored during the sessions.
A three month free subscription to AqMB process
simulation software for water treatment is also included.

Learning outcomes
By the end of the course delegates will have an
understanding and overview of:

applying systems thinking in energy assessment

Delegates must complete and pass a post-course


assessment within 7 days of the course, in order to
become registered as an ESOS Lead Energy Assessor.

Australia

configuring process flow sheets for design or


modelling purposes

sizing equipment for vendor pricing

creating a process design report

Who will benefit

process engineers
consultants and operators involved in concept
design, sizing and/or operation of existing
physico-chemical water treatment plants involving
conventional (settling, filtration), membrane, resin,
electrolytic or thermal technologies

Sustainability

Process Modelling for Water


Treatment Professionals

Course presenter
Darren Szczepanski CEng, MIChemE, MIEAust,
Matthew Brannock CEng, CSci, MIChemE, RPEQ

Course presenter
Kit Oung, MIChemE, consultant

53

Water Minimisation
with Process Integration

The demand for resources


such as natural gas, crude oil
and water is increasing rapidly
due to population growth and
economic development, and the
rising costs of these resources
has led the process industries
to seek more cost effective,
sustainable manufacturing
processes. With global water
usage set to increase by more
than 50% by 2025, efficient
use of water in industry is
now recognised as being
vital to achieving sustainable
development.

UK
Date / Location

Learning outcomes

tbc

By the end of the course delegates will know how to:

Fees
IChemE member
550 + VAT

how to identify a rigorous benchmark targets for


water minimisation in a process plant
how to identify the smallest purification unit for

Non-member water regeneration


650 + VAT
how to design a water recovery network that

achieves maximum recovery targets

Contact
Courses department
IChemE, UK

Who will benefit

+44 (0)1788 534431

process engineers

environmental engineers

utility engineers

environmental consultants

courses@icheme.org

www.icheme.org/
waterminuk

Resource conservation is the


key to reducing operating costs
CPD 12.5 hrs
and developing sustainable
processes, and process
integration and pinch analysis techniques play an
important role in identifying opportunities to improve
process efficiency. With an emphasis on targeting
throughout this course, delegates will learn how to apply
process integration techniques to identify rigorous targets
for waste minimisation in their own workplace.

Course presenter
Ir Dr Dominic Foo, FIChemE, University of Nottingham
Malaysia Campus

Join IChemE today


Your active professional community
With over 44,000 members in
120 countries, IChemE is the
only organisation that awards the
internationally-recognised Chartered
Chemical Engineer and Professional
Process Safety Engineer qualifications.
www.icheme.org/joinnow

Index
A

Area Classification ................................ 10

Gas Explosion Hazards on LNG Facilities .. 17

Asset Integrity Management in the


Process Industries Managing your
Ageing Plant Assets............................... 10

Gas Explosion Hazards on Offshore


and Onshore Facilities ........................... 18

C
Chemical Engineering for Non-Chemical
Engineers............................................. 39
Chemical Engineering for
Non-Engineers ..................................... 39
Chemical Engineering for Other
Engineers ............................................ 40
Chemical Engineering for Scientists ........ 40

H
Hazard Identification Techniques............. 18
Hazard Study Awareness ....................... 20

HAZOP Study for Team Leaders and


Team Members Oil and Gas................. 23
Heat Integration.................................... 41

Inherent Safety in Design....................... 27

Leadership........................................353

Effective Alarm Management ................. 45

Leading on ESOS Assessment................. 53

Energy Cost Reduction Efficiency and


On-Site Generation .............................. 52
Engineering Procurement ...................... 49
Engineering Project Management ........... 50
Environmental Sustainability and Waste
Reduction for Manufacturing.................. 52
Essentials of Pressure Systems................ 46

Layer of Protection Analysis (LOPA) ........ 28

M
Managing Cross-Cultural and
Virtual Teams........................................ 37
Managing Deterioration of Plant
Equipment........................................... 46
Managing the Hazards of Flare Systems... 30
Marketing for Engineers......................... 37
Mentoring for Chemical Engineers.......... 38

Establishing and Maintaining a


Safety Culture...................................... 13

New to Management............................. 38

Expert Hazard Awareness...................... 13

F
Forms of Contract................................. 51

W
What Engineers Need to Know
About Contracts ................................... 51

Introduction to Risk Assessment.............. 27

Emergency Planning Principles............... 12

Sustainability................................... 5054

Design and Operation of FPSOs.............. 44

Effective Technical Writing .................... 35

Safety............................................. 1034
SIL Determination and Hazard
Assessment ......................................... 33
SIL Determination IEC 61508/61511........ 34

Water Minimisation with


Process Integration ............................... 54

IChemE Forms of Contract..................... 51

Effective HAZOP .................................. 12

Human Factors in Health and Safety ........ 25

Effective Communication for


Engineers ............................................ 36

Process Safety Awareness...................... 32

Project Management........................ 4951

HAZOP Study for Team Leaders and


Team Members Chemical and Pharma... 23

Dust Explosions.................................... 12
Design and Operation of Piping
Systems .............................................. 45

Process Safety and the Board.................. 32

HAZOP Study, Leadership and


Management........................................ 21

Communication Skills ............................ 36

Creativity for Chemical Engineers............ 35

Process Plant................................... 4348

Production, Process and Emergency


Systems on Oil and Gas Installations ....... 48

HAZOP Study for Team Leaders and


Team Members .................................... 22

Control, Operation and Design of


Reciprocating Gas Compressors ............. 44

Process Operations.......................... 3942

HAZOP Applied Hazard and


Operability Study.................................. 20

Commercial and Project


Management................................... 4951

Control and Operation of Centrifugal


Gas Compressors.................................. 43

Process Modelling for Water Treatment


Professionals........................................ 53

Process Safety Key Performance


Indicators and PSM Auditing.................. 33

HAZOP Study for the Offshore Oil and


Gas Industry......................................... 21

Consequence Modelling Techniques....... 11

Process Design Practices........................ 48

HAZOP Awareness ............................... 19

Chemical Plant Commissioning .............. 49

Comprehensive Explosion Science.......... 11

and Personnel for Over Pressure............. 31

Personal Development an
Leadership..................................... 3538

Fundamentals of Process Safety.............. 14

Practical Aspects of Process Control


and Instrumentation ............................. 47

Fundamentals of Process Safety


Management........................................ 16

Pressure Relief ..................................... 47

Fundamentals of Nuclear Safety.............. 17

Pressure Relief: Protecting Equipment

Practical Distillation Technology ............. 41

55

European Symposium on
Biochemical Engineering
Sciences (ESBES) 2016

1114 September 2016, Dublin, Ireland


This major event will provide a platform for bioengineers and others to discuss the latest in research and
industrial application of all aspects of biochemical engineering. The technical programme is packed with topquality presentations from international industry practitioners and researchers as well as plenaries, keynotes
and invited keynotes. The programme also contains:

Malcolm Lilly Award

2016 Biochemical Engineering Journal Young Investigator Award

Raw Material Forum

writing workshop

student/industry networking forum

www.esbes2016.org

Global
AWARDS
2016

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Singapore
IChemE Global Award winner
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Registration form

For courses organised by IChemE


Complete and return this form by email or fax to the relevant IChemE office:
UK, Singapore, Abu Dhabi, US or Canada courses email: ar@icheme.org or fax +44 (0)1788 534403
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IChemE is a Malaysia
registered charity in England and Wales, and a charity registered in Scotland (SC039661)
t:
+603 2283 1381
www.icheme.org
e: malaysianmembers@icheme.org

Training Course
Catalogue 2016

Personal Development and


Leadership

Australia

Contact the membership team:


t: +61 (0)3 9642 4494
members@icheme.org
e: austmembers@icheme.org

IChemE Training
Course
Catalogue
2016
because chemical engineering matters
IChemE
Training
Course
Catalogue
2016

IChemE offices

Start your professional development journey

Process
Plant

New Zealand

Safety

t: +64 (4)473 4398


e: nzmembers@icheme.org

Singapore
t: +65 6471 5043
e: singaporemembers@icheme.org

UK London
t: +44 (0)20 7927 8200
e: info@icheme.org

Process
Operations

IChemE is a registered charity in England and Wales (214379) and a charity registered in Scotland (SC 039661)

Commercial and Project


Management

www.icheme.org

Sustainability

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