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Episode 52 - Mechanical Integrity for Process Safety Management (PSM)
Episode 52

Episode 52 - Mechanical Integrity for Process Safety Management (PSM)

The Occupational Safety Leadership Podcast

May 12, 20238m 12s

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Show Notes

Episode 52 breaks down the Mechanical Integrity (MI) element of OSHA’s Process Safety Management Standard (29 CFR 1910.119). Dr. Ayers explains why MI is one of the most critical PSM elements — and one of the most common root causes of catastrophic chemical incidents.

The core message: If equipment fails, the process fails. Mechanical integrity is the backbone of process safety.

  🧭 Purpose of Mechanical Integrity

The MI element ensures that equipment used to process, store, or handle highly hazardous chemicals is:

  • Designed properly

  • Installed correctly

  • Maintained reliably

  • Inspected regularly

  • Repaired safely

  • Replaced before failure

MI prevents leaks, releases, fires, explosions, and equipment breakdowns that can escalate into major incidents.

  🏗️ What Equipment Is Covered

Episode 52 highlights that MI applies to:

  • Pressure vessels

  • Storage tanks

  • Piping systems

  • Relief systems and vent systems

  • Emergency shutdown systems

  • Controls, sensors, alarms, and interlocks

  • Pumps, compressors, agitators

  • Any equipment whose failure could cause a release

If it touches the process — or protects the process — it falls under MI.

  📋 Key Requirements of the MI Element 1. Written Procedures

Facilities must have clear, detailed procedures for:

  • Inspections

  • Testing

  • Preventive maintenance

  • Repairs

  • Equipment replacement

Procedures must reflect manufacturer recommendations, industry standards, and site‑specific needs.

  2. Training for Maintenance Personnel

Maintenance workers must be trained on:

  • Hazards of the process

  • Safe work practices

  • Lockout/tagout

  • Hot work

  • Confined space entry

  • How to follow MI procedures

Training must be initial and ongoing.

  3. Inspection and Testing

MI requires:

  • Documented inspection and testing programs

  • Use of recognized and generally accepted good engineering practices (RAGAGEP)

  • Defined frequencies based on risk, manufacturer guidance, and industry standards

  • Proper calibration of instruments and sensors

Dr. Ayers emphasizes that RAGAGEP is the foundation of MI.

  4. Equipment Deficiencies

When deficiencies are found, employers must:

  • Correct them before further use, or

  • Implement temporary safeguards if immediate repair is not possible

Temporary fixes must be:

  • Documented

  • Risk‑assessed

  • Time‑limited

“Temporary” cannot become “permanent.”

  5. Quality Assurance

Quality assurance applies to:

  • New equipment

  • Replacement parts

  • Repairs

  • Fabrication

  • Installation

The episode stresses that poor-quality parts or improper installation can undermine the entire MI program.

  🧪 Common Mechanical Integrity Failures

Dr. Ayers highlights typical breakdowns:

  • Overdue inspections

  • Incomplete or inaccurate MI procedures

  • Poor documentation

  • Using non‑RAGAGEP inspection methods

  • Temporary repairs that never get replaced

  • Alarm and interlock failures

  • Corrosion under insulation (CUI) not addressed

  • Inadequate training for maintenance staff

These failures often lead to catastrophic releases.

  🔄 How MI Connects to Other PSM Elements

Mechanical Integrity is tightly linked to:

  • Process Safety Information (PSI) — equipment specs must be accurate

  • Operating Procedures — operators must know equipment limits

  • Training — workers must understand equipment hazards

  • MOC — changes may require new inspections or standards

  • Incident Investigation — equipment failures must be analyzed

  • PHA — MI weaknesses are major risk drivers

MI is not a standalone program — it is woven into the entire PSM system.

  🧑‍🏫 Leadership Responsibilities

Safety leaders must:

  • Ensure MI procedures follow RAGAGEP

  • Provide resources for inspections, testing, and repairs

  • Track and close deficiencies promptly

  • Ensure maintenance personnel are trained and competent

  • Audit MI programs for quality, not just completion

  • Treat MI as a risk‑reduction system, not a compliance checkbox

The episode’s core message: Mechanical integrity is the difference between a stable process and a catastrophic failure.