Nuclear Power Plants event classification based on International Reporting System (IRS)
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.15392/bjrs.v8i3A.1282Palavras-chave:
Event investigation, Operating experience, Incident Reporting System, Root causeResumo
The exchange of information between several business activities can lead to an increase in productivity and quality. In nuclear area, besides economic benefits, the operating experience exchanged can increase of the safety level of nuclear installations. Thus, it´s necessary to evaluate frequently operational occurrences from different countries and companies to learn with their lessons learned to prevent a recurrent events or unexpected consequences. Because this, several methodologies are recommended to investigate events in an adequate level of depth and perform reports based on local requirements. Generally, these reports contain plant conditions before and after an event occurs (operation mode, operation limits and condition, date and time, nuclear and electrical power) and their information (failure discovery methods, impact to the safety, classification from INES and national regulation scale, similar events, relation to human factors, activation of emergency plan, recommended actions, root cause and causal factors). To allow the exchange of experience the Nuclear Energy Agency (NEA) and International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) maintain an Incident Reporting System (IRS) that permits interaction of several member states. In this system, a local coordinator collects information of the most relevant operating events and performs an evaluation of them based on IRS Guideline presented in an annual meeting. This paper evaluates a set of approximately four hundred events reported in IRS between 2014 and 2018. This evaluation has the objective of identify the most recurrent event root causes, operation mode and the effectiveness of corrective actions in course in the nuclear industry.
Downloads
Referências
NEA - Nuclear Energy Agency. Comparing Nuclear Accident Risks with Those from Other Energy Source, Paris, France, 2010.
NASA - National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Lessons learned from Challenger, Washington D.C, USA, 1988.
MEDEIROS, L. O. Abordagem da ergonomia para avaliação do treinamento simulado das equipes de resposta à emergência em lançamentos de veículos aeroespaciais. Dissertação de Mestrado. Natal: Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte, 2015.
MOREIRA, J. F. M., d’ALMEIDA, A. L. Indústria de petróleo e gás: acidentes relevantes no mundo. III Congresso Nacional de Engenharia de Petróleo, Gás Natural e Biocombustíveis, Salvador, Bahia, Brazil, 2018.
LE COZE, J. C. BP Texas city accident: weak signal or sheer power?. Resilience Engineering Symposium, Antibes, Juan-les-Pins, France, pp. 185-194, 2008.
ISIADINSO, C. BP Texas City refinery disaster – accident & prevention report. Exeter, United Kingdom, 2015.
MEJRI, M., de WOLF, D. Crisis management: lessons learnt from the BP Deepwater Horizon Spill Oil. Business Management and Strategy, v. 4, pp. 67-90, 2013.
PEDRAZA, J. M. World major nuclear accidents and their negative impact in the environment, human health and public opinion. International Journal of Energy, Environment and Economics, v. 21, 2013.
REMPE, J., FARMER, M., CORRADINI, M., OTT, L., GAUNTT, R., POWERS, D. Revisiting insights from Three Mile Island Unit 2 postaccident examinations and evaluations in view of the Fukushima Daiichi Accident. Nuclear Science and Engineering, v. 172, pp.223-248, 2012.
KORTOV, V., USTYANTSEV, Y. Chernobyl accident: Causes, consequences and problems of radiation measurements. Radiation Measurements, v. 55, pp. 12-16, 2013.
MAURICIO, C. L. P. Analysis of the external doses received by workers involved in the mitigation of the Goiania radiological accident. Brazilian Journal of Radiation Sciences, v. 6, 2018.
PYY, P., ROSS, D. F. Recurring events: a nuclear safety concern. NEA News, 21.2, 2003.
IAEA - International Atomic Energy Agency. Best practices in the utilization and dissemination of Operating Experience at Nuclear Power Plants, Vienna, Austria, 2008.
CNEN - Comissão Nacional de Energia Nuclear. Norma NN 1.14 – Relatórios de operação de usinas nucleoelétricas, 2002.
IAEA - International Atomic Energy Agency. Safety of Nuclear Power Plants: Commissioning and Operation, Specific Safety Requirements (SSR-2/2), Vienna, Austria (2016).
ZIEDELIS, S., NOEL, M. Comparative Analysis of Nuclear Event Investigation Methods, Tools and Techniques - Interim Technical Report EUR 24757 EN, European Commission Joint Research Centre – Institute for Energy, Luxemburg, Luxemburg, 2011.
IAEA - International Atomic Energy Agency, Development and application of level 1 probabilistic safety assessment for Nuclear Power Plants, Specific Safety Guide (SSG-3), Vienna, Austria, 2010.
IAEA - International Atomic Energy Agency, Deterministic Safety Analysis for Nuclear Power Plants, Specific Safety Guide (SSG-2), Vienna, Austria (2009).
MOHAMADFAM, I., SOLEIMANI, E., GHASEMI, F., ZAMANPARVAR, A. Comparison of Management Oversight and Risk Tree and Tripod-Beta in Excavation Accident Analysis. Health Science, v. 7, pp. 1-5, 2015.
IAEA - International Atomic Energy Agency. IRS Guidelines. Vienna, Austria, 2010.
ERINC, J., SEAMAN, S. BAISCH, J. Common Cause Failure (CCF): A path to quantitative success. NPIC&HMIT, San Francisco, CA, pp. 246-255, 2017.
Downloads
Publicado
Edição
Seção
Licença
Direitos autorais (c) 2021 Brazilian Journal of Radiation Sciences

Este trabalho está licenciado sob uma licença Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Declaro que o presente artigo é original, não tendo sido submetido à publicação em qualquer outro periódico nacional ou internacional, quer seja em parte ou em sua totalidade. Declaro, ainda, que uma vez publicado na revista Brazilian Journal of Radiation Sciences, editada pela Sociedade Brasileira de Proteção Radiológica, o mesmo jamais será submetido por mim ou por qualquer um dos demais co-autores a qualquer outro periódico. Através deste instrumento, em meu nome e em nome dos demais co-autores, porventura existentes, cedo os direitos autorais do referido artigo à Sociedade Brasileira de Proteção Radiológica, que está autorizada a publicá-lo em meio impresso, digital, ou outro existente, sem retribuição financeira para os autores.
Licença
Os artigos do BJRS são licenciados sob uma Creative Commons Atribuição 4.0 Licença Internacional, que permite o uso, compartilhamento, adaptação, distribuição e reprodução em qualquer meio ou formato, desde que você dê o devido crédito ao (s) autor (es) original (is) e à fonte, forneça um link para a licença Creative Commons, e indique se mudanças foram feitas. As imagens ou outro material de terceiros neste artigo estão incluídos na licença Creative Commons do artigo, a menos que indicado de outra forma em uma linha de crédito para o material. Se o material não estiver incluído no licença Creative Commons do artigo e seu uso pretendido não é permitido por regulamentação legal ou excede o uso permitido, você precisará obter permissão diretamente do detentor dos direitos autorais. Para visualizar uma cópia desta licença, visite http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/