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Tank Cleaning and Entry Training Service | in Dammam - Riyadh - Jeddah - Makkah

Tank Cleaning & Entry training per OSHA 1910.146 and API standards covers confined space procedures, gas testing, ventilation, PPE, permits, and safe entry.

Course Title

Tank Cleaning and Entry

Course Duration

1 Day

Competency Assessment Criteria

Practical Assessment and Knowledge Assessment

Training Delivery Method

Classroom (Instructor-Led) or Online (Instructor-Led)

Service Coverage

Saudi Arabia - Bahrain - Kuwait - Philippines

Course Average Passing Rate

96%

Post Training Reporting 

Post Training Report(s) + Candidate(s) Training Evaluation Forms

Certificate of Successful Completion

Certification is provided upon successful completion. The certificate can be verified through a QR-Code system.

Certification Provider

Tamkene Saudi Training Center - Approved by TVTC (Technical and Vocational Training Corporation)

Certificate Validity

2 Years (Extendable with additional training hours)

Instructors Languages

English / Arabic / Urdu / Hindi / Pashto

Training Services Design Methodology

ADDIE Training Design Methodology

ADDIE Training Services Design Methodology (1).png

Course Overview

This comprehensive Tank Cleaning and Entry training course provides participants with essential knowledge and practical skills required for safely cleaning and entering tanks, vessels, and confined spaces in industrial and petroleum environments. The course covers fundamental confined space safety principles along with critical procedures for atmospheric testing, hazard control, and safe entry aligned with OSHA 29 CFR 1910.146 Permit-Required Confined Spaces, API Recommended Practice 2016 Guidelines and Procedures for Entering and Cleaning Petroleum Storage Tanks, NFPA 326 Standard for the Safeguarding of Tanks and Containers, and ANSI/ASSE Z117.1 Safety Requirements for Confined Spaces.


Participants will learn to apply systematic entry procedures and proven safety protocols to identify hazards, test atmospheres, implement ventilation, and execute safe tank cleaning operations. This course combines theoretical concepts with extensive practical demonstrations and hands-on exercises to ensure participants gain valuable skills applicable to their professional environment while emphasizing atmospheric monitoring, isolation, and emergency rescue preparedness.

Key Learning Objectives

  • Understand permit-required confined space regulations and tank entry hazards

  • Conduct atmospheric testing using calibrated gas detection instruments properly

  • Apply isolation procedures including lockout/tagout and line breaking effectively

  • Implement ventilation strategies for atmospheric hazard control

  • Execute tank cleaning procedures using appropriate methods and equipment

  • Perform confined space entry following permit system requirements

  • Establish rescue and emergency response capabilities per OSHA standards

  • Recognize and control specific petroleum tank hazards and health effects

Group Exercises

  • Entry planning workshop including (developing complete entry plan for tank scenario, assigning roles, identifying hazards, establishing controls)

  • Mock permit process including (team walkthrough of pre-entry verification, atmospheric testing, permit authorization, entry simulation)

  • The importance of proper training in tank cleaning and entry for preventing fatalities through hazard recognition, atmospheric testing, and procedural compliance

Knowledge Assessment

  • Technical quizzes on regulations including (multiple-choice questions on OSHA 1910.146 requirements, API 2016 procedures, permit elements)

  • Atmospheric hazard identification including (recognizing oxygen deficiency, flammable, toxic scenarios, determining controls, calculating LEL)

  • Testing sequence scenarios including (determining proper testing order, acceptance criteria application, continuous monitoring requirements)

  • Rescue planning evaluation including (assessing rescue capabilities, identifying appropriate methods, determining equipment needs)

Course Outline

1. Introduction to Tank Cleaning and Confined Space Entry

1.1 Tank Entry Hazards and Incident Overview
  • Tank entry statistics including (fatalities, atmospheric hazards, engulfment, multiple victim incidents, prevention through procedures)

  • Common tank entry hazards including (oxygen deficiency, toxic atmospheres, flammable vapors, engulfment, physical hazards, temperature extremes)

  • Incident patterns including (lack of testing, inadequate ventilation, no entry permit, unauthorized entry, poor rescue, preventable deaths)

  • Types of tanks and vessels including (storage tanks petroleum/chemical, process vessels, railcars, silos, digesters, reactor vessels)

  • Industry applications including (petroleum refining, chemical processing, food/beverage, wastewater, maritime, manufacturing)

1.2 Regulatory Framework
  • OSHA 29 CFR 1910.146 including (Permit-Required Confined Spaces, general industry, entry procedures, training, rescue)

  • OSHA 1926.1200 series including (construction confined spaces, similar requirements, differences, applicability)

  • API RP 2016 including (petroleum tank entry, industry standard, comprehensive procedures, testing protocols, documentation)

  • NFPA 326 including (safeguarding tanks and containers, flammable/combustible liquids, cleaning procedures, hot work)

  • ANSI Z117.1 including (safety requirements, consensus standard, best practices, program elements)

  • State and local regulations including (additional requirements, fire codes, environmental, permit requirements)

1.3 Confined Space Classification
  • Confined space definition per 1910.146(b) including (large enough to enter, limited means of entry/exit, not designed for continuous occupancy)

  • Permit-required confined space (PRCS) including (atmospheric hazards potential, engulfment, configuration entrapment, other serious hazards)

  • Non-permit confined spaces including (no permit-space hazards, reclassification possible, alternate procedures, documentation)

  • Permit space criteria including (hazardous atmosphere potential, engulfment material, configuration trap/asphyxiate, other recognized serious safety/health hazard)


2. Tank Entry Hazards and Health Effects

2.1 Atmospheric Hazards
  • Oxygen deficiency including (below 19.5%, asphyxiation, oxidation, corrosion, biological consumption, displacement by inert gas)

  • Oxygen enrichment including (above 23.5%, fire/explosion, materials ignite readily, clothing flammability, oxidizer)

  • Flammable atmospheres including (vapors, gases, mists, Lower Explosive Limit LEL, Upper Explosive Limit UEL, ignition sources)

  • Toxic atmospheres including (hydrogen sulfide H₂S, benzene, carbon monoxide CO, solvents, chemical residues, PEL/TLV/IDLH)

  • Inert atmospheres including (nitrogen, argon, carbon dioxide, oxygen displacement, asphyxiation without warning)

2.2 Physical and Environmental Hazards
  • Engulfment including (liquid or flowable solids, burial, drowning, suffocation, equipment activation, material inflow)

  • Configuration hazards including (converging walls, sloped floors, entrapment, internal obstructions, restricted movement)

  • Temperature extremes including (heat stress, hypothermia, steam, cryogenic materials, thermal burns, physiological effects)

  • Mechanical hazards including (agitators, mixers, rotating equipment, conveyors, moving parts, lockout/tagout critical)

  • Electrical hazards including (submerged equipment, wet conditions, confined metal space, bonding/grounding, shock/electrocution)

  • Noise including (confined space amplification, communication interference, hearing protection, equipment operation)

2.3 Chemical Hazards and Health Effects
  • Petroleum products including (gasoline, diesel, crude oil, aromatics benzene/toluene/xylene, cancer, reproductive, CNS effects)

  • Hydrogen sulfide (H₂S) including (rotten egg odor low concentrations, olfactory paralysis, rapid unconsciousness 100+ ppm, death 500+ ppm)

  • Benzene including (carcinogen, acute leukemia, bone marrow damage, PEL 1 ppm, detection limits, vapor hazard)

  • Carbon monoxide (CO) including (colorless odorless, combustion byproduct, asphyxiant, hemoglobin binding, PEL 50 ppm)

  • Solvent vapors including (dizziness, narcosis, dermal absorption, liver/kidney damage, central nervous system depression)


3. Pre-Entry Preparation and Isolation

3.1 Tank and Vessel Isolation
  • Isolation purpose including (prevent material entry, energy control, atmosphere contamination, worker protection, controlled environment)

  • Disconnection methods including (blind flanges, double block and bleed, removal of sections, physical gap, line breaking)

  • Lockout/Tagout per 1910.147 including (energy isolation, locks application, authorized employees, stored energy, verification)

  • Line breaking procedures including (depressurize, drain, purge, disconnect, blind/plug, documentation, supervision)

  • Atmospheric isolation including (close valves, blank connections, prevent inert gas entry, ventilation contamination sources)

3.2 Tank Cleaning and Preparation
  • Cleaning methods including (manual, automated, chemical cleaning, steam cleaning, hydroblasting, mechanical, residue removal)

  • Sludge and residue removal including (pumping, vacuuming, shoveling, manual removal, disposal, waste characterization)

  • Water washing/flushing including (dilution, rinsing, multiple rinses, drainage, water disposal, effectiveness verification)

  • Degassing and ventilation including (natural ventilation, forced air, purging, vapor displacement, time duration, effectiveness)

  • Cleaning verification including (visual inspection, atmospheric testing, residue sampling, acceptance criteria, documentation)

3.3 Pre-Entry Inspection and Evaluation
  • External inspection including (structural integrity, corrosion, leaks, access points, equipment condition, hazard identification)

  • Internal inspection remote including (cameras, mirrors, lighting, visual assessment without entry, preliminary hazard recognition)

  • Hazard assessment including (material history, residues, configuration, atmospheric hazards, rescue difficulty, control measures)

  • Entry plan development including (procedures, personnel, equipment, testing, ventilation, rescue, emergency, communication)


4. Atmospheric Testing and Monitoring

4.1 Gas Detection Instrumentation
  • Multi-gas detector including (oxygen, combustible gases LEL, H₂S, CO typical, portable, continuous monitoring, alarm functions)

  • Calibration per manufacturer including (bump test daily, full calibration periodic, known gas concentrations, accuracy verification, documentation)

  • Sampling methods including (remote sampling probe, pumped sample, diffusion, representative location, multiple points)

  • Instrument limitations including (sensor life, cross-sensitivity, calibration drift, temperature/humidity effects, maintenance)

  • Photoionization detector (PID) including (volatile organic compounds VOC, total hydrocarbons, benzene detection, supplemental instrument)

4.2 Testing Sequence and Acceptance Criteria per API 2016
  • Testing sequence including (oxygen first, flammable second, toxic third, logical order, each parameter before entry)

  • Oxygen including (acceptable range 19.5% to 23.5%, deficiency/enrichment both hazardous, test first critical)

  • Flammable gases including (below 10% of LEL acceptable, combustible gas indicator CGI, explosion prevention)

  • Toxic gases including (H₂S below 10 ppm acceptable per API, CO below 35 ppm, chemical-specific, PEL/TLV/STEL)

  • Continuous monitoring including (during entry, attendant monitors, alarm levels, evacuation triggers, real-time awareness)

4.3 Sampling Strategy and Documentation
  • Sampling locations including (top/middle/bottom stratification, low points settle, breathing zone, multiple points, vapor density)

  • Sampling frequency including (initial testing, continuous during entry, after breaks, ventilation changes, periodic verification)

  • Temperature and pressure effects including (vapor pressure temperature-dependent, density, stratification, testing conditions versus entry)

  • Documentation including (instrument ID, readings, location, time, tester signature, permit attachment, traceability)


5. Ventilation and Atmospheric Control

5.1 Ventilation Principles and Methods
  • Ventilation purpose including (oxygen supply, vapor removal, temperature control, atmosphere maintenance, continuous process)

  • Natural ventilation including (wind, thermal currents, openings, limited effectiveness, not primary reliance, supplemental)

  • Mechanical ventilation including (forced air blowers, exhaust fans, positive pressure preferred, air changes, effectiveness)

  • Air supply including (clean ambient, compressed air breathing-quality, SCBA, supplied-air, source contamination prevention)

5.2 Ventilation Design and Implementation
  • Air change calculations including (tank volume, blower capacity CFM, air changes per hour, effectiveness assessment)

  • Blower placement including (positive pressure preferred, vapor density consideration, intake location, exhaust, circulation pattern)

  • Duct placement including (fresh air to bottom if heavier-than-air vapor, mixing, dead spaces avoidance, movement throughout)

  • Ventilation duration including (initial purge, continuous during entry, testing verification, never rely on time alone)

  • Bonding and grounding including (static electricity, metal ducts, grounding straps, explosion prevention, spark prevention)

5.3 Ventilation Verification and Monitoring
  • Testing after ventilation including (atmosphere verification, acceptance criteria met, entry approval conditional, continuous monitoring)

  • Continuous ventilation including (maintain during entry, interruption requires evacuation and retest, equipment failure response)

  • Re-entry procedures including (if entry interrupted, re-test atmosphere, ventilation restoration, permit review, approval)


6. Permit-Required Confined Space Entry Procedures

6.1 Entry Permit System per 1910.146(e)
  • Entry permit purpose including (authorization, hazard communication, control verification, signature accountability, documentation)

  • Permit information per 1910.146(f) including (space identification, purpose, date/duration, authorized entrants, attendants, supervisor, hazards, controls, atmospheric test results, rescue services, equipment, additional requirements, signatures)

  • Permit validity including (duration specified, conditions maintained, completion or cancel, new permit if conditions change)

  • Permit retention including (minimum one year, audit trail, incident investigation, program evaluation, continuous improvement)

6.2 Entry Roles and Responsibilities
  • Authorized entrant per 1910.146(h) including (trained, authorized, enters space, follows procedures, recognizes hazards, communicates, evacuates when ordered)

  • Attendant per 1910.146(i) including (outside space always, monitors entrants, maintains communication, orders evacuation if necessary, summons rescue, prevents unauthorized entry, never enters)

  • Entry supervisor per 1910.146(j) including (permit signs, verifies conditions, authorizes entry, terminates entry, ensures rescue available, competent person)

  • Additional personnel including (rescue team, competent person testing, supervisor oversight, qualified person engineering)

6.3 Entry Authorization and Control
  • Pre-entry verification including (isolation complete, atmosphere acceptable, ventilation operating, equipment ready, rescue available, training current)

  • Authorization to enter including (entry supervisor signature, permit display at entry, entrants briefed, communication established)

  • Entry monitoring including (continuous atmospheric monitoring, attendant observation, communication frequent, conditions maintained)

  • Entry termination including (work complete, permit expires, conditions change, emergency, supervisor cancellation, documentation)


7. Personal Protective Equipment and Safety Equipment

7.1 Respiratory Protection
  • Respiratory hazard evaluation including (atmospheric testing, engineering controls first, residual hazards, selection criteria)

  • Air-purifying respirators (APR) including (filters/cartridges, adequate oxygen >19.5%, contaminant known, not IDLH, limited use tanks)

  • Supplied-air respirators (SAR) including (airline, breathing-quality air, escape provisions, extended duration, oxygen adequate)

  • Self-Contained Breathing Apparatus (SCBA) including (IDLH atmospheres, unknown atmospheres, oxygen deficiency, firefighting, emergency rescue)

  • Respiratory protection program per 1910.134 including (written program, medical evaluation, fit testing, training, maintenance)

7.2 Personal Protective Equipment
  • Head protection including (hard hat, bump cap, overhead hazards, requirements)

  • Eye and face protection including (safety glasses, goggles chemical splash, face shield, hazard-specific)

  • Protective clothing including (chemical-resistant suits, coveralls, aprons, material compatibility, splash/vapor, disposable/reusable)

  • Hand protection including (gloves chemical-resistant, cut-resistant, thermal, material-specific, inner gloves)

  • Foot protection including (safety boots, chemical-resistant, slip-resistant, steel toe, electrical hazard)

7.3 Safety and Rescue Equipment
  • Communication equipment including (two-way radios, field phones, visual signals, maintained contact, backup methods)

  • Lighting including (intrinsically safe if flammable, battery-powered, adequate illumination, backup, explosion-proof when required)

  • Retrieval systems per 1910.146(k)(3) including (full-body harness, lifeline, retrieval winch, exception if increase risk, non-entry rescue)

  • Emergency equipment including (first aid kit, eyewash portable, fire extinguisher, emergency shower access, spill kit)

  • Barriers and signage including (entry control, warning signs, permit posting, unauthorized entry prevention, visibility)


8. Rescue and Emergency Response

8.1 Rescue Planning per 1910.146(k)
  • Rescue capability required including (before entry, immediately available, trained and equipped, evaluation, arrange external if needed)

  • Non-entry rescue preferred including (retrieval system, minimize rescuer risk, harness and lifeline, mechanical advantage, immediate)

  • Entry rescue including (when non-entry not feasible, trained rescuers, equipped, practiced, SCBA, rapid response)

  • Rescue service evaluation per 1910.146(k)(1) including (proficiency, equipment, response time, training frequency, simulated rescue, annual)

8.2 On-Site Rescue Teams
  • Team composition including (minimum members, trained per 1910.146(k), authorized entrant training, current medical, available)

  • Rescue equipment including (SCBA, retrieval, communication, lighting, first aid, stretcher, harness, ropes)

  • Rescue training including (confined space entry, CPR/first aid, equipment use, rescue techniques, space-specific, annual practice)

  • Practice rescues per 1910.146(k)(2)(ii) including (annually minimum, actual representative space or simulation, timed, critique, proficiency)

8.3 Emergency Procedures
  • Evacuation triggers including (atmospheric alarm, equipment failure, injury/illness, hazard recognition, attendant order, any concern)

  • Rescue activation including (attendant summons, 911/emergency services, on-site team, no delay, information provision)

  • Rescue sequence including (non-entry retrieval first, assess atmosphere, SCBA entry rescue if trained/equipped, emergency services backup)

  • Post-incident including (medical treatment, investigation, lessons learned, procedure revision, reporting, training)


9. Tank-Specific Cleaning and Entry Procedures

9.1 Petroleum Storage Tank Entry per API 2016
  • API 2016 procedures including (preparation, isolation, cleaning, testing, ventilation, entry permit, continuous monitoring)

  • Tank product removal including (drain, pump, residue minimization, last drop hazard, vapor concentration)

  • Tank washing including (water flood, spray washing, sludge removal, effluent disposal, multiple rinses, verification)

  • Vapor freeing including (ventilation, degassing, time adequate, testing, flammable vapor removal below 10% LEL)

  • Inerting considerations including (nitrogen blanketing, oxygen deficiency creation, purging before entry, testing critical)

9.2 Chemical and Process Vessel Entry
  • Material-specific hazards including (corrosives, reactives, polymerization, toxic residues, chemical compatibility, SDS review)

  • Decontamination including (neutralization, chemical cleaning, rinsing, disposal, effectiveness verification, sampling)

  • Catalyst removal including (pyrophoric materials, water reactive, special handling, expert consultation, procedures)

  • Internal coatings/linings including (vapor release during entry, abrasion, heat, ventilation, protective measures)

9.3 Hot Work in Tanks
  • Hot work defined including (welding, cutting, grinding, burning, spark-producing, ignition sources)

  • Hot work permit per NFPA 326 including (separate permit, fire watch, flammable atmosphere testing below 10% LEL, combustible removal, fire protection)

  • Continuous monitoring during hot work including (combustible gas testing, fire watch, extinguishers, ventilation, atmospheric maintenance)

  • Post-hot work including (fire watch duration 30+ minutes, inspection, cooling, no re-ignition)


10. Tank Entry Documentation and Program Management

10.1 Documentation Requirements
  • Entry permits including (required information, signatures, retention one year, audit, trending)

  • Atmospheric test records including (instrument calibration, test results, locations, times, tester, permit attachment)

  • Training records per 1910.146(g)(4) including (employee name, trainer, date, understanding verification, certification, retention)

  • Rescue drill records including (date, participants, space/simulation, performance, deficiencies, corrective action)

10.2 Confined Space Program per 1910.146(c)
  • Written program including (identification, evaluation, procedures, training, equipment, rescue, review, availability)

  • Space inventory including (identification of permit spaces, non-permit spaces, classification, marking, posted signs)

  • Hazard assessment including (each space, material history, configuration, testing, controls, re-evaluation periodic)

  • Program review per 1910.146(d)(14) including (annual minimum, canceled permits, incidents, changes, effectiveness, improvement)

10.3 Training Requirements per 1910.146(g)
  • Entrant training including (hazards, recognition, consequences, controls, equipment, communication, evacuation, duties)

  • Attendant training including (hazards, monitoring, communication, evacuation orders, rescue, unauthorized entry prevention, no entry ever)

  • Supervisor training including (hazards, verification, authorization, termination, rescue, competencies, responsibilities)

  • Retraining including (inadequate knowledge, changes, permit cancellation, deviations, additional required, certification)

Practical Assessment

  • Gas detector operation including (performing calibration check, conducting atmospheric testing, interpreting readings, documenting results)

  • Permit completion including (filling out entry permit with scenario information, verifying required elements, obtaining signatures, posting)

  • Ventilation setup including (calculating air changes, positioning blower/ducting appropriately, verifying effectiveness with testing)

  • Harness and retrieval including (donning full-body harness properly, attaching lifeline, demonstrating non-entry retrieval procedure)

Gained Core Technical Skills

  • Permit-required confined space identification and classification

  • Atmospheric testing using multi-gas detectors and calibration

  • Tank isolation including lockout/tagout and line breaking

  • Ventilation design and effectiveness verification

  • Entry permit completion and authorization procedures

  • Entrant, attendant, and supervisor role execution

  • Oxygen, flammable, and toxic hazard recognition

  • Respiratory protection selection and use understanding

  • Non-entry rescue system setup and operation

  • API 2016 petroleum tank entry procedure application

  • Emergency response and evacuation protocols

  • Documentation and recordkeeping compliance

Training Design Methodology

ADDIE Training Design Methodology

Targeted Audience

  • Tank Cleaning Personnel entering vessels and tanks

  • Maintenance Workers conducting confined space work

  • Entry Supervisors authorizing and overseeing entries

  • Attendants monitoring confined space operations

  • Safety Professionals managing entry programs

  • Refinery and Chemical Plant Operations Personnel

  • Facility Maintenance Supervisors planning entries

  • Environmental and Remediation Workers entering tanks

  • Industrial Cleaning Contractors performing tank services

  • Anyone requiring tank entry and confined space training

Why Choose This Course

  • Comprehensive coverage of OSHA 29 CFR 1910.146 requirements

  • Integration of API 2016 petroleum tank entry standards

  • Hands-on atmospheric testing with calibrated instruments

  • Focus on isolation, ventilation, and atmospheric control

  • Emphasis on rescue planning and emergency preparedness

  • Real-world tank entry scenarios and procedures

  • Permit system development and implementation

  • NFPA 326 hot work safety integration

  • Respiratory protection and PPE selection guidance

  • Non-entry rescue and retrieval system practice

  • Regional considerations for Middle East petroleum facilities

  • Certificate demonstrating tank entry and confined space competency

Note

Note: This course outline, including specific topics, modules, and duration, can be customized based on the specific needs and requirements of the client.

Course Outline

1. Introduction to Tank Cleaning and Confined Space Entry

1.1 Tank Entry Hazards and Incident Overview
  • Tank entry statistics including (fatalities, atmospheric hazards, engulfment, multiple victim incidents, prevention through procedures)

  • Common tank entry hazards including (oxygen deficiency, toxic atmospheres, flammable vapors, engulfment, physical hazards, temperature extremes)

  • Incident patterns including (lack of testing, inadequate ventilation, no entry permit, unauthorized entry, poor rescue, preventable deaths)

  • Types of tanks and vessels including (storage tanks petroleum/chemical, process vessels, railcars, silos, digesters, reactor vessels)

  • Industry applications including (petroleum refining, chemical processing, food/beverage, wastewater, maritime, manufacturing)

1.2 Regulatory Framework
  • OSHA 29 CFR 1910.146 including (Permit-Required Confined Spaces, general industry, entry procedures, training, rescue)

  • OSHA 1926.1200 series including (construction confined spaces, similar requirements, differences, applicability)

  • API RP 2016 including (petroleum tank entry, industry standard, comprehensive procedures, testing protocols, documentation)

  • NFPA 326 including (safeguarding tanks and containers, flammable/combustible liquids, cleaning procedures, hot work)

  • ANSI Z117.1 including (safety requirements, consensus standard, best practices, program elements)

  • State and local regulations including (additional requirements, fire codes, environmental, permit requirements)

1.3 Confined Space Classification
  • Confined space definition per 1910.146(b) including (large enough to enter, limited means of entry/exit, not designed for continuous occupancy)

  • Permit-required confined space (PRCS) including (atmospheric hazards potential, engulfment, configuration entrapment, other serious hazards)

  • Non-permit confined spaces including (no permit-space hazards, reclassification possible, alternate procedures, documentation)

  • Permit space criteria including (hazardous atmosphere potential, engulfment material, configuration trap/asphyxiate, other recognized serious safety/health hazard)


2. Tank Entry Hazards and Health Effects

2.1 Atmospheric Hazards
  • Oxygen deficiency including (below 19.5%, asphyxiation, oxidation, corrosion, biological consumption, displacement by inert gas)

  • Oxygen enrichment including (above 23.5%, fire/explosion, materials ignite readily, clothing flammability, oxidizer)

  • Flammable atmospheres including (vapors, gases, mists, Lower Explosive Limit LEL, Upper Explosive Limit UEL, ignition sources)

  • Toxic atmospheres including (hydrogen sulfide H₂S, benzene, carbon monoxide CO, solvents, chemical residues, PEL/TLV/IDLH)

  • Inert atmospheres including (nitrogen, argon, carbon dioxide, oxygen displacement, asphyxiation without warning)

2.2 Physical and Environmental Hazards
  • Engulfment including (liquid or flowable solids, burial, drowning, suffocation, equipment activation, material inflow)

  • Configuration hazards including (converging walls, sloped floors, entrapment, internal obstructions, restricted movement)

  • Temperature extremes including (heat stress, hypothermia, steam, cryogenic materials, thermal burns, physiological effects)

  • Mechanical hazards including (agitators, mixers, rotating equipment, conveyors, moving parts, lockout/tagout critical)

  • Electrical hazards including (submerged equipment, wet conditions, confined metal space, bonding/grounding, shock/electrocution)

  • Noise including (confined space amplification, communication interference, hearing protection, equipment operation)

2.3 Chemical Hazards and Health Effects
  • Petroleum products including (gasoline, diesel, crude oil, aromatics benzene/toluene/xylene, cancer, reproductive, CNS effects)

  • Hydrogen sulfide (H₂S) including (rotten egg odor low concentrations, olfactory paralysis, rapid unconsciousness 100+ ppm, death 500+ ppm)

  • Benzene including (carcinogen, acute leukemia, bone marrow damage, PEL 1 ppm, detection limits, vapor hazard)

  • Carbon monoxide (CO) including (colorless odorless, combustion byproduct, asphyxiant, hemoglobin binding, PEL 50 ppm)

  • Solvent vapors including (dizziness, narcosis, dermal absorption, liver/kidney damage, central nervous system depression)


3. Pre-Entry Preparation and Isolation

3.1 Tank and Vessel Isolation
  • Isolation purpose including (prevent material entry, energy control, atmosphere contamination, worker protection, controlled environment)

  • Disconnection methods including (blind flanges, double block and bleed, removal of sections, physical gap, line breaking)

  • Lockout/Tagout per 1910.147 including (energy isolation, locks application, authorized employees, stored energy, verification)

  • Line breaking procedures including (depressurize, drain, purge, disconnect, blind/plug, documentation, supervision)

  • Atmospheric isolation including (close valves, blank connections, prevent inert gas entry, ventilation contamination sources)

3.2 Tank Cleaning and Preparation
  • Cleaning methods including (manual, automated, chemical cleaning, steam cleaning, hydroblasting, mechanical, residue removal)

  • Sludge and residue removal including (pumping, vacuuming, shoveling, manual removal, disposal, waste characterization)

  • Water washing/flushing including (dilution, rinsing, multiple rinses, drainage, water disposal, effectiveness verification)

  • Degassing and ventilation including (natural ventilation, forced air, purging, vapor displacement, time duration, effectiveness)

  • Cleaning verification including (visual inspection, atmospheric testing, residue sampling, acceptance criteria, documentation)

3.3 Pre-Entry Inspection and Evaluation
  • External inspection including (structural integrity, corrosion, leaks, access points, equipment condition, hazard identification)

  • Internal inspection remote including (cameras, mirrors, lighting, visual assessment without entry, preliminary hazard recognition)

  • Hazard assessment including (material history, residues, configuration, atmospheric hazards, rescue difficulty, control measures)

  • Entry plan development including (procedures, personnel, equipment, testing, ventilation, rescue, emergency, communication)


4. Atmospheric Testing and Monitoring

4.1 Gas Detection Instrumentation
  • Multi-gas detector including (oxygen, combustible gases LEL, H₂S, CO typical, portable, continuous monitoring, alarm functions)

  • Calibration per manufacturer including (bump test daily, full calibration periodic, known gas concentrations, accuracy verification, documentation)

  • Sampling methods including (remote sampling probe, pumped sample, diffusion, representative location, multiple points)

  • Instrument limitations including (sensor life, cross-sensitivity, calibration drift, temperature/humidity effects, maintenance)

  • Photoionization detector (PID) including (volatile organic compounds VOC, total hydrocarbons, benzene detection, supplemental instrument)

4.2 Testing Sequence and Acceptance Criteria per API 2016
  • Testing sequence including (oxygen first, flammable second, toxic third, logical order, each parameter before entry)

  • Oxygen including (acceptable range 19.5% to 23.5%, deficiency/enrichment both hazardous, test first critical)

  • Flammable gases including (below 10% of LEL acceptable, combustible gas indicator CGI, explosion prevention)

  • Toxic gases including (H₂S below 10 ppm acceptable per API, CO below 35 ppm, chemical-specific, PEL/TLV/STEL)

  • Continuous monitoring including (during entry, attendant monitors, alarm levels, evacuation triggers, real-time awareness)

4.3 Sampling Strategy and Documentation
  • Sampling locations including (top/middle/bottom stratification, low points settle, breathing zone, multiple points, vapor density)

  • Sampling frequency including (initial testing, continuous during entry, after breaks, ventilation changes, periodic verification)

  • Temperature and pressure effects including (vapor pressure temperature-dependent, density, stratification, testing conditions versus entry)

  • Documentation including (instrument ID, readings, location, time, tester signature, permit attachment, traceability)


5. Ventilation and Atmospheric Control

5.1 Ventilation Principles and Methods
  • Ventilation purpose including (oxygen supply, vapor removal, temperature control, atmosphere maintenance, continuous process)

  • Natural ventilation including (wind, thermal currents, openings, limited effectiveness, not primary reliance, supplemental)

  • Mechanical ventilation including (forced air blowers, exhaust fans, positive pressure preferred, air changes, effectiveness)

  • Air supply including (clean ambient, compressed air breathing-quality, SCBA, supplied-air, source contamination prevention)

5.2 Ventilation Design and Implementation
  • Air change calculations including (tank volume, blower capacity CFM, air changes per hour, effectiveness assessment)

  • Blower placement including (positive pressure preferred, vapor density consideration, intake location, exhaust, circulation pattern)

  • Duct placement including (fresh air to bottom if heavier-than-air vapor, mixing, dead spaces avoidance, movement throughout)

  • Ventilation duration including (initial purge, continuous during entry, testing verification, never rely on time alone)

  • Bonding and grounding including (static electricity, metal ducts, grounding straps, explosion prevention, spark prevention)

5.3 Ventilation Verification and Monitoring
  • Testing after ventilation including (atmosphere verification, acceptance criteria met, entry approval conditional, continuous monitoring)

  • Continuous ventilation including (maintain during entry, interruption requires evacuation and retest, equipment failure response)

  • Re-entry procedures including (if entry interrupted, re-test atmosphere, ventilation restoration, permit review, approval)


6. Permit-Required Confined Space Entry Procedures

6.1 Entry Permit System per 1910.146(e)
  • Entry permit purpose including (authorization, hazard communication, control verification, signature accountability, documentation)

  • Permit information per 1910.146(f) including (space identification, purpose, date/duration, authorized entrants, attendants, supervisor, hazards, controls, atmospheric test results, rescue services, equipment, additional requirements, signatures)

  • Permit validity including (duration specified, conditions maintained, completion or cancel, new permit if conditions change)

  • Permit retention including (minimum one year, audit trail, incident investigation, program evaluation, continuous improvement)

6.2 Entry Roles and Responsibilities
  • Authorized entrant per 1910.146(h) including (trained, authorized, enters space, follows procedures, recognizes hazards, communicates, evacuates when ordered)

  • Attendant per 1910.146(i) including (outside space always, monitors entrants, maintains communication, orders evacuation if necessary, summons rescue, prevents unauthorized entry, never enters)

  • Entry supervisor per 1910.146(j) including (permit signs, verifies conditions, authorizes entry, terminates entry, ensures rescue available, competent person)

  • Additional personnel including (rescue team, competent person testing, supervisor oversight, qualified person engineering)

6.3 Entry Authorization and Control
  • Pre-entry verification including (isolation complete, atmosphere acceptable, ventilation operating, equipment ready, rescue available, training current)

  • Authorization to enter including (entry supervisor signature, permit display at entry, entrants briefed, communication established)

  • Entry monitoring including (continuous atmospheric monitoring, attendant observation, communication frequent, conditions maintained)

  • Entry termination including (work complete, permit expires, conditions change, emergency, supervisor cancellation, documentation)


7. Personal Protective Equipment and Safety Equipment

7.1 Respiratory Protection
  • Respiratory hazard evaluation including (atmospheric testing, engineering controls first, residual hazards, selection criteria)

  • Air-purifying respirators (APR) including (filters/cartridges, adequate oxygen >19.5%, contaminant known, not IDLH, limited use tanks)

  • Supplied-air respirators (SAR) including (airline, breathing-quality air, escape provisions, extended duration, oxygen adequate)

  • Self-Contained Breathing Apparatus (SCBA) including (IDLH atmospheres, unknown atmospheres, oxygen deficiency, firefighting, emergency rescue)

  • Respiratory protection program per 1910.134 including (written program, medical evaluation, fit testing, training, maintenance)

7.2 Personal Protective Equipment
  • Head protection including (hard hat, bump cap, overhead hazards, requirements)

  • Eye and face protection including (safety glasses, goggles chemical splash, face shield, hazard-specific)

  • Protective clothing including (chemical-resistant suits, coveralls, aprons, material compatibility, splash/vapor, disposable/reusable)

  • Hand protection including (gloves chemical-resistant, cut-resistant, thermal, material-specific, inner gloves)

  • Foot protection including (safety boots, chemical-resistant, slip-resistant, steel toe, electrical hazard)

7.3 Safety and Rescue Equipment
  • Communication equipment including (two-way radios, field phones, visual signals, maintained contact, backup methods)

  • Lighting including (intrinsically safe if flammable, battery-powered, adequate illumination, backup, explosion-proof when required)

  • Retrieval systems per 1910.146(k)(3) including (full-body harness, lifeline, retrieval winch, exception if increase risk, non-entry rescue)

  • Emergency equipment including (first aid kit, eyewash portable, fire extinguisher, emergency shower access, spill kit)

  • Barriers and signage including (entry control, warning signs, permit posting, unauthorized entry prevention, visibility)


8. Rescue and Emergency Response

8.1 Rescue Planning per 1910.146(k)
  • Rescue capability required including (before entry, immediately available, trained and equipped, evaluation, arrange external if needed)

  • Non-entry rescue preferred including (retrieval system, minimize rescuer risk, harness and lifeline, mechanical advantage, immediate)

  • Entry rescue including (when non-entry not feasible, trained rescuers, equipped, practiced, SCBA, rapid response)

  • Rescue service evaluation per 1910.146(k)(1) including (proficiency, equipment, response time, training frequency, simulated rescue, annual)

8.2 On-Site Rescue Teams
  • Team composition including (minimum members, trained per 1910.146(k), authorized entrant training, current medical, available)

  • Rescue equipment including (SCBA, retrieval, communication, lighting, first aid, stretcher, harness, ropes)

  • Rescue training including (confined space entry, CPR/first aid, equipment use, rescue techniques, space-specific, annual practice)

  • Practice rescues per 1910.146(k)(2)(ii) including (annually minimum, actual representative space or simulation, timed, critique, proficiency)

8.3 Emergency Procedures
  • Evacuation triggers including (atmospheric alarm, equipment failure, injury/illness, hazard recognition, attendant order, any concern)

  • Rescue activation including (attendant summons, 911/emergency services, on-site team, no delay, information provision)

  • Rescue sequence including (non-entry retrieval first, assess atmosphere, SCBA entry rescue if trained/equipped, emergency services backup)

  • Post-incident including (medical treatment, investigation, lessons learned, procedure revision, reporting, training)


9. Tank-Specific Cleaning and Entry Procedures

9.1 Petroleum Storage Tank Entry per API 2016
  • API 2016 procedures including (preparation, isolation, cleaning, testing, ventilation, entry permit, continuous monitoring)

  • Tank product removal including (drain, pump, residue minimization, last drop hazard, vapor concentration)

  • Tank washing including (water flood, spray washing, sludge removal, effluent disposal, multiple rinses, verification)

  • Vapor freeing including (ventilation, degassing, time adequate, testing, flammable vapor removal below 10% LEL)

  • Inerting considerations including (nitrogen blanketing, oxygen deficiency creation, purging before entry, testing critical)

9.2 Chemical and Process Vessel Entry
  • Material-specific hazards including (corrosives, reactives, polymerization, toxic residues, chemical compatibility, SDS review)

  • Decontamination including (neutralization, chemical cleaning, rinsing, disposal, effectiveness verification, sampling)

  • Catalyst removal including (pyrophoric materials, water reactive, special handling, expert consultation, procedures)

  • Internal coatings/linings including (vapor release during entry, abrasion, heat, ventilation, protective measures)

9.3 Hot Work in Tanks
  • Hot work defined including (welding, cutting, grinding, burning, spark-producing, ignition sources)

  • Hot work permit per NFPA 326 including (separate permit, fire watch, flammable atmosphere testing below 10% LEL, combustible removal, fire protection)

  • Continuous monitoring during hot work including (combustible gas testing, fire watch, extinguishers, ventilation, atmospheric maintenance)

  • Post-hot work including (fire watch duration 30+ minutes, inspection, cooling, no re-ignition)


10. Tank Entry Documentation and Program Management

10.1 Documentation Requirements
  • Entry permits including (required information, signatures, retention one year, audit, trending)

  • Atmospheric test records including (instrument calibration, test results, locations, times, tester, permit attachment)

  • Training records per 1910.146(g)(4) including (employee name, trainer, date, understanding verification, certification, retention)

  • Rescue drill records including (date, participants, space/simulation, performance, deficiencies, corrective action)

10.2 Confined Space Program per 1910.146(c)
  • Written program including (identification, evaluation, procedures, training, equipment, rescue, review, availability)

  • Space inventory including (identification of permit spaces, non-permit spaces, classification, marking, posted signs)

  • Hazard assessment including (each space, material history, configuration, testing, controls, re-evaluation periodic)

  • Program review per 1910.146(d)(14) including (annual minimum, canceled permits, incidents, changes, effectiveness, improvement)

10.3 Training Requirements per 1910.146(g)
  • Entrant training including (hazards, recognition, consequences, controls, equipment, communication, evacuation, duties)

  • Attendant training including (hazards, monitoring, communication, evacuation orders, rescue, unauthorized entry prevention, no entry ever)

  • Supervisor training including (hazards, verification, authorization, termination, rescue, competencies, responsibilities)

  • Retraining including (inadequate knowledge, changes, permit cancellation, deviations, additional required, certification)

Why Choose This Course?

  • Comprehensive coverage of OSHA 29 CFR 1910.146 requirements

  • Integration of API 2016 petroleum tank entry standards

  • Hands-on atmospheric testing with calibrated instruments

  • Focus on isolation, ventilation, and atmospheric control

  • Emphasis on rescue planning and emergency preparedness

  • Real-world tank entry scenarios and procedures

  • Permit system development and implementation

  • NFPA 326 hot work safety integration

  • Respiratory protection and PPE selection guidance

  • Non-entry rescue and retrieval system practice

  • Regional considerations for Middle East petroleum facilities

  • Certificate demonstrating tank entry and confined space competency

Note: This course outline, including specific topics, modules, and duration, can be customized based on the specific needs and requirements of the client.

Practical Assessment

  • Gas detector operation including (performing calibration check, conducting atmospheric testing, interpreting readings, documenting results)

  • Permit completion including (filling out entry permit with scenario information, verifying required elements, obtaining signatures, posting)

  • Ventilation setup including (calculating air changes, positioning blower/ducting appropriately, verifying effectiveness with testing)

  • Harness and retrieval including (donning full-body harness properly, attaching lifeline, demonstrating non-entry retrieval procedure)

Course Overview

This comprehensive Tank Cleaning and Entry training course provides participants with essential knowledge and practical skills required for safely cleaning and entering tanks, vessels, and confined spaces in industrial and petroleum environments. The course covers fundamental confined space safety principles along with critical procedures for atmospheric testing, hazard control, and safe entry aligned with OSHA 29 CFR 1910.146 Permit-Required Confined Spaces, API Recommended Practice 2016 Guidelines and Procedures for Entering and Cleaning Petroleum Storage Tanks, NFPA 326 Standard for the Safeguarding of Tanks and Containers, and ANSI/ASSE Z117.1 Safety Requirements for Confined Spaces.


Participants will learn to apply systematic entry procedures and proven safety protocols to identify hazards, test atmospheres, implement ventilation, and execute safe tank cleaning operations. This course combines theoretical concepts with extensive practical demonstrations and hands-on exercises to ensure participants gain valuable skills applicable to their professional environment while emphasizing atmospheric monitoring, isolation, and emergency rescue preparedness.

Key Learning Objectives

  • Understand permit-required confined space regulations and tank entry hazards

  • Conduct atmospheric testing using calibrated gas detection instruments properly

  • Apply isolation procedures including lockout/tagout and line breaking effectively

  • Implement ventilation strategies for atmospheric hazard control

  • Execute tank cleaning procedures using appropriate methods and equipment

  • Perform confined space entry following permit system requirements

  • Establish rescue and emergency response capabilities per OSHA standards

  • Recognize and control specific petroleum tank hazards and health effects

Knowledge Assessment

  • Technical quizzes on regulations including (multiple-choice questions on OSHA 1910.146 requirements, API 2016 procedures, permit elements)

  • Atmospheric hazard identification including (recognizing oxygen deficiency, flammable, toxic scenarios, determining controls, calculating LEL)

  • Testing sequence scenarios including (determining proper testing order, acceptance criteria application, continuous monitoring requirements)

  • Rescue planning evaluation including (assessing rescue capabilities, identifying appropriate methods, determining equipment needs)

Targeted Audience

  • Tank Cleaning Personnel entering vessels and tanks

  • Maintenance Workers conducting confined space work

  • Entry Supervisors authorizing and overseeing entries

  • Attendants monitoring confined space operations

  • Safety Professionals managing entry programs

  • Refinery and Chemical Plant Operations Personnel

  • Facility Maintenance Supervisors planning entries

  • Environmental and Remediation Workers entering tanks

  • Industrial Cleaning Contractors performing tank services

  • Anyone requiring tank entry and confined space training

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