Results 21-30 of 34 for Article Date:06-01-2011. (0.030538 seconds)
relevance / newest first / oldest first
Mini-siphon for replacement of old pigtail and coil siphons. The WIKA mini-siphon Type 910.24 is said to specifically replace ... View this article
'Leak-free' involves monitoring and new equipment technology. View this article
Optimization programs deliver benefits to existing and new plants. View this article
Honeywell announced on Wednesday that it was selected by North Refineries Co. (NRC) as the main engineering, procurement and construction (EPC ... View this article
Communication and competence are key in finding the best repair shop for major equipment. View this article
CB&I has been awarded a storage tank project, valued in excess of $40mn, by the Bahamas Oil Refining Co. View this article
This five-step approach is low-cost and offers safer learning experiences. View this article
LG Chem is Korea's first and largest vertically integrated chemical company. Founded in 1947, the company has emerged ... View this article
KBC Advanced Technologies recently published its refining outlook, a report that analyzes issues facing the global oil refining sector and discusses ... View this article
Better risk assessment can identify root causes for potential site catastrophes before they occur. View this article
1 | 2 | 3 | 4
A searchable database of project activity in the global hydrocarbon processing industry
Engineers and designers are highly skilled individuals. Forcing them to enter design changes using tables, forms and spreadsheets is unproductive and uneconomical, and it increases the likelihood of human error—this is the way that most instrumentation software systems currently work. For too long, software vendors have denied engineers and designers the simple practicality of a graphical visual engineering interface with “drag and drop” capability and inbuilt intelligence, ensuring changes are automatically replicated into all the associated data and databases.
D. GIBSON, AVEVA
Compared to the rest of the world, how long will the US hold its "ethane advantage" of cheap petrochemical feedstock?
Up to 5 years 29%
Up to 10 years 52%
Longer 19%