HCB Magazine June 2020

Page 6

04

30 YEARS AGO A LOOK BACK AT JUNE 1990

In a spooky premonition of what was to come thirty years later, our June 1990 issue led on the storage terminals market, with the introduction to the main story saying: “Although utilisation rates are running high, terminal operators feel there is no great need for new tankage”. In the current disrupted oil markets, most tanks – especially in North America but also in trading hubs around the world – are full to the brim but terminal operators, fearing what this might all mean for upstream investment, are cutting capital expenditure rather than building more capacity. But back in 1990, HCB reported that the boom year of 1989 was based largely on increased demand for chemicals storage and we noted that, with the introduction of increasingly strict requirements to reduce vapour emissions in tank storage activities, many in the business were predicting that the handling of particularly hazardous substances would become concentrated among a few dedicated facilities. That separation has indeed taken place to a large extent, though there are still multi-purpose terminals in operation, particularly in smaller ports. Back in June 1990, HCB carried its annual review of terminal expansion and investment projects in a listing that ran to 6.5 pages

hazards such as flammability, toxicity, oxidation and corrosivity should take precedence over the pressure hazard posed by Class 2 gases and it was therefore appropriate to split Class 2 into three divisions. Not only that, but these three divisions should also bear different labels and placards – something that has come back to the UN experts over the past year, with discussions about how to differentiate those labels for Divisions 2.1 and 2.3 from the corresponding labels for flammable liquids and toxic substances. This was the point too when the new entries UN 3156 to 3163 were introduced into the Dangerous Goods List. Also at that session, the UN experts were asked to discuss the problems being presented by waste material generated by hospitals; at that time, it was felt that infectious substance wastes should be disposed of or decontaminated at source. That may be the case but the recent Ebola virus outbreaks and the current Covid-19 crisis show that it is not always possible. Over in London, IMO’s Marine Environment Protection Committee (MEPC) had met in March, for the first time since Bill O’Neil had taken over as secretary-general of the organisation. Opening the MEPC

– but included nothing east of Suez. These days we are more clued up about developments in Asia and the equivalent article in last month’s issue covered ten pages of the magazine. There were pre-echoes of 2020 also in the Regulation section of the June 1990 issue, with a report by ‘HJK’ on the January 1990 session of the UN Sub-committee of Experts’ work to review the provisions for gases of Class 2. This was the point at which it was agreed that

session, O’Neil reminded delegates of the impact of the Exxon Valdez incident in Alaska in March 1989 as well as the potential pollution impact in Morocco following the explosion aboard the VLCC Khark-5 in December 1989. Those two incidents did much to accelerate MEPC’s work towards the development of the International Convention on Oil Pollution Preparedness, Response and Cooperation, which was rapidly adopted in November 1990.

HCB MONTHLY | JUNE 2020


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Articles inside

Intercargo wants action on liquefaction

3min
page 55

More amendments from the UN

22min
pages 56-63

RID experts agree changes

16min
pages 64-69

HSE slams Chevron over deaths

9min
pages 52-54

NTSB identifies communication issues

3min
page 50

Amsafe FCC passes another test

2min
page 51

TT Club highlights Covid-19 risks

4min
pages 48-49

Greif concentrates on industrial markets

3min
page 43

Incident Log Stay safe

3min
page 47

The editor becomes a DGSA

7min
pages 44-45

Conference diary

2min
page 46

Cross-bottling reconditioning from Schütz

2min
page 42

News bulletin – chemical distribution

5min
pages 40-41

Matlack highlights digitisation benefits

3min
page 39

Univar starts 2020 brightly

2min
page 38

News bulletin – tanks and logistics

5min
pages 30-31

Brenntag’s holistic transformation

5min
pages 36-37

UK distributors face double trouble

3min
pages 34-35

Fecc looks for lessons in a crisis

4min
pages 32-33

Hoyer targets investments

2min
page 29

Power-to-methanol plan in Antwerp

2min
page 28

CSafe tracks the cold chain

2min
page 27

Implico finds where the trains are

3min
page 26

VTG breaks all records

3min
pages 24-25

Big landmark for Framo

2min
page 19

News bulletin – tanker shipping

6min
pages 20-21

ITCO guidance on tank top working

6min
pages 22-23

Team outsources management

2min
page 18

US barge business going strong

3min
page 16

Letter from the Editor

5min
pages 3-5

30 Years Ago

2min
page 6

Gasum helps Preem get clean

2min
page 15

Gas ship owners enjoy it for now

9min
pages 10-12

Odfjell takes advantage of market

2min
page 17

Learning by Training

2min
page 7

In memoriam: David Jenkins

3min
page 9
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