Skip to content

Hello, Guest!

  • Home
  • All Topics
  • Resources
    • OSHA Program Wizards
      • Emergency Action Plan
      • Transitional Work Program
      • Personal Protective Equipment
      • Energy Control (LOTO)
      • Hazard Communication (HAZCOM)
      • Confined Space Program
      • Hearing Conservation Program
      • Ergonomics Program
      • More…
    • Program Audits
      • Confined Space
      • Emergency Planning
      • Employee Training
      • Hazard Recognition and Control
      • Hearing Conservation
      • IIPP
      • Lockout Tagout
      • Personal Protective Equipment
      • More…
    • Major Loss Source Assessment Tools
      • Amputation
      • Falls from Elevation – Construction
      • Falls from Elevation – Extension Ladders
      • Falls from Elevation – Orchard Ladder
      • Falls from Elevation – Stepladders
      • Lifting Below the Knees
      • Lifting With Arms Extended
      • More…
    • Supervisor Resources
      • California SB 553 Workplace Violence Prevention
      • New York Workplace Violence Prevention
      • Employer’s Guide HazCom
      • Employer’s Guide Lockout Tagout
      • 2026 OSHA Outreach 10 Hour Virtual Training Course
      • Forklift Train the Trainer
      • Train the Trainer
      • Business Case for Safety
      • Special Reports
      • Newsletters
      • Incident Investigations
    • Training Calendars and Bundles
      • ICW Ladder Elimination Challenge
      • Quarterly Safety Checkup
      • Training Calendars by Industry
      • Essential 29
      • Landscaping Safety
      • Fundamental 55
      • Tree Trimming
      • Towing Bundle
    • Training Engagement and Retention
      • Picture This
      • Stats and Facts
      • Fatality Reports
      • Puzzles and Games
      • Safety Checklists
    • Webinars
      • Work Comp Fraud: The Modern Fraudster
      • Returning to the Workplace During COVID-19
      • Respiratory Protection Must Haves
      • Beat the Heat: Outdoors
      • Beat the Heat: Indoors
      • More…
    • When An Injury Occurs
      • Help Injured Workers
      • Nurse Triage Hotline
      • If You’ve Been Injured
      • Transitional Work Program
      • Incident Investigation Wizard Form
      • Top 10 Tips to Lower Your Ex-Mod
  • Webinars
    • Webinars
      • Work Comp Fraud: Identifying the Modern Fraudster
      • Returning to the Workplace During COVID-19
      • Breathe Easier With These Respiratory Protection Must Haves
      • Beat the Heat: Outdoors
      • Beat the Heat: Indoors
      • Machine Guarding: 7 Questions Everyone Should Ask
      • 5 Tips for Impactful Safety Observations
      • More…
  • Ask The Expert
  • Favorites

Hello, Guest!

  • Home
  • All Topics
  • Resources
    • OSHA Program Wizards
      • Emergency Action Plan
      • Transitional Work Program
      • Personal Protective Equipment
      • Energy Control (LOTO)
      • Hazard Communication (HAZCOM)
      • Confined Space Program
      • Hearing Conservation Program
      • Ergonomics Program
      • More…
    • Program Audits
      • Confined Space
      • Emergency Planning
      • Employee Training
      • Hazard Recognition and Control
      • Hearing Conservation
      • IIPP
      • Lockout Tagout
      • Personal Protective Equipment
      • More…
    • Major Loss Source Assessment Tools
      • Amputation
      • Falls from Elevation – Construction
      • Falls from Elevation – Extension Ladders
      • Falls from Elevation – Orchard Ladder
      • Falls from Elevation – Stepladders
      • Lifting Below the Knees
      • Lifting With Arms Extended
      • More…
    • Supervisor Resources
      • California SB 553 Workplace Violence Prevention
      • New York Workplace Violence Prevention
      • Employer’s Guide HazCom
      • Employer’s Guide Lockout Tagout
      • 2026 OSHA Outreach 10 Hour Virtual Training Course
      • Forklift Train the Trainer
      • Train the Trainer
      • Business Case for Safety
      • Special Reports
      • Newsletters
      • Incident Investigations
    • Training Calendars and Bundles
      • ICW Ladder Elimination Challenge
      • Quarterly Safety Checkup
      • Training Calendars by Industry
      • Essential 29
      • Landscaping Safety
      • Fundamental 55
      • Tree Trimming
      • Towing Bundle
    • Training Engagement and Retention
      • Picture This
      • Stats and Facts
      • Fatality Reports
      • Puzzles and Games
      • Safety Checklists
    • Webinars
      • Work Comp Fraud: The Modern Fraudster
      • Returning to the Workplace During COVID-19
      • Respiratory Protection Must Haves
      • Beat the Heat: Outdoors
      • Beat the Heat: Indoors
      • More…
    • When An Injury Occurs
      • Help Injured Workers
      • Nurse Triage Hotline
      • If You’ve Been Injured
      • Transitional Work Program
      • Incident Investigation Wizard Form
      • Top 10 Tips to Lower Your Ex-Mod
  • Webinars
    • Webinars
      • Work Comp Fraud: Identifying the Modern Fraudster
      • Returning to the Workplace During COVID-19
      • Breathe Easier With These Respiratory Protection Must Haves
      • Beat the Heat: Outdoors
      • Beat the Heat: Indoors
      • Machine Guarding: 7 Questions Everyone Should Ask
      • 5 Tips for Impactful Safety Observations
      • More…
  • Ask The Expert
  • Favorites
FUNDAMENTAL 55: Spill Prevention, Control, and Countermeasure Plan
FUNDAMENTAL 55: Spill Prevention, Control, and Countermeasure Plan
Favorite Print Email
English
Topic: Spill Prevention; Accident Prevention
Industry: Oil and Gas
Duration: 29 MINUTES
Assign Now

Key Takeaways:
– Learning about the harmful effects of spilled oil and the applicable laws and regulations for oil pollution prevention.
– Understanding the purpose and general requirements of a facility SPCC Plan.
– Learning general operating procedures designed to prevent spills.
– Observing general control measures to prevent an oil spill from reaching navigable waters and adjoining shorelines.
– Learning basic countermeasures for stopping a spill from reaching the environment and how to respond to facility shutdown and evacuation.

Course Description
OSHA reported that, from 2003 to 2010, 823 oil and gas extraction workers were killed on the job — a fatality rate seven times greater than the rate for all U.S. industries

The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) found that many of the 14,000 oil spills reported annually are caused by industry activities resulting from storage tank rupturing, pipeline leaks, and oil transport accidents.

Oil spills are a significant threat to the environment and often require specially trained emergency response personnel to contain and clean them up. In fact, some spills are so significant that they require help from local and state agencies, in addition to federal governments.

Here are several important laws that industry employers should understand to prevent oil spills and orchestrate appropriate responses:
Clean Water Act
– Prohibits the release of oil and petroleum products into waters of the United States and adjoining shorelines.

Oil Pollution Prevention and Response Regulation, 40 CFR, Part 112
– Forces certain facilities to implement Spill Prevention, Control, and Countermeasure (SPCC) Plans and train employees in oil spill prevention.
– Created to help facilities prepare for and respond to any oil spill affecting the waters of the United States.

Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
– Enforces regulations.
– Performs on-site inspections to guarantee facilities take adequate measures to prevent an accidental discharge of oil.

The Oil Pollution Prevention and Response regulation affects the owners or operators of “regulated” facilities. Any facility is a regulated facility if it meets these three criteria:
1. The facility needs to be a non-transport-related facility operating onshore or offshore.
2. The facility must have a total aboveground oil storage capacity of over 1,320 gallons or have a completely buried storage capacity over 42,000 gallons.
3. There has to be a reasonable expectation of a discharge based on the facility’s location near water or adjourning shorelines. For illustration, a reasonable expectation would be a situation where a spill could flow into storm drains and the toxic runoff could then flow to a lake, stream, river, wetland, or coastal water.

The EPA requires regulated facilities to have a fully prepared and implemented Spill Prevention, Control, and Countermeasure Plan, or SPCC Plan, to prevent the discharge of oil into inland and marine waters and to control spills that do happen.

Workers are responsible for:
– Knowing the location of your facility’s SPCC Plan
– Enacting the procedures specified in the plan
– Identifying your facility’s emergency response coordinator
– Knowing the locations of emergency shut-offs to oil tanks

General Spill Prevention Practices
– Know where spill prevention devices are and how to use them.
– Only use receptacles designated for oil waste.
– Understand how to properly operate oil-handling equipment.
– Learn how to read or operate liquid level alarms, cutoff devices, and vacuum protection.
– Always stay with the vehicle if you are the driver during oil loading and unloading operations.
– Frequently inspect hoses and connections, in addition to checking tank levels.
– Notify your supervisor of all leaks and unusual observations.

Procedures for Loading and Unloading Oil
– Utilize the containment equipment provided to prevent the spread of spilled oil.
– Guarantee that the wheels of the delivery trucks are chocked the entire time.
– If you are a driver, be within 25 feet and in full view of the truck during the entire loading and unloading process.
– Regularly check the leak detection gauges on fuel and oil tanks.
– Guarantee that all tank flow valves are locked-out when they are in a non-operating or non-standby mode.

Example of spill control measures include:
– Mechanical Containment Equipment
– Blocking the spread of oil
– Focussing it into one area
– Containing the oil until it can be removed and disposed of properly

For all onshore facilities that have a significant potential for oil spills and leaks:
– Plug floor drains
– Seal storm drains
– Divert discharge from a primary containment system, such as a tank or pipe, into secondary containment areas until cleanup can be completed

Secondary containment method examples:
– Curbs
– Diversion ponds
– Dikes
– Berms
– Retaining walls

New Safety Talks

New Safety Talks

Vicky Pickford2026-06-15T23:37:40+00:00
GHS – Pictograms Meeting Kit
Giovanni Tejada 22026-06-15T16:58:51+00:00
Dermal Absorption Safety Meeting Kit – Spanish
Giovanni Tejada 22026-06-15T16:57:21+00:00
Scaffold Safety Meeting Kit
Giovanni Tejada 22026-06-15T16:57:21+00:00
Scaffold Safety Meeting Kit – Spanish
Giovanni Tejada 22026-06-15T16:55:53+00:00
Inspection Basics Meeting Kit
Giovanni Tejada 22026-06-15T16:55:53+00:00
Inspection Basics Meeting Kit – Spanish

New eLearning

Giovanni Tejada 22026-06-15T17:02:34+00:00
Criticality Safety: Preventing the Unthinkable (Spanish)
Giovanni Tejada 22026-06-15T17:02:22+00:00
Workplace Cleanliness – SPANISH
Giovanni Tejada 22026-06-15T17:01:58+00:00
Drug and Alcohol-Free Workplace – USA (Spanish)
Giovanni Tejada 22026-06-15T17:00:58+00:00
Hurricane Preparedness – Spanish
Giovanni Tejada 22026-06-15T17:00:41+00:00
ESSENTIAL 29: Drug and Alcohol-Free Workplace – USA
Giovanni Tejada 22026-06-15T16:59:36+00:00
Domestic Violence in the Workplace for Managers

Upcoming Events & Webinars

Damian Tollens2025-01-31T09:55:18+00:00
Feb 11 – Performance and Cultural Alignment
Damian Tollens2025-02-12T19:53:20+00:00
Feb 26 – Avoid Common Overhead Crane and Rigging Mistakes
Rick Tobin2024-10-24T16:57:11+00:00
Nov 13 – Defensive Driving For Changing Seasons
Rick Tobin2024-10-24T17:10:53+00:00
Nov 29 – What to Expect From a Health & Safety Inspection
Rick Tobin2024-10-24T17:13:55+00:00
Dec 5 – Top Safety Issues During the Holiday Season
Rick Tobin2024-10-24T17:13:30+00:00
Dec 19 – Safer in ’25: The 3 Pillars of Safety Culture
Vicky Pickford2019-07-08T00:00:00+00:00

See What's Trending

Emergency Lighting and Exit Sign Requirements – Quick Tips

Emergency Lighting and Exit Sign Requirements – Quick Tips

2026 OSHA Outreach 10 Hour Virtual Training Course

2026 OSHA Outreach 10 Hour Virtual Training Course

SCBA Cylinder Hydrostatic Testing – Quick Tips

SCBA Cylinder Hydrostatic Testing – Quick Tips

Forklift Train the Trainer Course

Forklift Train the Trainer Course

Forklift Training and Certification Instructions

Forklift Training and Certification Instructions

Upcoming Live Virtual Training Classes: Forklift Train the Trainer

Upcoming Live Virtual Training Classes: Forklift Train the Trainer

Contact Us

800-ICW-SAFETY (800.429.7233)SAFETYOnDemand@icwgroup.com

Additional Links

Manage eLearning
View list of learners
Help

Terms of Use | Legal Notice & Privacy Policy
©2023 ICW Group , All Rights Reserved

Page load link

 

Video Tutorials to Help You Get Started

Since it's your first time, you may want to checkout some of the video tutorials.

eLearning overview

Managing learners

Assigning courses

Reporting & Analytics

When you are ready to go, close this window.
Don't show this again
Go to Top