Difference between revisions of "Seismic Fire Interactions (Task 13)"
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Revision as of 17:34, 24 August 2017
Contents
Task Overview
Background
This task is a qualitative approach to help identify the risk from any potential interactions between an earthquake and fire.
Purpose
The Fire Risk Scoping Study [13.1] identified the following four seismic-fire interaction issues:
- 1.8. Seismically induced fires
- 2.9. Degradation of fire suppression systems and features
- 3.10. Spurious actuation of suppression and/or detection systems
- 4.11. Degradation of manual firefighting effectiveness
It is recommended that a Fire PRA include a qualitative assessment of these issues. In this procedure, a recommended approach is given.
This procedure does not provide a methodology for developing models and quantifying risk associated with fires caused by a severe seismic event. This is due to a combination of limitations in the state of the art, and the perceived low level of risk from these fires. The low risk is based on the low frequency of an earthquake that can initiate a challenging fire and degrade various plant fire protection defense-in-depth elements, and the general seismic ruggedness of the NPPs as part of their design basis. This procedure outlines a series of steps intended to verify this premise. If the verification steps outlined in this procedure do not preclude the risk significance, either a quantitative assessment or consideration of physical or procedural changes may follow.
Scope
Consistent with the recommendations of Reference [13.1] and those outlined in the EPRI FIVE [13.2] and Fire PRA Implementation Guide [13.3], recommended practice in the seismic fire interactions assessment utilizes a qualitative, walkdown-based approach, rather than quantitative methods to estimated associated risk. This task provides a stand-alone study of the effects of a fire due to an earthquake. This task is not intended to develop quantitative estimates of the risk associated with seismic-fire interactions.