Why Dynamic Risk Assessments Matter
Dynamic risk assessments help teams understand the variables and how they impact response to tank fires.
Dynamic risk assessments help teams understand the variables and how they impact response to tank fires.
While COVID-19 may have restricted the NFFF’s ability to carry out its programs in-person in 2020, the Foundation’s pursuit of its mission never waned. Virtual gatherings replaced in-person events and the Foundation continued to serve our Fire Hero Families and firefighters.
A full-scale fire sprinkler test usually consists of two forty-foot-long double row racks with single row tacks on each side as a target.
The group of 16 companies that form LastFire test foams periodically at full-scale levels for a more real world assessment.
Anheuser-Busch and the National Volunteer Fire Council (NVFC) are teaming up for the third year to provide critical hydration to volunteer fire departments responding to wildfires through the Emergency Drinking Water for Wildland Firefighters program.
Carbon monoxide is a common industrial hazard resulting from the incomplete combustion of material containing carbon such as natural gas, gasoline, kerosene, oil, propane, coal, or wood.
Being able to accept other ways of thinking can lead to better overall fire protection and unique solutions to unforeseen challenges.
Manufacturing facility sprinkler design is derived from experience with what were called pipe schedule sprinkler systems.
Pre-plans for fire emergencies must be continually edited and updated.
With tanks, original blueprints and drawings should be kept as reference points. These documents can be used to compare notes and measurements such as steel thickness.
U.S. Senator Kirsten Gillibrand of New York has introduced a bill that would ban the use of firefighting foam that contains cancer-causing PFAS chemicals.
Jim Burneka of Firefighter Cancer Consultants shares best practices that limit firefighter exposure to PFAS and other carcinogens.
A new study heightens concerns about firefighters’ exposure to the fluorinated “forever chemicals” known as PFAS: Nearly 99 percent of the fluorine found in tests of dust from inside fire stations likely came from unknown PFAS chemicals that could not be identified as ones that researchers had tested for.
Four workers died in an accident involving an environmental incinerator.
Meeting the requirement of a stationary diesel engine fire pump.
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