13/11/2023 - 14/11/2023
61 New Cavendish Street, London, W1G 7AR
Non-Member: £1030.00 (excl. VAT)
Member: £930.00 (excl. VAT)
This 2-day course will cover basic corrosion management principles, basic Microbiologically Influenced Corrosion (MIC) mechanisms, use of molecular microbiological methods (MMM) in diagnosing and managing MIC, selection of MIC mitigation methods, selection and interpretation of MIC monitoring methods, case studies demonstrating MIC diagnostic tools, failure analysis principles, MIC modelling and demonstrate applicable sampling techniques and equipment.
Richard Eckert has been involved in pipeline corrosion/failure investigation and forensic corrosion engineering for over 38 years. He is a recognized expert in the field of microbiologically influenced corrosion (MIC), having published more than 50 symposium and peer-reviewed papers and two books on internal corrosion. Mr. Eckert has been an invited speaker on the topic of MIC and has conducted MIC workshops for NACE, SPE and others in the oil and gas industry. He has chaired NACE technical committees that produced standards on internal MIC of pipelines, a framework for corrosion management, and corrosion monitoring methods. Mr. Eckert is a certified NACE Internal Corrosion Specialist, and served on the NACE International Board of Directors. Eckert graduated with a BS in Engineering Metallurgy from Western Michigan University. He is currently working with his co-editor Dr. Torben Lund Skovhus on a new book “Failure Analysis of Microbiologically Influenced Corrosion” for CRC Press to be published in 2021.
This 2-day course will cover basic corrosion management principles, basic Microbiologically Influenced Corrosion (MIC) mechanisms, use of molecular microbiological methods (MMM) in diagnosing and managing MIC, selection of MIC mitigation methods, selection and interpretation of MIC monitoring methods, case studies demonstrating MIC diagnostic tools, failure analysis principles, MIC modelling and demonstrate applicable sampling techniques and equipment.
Learning Objectives:
- Be able to apply Corrosion Management principles to assessing, mitigating and monitoring the corrosion threat of MIC.
- Understand, and correctly apply and interpret state of the art MIC diagnostic methods.
- Understand sampling procedures for various sample types obtained from industrial process systems.
- Be able to plan and execute a failure analysis investigation where MIC is the root cause.
Why You Should Attend
To be able to diagnose, prevent and act against the MIC threat in industrial process systems in the upstream oil and gas industry, maritime sector and water processing industries. Course certificate and a full course compendium will be provided to all participants.
Who Should Attend
Individuals with responsibility for developing, implementing and executing corrosion management activities, including corrosion and materials engineers, microbiologists, production chemists, process engineers, integrity managers, laboratory technicians and field staff (both onshore and offshore).
Related Conference:
Reservoir Microbiology Forum (RMF) 2023
15 - 16 November 2023
This excellent multi-disciplinary platform brings together oil producers, scientists, technologists, engineers, academics and researchers from around the world to present, share and discuss the widespread and versatile effects of microbes in oil reservoirs.
As RMF is taking place the week of MIC, you can receive a 10% discount if you've already booked onto MIC. Email us at webtraining@energyinst.org for the discount code.
Contact details
Training Team: webtraining@energyinst.org, 02074677178