Applying higher safety margins and system-level design beyond standard petrochemical requirements
Environmental and Safety Framework
We have completed environmental and safety assessments for our manufacturing base in China, marking an important step toward project execution.
The assessment was conducted in line with regulatory frameworks typically applied to petrochemical projects. Throughout this process, we focused not only on compliance thresholds, but on how environmental and safety requirements are embedded into system design from the outset.
Environmental Control Approach
We have designed the facility around closed-loop material handling and controlled emission systems.
Volatile emissions are managed through centralized collection and treatment. Process water and residues are handled through dedicated and segregated systems, ensuring controlled discharge and traceability across operations.
Safety System Design
We have incorporated multi-layer risk management into the system architecture.
This includes redundant temperature control for reaction systems, emergency response mechanisms for abnormal conditions, and controlled storage and transfer systems for reactive materials.
Process Risk Evaluation
During the design phase, we conducted detailed process risk analysis to evaluate system behavior under different operating conditions, rather than relying solely on standard compliance checks.
Design Decisions and Trade-offs
We evaluated alternative approaches with lower initial investment and shorter timelines.
However, these options would have limited safety margins and long-term operational flexibility. We therefore chose a more conservative system design with higher safety boundaries and integrated control.
Long-Term Perspective
The project not only meets regulatory requirements, but operates within a broader safety and environmental control range than initially required.
We see this not as a one-time compliance milestone, but as a foundation for long-term stable and controlled operation.



