What is LOPA?
LOPA stands for Layer of Protection Analysis — a semi-quantitative risk assessment method used to evaluate whether the existing safety layers are sufficient to control a particular process risk.
LOPA determines whether your existing safety measures are adequate — or whether additional protection layers, such as a SIS with a SIL rating, are required.
LOPA is often used as a follow-up to a HAZOP study.
🎯 Why LOPA?
LOPA helps you to:
- Quantify risks of hazardous scenarios
- Assign SIL levels to SIFs (Safety Instrumented Functions)
- Determine whether existing protection layers are adequate
- Make objective and traceable safety decisions
- Comply with standards such as IEC 61511 and IEC 61508
🧱 How does LOPA work?
LOPA calculates whether the residual risk is acceptable using the following formula:
Frequency of initiating event / Risk-reduction capability of protection layers = Residual risk (target: ≤ tolerable risk frequency)
For each scenario you map out:
- Initiating event (e.g. valve fails, operator error)
- Undesired consequence (explosion, leak, overheating)
- Existing protection layers (alarms, interlocks, SIS, ventilation)
- Frequency and risk reduction per layer
- Residual risk: does it meet the risk criteria?
🧠 Example: LOPA for an over-pressure scenario
| Step | Worked example |
|---|---|
| Initiating event | Control valve fails open |
| Frequency | Once every 10 years (0.1/year) |
| Consequence | Over-pressure → reactor wall could rupture |
| IPL 1: Operator alarm | PFD = 0.1 |
| IPL 2: SIS (over-pressure valve) | PFD = 0.01 |
| Residual risk = 0.1 / (0.1 × 0.01) = 100 years → Acceptable? ✅ |
PFD = Probability of Failure on Demand
🔗 LOPA vs. other methods
| Method | Type of analysis | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
| HAZOP | Qualitative | Identify hazards and deviations |
| LOPA | Semi-quantitative | Quantify risks, weigh measures |
| FMEA | Component-focused | Analyse failure probabilities and impact per component |
| SIL determination | Outcome of LOPA | Determine the required risk reduction level |
✅ What are Independent Protection Layers (IPLs)?
LOPA uses independent protection layers, such as:
| IPL | Example |
|---|---|
| Process design | Oversized pipe diameter prevents blockages |
| Control and alarming | SCADA alarm + operator action |
| SIS with a Safety PLC | Emergency valve closes automatically on excess pressure |
| Physical protection | Pressure relief valve, rupture disc |
| Organisational measures | Work procedures, training, MOC process |
📌 In summary
LOPA is a powerful method for systematically assessing whether you have sufficient protection against specific process risks. It bridges HAZOP and SIL classification and underpins decisions with demonstrable risk reduction.
