The current most up-to-date database for tank fire incidents in storage tanks was made as part of LASTFIRE 1 in the late nineties. Lastfire is very clear that when one manages a tank appropriately, the probability of that tank being involved in a fire is very low. But a low chance is not zero; it still means it cannot be excluded entirely. Despite all the knowledge gathered during that Lastfire project, the World still faces several large fires in storage tanks. Conventional systems to tackle tank fires are complex. Foam proportioning equipment is complicated and, therefore, prone to failure. Fire-trained personnel are generally a problem.
Personnel reduction is an ongoing action in the Oil Industry, so at a particular moment, one comes below the critical number of (volunteer) firefighters—conventional systems to succeed require well-organized logistics and half an army of well-trained personnel. Unfortunately, “success” in traditional fighting of a tank fire is only relative; since the result is always that the fire is out, the tank is also completely lost. Our system is set up during quiet periods. During a fire, all that is needed is to open one valve (or a few valves in the case of a common standard foam supply system). Our approach is highly reliable. It is so simple that the probability that it fails because a component fails is very low simply because there are hardly any components. It works perfectly since it does not require any external water or power source and can be triggered remotely or automatically. We do not claim to offer the only solution to all tank fire problems. But we are confident that our system, due to its unconventional approach to the typical fire extinguishing one faces, offers a revolutionary solution to many of these problems. We can imagine that hue refineries with a full-time company fire brigade and an army of technical personnel to fall back on as assistants- firefighters do not need our system. But a not around-the-clock crewed marketing terminal in the suburbs of a city does need our system since they cannot afford to have a tank fire lasting some time and endangering the population living in the vicinity.
