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Fundamentals of LPG Storage Systems and Compliance (Module 3 of 8)

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Fundamentals of LPG Storage Systems and Compliance (Module 3 of 8)

4(12)
662 views
FREE
2 hrs
Next month
English
Ashok Khopkar
Ashok KhopkarConsultant
  • Session recordings included
  • Certificate of completion
  • Foundational Learning
  • Access to Study Materials
Volume pricing for groups of 5+

Why enroll

With basic knowledge of storage system, the person will expand his scope for getting opportunity to work on design of such facilities, erection, commissioning and operation of such facilities where substantial number of manpower is required. The jobs are very satisfying and remunerative. This course will be like a first step towards that.

Is this course for you?

You should take this if

  • You work in Oil & Gas or Energy & Utilities
  • You're a Mechanical / Petroleum professional
  • You prefer live, instructor-led training with Q&A

You should skip if

  • You need a different specialisation outside Mechanical
  • You need fully self-paced, on-demand content

Course details

To explain the Essential equipment required for storing LPG for bulk consumption at user's premises, and relevant rules in India

Industries using LPG as fuel for their manufacturing activities, need to store LPG in bulk, like 10 ton and more, to hundreds of tons. Being of hazardous nature (highly inflammable), extreme care is taken from design stage to daily consumption, operation, maintenance etc. To ensure safety, PESO has formulated rules --- SMPV Rules -- covering various aspects of storage and handling.

This course focuses on what are minimum essential parts of the storage plant and what are the relevant rules. There are variety of storage vessels /tanks, from which LPG is taken for consumption. So there is piping, valves, pressure regulators, pumps,  compressors, vapourisers, leak detectors, fire fighting equipment and so on. There is an arrangement for refilling these tanks. This course explains in general the system and the flow diagram. Each part of the system is covered under some code and is critical to safety of the plant and the operation.

Everybody working in LPG engineering field, must have basic knowledge of storage system, whether he/ she is working nearby it or far away from it. This course is designed keeping that as the theme.

 

With basic knowledge of storage system, the person will expand his scope for getting opportunity to work on design of such facilities, erection, commissioning and operation of such facilities where substantial number of manpower is required. The jobs are very satisfying and remunerative.

This course will be like a first step towards that.

 

You can join remaining modules at discounted price, by making one time payment. Contact EveryEng for details. Topics of remaining modules are listed here for information. Mod. 4. Safety of storage installation and relevant rules.   5. Safety fittings.   6. Transportation of LPG by road and relevant rules.   7.  LPG transfer systems and relevant equipment.   8. Hazards associated with LPG and care taken at different stages

Course suitable for

Key topics covered

Types of storage vessels

Safety fittings mandatory for vessels

Piping provided and function of each piping segment

Provision of pumps and compressors

General review of safety provisions

Opportunities that await you!

Career opportunities

Training details

This is a live course that has a scheduled start date.

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Why people choose EveryEng

Industry-aligned courses, expert training, hands-on learning, recognized certifications, and job opportunities-all in a flexible and supportive environment.

What learners say about this course

Raj Pravin
Raj Pravin NDT technician
Feb 25, 2026

Initially, I wasn’t sure what to expect from this course. Coming from field work in oil & gas and some exposure to energy utilities, the “beginner” label made me worry it might be too high level. It actually helped fill a gap I’ve had around LPG systems, especially how upstream LPG properties translate into real household appliance behavior. The sections on LPG composition, vapor pressure, and cylinder storage tied directly into issues we see with domestic LPG stoves and regulators. Understanding why certain appliances struggle in cold conditions was useful, and the breakdown of basic LPG distribution in utility-style networks helped connect dots I hadn’t fully put together before. One challenge was keeping up with all the safety terminology and codes early on—it took a bit of rewatching to separate what’s critical in practice versus background theory. A practical takeaway was the step-by-step approach to regulator sizing and leak testing. That’s already been applied on a small residential conversion project, and it made conversations with installers more concrete. The course didn’t try to oversell itself and stayed close to how things actually work on site. Overall, it felt grounded in real engineering practice.

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Sateesh Kumar Yadav PhD
Feb 25, 2026

At first glance, the topics looked familiar, but the depth surprised me. Even at a beginner level, the course dug into LPG behavior in a way that connects well to real oil & gas operations and downstream household appliance use. The sections on vapor pressure versus temperature and basic cylinder storage rules were stronger than expected, especially when compared with how loosely these topics are sometimes handled in entry-level energy utilities training. One challenge was mentally translating the simplified examples into messy field conditions. For instance, regulator sizing was explained clearly, but edge cases like low ambient temperatures or partially filled cylinders required extra thought, since those are where systems usually fail in practice. That gap mirrors what happens on actual projects, so it was a useful friction point. A practical takeaway was a more structured approach to leak detection and odorization checks, which applies directly to residential LPG appliance installations and small distribution networks. Seeing how small design decisions propagate at the system level—safety, maintenance, and user behavior—was valuable. The content felt aligned with practical engineering demands.

Manish Rodrigues
Manish Rodrigues
Feb 25, 2026

Coming into this course, I had some prior exposure to the subject from oilgas projects, but mostly at a systems level. What stood out was how LPG fundamentals were tied down to household appliance interfaces, not just storage and transport. The sections on vaporization, regulator staging, and odorization lined up reasonably well with industry practices I’ve seen in energy utilities, especially when comparing LPG distribution to piped natural gas. One challenge was adjusting to the beginner framing. Some simplifications around safety distances and cylinder changeover logic gloss over real-world constraints, like tight residential sites or mixed propane–butane blends. Cold-weather edge cases, where vapor pressure drops and appliances start misbehaving, could have used more emphasis because that’s where field calls usually spike. A practical takeaway was the regulator sizing and pressure drop walkthrough. The rule-of-thumb approach for matching appliance demand to cylinder capacity is something I’ll actually reuse when reviewing small residential designs. It also highlighted system-level implications, like how a poorly sized regulator can cascade into nuisance shutdowns across multiple household appliances. Overall, it felt grounded in real engineering practice, even if a few corners were intentionally smoothed for beginners.

Ashok Khopkar
Ashok Khopkar General manager at the time retirement
Feb 25, 2026

Coming into this course, I had some prior exposure to the subject, mostly from oil & gas projects adjacent to LPG storage. The material covers the basics well, but what stood out was how it tied LPG properties to real use in energy utilities and household appliances. For example, the sections on vaporization rates and pressure regulators connected directly to why residential stoves misbehave under cold-start conditions, which is an edge case that gets glossed over in many industry handovers. One challenge was reconciling the simplified examples with field reality. In practice, LPG distribution in utilities has to deal with mixed cylinder and bulk tank setups, local code differences, and aging regulators that don’t match the textbook curves. That gap took some mental translation. Still, comparing the course approach to standard oil and gas practices around safety valves and odorization helped frame the risks at a system level, especially leakage detection downstream of the regulator. A practical takeaway was a clearer checklist for regulator sizing and leak testing before commissioning household appliances. It’s basic, but useful. I can see this being useful in long-term project work.

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