About
This course is the first technical electrical course in the professional development program for Shell Electrical Engineers. It has been developed through a collaboration with Shell and PetroSkills and is focused on getting electrical engineers up to speed with the essential principles of electrical safety, system design and maintenance. Additionally, this course introduces the participants to the critical elements of relevant Shell DEPs that they will use in their daily work. The course focuses on foundational concepts rather than regional code and standard requirements, but does cover common international (IEC, EN, BS, etc.) and North American (NEC, IEEE) standards related to design and safe operation. A sample project will be completed in phases throughout the course, giving the participants an opportunity to work with their peers in solving typical design challenges and applying concepts and Shell standards. At the end of the course, participants will complete a formal written final exam, and must pass or remediate the exam to receive credit for the course.
Target Audience
You Will Learn
By the end of the course, participants should be able to:
- Work safely in and around electrical equipment and understand their role in electrical safety
- Locate and use company standards for electrical projects, ongoing maintenance, and operation of a facility
- Design a simple facility starting from a load list and produce a single line diagram indicating the basic arrangements and key parameters of electrical equipment.
- Incorporate appropriate levels of contingency and considerations for future growth
- Describe the effect on power system behavior when operating in various configurations (e.g., Ties Closed or Open, Dual or Single feed)
- Calculate fault levels and short circuit currents including motor contribution by hand using the per unit method
- Calculate voltage drop during motor start by hand using the per unit method
- Calculate the voltage profile of a power system under various operating conditions
- Perform simple protection coordination studies by hand and determine basic protective device selection.
- Select the key parameters/ratings for switchgear, transformers, generators, UPS systems, circuit and equipment protection, motors, and motor starters for common applications
- Size and select cables based on voltage, steady state load, voltage drop, de-rating factors, fault conditions and environmental factors using both IEC and NEC methods.
- Describe the basic operation of Generators in a power system and their design and operational requirements
- Discuss the considerations and methods used to determine hazardous area classifications.
- Determine the requirements for electrical equipment installed in hazardous (classified) locations
- Describe the considerations for an effective lighting design
- Determine basic maintenance needs of electrical equipment and power systems per company and industry standards
- Explain the use of renewable energies at Shell and discuss future opportunities, considerations, and challenges in implementing them