Exquintia
Sectoren

Sector | Storage and handling

Why Exquintia for storage and handling?

In storage and handling, explosion risks often arise when substances start moving.

Filling, unloading, pumping, conveying, mixing, venting, sampling and cleaning can create emissions, dust clouds, vapours, static charging and ignition risks.

01

The transfer moment is often critical

A tank, silo or bulk container can be well designed, but additional risks arise during transfer operations.

Exquintia assesses the complete handling operation, including equipment, procedure, working environment, competence and maintenance condition.

02

Typical support

Exquintia supports storage and handling operations with:

  • explosion protection documentation
  • gas, vapour and dust zoning
  • review of loading and unloading procedures
  • inspection of Ex installations
  • assessment of electrostatic risks
  • earthing and bonding review
  • ignition source analysis
  • audit preparation and improvement programmes
03

Result

You gain a clear view of explosion risks during storage and handling, critical operations, zones, ignition sources, missing documentation and required measures.

Concrete entry point

Choose directly why you involve Exquintia.

Not a generic contact step, but a clear route for EPD, zoning, inspection regime and explosion safety risks.

Request an ATEX intake

For companies that want to know whether their EPD, zoning or inspection regime is still up to date.

Request intake

Have your EPD reviewed for auditability

For companies that already have a document, but doubt whether it holds up technically and legally.

Review EPD

Request an explosion safety quickscan

For battery charging areas, dust installations, food/feed, utilities, water treatment and maintenance situations.

Request quickscan

Do you store or transfer flammable liquids, gases, vapours or powders?

Have your storage areas, loading points, tanks, silos and transfer systems independently assessed for explosion risk and zoning.

Assess storage and transfer risk