Inspection and Acceptance Control for Hazardous Areas
MurphyEx delivers Ex inspection, verification and compliance support for offshore and onshore hazardous area assets. We focus on practical execution that reduces repeat findings, supports clean close-out and helps acceptance move forward without unnecessary delays.
Inspection and Acceptance Readiness
Acceptance goes smoother when scope and acceptance criteria are clear from the start. A focused intake helps avoid rework offshore and keeps verification aligned to the actual scope.
Asset and area specific
Asset type, location, hazardous area zone classification, and hazardous area boundaries.
Scope and target dates
What needs to be inspected or verified, any verifier hold points, and the acceptance or handover dates that matter.
Current records
Existing registers, certificates, datasheets, drawings, and any known problem areas or repeat defects.
Fast start option
Asset details, location, target dates, and photos of nameplates or entries are usually enough to begin scoping the first shift.
How we execute
A practical control process: acceptance criteria defined first, followed by inspection, evidence capture, findings, close-out actions, and final verification.
Acceptance criteria and scope definition
What is in scope, what acceptance looks like, which standards apply, and which dates matter.
Plan the inspection grade and coverage
Visual, close, and detailed coverage aligned to risk and what can realistically be verified on the asset.
Inspect and capture as-found condition
Markings, nameplates, entries, glands, interfaces and installed condition recorded with photo evidence.
Findings, NCR criteria and prioritisation
Clear defect statements with acceptance impact and the evidence required to close them.
Rectification support and verification
Close-out planning and re-inspection where required, aligned to the acceptance criteria.
Close-out and acceptance readiness
Registers aligned, records controlled, as-left condition verified, and acceptance status established for review.
What we optimise for
Fewer punch items, fewer replacements offshore, fewer repeated witness points, and faster acceptance.
What slows close-out
Late scope changes, substitutions without compliance check, unclear entry systems, and closure without substantiation.
How we keep it practical
We focus on the items that repeatedly cause problems offshore: entries, glands, interfaces, installed condition and traceability.
Inspection and acceptance control across multiple scopes
This page covers execution. The Technical Control System defines the close-out process.
Service lines
Delivered under one control approach: inspection, findings, close-out evidence, and acceptance readiness.
Ex inspection and verification
Visual, close and detailed verification with consistent marking capture and photo evidence.
HAER build and control
Asset population, tagging structure and register control aligned to installed reality.
NCR, rectification and close-out support
Findings converted into owned actions with clear evidence requirements and verification checks.
Mechanical Completion and handover readiness
Handover gate readiness, dossier completeness and acceptance support.
Certified Ex equipment supply
Equipment, glands and accessories aligned to the hazardous area zone classification, gas group, temperature class, and project requirements.
Advanced inspection support
Targeted condition assessment where it helps reduce repeat defects and rework.
Rapid scope clarification
A short description, location, target dates, and photos of nameplates or entries are usually enough to define the compliant execution path.
What you receive
Outputs are structured to support verification, NCR closure, close-out and acceptance. They are built to withstand technical review.
Inspection reports and schedules
Inspection grade approach, coverage and findings presented clearly with acceptance impact.
Register alignment
Asset records aligned to what is installed, with certificate linkage and traceability references.
Findings and close-out control
Clear findings, required close-out evidence, ownership and verification checks so issues close cleanly.
As-found / as-left evidence
Photo evidence, marking capture and condition notes packaged for close-out and audit.
Controlled certification records
Certificates and datasheets controlled against delivered equipment and installed configuration.
Acceptance readiness summary
What is accepted, what remains open (if any), and what is scheduled for verification at close-out.
Acceptance predictability
Where deadlines apply, they are built into the close-out and verification sequence from the outset.
When to call MurphyEx
These are the situations where inspection-led control typically saves the most time and reduces repeat inspection.
Verifier hold points
Issues must close with evidence that conforms at review, not status statements.
Punch growth
Findings are multiplying, close-out is drifting, and acceptance dates are at risk.
Replacement uncertainty
Markings, certificates, threads or entry systems are unclear and selection risk is high.
Mixed supply and records
Multiple sources and certificate sets are creating traceability gaps and slowing review cycles.
Late changes during commissioning
Changes are landing late and you need compliance impact understood fast.
Handover dossier pressure
You need a complete, structured close-out pack for acceptance, audit, and long-term record integrity.
Related technical pages
These pages define the control process behind the execution: control, close-out discipline, and acceptance order.
Technical Control System
The control process for risk, deviation, close-out, and acceptance.
Inspection Readiness
Readiness gates that reduce rework and make verification predictable.
HAER and Inspection Control
Register control and inspection alignment to installed reality.
NCR and Punch Close-Out
Controlled NCR closure with evidence requirements and acceptance discipline.
Corrective Action and Root Cause
Owned actions, acceptance criteria, and clear close-out status.
Mechanical Completion
Handover readiness and acceptance pack discipline at handover.
One system, one execution order
This services page explains execution. The technical pages define the control and close-out process behind it.

