Magna Concursos

Foram encontradas 60 questões.

3090560 Ano: 2012
Disciplina: Engenharia Civil
Banca: CETRO
Orgão: TBG

Em relação à análise da discriminação dos custos em uma obra, correlacione o tipo de custo (Coluna A), com seus respectivos exemplos (Coluna B) e, em seguida, assinale a alternativa que apresenta a sequência correta.

Coluna A

1. Custos Diretos.

2. Custos Indiretos.

Coluna B

( ) Execução de fundações.

( ) Canteiro de obras.

( ) Alojamento provisório.

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3090559 Ano: 2012
Disciplina: Engenharia Civil
Banca: CETRO
Orgão: TBG

Estudo das condicionantes (condições de contorno), composição de custos e fechamento. Esquematicamente, estas três grandes etapas aqui englobadas referem-se

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3090558 Ano: 2012
Disciplina: Engenharia Civil
Banca: CETRO
Orgão: TBG

A respeito da execução do planejamento de projetos, analise as assertivas abaixo.

I. Para a execução do planejamento de projetos, precisa-se considerar os fatores espaço e tempo, prevendo as possíveis interferências que podem existir entre atividades no decorrer da obra.

II. Deve-se determinar, de forma clara, o conteúdo esperado de cada projeto (nível de detalhamentos, memórias de cálculo, quantificações de materiais e insumos) e também abastecer os projetistas com todos os levantamentos necessários (planialtimétrico, cadastral, clima, sondagens), definindo uma referência de nível a ser adotada em todos os projetos.

III. É imprescindível que sejam analisados os riscos de engenharia, como ação do vento, inundações, incêndios ou outros eventos semelhantes, após a construção.

É correto o que se afirma em

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3090557 Ano: 2012
Disciplina: Engenharia Civil
Banca: CETRO
Orgão: TBG

Leia o trecho abaixo e, em seguida, assinale a alternativa que preenche correta e respectivamente as lacunas.

é a aplicação de conhecimentos, habilidades, ferramentas e técnicas nas atividades de um projeto, objetivando atender ou exceder as necessidades e expectativas do cliente e de nossa empresa, naquele projeto. Um projeto é constituído por cinco fases distintas, que compõem o ciclo de vida deste, que são elas, na ordem: 1º – Iniciação, 2º – , 3º – , 4º – e 5º – Finalização.

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3090556 Ano: 2012
Disciplina: Engenharia Civil
Banca: CETRO
Orgão: TBG

Em relação ao planejamento de obras, marque V para verdadeiro ou F para falso e, em seguida, assinale a alternativa que apresenta a sequência correta.

( ) Uma parte importante do planejamento de obras é a programação das diferentes atividades necessárias para a conclusão efetiva do empreendimento.

( ) O planejamento é essencial para o sucesso de um empreendimento. Sua importância aumenta quando, na sociedade, existe pouca disponibilidade de recursos, instabilidade no mercado, entre outros obstáculos.

( ) O planejamento da construção torna-se dispensável para que se canalize informações e conhecimentos. É direcionado à utilização nas execuções dos serviços da construção civil.

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3090515 Ano: 2012
Disciplina: Direito Ambiental
Banca: CETRO
Orgão: TBG

Em relação ao licenciamento ambiental federal para obras de gás natural, analise as assertivas abaixo.

I. Para a obtenção de licença ambiental relativa à pesquisa sísmica (LPS), é necessário o encaminhamento ao Ibama da Ficha de Caracterização da Atividade (FCA).

II. O órgão, então, expedirá Termo de Referência, em 30 dias úteis contados a partir da data de protocolo da FCA, sobre a classe de enquadramento do empreendimento, sendo necessária a elaboração prévia do já citado EIA/Rima ou do Estudo Ambiental de Sísmica/Relatório de Impacto Ambiental de Sísmica – EAS/Rias, a depender da classe designada pelo Ibama.

III. Após a emissão do Termo de Referência, ele deverá ser reencaminhado ao Ibama, com os documentos nele exigidos, no prazo máximo de um mês, com pedido de obtenção de LPS, observada a devida publicidade que deverá ser realizada mediante publicação em jornal de grande circulação, bem como publicação no Diário Oficial da União.

É correto o que se afirma em

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3090448 Ano: 2012
Disciplina: Segurança e Saúde no Trabalho (SST)
Banca: CETRO
Orgão: TBG

Em relação aos perigos à SSO (Segurança e Saúde Ocupacional) e ao sistema de gestão de SSO, a organização deve estabelecer, implementar e manter procedimentos para comunicação. Sobre o que deve haver quanto à questão da comunicação, analise as assertivas abaixo.

I. Comunicação externa entre os diversos níveis e funções da organização.

II. Comunicação com contratados e outros visitantes no local de trabalho.

III. Receber, documentar e responder a comunicações relevantes de partes interessadas internas.

É correto o que se afirma em

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas

PIPELINE RISK MANAGEMENT

Underlying the definition of risk is the concept of hazard. The word hazard comes from al zahr, the Arabic word for “dice” that referred to an ancient game of chance. We typically define a hazard as a characteristic or group of characteristics that provides the potential for a loss. Flammability and toxicity are examples of such characteristics.

It is important to make the distinction between a hazard and a risk because we can change the risk without changing the hazard. When a person crosses a busy street, the hazard should be clear to that person. Loosely defined, it is the prospect that the person must place himself in the path of moving vehicles that can cause him great bodily harm were he to be struck by one or more of them. The hazard is therefore injury or fatality as a result of being struck by a moving vehicle. The risk, however, is dependent on how that person conducts himself in the crossing of the street. He most likely realizes that the risk is reduced if he crosses in a designed traffic-controlled area and takes extra precautions against vehicle operators who may not see him. He has not changed the hazard—he can still be struck by a vehicle—but his risk of injury or death is reduced by prudent actions. Were he to encase himself in an armored vehicle for the trip across the street, his risk would be reduced even further—he has reduced the consequences of the hazard.

Risk is most commonly defined as the probability of an event that causes a loss and the potential magnitude of that loss. By this definition, risk is increased when either the probability of the event increases of the potential loss (the consequences of the event) increases. Transportation of products by pipeline is a risk because there is some probability of the pipeline failing, releasing its contents, and causing damage (in addition to the potential loss of the product itself). A risk is often expressed in measurable quantities such as the expected frequency of fatalities, injuries, or economic loss. Monetary costs are often used as part of an overall expression of risk; however, the difficult task of assigning a dollar value to human life or environmental damage is necessary in using this metric. Related risk terms include acceptable risk, tolerable risk, risk tolerance, and negligible risk, in which risk assessment and decision making meet. A complete understanding of the risk requires that three questions be answered: 1. What can go wrong? 2. How likely is it? and 3. What are the consequences?—by answering these questions, the risk is defined.

Answering the question of “what can go wrong?” begins with defining a pipeline failure. The unintentional release of pipeline contents is one definition. Loss of integrity is another way to characterize pipeline failure. However, a pipeline can fail in other ways by not meeting that do not involve a loss of contents. A more general definition is failure to perform its intended function.

By the commonly accepted definition of risk, it is apparent that probability is a critical aspect of all risk assessments. Some estimate of the probability of failure will be required in order to assess risks. This addresses the second question of the risk definition: “How likely is it?”

Inherent in any risk evaluation is a judgment of the potential consequences. This is the last of the three risk-defining questions: “If something goes wrong, what are the consequences?” Consequence implies a loss of some kind and many of the aspects of potential losses can readily quantified. In the case of a hydrocarbon pipeline accident (product escaping, perhaps causing an explosion and fire), we could quantify losses such as damaged buildings, vehicles, and other propriety; costs of service interruption; cost of the product lost; cost of the product cleanup; and so on.

Several methodologies are available to identify hazards and threats in a formal and structural way. A hazard and operability (HAZOP) study is a technique in which a team of system experts is guided through a formal process in which imaginative scenarios are developed using specific guide words and analyzed by the team.

It is generally recognized that, unlike most other facilities that undergo a risk assessment, a pipeline usually does not have a constant hazard potential over its entire length. As conditions along the line’s route change, so too does the risk picture. Because the risk picture is not constant, it is efficient to examine a long pipeline in shorter sections. The risk evaluator must decide on a strategy for creating these sections in order to obtain an accurate risk picture. Each section will have its own risk assessment results. Breaking the line into many short sections increases the accuracy of the assessment for each section, but may result in higher costs of data collection, handling, and maintenance (although higher costs are rarely an issue with modern computing capabilities). Longer sections (fewer in number), on the other hand, .

MUHLBAUER, W. K., Pipeline Risk Management, 2004.

Read the paragraph below.

“A hazard and operability (HAZOP) study is a technique in which a team of system experts is guided through a formal process in which imaginative scenarios are developed using specific guide words and analyzed by the team”.

Choose the item that presents a replacement, without changing the meaning of the original text, for the underlined words.

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas

PIPELINE RISK MANAGEMENT

Underlying the definition of risk is the concept of hazard. The word hazard comes from al zahr, the Arabic word for “dice” that referred to an ancient game of chance. We typically define a hazard as a characteristic or group of characteristics that provides the potential for a loss. Flammability and toxicity are examples of such characteristics.

It is important to make the distinction between a hazard and a risk because we can change the risk without changing the hazard. When a person crosses a busy street, the hazard should be clear to that person. Loosely defined, it is the prospect that the person must place himself in the path of moving vehicles that can cause him great bodily harm were he to be struck by one or more of them. The hazard is therefore injury or fatality as a result of being struck by a moving vehicle. The risk, however, is dependent on how that person conducts himself in the crossing of the street. He most likely realizes that the risk is reduced if he crosses in a designed traffic-controlled area and takes extra precautions against vehicle operators who may not see him. He has not changed the hazard—he can still be struck by a vehicle—but his risk of injury or death is reduced by prudent actions. Were he to encase himself in an armored vehicle for the trip across the street, his risk would be reduced even further—he has reduced the consequences of the hazard.

Risk is most commonly defined as the probability of an event that causes a loss and the potential magnitude of that loss. By this definition, risk is increased when either the probability of the event increases of the potential loss (the consequences of the event) increases. Transportation of products by pipeline is a risk because there is some probability of the pipeline failing, releasing its contents, and causing damage (in addition to the potential loss of the product itself). A risk is often expressed in measurable quantities such as the expected frequency of fatalities, injuries, or economic loss. Monetary costs are often used as part of an overall expression of risk; however, the difficult task of assigning a dollar value to human life or environmental damage is necessary in using this metric. Related risk terms include acceptable risk, tolerable risk, risk tolerance, and negligible risk, in which risk assessment and decision making meet. A complete understanding of the risk requires that three questions be answered: 1. What can go wrong? 2. How likely is it? and 3. What are the consequences?—by answering these questions, the risk is defined.

Answering the question of “what can go wrong?” begins with defining a pipeline failure. The unintentional release of pipeline contents is one definition. Loss of integrity is another way to characterize pipeline failure. However, a pipeline can fail in other ways by not meeting that do not involve a loss of contents. A more general definition is failure to perform its intended function.

By the commonly accepted definition of risk, it is apparent that probability is a critical aspect of all risk assessments. Some estimate of the probability of failure will be required in order to assess risks. This addresses the second question of the risk definition: “How likely is it?”

Inherent in any risk evaluation is a judgment of the potential consequences. This is the last of the three risk-defining questions: “If something goes wrong, what are the consequences?” Consequence implies a loss of some kind and many of the aspects of potential losses can readily quantified. In the case of a hydrocarbon pipeline accident (product escaping, perhaps causing an explosion and fire), we could quantify losses such as damaged buildings, vehicles, and other propriety; costs of service interruption; cost of the product lost; cost of the product cleanup; and so on.

Several methodologies are available to identify hazards and threats in a formal and structural way. A hazard and operability (HAZOP) study is a technique in which a team of system experts is guided through a formal process in which imaginative scenarios are developed using specific guide words and analyzed by the team.

It is generally recognized that, unlike most other facilities that undergo a risk assessment, a pipeline usually does not have a constant hazard potential over its entire length. As conditions along the line’s route change, so too does the risk picture. Because the risk picture is not constant, it is efficient to examine a long pipeline in shorter sections. The risk evaluator must decide on a strategy for creating these sections in order to obtain an accurate risk picture. Each section will have its own risk assessment results. Breaking the line into many short sections increases the accuracy of the assessment for each section, but may result in higher costs of data collection, handling, and maintenance (although higher costs are rarely an issue with modern computing capabilities). Longer sections (fewer in number), on the other hand, .

MUHLBAUER, W. K., Pipeline Risk Management, 2004.

Read the last paragraph of Muhbauer’s text and choose one item to fill in the blank. “Breaking the line into many short sections increases the accuracy of the assessment for each section, but may result in higher costs of data collection, handling, and maintenance (although higher costs are rarely an issue with modern computing capabilities). Longer sections (fewer in number), on the other hand, .

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas

PIPELINE RISK MANAGEMENT

Underlying the definition of risk is the concept of hazard. The word hazard comes from al zahr, the Arabic word for “dice” that referred to an ancient game of chance. We typically define a hazard as a characteristic or group of characteristics that provides the potential for a loss. Flammability and toxicity are examples of such characteristics.

It is important to make the distinction between a hazard and a risk because we can change the risk without changing the hazard. When a person crosses a busy street, the hazard should be clear to that person. Loosely defined, it is the prospect that the person must place himself in the path of moving vehicles that can cause him great bodily harm were he to be struck by one or more of them. The hazard is therefore injury or fatality as a result of being struck by a moving vehicle. The risk, however, is dependent on how that person conducts himself in the crossing of the street. He most likely realizes that the risk is reduced if he crosses in a designed traffic-controlled area and takes extra precautions against vehicle operators who may not see him. He has not changed the hazard—he can still be struck by a vehicle—but his risk of injury or death is reduced by prudent actions. Were he to encase himself in an armored vehicle for the trip across the street, his risk would be reduced even further—he has reduced the consequences of the hazard.

Risk is most commonly defined as the probability of an event that causes a loss and the potential magnitude of that loss. By this definition, risk is increased when either the probability of the event increases of the potential loss (the consequences of the event) increases. Transportation of products by pipeline is a risk because there is some probability of the pipeline failing, releasing its contents, and causing damage (in addition to the potential loss of the product itself). A risk is often expressed in measurable quantities such as the expected frequency of fatalities, injuries, or economic loss. Monetary costs are often used as part of an overall expression of risk; however, the difficult task of assigning a dollar value to human life or environmental damage is necessary in using this metric. Related risk terms include acceptable risk, tolerable risk, risk tolerance, and negligible risk, in which risk assessment and decision making meet. A complete understanding of the risk requires that three questions be answered: 1. What can go wrong? 2. How likely is it? and 3. What are the consequences?—by answering these questions, the risk is defined.

Answering the question of “what can go wrong?” begins with defining a pipeline failure. The unintentional release of pipeline contents is one definition. Loss of integrity is another way to characterize pipeline failure. However, a pipeline can fail in other ways by not meeting that do not involve a loss of contents. A more general definition is failure to perform its intended function.

By the commonly accepted definition of risk, it is apparent that probability is a critical aspect of all risk assessments. Some estimate of the probability of failure will be required in order to assess risks. This addresses the second question of the risk definition: “How likely is it?”

Inherent in any risk evaluation is a judgment of the potential consequences. This is the last of the three risk-defining questions: “If something goes wrong, what are the consequences?” Consequence implies a loss of some kind and many of the aspects of potential losses can readily quantified. In the case of a hydrocarbon pipeline accident (product escaping, perhaps causing an explosion and fire), we could quantify losses such as damaged buildings, vehicles, and other propriety; costs of service interruption; cost of the product lost; cost of the product cleanup; and so on.

Several methodologies are available to identify hazards and threats in a formal and structural way. A hazard and operability (HAZOP) study is a technique in which a team of system experts is guided through a formal process in which imaginative scenarios are developed using specific guide words and analyzed by the team.

It is generally recognized that, unlike most other facilities that undergo a risk assessment, a pipeline usually does not have a constant hazard potential over its entire length. As conditions along the line’s route change, so too does the risk picture. Because the risk picture is not constant, it is efficient to examine a long pipeline in shorter sections. The risk evaluator must decide on a strategy for creating these sections in order to obtain an accurate risk picture. Each section will have its own risk assessment results. Breaking the line into many short sections increases the accuracy of the assessment for each section, but may result in higher costs of data collection, handling, and maintenance (although higher costs are rarely an issue with modern computing capabilities). Longer sections (fewer in number), on the other hand, .

MUHLBAUER, W. K., Pipeline Risk Management, 2004.

Read the paragraph below and choose the item that describes correctly the grammatical function of the underlined words.

“By the commonly accepted definition of risk, it is apparent that probability is a critical aspect of all risk assessments. Some estimate of the probability of failure will be required in order to assess risks. This addresses the second question of the risk definition: “How likely is it?”

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas