1. Introduction
In Safety Instrumented Systems (SIS), two critical Human-Machine Interfaces (HMI) are involved:
- Engineering Station (ES): Used for configuration, programming, diagnostics, and maintenance. 
- Operator Station (OS): Used for monitoring, process operation, and alarm handling. 
A common industry question is whether these two stations can be shared to reduce cost and simplify system architecture. This article evaluates the issue from a safety, standard compliance, and practical application perspective.
2. Standards and Guidelines
2.1 GB/T 50770-2013
- Requires dedicated engineering stations for SIS configuration, diagnostics, and maintenance. 
- Event Sequence Recorder (ESR) can share resources with the engineering station but not with operator stations. 
2.2 HG/T 22820-2024
- SIS with programmable electronics must have an engineering station for configuration and system updates. 
- ESR may be combined with the engineering station. 
2.3 HG/T 20511-2014
- SIS must be equipped with an engineering station. 
- Engineering stations require multi-level password protection. 
- ESR may be combined with the operator station if one exists; otherwise, with the engineering station. 
2.4 HG/T 20573-2012 (BPCS Reference)
- Engineering stations can also function as operator stations if software and permissions are adjusted. 
- However, guidelines recommend dedicated use for safety and data integrity. 
2.5 SH/T 3092-2013
- Field engineering stations may double as operator stations if user permissions are modified. 
- Strongly emphasizes “dedicated use” for system safety. 
3. Comparison Table: SIS vs. BPCS Requirements
| System Type | Engineering Station (ES) | Operator Station (OS) | Event Sequence Recorder (ESR) | Sharing Policy | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SIS | Mandatory, dedicated; used for configuration, diagnostics, maintenance | Separate from ES | Can share with ES | ES and OS should not be shared | 
| BPCS | Can function as OS with software and permission changes | Mandatory for process operation | Often integrated with OS | ES may double as OS, but dedicated use recommended | 
4. Safety Considerations
- Risk of Misoperation: Operators may accidentally trigger engineering functions if stations are shared. 
- Cybersecurity & Access Control: Engineering stations require stricter permission and password protection than operator stations. 
- System Integrity: SIS must remain independent to ensure functional safety (IEC 61511 / IEC 61508). 
5. Practical Engineering Insights
- In real-world projects, BPCS engineering stations may sometimes double as operator stations, but SIS engineering stations are not recommended to share with operator stations due to safety-critical functions. 
- Cost-saving measures should not compromise system integrity; instead, ESR can be combined with ES to reduce hardware redundancy. 
- Best practice: dedicated SIS ES + shared ESR + separate OS, ensuring both safety and maintainability. 
6. Conclusion and Recommendations
- Answer: SIS operator stations and engineering stations must not be shared for safety reasons. 
- Compliance with GB/T, HG/T, and SH/T standards reinforces this principle. 
- Companies should adopt a dedicated-use policy for SIS engineering stations, while allowing limited sharing between ESR and ES. 
- During design and procurement, clearly specify SIS HMI requirements in the Instrumented Safety Lifecycle (IEC 61511) documentation. 
