As part of their production process, chemical plants carry out chemical reactions with high
temperature and pressure as operating conditions. They also handle substances which have a corrosive
nature. These conditions make their operating environments more severe than that of other industries.
Anti-corrosion measures are taken, but it is difficult to analyze the causes of the corrosion and devise
control measures since the substances which are being handled are intricately intertwined. Because of
these circumstances, a method is proposed which simultaneously measures the corrosion developing in
the facility by using a corrosion monitor and assesses the operational conditions. Thus, the causes of
the corrosion are identified by examining the correlation between these two factors. In this paper, a
method is proposed that measures the corrosive state of a chemical facility by a corrosion monitor and
then compares it with the operational conditions in order to determine the causes and establish control
measures. The electrochemical noise method is adopted for the corrosion monitor, since this method
has a high reaction speed as well as a good level of safety because the electric current does not need to
be externally applied. In addition, existing corrosion monitors were revised for on-site measurements by
examining their specifications, among other measures. An example case is introduced in which the
repair interval at a chemical facility was extended from two years to ten years or longer as a result of the
implemented control measures.