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Commission Implementing Decision (EU) 2016/902 of 30 May 2016 establishing best available techniques (BAT) conclusions, under Directive 2010/75/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council, for common waste water and waste gas treatment/management systems in the chemical sector (notified under document C(2016) 3127) (Text with EEA relevance)
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THE EUROPEAN COMMISSION,
Having regard to the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union,
Having regard to Directive 2010/75/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council of 24 November 2010 on industrial emissions (integrated pollution prevention and control)(1), and in particular Article 13(5) thereof,
Whereas:
(1) Best available techniques (BAT) conclusions are the reference for setting permit conditions for installations covered by Chapter II of Directive 2010/75/EU. The competent authorities should set emission limit values which ensure that, under normal operating conditions, emissions do not exceed the emission levels associated with the best available techniques as laid down in the BAT conclusions.
(2) The forum composed of representatives of Member States, the industries concerned and non-governmental organisations promoting environmental protection, established by Commission Decision of 16 May 2011(2), provided the Commission with its opinion on the proposed content of the BAT reference document on 24 September 2014. That opinion is publicly available.
(3) The BAT conclusions set out in the Annex to this Decision are the key element of that BAT reference document.
(4) The measures provided for in this Decision are in accordance with the opinion of the Committee established by Article 75(1) of Directive 2010/75/EU,
HAS ADOPTED THIS DECISION:
The best available techniques (BAT) conclusions for common waste water and waste gas treatment/management systems in the chemical sector, as set out in the Annex, are adopted.
Application and Interpretation
1.The BAT conclusions referred to in Article 1 apply in the United Kingdom.
2.In this Decision—
“BAT conclusions” has the meaning given in Article 2 of Decision 2012/134/EU (“Decision 2012/134/EU”) establishing the best available techniques (BAT) conclusions under Directive 2010/75/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council on industrial emissions for the manufacture of glass;
“best available techniques” has the meaning given in Article 2 of Decision 2012/134/EU.
3.For the purpose of this Decision a reference to a provision of a Directive is to be read as a reference to that provision in so far as it has been transposed into the law of any part of the United Kingdom.]
Textual Amendments
Done at Brussels, 30 May 2016.
For the Commission
Karmenu Vella
Member of the Commission
These BAT conclusions concern the activities specified in Sections 4 and 6.11 of Annex I to Directive 2010/75/EU, namely:
Section 4: Chemical industry;
Section 6.11: Independently operated treatment of waste water not covered by Council Directive 91/271/EEC and discharged by an installation undertaking activities covered under Section 4 of Annex I to Directive 2010/75/EU.
These BAT conclusions also cover the combined treatment of waste water from different origins if the main pollutant load originates from the activities covered under Section 4 of Annex I to Directive 2010/75/EU.
In particular, these BAT conclusions cover the following issues:
environmental management systems;
water saving;
waste water management, collection and treatment;
waste management;
treatment of waste water sludge with the exception of incineration;
waste gas management, collection and treatment;
flaring;
diffuse emissions of volatile organic compounds (VOC) to air;
odour emissions;
noise emissions.
Other BAT conclusions and reference documents which could be relevant for the activities covered by these BAT conclusions are the following:
Production of Chlor-alkali (CAK);
Manufacture of Large Volume Inorganic Chemicals — Ammonia, Acids and Fertilisers (LVIC-AAF);
Manufacture of Large Volume Inorganic Chemicals — Solids and Others Industry (LVIC-S);
Production of Speciality Inorganic Chemicals (SIC);
Large Volume Organic Chemical Industry (LVOC);
Manufacture of Organic Fine Chemicals (OFC);
Production of Polymers (POL);
Emissions from Storage (EFS);
Energy Efficiency (ENE);
Monitoring of Emissions to Air and Water from IED installations (ROM);
Industrial Cooling Systems (ICS);
Large Combustion Plants (LCP);
Waste Incineration (WI);
Waste Treatments Industries (WT);
Economics and Cross-media Effects (ECM).
The techniques listed and described in these BAT conclusions are neither prescriptive nor exhaustive. Other techniques may be used that ensure at least an equivalent level of environmental protection.
Unless otherwise stated, the BAT conclusions are generally applicable.
Emission levels associated with the best available techniques (BAT-AELs) for emissions to water given in these BAT conclusions refer to values of concentrations (mass of emitted substances per volume of water), expressed in μg/l or mg/l.
Unless otherwise stated, the BAT-AELs refer to flow-weighted yearly averages of 24-hour flow-proportional composite samples, taken with the minimum frequency set for the relevant parameter and under normal operating conditions. Time-proportional sampling can be used provided that sufficient flow stability is demonstrated.
The flow-weighted yearly average concentration of the parameter (cw ) is calculated using the following equation:
Where
=
number of measurements;
=
average concentration of the parameter during ith measurement;
=
average flow rate during ith measurement.
In the case of total organic carbon (TOC), chemical oxygen demand (COD), total nitrogen (TN) and total inorganic nitrogen (Ninorg), the calculation of the average abatement efficiency referred to in these BAT conclusions (see Table 1 and Table 2) is based on loads and includes both pretreatment (BAT 10 c) and final treatment (BAT 10 d) of waste water.
For the purposes of these BAT conclusions, the following definitions apply:
| Term used | Definition |
|---|---|
| New plant | A plant first permitted at the site of the installation following the publication of these BAT conclusions or a complete replacement of a plant following the publication of these BAT conclusions. |
| Existing plant | A plant that is not a new plant. |
| Biochemical oxygen demand (BOD5) | Amount of oxygen needed for the biochemical oxidation of the organic matter to carbon dioxide in 5 days. BOD is an indicator for the mass concentration of biodegradable organic compounds. |
| Chemical oxygen demand (COD) | Amount of oxygen needed for the total oxidation of the organic matter to carbon dioxide. COD is an indicator for the mass concentration of organic compounds. |
| Total organic carbon (TOC) | Total organic carbon, expressed as C, includes all organic compounds. |
| Total suspended solids (TSS) | Mass concentration of all suspended solids, measured via filtration through glass fibre filters and gravimetry. |
| Total nitrogen (TN) | Total nitrogen, expressed as N, includes free ammonia and ammonium (NH4-N), nitrites (NO2-N), nitrates (NO3-N) and organic nitrogen compounds. |
| Total inorganic nitrogen (Ninorg) | Total inorganic nitrogen, expressed as N, includes free ammonia and ammonium (NH4-N), nitrites (NO2-N) and nitrates (NO3-N). |
| Total phosphorus (TP) | Total phosphorus, expressed as P, includes all inorganic and organic phosphorus compounds, dissolved or bound to particles. |
| Adsorbable organically bound halogens (AOX) | Adsorbable organically bound halogens, expressed as Cl, include adsorbable organically bound chlorine, bromine and iodine. |
| Chromium (Cr) | Chromium, expressed as Cr, includes all inorganic and organic chromium compounds, dissolved or bound to particles. |
| Copper (Cu) | Copper, expressed as Cu, includes all inorganic and organic copper compounds, dissolved or bound to particles. |
| Nickel (Ni) | Nickel, expressed as Ni, includes all inorganic and organic nickel compounds, dissolved or bound to particles. |
| Zinc (Zn) | Zinc, expressed as Zn, includes all inorganic and organic zinc compounds, dissolved or bound to particles. |
| VOC | Volatile organic compounds as defined in Article 3(45) of Directive 2010/75/EU. |
| Diffuse VOC emissions | Non-channelled VOC emissions which can result from ‘area’ sources (e.g. tanks) or ‘point’ sources (e.g. pipe flanges). |
| Fugitive VOC emissions | Diffuse VOC emissions from ‘point’ sources. |
| Flaring | High-temperature oxidation to burn combustible compounds of waste gases from industrial operations with an open flame. Flaring is primarily used for burning off flammable gas for safety reasons or during non-routine operational conditions. |
commitment of the management, including senior management;
an environmental policy that includes the continuous improvement of the installation by the management;
planning and establishing the necessary procedures, objectives and targets, in conjunction with financial planning and investment;
implementation of procedures paying particular attention to:
structure and responsibility;
recruitment, training, awareness and competence;
communication;
employee involvement;
documentation;
effective process control;
maintenance programmes;
emergency preparedness and response;
safeguarding compliance with environmental legislation;
checking performance and taking corrective action, paying particular attention to:
monitoring and measurement (see also the Reference Report on Monitoring of emissions to Air and Water from IED installations — ROM);
corrective and preventive action;
maintenance of records;
independent (where practicable) internal or external auditing in order to determine whether or not the EMS conforms to planned arrangements and has been properly implemented and maintained;
review of the EMS and its continuing suitability, adequacy and effectiveness by senior management;
following the development of cleaner technologies;
consideration for the environmental impacts from the eventual decommissioning of the plant at the design stage of a new plant, and throughout its operating life;
application of sectoral benchmarking on a regular basis;
waste management plan (see BAT 13).
Specifically for chemical sector activities, BAT is to incorporate the following features in the EMS:
on multi-operator installations/sites, establishment of a convention that sets out the roles, responsibilities and coordination of operating procedures of each plant operator in order to enhance the cooperation between the various operators;
establishment of inventories of waste water and waste gas streams (see BAT 2).
In some cases, the following features are part of the EMS:
odour management plan (see BAT 20);
noise management plan (see BAT 22).
The scope (e.g. level of detail) and nature of the EMS (e.g. standardised or non-standardised) will generally be related to the nature, scale and complexity of the installation, and the range of environmental impacts it may have.
information about the chemical production processes, including:
chemical reaction equations, also showing side products;
simplified process flow sheets that show the origin of the emissions;
descriptions of process-integrated techniques and waste water/waste gas treatment at source including their performances;
information, as comprehensive as is reasonably possible, about the characteristics of the waste water streams, such as:
average values and variability of flow, pH, temperature, and conductivity;
average concentration and load values of relevant pollutants/parameters and their variability (e.g. COD/TOC, nitrogen species, phosphorus, metals, salts, specific organic compounds);
data on bioeliminability (e.g. BOD, BOD/COD ratio, Zahn-Wellens test, biological inhibition potential (e.g. nitrification));
information, as comprehensive as is reasonably possible, about the characteristics of the waste gas streams, such as:
average values and variability of flow and temperature;
average concentration and load values of relevant pollutants/parameters and their variability (e.g. VOC, CO, NOX, SOX, chlorine, hydrogen chloride);
flammability, lower and higher explosive limits, reactivity;
presence of other substances that may affect the waste gas treatment system or plant safety (e.g. oxygen, nitrogen, water vapour, dust).
| a Monitoring frequencies may be adapted if the data series clearly demonstrate a sufficient stability. | |||
| b The sampling point is located where the emission leaves the installation. | |||
| c TOC monitoring and COD monitoring are alternatives. TOC monitoring is the preferred option because it does not rely on the use of very toxic compounds. | |||
| d TN and Ninorg monitoring are alternatives. | |||
| e An appropriate combination of these methods can be used. | |||
| Substance/parameter | Standard(s) | Minimum monitoring frequencya b | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total organic carbon (TOC)c | EN 1484 | Daily | |
| Chemical oxygen demand (COD)c | No EN standard available | ||
| Total suspended solids (TSS) | EN 872 | ||
| Total nitrogen (TN)d | EN 12260 | ||
| Total inorganic nitrogen (Ninorg)d | Various EN standards available | ||
| Total phosphorus (TP) | Various EN standards available | ||
| Adsorbable organically bound halogens (AOX) | EN ISO 9562 | Monthly | |
| Metals | Cr | Various EN standards available | |
| Cu | |||
| Ni | |||
| Pb | |||
| Zn | |||
| Other metals, if relevant | |||
| Toxicitye | Fish eggs (Danio rerio) | EN ISO 15088 | To be decided based on a risk assessment, after an initial characterisation |
| Daphnia (Daphnia magna Straus) | EN ISO 6341 | ||
| Luminescent bacteria (Vibrio fischeri) | EN ISO 11348-1, EN ISO 11348-2 or EN ISO 11348-3 | ||
| Duckweed (Lemna minor) | EN ISO 20079 | ||
| Algae | EN ISO 8692, EN ISO 10253 or EN ISO 10710 | ||
sniffing methods (e.g. with portable instruments according to EN 15446) associated with correlation curves for key equipment;
optical gas imaging methods;
calculation of emissions based on emissions factors, periodically validated (e.g. once every two years) by measurements.
Where large amounts of VOCs are handled, the screening and quantification of emissions from the installation by periodic campaigns with optical absorption-based techniques, such as Differential absorption light detection and ranging (DIAL) or Solar occultation flux (SOF), is a useful complementary technique to the techniques I to III.
See Section 6.2.
Emissions can be monitored by dynamic olfactometry according to EN 13725. Emission monitoring may be complemented by measurement/estimation of odour exposure or estimation of odour impact.
The applicability is restricted to cases where odour nuisance can be expected or has been substantiated.
The segregation of uncontaminated rainwater may not be applicable in the case of existing waste water collection systems.
The interim storage of contaminated rainwater requires segregation, which may not be applicable in the case of existing waste water collection systems.
| a These techniques are further described and defined in other BAT conclusions for the chemical industry. | ||
| b See BAT 11. | ||
| c See BAT 12. | ||
| Technique | Description | |
|---|---|---|
| (a) | Process-integrated techniquesa | Techniques to prevent or reduce the generation of water pollutants. |
| (b) | Recovery of pollutants at sourcea | Techniques to recover pollutants prior to their discharge to the waste water collection system. |
| (c) | Waste water pretreatmenta b | Techniques to abate pollutants before the final waste water treatment. Pretreatment can be carried out at the source or in combined streams. |
| (d) | Final waste water treatmentc | Final waste water treatment by, for example, preliminary and primary treatment, biological treatment, nitrogen removal, phosphorus removal and/or final solids removal techniques before discharge to a receiving water body. |
The integrated waste water management and treatment strategy is based on the inventory of waste water streams (see BAT 2).
BAT-associated emission levels (BAT-AELs): see Section 3.4.
Waste water pretreatment is carried out as part of an integrated waste water management and treatment strategy (see BAT 10) and is generally necessary to:
protect the final waste water treatment plant (e.g. protection of a biological treatment plant against inhibitory or toxic compounds);
remove compounds that are insufficiently abated during final treatment (e.g. toxic compounds, poorly/non-biodegradable organic compounds, organic compounds that are present in high concentrations, or metals during biological treatment);
remove compounds that are otherwise stripped to air from the collection system or during final treatment (e.g. volatile halogenated organic compounds, benzene);
remove compounds that have other negative effects (e.g. corrosion of equipment; unwanted reaction with other substances; contamination of waste water sludge).
In general, pretreatment is carried out as close as possible to the source in order to avoid dilution, in particular for metals. Sometimes, waste water streams with appropriate characteristics can be segregated and collected in order to undergo a dedicated combined pretreatment.
Final waste water treatment is carried out as part of an integrated waste water management and treatment strategy (see BAT 10).
Appropriate final waste water treatment techniques, depending on the pollutant, include:
| a The descriptions of the techniques are given in Section 6.1. | |||
| Techniquea | Typical pollutants abated | Applicability | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Preliminary and primary treatment | |||
| (a) | Equalisation | All pollutants | Generally applicable. |
| (b) | Neutralisation | Acids, alkalis | |
| (c) | Physical separation, e.g. screens, sieves, grit separators, grease separators or primary settlement tanks | Suspended solids, oil/grease | |
| Biological treatment (secondary treatment), e.g. | |||
| (d) | Activated sludge process | Biodegradable organic compounds | Generally applicable. |
| (e) | Membrane bioreactor | ||
| Nitrogen removal | |||
| (f) | Nitrification/denitrification | Total nitrogen, ammonia | Nitrification may not be applicable in case of high chloride concentrations (i.e. around 10 g/l) and provided that the reduction of the chloride concentration prior to nitrification would not be justified by the environmental benefits. Not applicable when the final treatment does not include a biological treatment. |
| Phosphorus removal | |||
| (g) | Chemical precipitation | Phosphorus | Generally applicable. |
| Final solids removal | |||
| (h) | Coagulation and flocculation | Suspended solids | Generally applicable. |
| (i) | Sedimentation | ||
| (j) | Filtration (e.g. sand filtration, microfiltration, ultrafiltration) | ||
| (k) | Flotation | ||
The BAT-associated emission levels (BAT-AELs), for emissions to water given in Table 1, Table 2 and Table 3 apply to direct emissions to a receiving water body from:
the activities specified in Section 4 of Annex I to Directive 2010/75/EU;
independently operated waste water treatment plants specified in Section 6.11 of Annex I to Directive 2010/75/EU provided that the main pollutant load originates from activities specified in Section 4 of Annex I to Directive 2010/75/EU;
the combined treatment of waste water from different origins provided that the main pollutant load originates from activities specified in Section 4 of Annex I to Directive 2010/75/EU.
The BAT-AELs apply at the point where the emission leaves the installation.
BAT-AELs for direct emissions of TOC, COD and TSS to a receiving water body
| a No BAT-AEL applies for Biochemical oxygen demand (BOD). As an indication, the yearly average BOD5 level in the effluent from a biological waste water treatment plant will generally be ≤ 20 mg/l. | ||
| b Either the BAT-AEL for TOC or the BAT-AEL for COD applies. TOC is the preferred option because its monitoring does not rely on the use of very toxic compounds. | ||
| c The lower end of the range is typically achieved when few tributary waste water streams contain organic compounds and/or the waste water mostly contains easily biodegradable organic compounds. | ||
| d The upper end of the range may be up to 100 mg/l for TOC or up to 300 mg/l for COD, both as yearly averages, if both of the following conditions are fulfilled: — Condition A : Abatement efficiency ≥ 90 % as a yearly average (including both pretreatment and final treatment). — Condition B : If a biological treatment is used, at least one of the following criteria is met:
| ||
| e The upper end of the range may not apply if all of the following conditions are fulfilled: — Condition A : Abatement efficiency ≥ 95 % as a yearly average (including both pretreatment and final treatment). — Condition B : same as Condition B in footnote (4). — Condition C : The influent to the final waste water treatment shows the following characteristics: TOC > 2 g/l (or COD > 6 g/l) as a yearly average and a high proportion of refractory organic compounds. | ||
| f The upper end of the range may not apply when the main pollutant load originates from the production of methylcellulose. | ||
| g The lower end of the range is typically achieved when using filtration (e.g. sand filtration, microfiltration, ultrafiltration, membrane bioreactor), while the upper end of the range is typically achieved when using sedimentation only. | ||
| h This BAT-AEL may not apply when the main pollutant load originates from the production of soda ash via the Solvay process or from the production of titanium dioxide. | ||
| Parameter | BAT-AEL(yearly average) | Conditions |
|---|---|---|
| Total organic carbon (TOC)a b | 10-33 mg/lc d e f | The BAT-AEL applies if the emission exceeds 3,3 t/yr. |
| Chemical oxygen demand (COD)a b | 30-100 mg/lc d e f | The BAT-AEL applies if the emission exceeds 10 t/yr. |
| Total suspended solids (TSS) | 5,0-35 mg/lg h | The BAT-AEL applies if the emission exceeds 3,5 t/yr. |
BAT-AELs for direct emissions of nutrients to a receiving water body
| a Either the BAT-AEL for total nitrogen or the BAT-AEL for total inorganic nitrogen applies. | ||
| b The BAT-AELs for TN and Ninorg do not apply to installations without biological waste water treatment. The lower end of the range is typically achieved when the influent to the biological waste water treatment plant contains low levels of nitrogen and/or when nitrification/denitrification can be operated under optimum conditions. | ||
| c The upper end of the range may be higher and up to 40 mg/l for TN or 35 mg/l for Ninorg, both as yearly averages, if the abatement efficiency is ≥ 70 % as a yearly average (including both pretreatment and final treatment). | ||
| d The lower end of the range is typically achieved when phosphorus is added for the proper operation of the biological waste water treatment plant or when phosphorus mainly originates from heating or cooling systems. The upper end of the range is typically achieved when phosphorus-containing compounds are produced by the installation. | ||
| Parameter | BAT-AEL(yearly average) | Conditions |
|---|---|---|
| Total nitrogen (TN)a | 5,0-25 mg/lb c | The BAT-AEL applies if the emission exceeds 2,5 t/yr. |
| Total inorganic nitrogen (Ninorg)a | 5,0-20 mg/lb c | The BAT-AEL applies if the emission exceeds 2,0 t/yr. |
| Total phosphorus (TP) | 0,50-3,0 mg/ld | The BAT-AEL applies if the emission exceeds 300 kg/yr. |
BAT-AELs for direct emission of AOX and metals to a receiving water body
| a The lower end of the range is typically achieved when few halogenated organic compounds are used or produced by the installation. | ||
| b This BAT-AEL may not apply when the main pollutant load originates from the production of iodinated X-ray contrast agents due to the high refractory loads. This BAT-AEL may also not apply when the main pollutant load originates from the production of propylene oxide or epichlorohydrin via the chlorohydrin process due to the high loads. | ||
| c The lower end of the range is typically achieved when few of the corresponding metal (compounds) are used or produced by the installation. | ||
| d This BAT-AEL may not apply to inorganic effluents when the main pollutant load originates from the production of inorganic heavy metal compounds. | ||
| e This BAT-AEL may not apply when the main pollutant load originates from the processing of large volumes of solid inorganic raw materials that are contaminated with metals (e.g. soda ash from the Solvay process, titanium dioxide). | ||
| f This BAT-AEL may not apply when the main pollutant load originates from the production of chromium-organic compounds. | ||
| g This BAT-AEL may not apply when the main pollutant load originates from the production of copper-organic compounds or the production of vinyl chloride monomer/ethylene dichloride via the oxychlorination process. | ||
| h This BAT-AEL may not apply when the main pollutant load originates from the production of viscose fibres. | ||
| Parameter | BAT-AEL(yearly average) | Conditions |
|---|---|---|
| Adsorbable organically bound halogens (AOX) | 0,20-1,0 mg/la b | The BAT-AEL applies if the emission exceeds 100 kg/yr. |
| Chromium (expressed as Cr) | 5,0-25 μg/lc d e f | The BAT-AEL applies if the emission exceeds 2,5 kg/yr. |
| Copper (expressed as Cu) | 5,0-50 μg/lc d e g | The BAT-AEL applies if the emission exceeds 5,0 kg/yr. |
| Nickel (expressed as Ni) | 5,0-50 μg/lc d e | The BAT-AEL applies if the emission exceeds 5,0 kg/yr. |
| Zinc (expressed as Zn) | 20-300 μg/lc d e h | The BAT-AEL applies if the emission exceeds 30 kg/yr. |
The associated monitoring is in BAT 4.
| Technique | Description | Applicability | |
|---|---|---|---|
| (a) | Conditioning | Chemical conditioning (i.e. adding coagulants and/or flocculants) or thermal conditioning (i.e. heating) to improve the conditions during sludge thickening/dewatering. | Not applicable to inorganic sludges. The necessity for conditioning depends on the sludge properties and on the thickening/dewatering equipment used. |
| (b) | Thickening/dewatering | Thickening can be carried out by sedimentation, centrifugation, flotation, gravity belts, or rotary drums. Dewatering can be carried out by belt filter presses or plate filter presses. | Generally applicable. |
| (c) | Stabilisation | Sludge stabilisation includes chemical treatment, thermal treatment, aerobic digestion, or anaerobic digestion. | Not applicable to inorganic sludges. Not applicable for short-term handling before final treatment. |
| (d) | Drying | Sludge is dried by direct or indirect contact with a heat source. | Not applicable to cases where waste heat is not available or cannot be used. |
The applicability may be restricted by concerns on operability (access to equipment), safety (avoiding concentrations close to the lower explosive limit) and health (where operator access is required inside the enclosure).
The integrated waste gas management and treatment strategy is based on the inventory of waste gas streams (see BAT 2) giving priority to process-integrated techniques.
| Technique | Description | Applicability | |
|---|---|---|---|
| (a) | Correct plant design | This includes the provision of a gas recovery system with sufficient capacity and the use of high-integrity relief valves. | Generally applicable to new plants. Gas recovery systems may be retrofitted in existing plants. |
| (b) | Plant management | This includes balancing the fuel gas system and using advanced process control. | Generally applicable. |
| Technique | Description | Applicability | |
|---|---|---|---|
| (a) | Correct design of flaring devices | Optimisation of height, pressure, assistance by steam, air or gas, type of flare tips (either enclosed or shielded), etc., aimed to enable smokeless and reliable operation and to ensure the efficient combustion of excess gases. | Applicable to new flares. In existing plants, applicability may be restricted due to e.g. maintenance time availability during the turnaround of the plant. |
| (b) | Monitoring and recording as part of flare management | Continuous monitoring of the gas sent to flaring, measurements of gas flow and estimations of other parameters (e.g. composition, heat content, ratio of assistance, velocity, purge gas flow rate, pollutant emissions (e.g. NOX, CO, hydrocarbons, noise)). The recording of flaring events usually includes the estimated/measured flare gas composition, the estimated/measured flare gas quantity and the duration of operation. The recording allows for the quantification of emissions and the potential prevention of future flaring events. | Generally applicable. |
| Technique | Applicability | |
|---|---|---|
| Techniques related to plant design | ||
| (a) | Limit the number of potential emission sources | Applicability may be restricted in the case of existing plants due to operability requirements. |
| (b) | Maximise process-inherent containment features | |
| (c) | Select high-integrity equipment (see the description in Section 6.2) | |
| (d) | Facilitate maintenance activities by ensuring access to potentially leaky equipment | |
| Techniques related to plant/equipment construction, assembly and commissioning | ||
| (e) | Ensure well-defined and comprehensive procedures for plant/equipment construction and assembly. This includes using the designed gasket stress for flanged joint assembly (see the description in Section 6.2) | Generally applicable. |
| (f) | Ensure robust plant/equipment commissioning and handover procedures in line with the design requirements | |
| Techniques related to plant operation | ||
| (g) | Ensure good maintenance and timely replacement of equipment | Generally applicable. |
| (h) | Use a risk-based leak detection and repair (LDAR) programme (see the description in Section 6.2) | |
| (i) | As far as it is reasonable, prevent diffuse VOC emissions, collect them at source, and treat them | |
The associated monitoring is in BAT 5.
a protocol containing appropriate actions and timelines;
a protocol for conducting odour monitoring;
a protocol for response to identified odour incidents;
an odour prevention and reduction programme designed to identify the source(s); to measure/estimate odour exposure; to characterise the contributions of the sources; and to implement prevention and/or reduction measures.
The associated monitoring is in BAT 6.
The applicability is restricted to cases where odour nuisance can be expected or has been substantiated.
| Technique | Description | Applicability | |
|---|---|---|---|
| (a) | Minimise residence times | Minimise the residence time of waste water and sludge in collection and storage systems, in particular under anaerobic conditions. | Applicability may be restricted in the case of existing collection and storage systems. |
| (b) | Chemical treatment | Use chemicals to destroy or to reduce the formation of odorous compounds (e.g. oxidation or precipitation of hydrogen sulphide). | Generally applicable. |
| (c) | Optimise aerobic treatment | This can include: (i) controlling the oxygen content; (ii) frequent maintenance of the aeration system; (iii) use of pure oxygen; (iv) removal of scum in tanks. | Generally applicable. |
| (d) | Enclosure | Cover or enclose facilities for collecting and treating waste water and sludge to collect the odorous waste gas for further treatment. | Generally applicable. |
| (e) | End-of-pipe treatment | This can include: (i) biological treatment; (ii) thermal oxidation. | Biological treatment is only applicable to compounds that are easily soluble in water and readily bioeliminable. |
a protocol containing appropriate actions and timelines;
a protocol for conducting noise monitoring;
a protocol for response to identified noise incidents;
a noise prevention and reduction programme designed to identify the source(s), to measure/estimate noise exposure, to characterise the contributions of the sources and to implement prevention and/or reduction measures.
The applicability is restricted to cases where noise nuisance can be expected or has been substantiated.
| Technique | Description | Applicability | |
|---|---|---|---|
| (a) | Appropriate location of equipment and buildings | Increasing the distance between the emitter and the receiver and using buildings as noise screens. | For existing plants, the relocation of equipment may be restricted by a lack of space or excessive costs. |
| (b) | Operational measures | This includes: (i) improved inspection and maintenance of equipment; (ii) closing of doors and windows of enclosed areas, if possible; (iii) equipment operation by experienced staff; (iv) avoidance of noisy activities at night, if possible; (v) provisions for noise control during maintenance activities. | Generally applicable. |
| (c) | Low-noise equipment | This includes low-noise compressors, pumps and flares. | Applicable only when the equipment is new or replaced. |
| (d) | Noise-control equipment | This includes: (i) noise-reducers; (ii) equipment insulation; (iii) enclosure of noisy equipment; (iv) soundproofing of buildings. | Applicability may be restricted due to space requirements (for existing plants), health, and safety issues. |
| (e) | Noise abatement | Inserting obstacles between emitters and receivers (e.g. protection walls, embankments and buildings). | Applicable only to existing plants; since the design of new plants should make this technique unnecessary. For existing plants, the insertion of obstacles may be restricted by a lack of space. |
| Technique | Description |
|---|---|
| Activated sludge process | The biological oxidation of dissolved organic substances with oxygen using the metabolism of microorganisms. In the presence of dissolved oxygen (injected as air or pure oxygen) the organic components are mineralised into carbon dioxide and water or are transformed into other metabolites and biomass (i.e. the activated sludge). The microorganisms are maintained in suspension in the waste water and the whole mixture is mechanically aerated. The activated sludge mixture is sent to a separation facility from which the sludge is recycled to the aeration tank. |
| Nitrification/denitrification | A two-step process that is typically incorporated into biological waste water treatment plants. The first step is the aerobic nitrification where microorganisms oxidise ammonium (NH4 +) to the intermediate nitrite (NO2 –), which is then further oxidised to nitrate (NO3 –). In the subsequent anoxic denitrification step, microorganisms chemically reduce nitrate to nitrogen gas. |
| Chemical precipitation | The conversion of dissolved pollutants into an insoluble compound by adding chemical precipitants. The solid precipitates formed are subsequently separated by sedimentation, air flotation or filtration. If necessary, this may be followed by microfiltration or ultrafiltration. Multivalent metal ions (e.g. calcium, aluminium, iron) are used for phosphorus precipitation. |
| Coagulation and flocculation | Coagulation and flocculation are used to separate suspended solids from waste water and are often carried out in successive steps. Coagulation is carried out by adding coagulants with charges opposite to those of the suspended solids. Flocculation is carried out by adding polymers, so that collisions of microfloc particles cause them to bond to produce larger flocs. |
| Equalisation | Balancing of flows and pollutant loads at the inlet of the final waste water treatment by using central tanks. Equalisation may be decentralised or carried out using other management techniques. |
| Filtration | The separation of solids from waste water by passing them through a porous medium e.g. sand filtration, microfiltration and ultrafiltration. |
| Flotation | The separation of solid or liquid particles from waste water by attaching them to fine gas bubbles, usually air. The buoyant particles accumulate at the water surface and are collected with skimmers. |
| Membrane bioreactor | A combination of activated sludge treatment and membrane filtration. Two variants are used: a) an external recirculation loop between the activated sludge tank and the membrane module; and b) immersion of the membrane module into the aerated activated sludge tank, where the effluent is filtered through a hollow fibre membrane, the biomass remaining in the tank (this variant is less energy-consuming and results in more compact plants). |
| Neutralisation | The adjustment of the pH of waste water to a neutral level (approximately 7) by the addition of chemicals. Sodium hydroxide (NaOH) or calcium hydroxide (Ca(OH)2) is generally used to increase the pH; whereas, sulphuric acid (H2SO4), hydrochloric acid (HCl) or carbon dioxide (CO2) is generally used to decrease the pH. The precipitation of some substances may occur during neutralisation. |
| Sedimentation | The separation of suspended particles and suspended material by gravitational settling. |
| Technique | Description |
|---|---|
| High-integrity equipment | High-integrity equipment includes:
|
| Leak detection and repair (LDAR) programme | A structured approach to reduce fugitive VOC emissions by detection and subsequent repair or replacement of leaking components. Currently, sniffing (described by EN 15446) and optical gas imaging methods are available for the identification of leaks. Sniffing method : The first step is the detection using hand-held VOC analysers measuring the concentration adjacent to the equipment (e.g. by using flame ionisation or photo-ionisation). The second step consists of bagging the component to carry out a direct measurement at the source of emission. This second step is sometimes replaced by mathematical correlation curves derived from statistical results obtained from a large number of previous measurements made on similar components. Optical gas imaging methods : Optical imaging uses small lightweight hand-held cameras which enable the visualisation of gas leaks in real time, so that they appear as ‘smoke’ on a video recorder together with the normal image of the component concerned, to easily and rapidly locate significant VOC leaks. Active systems produce an image with a back-scattered infrared laser light reflected on the component and its surroundings. Passive systems are based on the natural infrared radiation of the equipment and its surroundings |
| Thermal oxidation | The oxidation of combustible gases and odorants in a waste gas stream by heating the mixture of contaminants with air or oxygen to above its auto-ignition point in a combustion chamber and maintaining it at a high temperature long enough to complete its combustion to carbon dioxide and water. Thermal oxidation is also referred to as ‘incineration’, ‘thermal incineration’ or ‘oxidative combustion’. |
| Using the designed gasket stress for flanged joint assembly | This includes: (i) obtaining a certified high quality gasket, e.g. according to EN 13555; (ii) calculating the highest possible bolt load, e.g. according to EN 1591-1; (iii) obtaining a qualified flange-assembling equipment; (iv) supervision of the bolt tightening by a qualified fitter. |
| VOC diffuse emissions monitoring | Sniffing and optical gas imaging methods are described under leak detection and repair programme. Full screening and quantification of emissions from the installation can be undertaken with an appropriate combination of complementary methods, e.g. Solar occultation flux (SOF) or Differential absorption LIDAR (DIAL) campaigns. These results can be used for trend evaluation in time, cross-checking and updating/validation of the on-going LDAR programme. Solar occultation flux (SOF) : The technique is based on the recording and spectrometric Fourier Transform analysis of a broadband infra-red or ultraviolet/visible sunlight spectra along a given geographical itinerary, crossing the wind direction and cutting through VOC plumes. Differential absorption LIDAR (DIAL) : This is a laser-based technique using differential absorption LIDAR (light detection and ranging), which is the optical analogue of radio wave-based RADAR. The technique relies on the back-scattering of laser beam pulses by atmospheric aerosols, and the analysis of spectral properties of the returned light collected with a telescope. |
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