1 / 21

Vilas Nitivattananon

Guidelines for Allocating Air Pollutio n Assimilative Capacity for Industrial Areas Located in Major Industrial Region. Vilas Nitivattananon. Introduction. Environmental requirements are important for utilization by entrepreneurs in planning for a project

elysia
Download Presentation

Vilas Nitivattananon

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Guidelines for Allocating Air Pollution Assimilative Capacityfor Industrial Areas Located in Major Industrial Region Vilas Nitivattananon

  2. Introduction • Environmental requirements are important for utilization by entrepreneurs in planning for a project • A study to develop a methodology in determining how to evaluate the capacity of industrial area to absorb air pollution from industries in the area • Why is assimilative capacity important? • Because it is desirable to control inefficient use of the capacity without destroying the environment

  3. Industrial Regional Management in Thailand • Industrial Estates – established under Industrial Estate Act (1979) • Other industrial areas - established under Factory Act (1992) need permit from Department of Industrial Works (DIW) • Industrial Zone (16) • Industrial Community (4) • Industrial Park (11)

  4. Applicable Guidelines of other Countries • Identification of buffer zone according to type of industrial area • Identification of emission rate using standard classified by type of land use • Identification of manufacturing conditions (in terms of emission sources and environmental aspects) to support the operation • Creating relationships between manufacturers and local people by cooperating with central and local governments

  5. Methodology • Ability of an area to absorb ever-increasing emissions for one specific pollutant without violating the ambient air standard for that pollutant is known as the assimilative capacity of the area. • To predict this capacity before it is exceeded is the primary goal of air pollution control management

  6. Methodology • Data review and collection • Emission source and receptor • Large industry – actual data of stack measurement or design values • Small polluting source – estimation by using emission factor • Monitoring data of ambient air quality • By private sector agencies • By governmental agencies • Meteorological data • most stations measure 3-hr surface air • few stations measure hourly

  7. Methodology • Modeling for existing ambient air quality assessment • Use ISC3 model of USEPA for assessment • Two series of modeling runs for each pollutant • Establish current ambient air quality by existing sources, to calculate existing source and baseline impacts • Additional impact from projected growth of the sources to be added to those (impacts) then compared with ambient standard • Violation of the standard would mean that the source would need to be evaluated and permitting stopped until further reductions in emissions could be instituted

  8. Methodology • Assimilative Capacity Evaluation • The different between the existing ambient air quality and the standard is the assimilative capacity • To protect the standard from being violated by sources that impact the same air quality monitoring stations but are not included in the algorithm, a buffer concentration is needed. This is some percent of the predicted assimilative capacity

  9. Assimilative Capacity

  10. Applications • TPI • Major pollutants are SO2, NOx, CO and TSP, through stacks • Results of modeling the existing and future emissions were obtained • Violation of PM-10 for 24-hr standard at some receptors but not at monitoring station • Violation of SO2 for hourly and annual standards at some receptors • Annual average level used to determine buffer zone

  11. 24-hr Average Concentration of PM-10 for TPI

  12. Annual Concentration of SO2 from the Model

  13. Applications • WCF • Major pollutants are particulate matter and hydrocarbon vapors, through ventilation outlets of factories • Results of modeling existing and future emissions were obtained • Violations of PM-10 for 24-hr and annual standards, but not significant from WCF sources

  14. 24-hr Average Concentration of PM-10 for WCF

  15. Summary of the Applications • Items for effective air quality program • A permit system identifying all pollution sources • An accurate emission inventory • An ambient air monitoring network • An accurate meteorological system • A set of air quality standards

  16. Institutional Arrangements • Organizational aspects • Permit institution – appointing Application Committee • Monitoring institution – committee of related agencies and communities • Inspection institution – according to current laws • Legal aspects • Decentralization Committee – allocating authority to local governments • Board of Investment – determining sizes and conditions of industries • Campaigns and public relation – for good cooperation

  17. Management Procedures • Identification of industrial types and responsibilities of project developer • Determination of pollutants emission level from sources within industrial zone • As part of permit approval procedure • Determination of buffer zone area • Using allowable concentration and long-term impact values • Public relations • Project information and operation observation

  18. Procedure and Conditions for Permit Approval

  19. Conclusions • The methodology based on existing and future ambient air quality in the area compared with standard • Limitations of available data, locations of monitoring, frequency and elevation of meteorological data, location and continuity of ambient air quality monitoring, and accuracy of emission data • Guidelines to mitigate environmental impact to acceptable level with required conditions including institutional and management aspects

  20. Recommendations • Proper data collection and restoration under present regulations are important • National industrial permitting agency should consider • Preparation of Permit Application Procedure to include FS and EIA • Preparation and utilization of the methodology using data from permitted industries and to allow proper allocation of assimilative capacity of the area

  21. Thank you!

More Related