Encyclopedia of Environmental Science and Engineering, Volume I and II

(Ben Green) #1

72 AIR POLLUTION SOURCES


pollutants (nitrogen dioxide, sulfur dioxide, hydrocarbons,
carbon monoxide, particulate matter and ozone) were identi-
fied in 1971 as the most “universal” within the United States
and the most significant pollutants contributing to the degra-
dation of the lower atmosphere or troposphere. Once national
air quality standards were established each state was given
the responsibility to make sure that emissions from sources of
air pollution in that state and neighboring states do not violate
these air quality standards by developing and implementing
creative plans for reducing source emissions. Recognizing
that hydrocarbons in the atmosphere did not, as a class of
pollutants, create a singular and internally consistent ambient
air quality problem, the class term was dropped and lead was
added as a new pollutant class.

Hazardous Pollutants These are air pollutants for which
no air quality standard has been established but nevertheless
cause or contribute to an increase in the mortality rate or
serious irreversible or incapacitating illness. The hazardous
pollutants listed by January 1988 are: asbestos, beryllium,
mercury, vinyl chloride, radionuclides, coke oven emissions,
benzene and inorganic arsenic.
In November of 1990, the U.S. Congress passed Clean
Air Act amendments (CAAA) into law which greatly expand
the list of regulated chemicals—Hazardous Air Pollutants
(HAPs)– to about 190. The EPA’s mandate is to promulgate
standards for the control of HAP emissions from about 100
source categories, employing maximum achievable control
technology (MACT). To date greater than 95% of MACT
standards have been published.
Source: http://www.epa.gov/ttn/atw/eparules.html

SOURCE CLASSIFICATIONS

The management and control of air pollution is generally
achieved through the regulation and control of air pollution
sources. For convenience, sources of air pollutants may be
classified according to the size or the nature of the pollutant
activity and source type characteristics.

Classification According to Magnitude

For convenience of analysis, air pollution sources are divided
into two classes (1) major sources and (2) minor sources.
Major sources are sources whose emissions quantities
are large enough to cause them to have a dominant role in the
pollution potential of an area. Prior to the 1990 CAAA, the
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency classified all sources
that emitted or had the potential for emitting 100 tons/year
of any single pollutant as a major source.
Today, the definition has been revised and made more
stringent. Depending upon an area’s air quality, emissions of
as little as 10 tons/year would constitute a major source.
Major sources are fixed (stationary) and commonly
occupy a limited area relative to a community. They include:


  1. Major industrial and manufacturing plants.

  2. Steam—Electric power plants.
    3. Industrial and Municipal Incinerators.
    4. Facilities that use solvents (surface coating,
    degreasing, dry cleaning, plastics manufacture,
    rubber manufacture) and lose petroleum products
    by evaporation.
    5. Facilities that lose petroleum product from stor-
    age and marketing (tank farms, service stations)
    operations.
    6. Motor vehicles, aircraft, ships and railroads in which
    the combustion of fuels for transportation occurs.
    7. Dumps, incinerators, etc. in which combustion of
    wastes occur.
    8. Facilities or units in which the decomposition of
    organic wastes occur.
    9. Sewage treatment plants.


Industrial plants constitute a highly varied and complex
chemical system, each industry presenting a unique air pollu-
tion problem. The characteristics of the emissions produced
are directly related to the peculiarities of the operation in
question, that is, on the raw materials, the fuels, the process
method, the efficiency of the chosen process, the method and
the type of air pollution control measures applied.
Minor sources are those which cannot be cataloged prac-
tically on a source-by-source basis. They may be stationary
or mobile and are commonly spread throughout the commu-
nity. These sources are associated with:


  1. Combustion of fuels in residences and commer-
    cial buildings and institutions for personal com-
    fort and convenience.

  2. Service industries such as laundries, dry-cleaning
    plants, repair services, etc.

  3. Animal processing.

  4. Handling and use of paints, lacquers and other
    surface coatings containing organic solvents.

  5. Food processing in restaurants, grills, coffee
    roasting, etc.


Classification According to Nature of Emissions

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency classifies sources
depending on both the quantitative and qualitative nature of
the emissions. The source categories are:


  1. NSPS (New Source Performance Standard) sources.
    These are sources for which national emissions
    standards have been established. All sources built
    subsequent to the date of establishment of these
    emissions standards must meet NSPS requirements.

  2. SIP (State Implementation Plan) sources. These
    are sources built prior to the establishment of the
    new source standards. These older SIP sources
    have no national emissions standards to follow per
    se, but rather their level of emissions is determined
    on a source-by-source basis and depend on the air
    quality of the area in which they are located. If the


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