emissions to air from landfill and landfill gas engines

21
Emissions to Air from Landfill and Landfill Gas Engines Alan Rosevear Environment Agency Science Group

Upload: others

Post on 26-Mar-2022

8 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Emissions to Air from Landfill and Landfill Gas Engines

Emissions to Air from Landfill and Landfill Gas EnginesAlan RosevearEnvironment Agency Science Group

Page 2: Emissions to Air from Landfill and Landfill Gas Engines

Typical Landfill Operation

Page 3: Emissions to Air from Landfill and Landfill Gas Engines

Post Landfill Directive� Required to Control, Collect and Treat landfill

gas. Where possible utilise the gas, the remainder to be flared.

� A step change in management of landfill gas at permitted sites.

� Combustion of methane reduces greenhouse gas potential

� Renewable fuels obligation (10% electricity from renewables such as landfill gas by 2010)

Page 4: Emissions to Air from Landfill and Landfill Gas Engines

The Regulatory Framework

� Old Legacy sites - pre CoPA with no control, little monitoring but probably low gas production. Now Contaminated Land under Part IIA

� Old Waste Management Licensed sites - some control and monitoring - significant gas

� Sites permitted under PPC - well engineered, contained, gas utilised

Page 5: Emissions to Air from Landfill and Landfill Gas Engines

The Holistic View

Source - Pathway - ReceptorGASSIM provides a conceptual model

Page 6: Emissions to Air from Landfill and Landfill Gas Engines

Raw Gas Emission Rates

� Each tonne of waste will generate 6 cubic metres of landfill gas a year over first 10 years

� A modern permitted site contains several million tonnes of waste

� Passive venting no longer acceptable� Gas collection efficiency 85% on capped/controlled areas

Page 7: Emissions to Air from Landfill and Landfill Gas Engines

Fugitive emissions of raw gas� the capped surface� lateral migration� leaks & failures in collection system� active tipping area� uncapped active cells

Page 8: Emissions to Air from Landfill and Landfill Gas Engines

Surface Emissions Monitoring1. identify high permeability area2. Rectify faults3. Quantify with an array of flux boxes

Page 9: Emissions to Air from Landfill and Landfill Gas Engines

Standards for Emission of Raw Gas� Surface emissions of raw gas - from

permanently capped area 10-3 mg methane per m2 per sec.

� Only achieved with a well engineered cap and good gas management.

Page 10: Emissions to Air from Landfill and Landfill Gas Engines

Raw Gas� Methane� Carbon dioxide� Trace Components (less than 1% in total)� Air (oxygen depleted)

� Global warming potential and calorific value from methane (ca 60% v/v in source gas)

� Odour and potential health impact from a few of the 550 trace components

Page 11: Emissions to Air from Landfill and Landfill Gas Engines

Median and mean concns of trace components - recent typical sites

0.1

1

10

100

1000H

ydro

ge

n S

ulp

hid

e

Ch

loro

eth

en

e

m-X

yle

ne

+ p

-Xyl

en

e

Ben

zen

e

Ca

rbo

n D

isu

lfid

e

Tolu

en

e

Eth

ylBe

nze

ne

Lim

on

en

e

Eth

yl B

uty

rate

1-P

en

ten

e

p-E

thyl

Tolu

en

ec

is-1

,2-

Dic

hlo

roe

the

ne

Tetr

ac

hlo

roe

the

ne

Tric

hlo

roe

the

ne

Fura

n

Dim

eth

yl s

ulfi

de

1,1-

Dic

hlo

roe

the

ne

1,1-

Dic

hlo

roe

tha

ne

tra

ns-

1,2-

Dic

hlo

roe

the

ne

Dim

eth

yl d

isu

lfid

e

Buty

ric A

cid

Ch

loro

eth

an

e

1,2-

Dic

hlo

roe

tha

ne

1-P

rop

an

eth

iol

Eth

an

eth

iol

Tetr

ac

hlo

rom

eth

an

e

Die

thyl

sulfi

de

1-Bu

tan

eth

iol

2-Bu

toxy

Eth

an

ol

Me

tha

ne

thio

l

1,3-

Buta

die

ne

Con

cent

ratio

n (m

g.m

-3)

Mean ConcentrationMedian Concentration

Page 12: Emissions to Air from Landfill and Landfill Gas Engines

Potential impacts of raw gas� Acute - explosive risk from methane

accumulation in voids (lateral migration)� Acute - odour due to trace components in the

gas; principally sulphur compounds� Global - methane as greenhouse gas� Chronic - potential health impact from trace

components such as chlorethene, carbon disulphide and benzene.

Page 13: Emissions to Air from Landfill and Landfill Gas Engines

Combustion Products - Engines & Flares� Carbon dioxide and water diluted with excess air� Products of incomplete combustion of methane

(Carbon monoxide, unburnt methane, VOCs such as formaldehyde, dioxins?)

� Products from combustion of traces in raw gas (sulphur dioxide, hydrogen chloride, hydrogen fluoride)

� Products of high temperature (nitrogen oxides)

Impact is on local air quality

Page 14: Emissions to Air from Landfill and Landfill Gas Engines

Gas Utilisation in Engines

Gas use may be in an adjacent compound and managed separately from the landfill

Page 15: Emissions to Air from Landfill and Landfill Gas Engines

Central facility - variation in scale� Single Unit with balancing flare� Multiple units with single, high stack

Page 16: Emissions to Air from Landfill and Landfill Gas Engines

Enclosed Landfill Gas Flares

Page 17: Emissions to Air from Landfill and Landfill Gas Engines

Stack Emissions Monitoring

Page 18: Emissions to Air from Landfill and Landfill Gas Engines

Principal Standards Emissions to be Assessed for ComplianceEmission Engine

(mg/Nm3)TypicalUncertainty

Flare(mg/Nm3)

TypicalUncertainty

NOx 650 30% 150 30%

CO 1500 20% 100 20%

Total VOC 1750 40% 10 40%

NMVOC 150 40% 5 40%

Page 19: Emissions to Air from Landfill and Landfill Gas Engines

Impact of Combustion on Local Air Quality� Landfills often near major transport corridors � NOx background already close to annual

mean AQ objective of 40 micrograms/ m3

� Flares and engines are point sources with relatively low velocity at small height (low plume rise), close to site boundary

� Compliant engines and flares must also take account of local air quality

Page 20: Emissions to Air from Landfill and Landfill Gas Engines

Air Quality Objectives� NOx from Combustion - additional contribution from

two compliant engines may breach air quality objectives at nearest receptor (2005) and even more likely at site boundary (2010)

less significant - site specific� Benzene in Raw Gas - surface emission has potential

to breach air quality objectives at nearest receptor (2005) and site boundary (2010)

� SO2 from Combustion - small potential on some sites for breach at nearest receptor

Page 21: Emissions to Air from Landfill and Landfill Gas Engines

In ConclusionLandfill Gas emission from permitted landfills is

controlled and relatively low; less control at older landfills.

� Raw Gas: global warming potential of methane; risk of explosion from gas migration and risk of odour or health impact from aerial emission of trace components.

� Combustion Products: engines could impact local air quality, particularly for NOx.