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MAXIMUM ALLOWABLE CONCENTRATIONS THE PERCENTILE APPROACH
John Batty Environment Agency EU CMA Plenary Meeting Berlin 2 May 2007
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Introduction: How to use MACs
In Council Working Party discussions a range of views on the approach for short term standards have been expressed: Reference values only (not used in compliance) Mandatory values (used as component of classification) Absolute standard Percentile standards Whichever of these is selected one thing is clear: We should investigate immediately if the standard is exceeded…. Trigger further monitoring
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“Ideal” Environmental Quality Standards
To achieve consistency an EQS should include: A limit - e.g. a concentration of 0.07ug/litre A “Summary statistic” - how often the limit may be exceeded- e.g. 5% of the time The period over which compliance assessed The degree of statistical confidence required to demonstrate non-compliance The proportion of the time over which assessment takes place for which failure is acceptable e.g. 1 year in 10 calendar years
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Assessing compliance with Short Term Standards
There are 31,000,000 seconds in a year Yet we will only sample, at best, a few hundred of these The problem is that we do not know the quality for the rest of the time If a standard is to be considered an absolute value - it must NEVER be failed! Do we really mean that? Continuous monitoring provides the only reliable mechanism to demonstrate absolute compliance. UNAFFORDABLE ! In reality, we tolerate failure some of the time - when we are not monitoring. A percentile approach
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Breaches of Short Term Standards
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Effect of sampling rate on compliance
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Assessing compliance with Short Term Standards
We have seen that an absolute limit is a poor compliance measure unable to capture all events - risk of false negatives increased sampling frequency will show more failures while low rates of sampling favour the polluter under very frequent sampling, the standard will almost always be exceeded
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Effect of sampling rate on the severity of an absolute limit -1
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Effect of sampling rate on the severity of an absolute limit -2
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Proposal ... If we are to implement a mandatory short-term standard it should be expressed as a 95% percentile (i.e. we allow the concentration to be exceeded for 5% of the time)with a 50% level of confidence. A look-up table may be provided that sets out the number of failures permitted for a given sampling rate
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