Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

A History and Status of CEMS Applications in USEPA Regulations Dale Evarts US EPA December 16, 2002 Better Air Quality in Asian Cities 2002

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "A History and Status of CEMS Applications in USEPA Regulations Dale Evarts US EPA December 16, 2002 Better Air Quality in Asian Cities 2002"— Presentation transcript:

1 A History and Status of CEMS Applications in USEPA Regulations Dale Evarts US EPA December 16, 2002 Better Air Quality in Asian Cities 2002 Email: evarts.dale@epa.gov

2 Overview  Basic Terminology  Early Technical Hurdles  USEPA Regulatory History  Summary of CEMS Applications  Recent CEMS Developments

3 Basic Terminology  CEMS - Continuous Emission Monitoring System Total equipment required to:  Sample  Condition, if necessary  Analyze  Provide results in units of applicable standard Applies primarily to gaseous pollutants  SO2, NOx, CO, organic gases

4 Basic Terminology  COMS - Continuous Opacity Monitoring System Total equipment required to:  Determine opacity  Provide record in applicable averaging time Used as surrogate for monitoring particulate emissions control

5 Purposes for Using CEMS/COMS  Governmental Agencies Determine compliance status Evaluate effectiveness of controls  Industry Owners Determine need for corrective action Demonstrate compliance with standards Comply with monitoring requirements

6 Early Technical Hurdles  1960s - Few Regulatory Incentives State and local agencies direct most regulatory efforts  Rely on short-term manual methods  Want continuous records Little Federal focus  Technical Evaluations Ambient analyzers Process monitors New German and US technologies

7 US Environmental Protection Agency - 1970  1970 Clean Air Act Provided resources for regulatory development Focus on criteria pollutants  Gaseous: SO2, NOx, CO  Particulate Matter and Opacity Authorized applications of CEMS

8 USEPA Regulatory Development  Regulations for New Sources Technology-based limits Performance demonstrations  1971 - Fossil Fuel-Fired Electric Utilities SO2 and NOx standards CEMS and COMS required  O&M indicators  Installation delayed until performance specifications published

9 USEPA Regulatory Development  1975 - Gaseous CEMS Performance Specifications Criteria for evaluating CEMS performance  Repeatability (daily analytical drift)  Representativeness (siting requirements)  Reproducibility (relative accuracy - at least 9 comparison tests) Few design requirements (data collection frequency) On-site, case-by-case certification

10 USEPA Regulatory Development  1979 - CEMS Quality Assurance Procedures CEMS as O&M indicators (most)  Initial performance test  Daily drift check and correction Continuous compliance CEMS (few)  Initial performance test  Daily drift check and correction  Quarterly audits (cylinder gas)  Annual relative accuracy test

11 USEPA Regulatory Development  1990 Clean Air Act Amendments Acid rain reductions through market incentives  Limit SO2 and NOx on national basis  Use CEMS for annual mass emission rates  Compare emissions against allowances  Allow trading of credits on open market Market incentives for reducing ozone  Voluntary VOC and NOx reduction program  Requires VOC CEMS  Enacted by some local agencies

12 USEPA Regulatory Development  1990 Clean Air Act Amendments Hazardous air pollutant standards  Technology-based control limits  CEMS for VOC including FTIR Operating permits program  Monitoring required for every source  Increasing use of CEMS and COMS  Alternatives to CEMS sought

13 USEPA Regulatory Development  Source Types with CEMS Requirements Over 30 EPA regulations require CEMS/COMS:  Fossil fuel-fired electric and steam generators  Municipal waste incinerators  Acid plants  Steel and ferroalloy plants  Glass manufacturing plants  Refineries including Benzene operations  Cement plants  Copper and zinc smelters  Calciners and dryers  Magnetic tape production  Printing and publishing

14 Current and Future CEMS Development Activities  FTIR (Fourier Transform Infrared) CEMS Over 100 organic HAP spectra developed Performance specifications promulgated  Particulate Matter CEMS  Performance specifications proposed  Field tests underway  First source category - hazardous waste incinerators  Other CEMS development work Metals including Hg Cl and HCl

15 For More Information…  US EPA’s Emission Measurement Center http://www.epa.gov/ttn/emc/  US EPA’s Technology Transfer Network http://www.epa.gov/ttn/


Download ppt "A History and Status of CEMS Applications in USEPA Regulations Dale Evarts US EPA December 16, 2002 Better Air Quality in Asian Cities 2002"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google