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Course 3.1, Section V Decision Making on Pollution Module 3: Solid waste, Wastewater and Gaseous Emissions Treatment Systems Course 3.1 Environmental Science and Technology for Decision Makers Developed by AIT for Tongji University Recap from the Last Lecture: • Global Imbalances o o o Imbalanced Population Growth Wealth Imbalances Resource Consumption Imbalances • Consequences o Conflicts • Solutions o o o o o o o o o o o o Sustainable Cities Environmental Management Strategies for Cities Urban Environment Priority Environmental Issues Facing Cities Spatial Scale of Urban Environmental Problems Urbanization in Developing Countries Economic/Environmental Typology of Cities Critical Policy Linkages for Urban Environmental Management Key Policy Messages Possible Priority Actions Key Stakeholders Formulating Environmental Strategies for Cities Module 3: Solid waste, Wastewater and Gaseous Emissions Treatment Systems 2 Decision Making on Pollution Human Impacts on Ecosystems: Humans altered nature to meet needs & wants in nine major ways: • Destruction, fragmentation, and degrading of wildlife habitats: Reduced biodiversity • Simplification and homogenization of natural ecosystems by clearing land and planting a single species (monoculture): o o o Reduced numbers of species and interactions Opportunistic species and pest organisms costing time, energy, and money to control Invasion of pathogenic organisms another threat • Destruction of the earth's net primary productivity • Certain types of intervention: Unintentionally strengthened pest species and disease-causing bacteria • Some predator species deliberately eliminated from ranching areas • Alterations occurred due to introduction of non-native (invasive) or new species into an ecosystem Module 3: Solid waste, Wastewater and Gaseous Emissions Treatment Systems 4 Human Impacts on Ecosystems: Humans altered nature to meet needs & wants in nine major ways: • A number of renewable resources over-harvested: o o o overgrazing of grasslands over-hunting of wildlife and pumping out aquifers for freshwater faster than they can recharge • Some human activities interfere with normal chemical cycling and energy flows in ecosystems • Human-dominated ecosystems increasingly dependent on nonrenewable energy from fossil fuels that produce pollution and add greenhouse gases to the atmosphere Alteration of natural ecosystems needs to be slowed down, and we need to maintain a balance between simplified, human-altered ecosystems and more complex, natural ecosystems Module 3: Solid waste, Wastewater and Gaseous Emissions Treatment Systems 5 Learning from Nature • • • • • Dependence on Nature Interdependence Unpredictability Limited Resources Recycle Wastes Module 3: Solid waste, Wastewater and Gaseous Emissions Treatment Systems 6 Standards Key Strategy • • • • • • Long term planning Preventive control of environmental threats Monitoring of environmental quality Effective legislation & enforcement Provision of environmental infrastructure Use of environmental technology Module 3: Solid waste, Wastewater and Gaseous Emissions Treatment Systems 8 Land Use Planning Urban Redevelopment Authority • National Authority for land use planning • Prepares Concept Plan and Development Guide Plans (DGPs) • Land zoned for specific uses such as residential, commercial, industrial, etc. • Environmental controls factored in Concept Plan and DGPs o o o Protection of water catchment Provision of environmental infrastructure Compatibility of land use Module 3: Solid waste, Wastewater and Gaseous Emissions Treatment Systems 9 Preventive Controls • Judicious siting of industries • Development and building plan control • Inspection of completed premises Module 3: Solid waste, Wastewater and Gaseous Emissions Treatment Systems 10 Siting of Industries • Site industrial estates for clean and light industries close to residential areas • Site general and special industries farther away from residential areas Module 3: Solid waste, Wastewater and Gaseous Emissions Treatment Systems 11 Siting of Industries Evaluates pollution impact of new industries • do not pose unmanageable health and safety hazards and pollution • adopt clean technology to minimize use of hazardous chemicals and generation of wastes • comply with prescribed standards for emission/discharge of pollutants • wastes properly handled and disposed of • compatible with surrounding land use Module 3: Solid waste, Wastewater and Gaseous Emissions Treatment Systems 12 Building Plan Control • Check building plans of new developments • Check pollution control facilities of industrial developments • Check completed developments for compliance with pollution control requirements before occupation and use of developments Module 3: Solid waste, Wastewater and Gaseous Emissions Treatment Systems 13 Environmental Monitoring • Monitor ambient air quality and quality of inland and coastal waters • Detect trends so that control programmes formulated to prevent a problem from arising • Assess adequacy and effectiveness of control programmes • Keep abreast with monitoring technology Module 3: Solid waste, Wastewater and Gaseous Emissions Treatment Systems 14 Legislation & Policies • Set up effective legislation to control pollution • Carry out regular review of policies and standards with extensive consultations with public and industries Module 3: Solid waste, Wastewater and Gaseous Emissions Treatment Systems 15 Enforcement • Ensure air pollutant emission standards and trade effluent standards comply with legal standards • Control proper management and disposal of hazardous substances and toxic industrial wastes • Conduct regular checks on industries • Take legal action against recalcitrant polluters Module 3: Solid waste, Wastewater and Gaseous Emissions Treatment Systems 16 Sources of Environmental Law • • • • • • • Legislation (federal, state, local) Regulations (federal, state, local) Court decisions (interpreting statutes & regulations) Common law Constitutions (United States, state) International treaties Foreign regulations Module 3: Solid waste, Wastewater and Gaseous Emissions Treatment Systems 17 The Importance of State Laws • Some state laws implement federal programs o o Clean Water Act programs Clean Air Act programs • Some state laws independent from federal programs o o o Massachusetts: Toxic Waste Minimization Law California: Proposition 65 New Jersey: Property Transfer Environmental Law Module 3: Solid waste, Wastewater and Gaseous Emissions Treatment Systems 18 Targets of Environmental Laws Who or what gets regulated? • • • • • • Products Pollutants Industrial Facilities Government Agencies Individuals Land uses Module 3: Solid waste, Wastewater and Gaseous Emissions Treatment Systems 19 Regulatory Objectives What is the desirable level of protection? • Health or Environmental Based Standards o e.g., under Clean Air Act, ambient air quality standards must protect human health • Technology or Feasibility Based Standards o e.g., under Clean Air Act, emission limits for new sources determined by limits achievable using the best control technology demonstrated by that industry • Balancing Standards o e.g., Toxic Substances Control Act requires EPA to balance environmental and health effects of chemicals with economic consequences of regulation Module 3: Solid waste, Wastewater and Gaseous Emissions Treatment Systems 20 Regulatory Obligations How will regulations achieve their objectives? • • • • • • Design Standards Performance Standards Ambient or Harm Based Standards Product Bans or Use Limitations Planning or Analysis Requirements Information Disclosure Requirements Module 3: Solid waste, Wastewater and Gaseous Emissions Treatment Systems 21 Translating Statutes into Regulations Federal Environmental Statutes: Enacted through the legislative process. Provide the regulatory framework. Authorize the agencies to adopt regulations. Reported in the United States Code. Federal Environmental Regulations: Adopted by federal agencies. Set forth implementation details, such as emission standards or procedures for submitting permit applications. Reported in the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) Module 3: Solid waste, Wastewater and Gaseous Emissions Treatment Systems 22 Sources of Information to Help Identify Regulatory Obligations • Federal or State Agencies o e.g., USEPA or Michigan Department of Quality • Internal Corporate Resources o e.g., environmental health and safety department or “in-house” legal counsel • Federal Register o contains proposed and adopted regulations, available at http://www.nara.gov/fedreg Module 3: Solid waste, Wastewater and Gaseous Emissions Treatment Systems 23 Environmental Laws Federal Statutes International Treaties Common Law Module 3: Solid waste, Wastewater and Gaseous Emissions Treatment Systems 24 Federal Environmental Statutes Clean Air Act Clean Water Act Pollution Prevention Act Toxic Substances Control Act National Environmental Policy Act Occupational Safety and Health Act Resource Conservation and Recovery Act Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act Emergency Planning and Community-Right-to-Know Act Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act Module 3: Solid waste, Wastewater and Gaseous Emissions Treatment Systems 25 Clean Air Act • What is the purpose? o To control air pollution by instituting point source controls and establishing maximum pollutant levels for the ambient air. • What is the scope? o The main focus is stationary sources of air pollution but the Act also provides some regulation for mobile sources. • Who implements the program? o o o The EPA must establish national ambient air quality standards (NAAQS) for criteria pollutants: total suspended particulates, sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxides, carbon monoxide, ozone, and lead. Each state is required to determine how to attain and maintain NAAQS by developing a State Implementation Plan (SIP). For state areas that exceed the NAAQS, the states must implement a program to prevent the significant deterioration of air quality in those areas that exceed the NAAQS. Module 3: Solid waste, Wastewater and Gaseous Emissions Treatment Systems 26 Clean Water Act • What is the purpose? o The stated objective of the Clean Water Act is to restore and maintain the chemical, physical, and biological integrity of the Nation’s waters. • What is the scope? o All point sources that discharge any pollutants into the waters of the United States must first obtain a permit under the Act. • Who implements the program? o o the EPA With EPA approval, states can issue National Pollution Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permits within the state. The EPA can revoke a state’s permitting authority if the program is not as stringent as the federal program. Module 3: Solid waste, Wastewater and Gaseous Emissions Treatment Systems 27 Resource Conservation and Recovery Act • What is the purpose? o to provide a “cradle to grave” framework for managing solid and hazardous waste from generation to final disposal • Who must comply? o Any party that generates, transports, stores or disposes of solid and hazardous waste. • Who implements the program? o o the EPA States: with EPA approval, some states implement and manage solid and hazardous waste management programs in lieu of the federal RCRA program Module 3: Solid waste, Wastewater and Gaseous Emissions Treatment Systems 28 Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act • What is the purpose? o To provide a mechanism to clean up contaminated sites and hold potentially responsible parties accountable for clean up costs. • What is the scope? o Parties may be liable for cleanup costs if they contributed any amount of hazardous substance to a contaminated site, e.g. anyone who disposed of hazardous substances found at the site. • How is the Act enforced? o o The EPA can conduct a short-term removal action at any site requiring emergency action or conduct a long-term remedial action at any site on the National Priorities List. The EPA can compel private parties to cleanup a site when release or threatened release of hazardous substances present an imminent endangerment to the public health or welfare of the environment. Module 3: Solid waste, Wastewater and Gaseous Emissions Treatment Systems 29 Toxic Substances Control Act • What is the purpose? o To regulate toxic chemicals and mixtures that present an “unreasonable risk of injury to health or the environment” • What is the scope? o TSCA places the burden on manufacturers to supply the EPA with information on environmental and health effects of chemical substances and mixtures. The EPA then has broad power to regulate the manufacture, use, distribution, and disposal of chemical substances and mixtures. However, the EPA must balance the economic and social benefits of a chemical against the risks when setting forth regulations. • Who implements the program? o o the EPA Unlike other programs, states do not implement TSCA Module 3: Solid waste, Wastewater and Gaseous Emissions Treatment Systems 30 Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act • What is the purpose? o To protect the public health and environment against the misuse of pesticides. • What is the scope? o All pesticide manufacturers must submit data regarding the safety and efficacy of their pesticides. • Who implements the program? o o The EPA Where a state has a federally approved pesticide program, the state is the primary enforcement authority. Module 3: Solid waste, Wastewater and Gaseous Emissions Treatment Systems 31 National Environmental Policy Act • What is the purpose? o Section 2 of NEPA declares that the purpose of the Act is to promote efforts which will prevent or eliminate damage to the environment and biosphere and stimulate the health and welfare of man; and to enrich the understanding of the ecological systems and natural resources important to the Nation. • What is the scope? o NEPA applies to all major federal actions -- therefore it affects all federal agencies. • Who implements the Act? o o The Council on Environmental Quality, established under Title II, as an Executive Office of the President to implement NEPA States do not implement NEPA Module 3: Solid waste, Wastewater and Gaseous Emissions Treatment Systems 32 Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act • What is the purpose? o o To create emergency response plans to prepare for accidental chemical releases. To create an information database so that the public can know what types of chemical are being released by manufacturing facilities in their communities. • What is the scope? o Any facility that produces, uses, or stores any of the substances listed on the EPA’s List of Extremely Hazardous Substances. • Who implements the Act? o o The State Emergency Response Commission, which are created in each state under the Act, implement the emergency planning requirements. The EPA receives submissions of the Toxic Release Inventory (TRI) reports with the authority to inspect and verify the reports. Module 3: Solid waste, Wastewater and Gaseous Emissions Treatment Systems 33 Occupational Safety and Health Act • What is the purpose? o To ensure that “no employee will suffer material impairment of health or functional capacity” from a lifetime of occupational exposure. • What is the scope of the Act? o The Act extends to all employers and their employees in all fifty states, except workplaces with fewer than ten workers and federal or state employees. • Who implements the Act? o The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) Module 3: Solid waste, Wastewater and Gaseous Emissions Treatment Systems 34 Pollution Prevention Act • What is the purpose? o o Establishes Pollution Prevention as the nation’s preferred pollution control strategy, as opposed to end of pipe pollution control. Pollution Prevention is the attempt to reduce the amount of generated waste through more efficient use of resources at the input and production levels. • What is the scope of the Act? o Moves facilities beyond compliance on a voluntary basis • Who implements the Act? o The EPA Module 3: Solid waste, Wastewater and Gaseous Emissions Treatment Systems 35 Common Law vs. Statutory Law Common Law • Rules are created by judges through court decisions. • Because common law is continuously shaped by court decisions, common law can vary between different jurisdictions. • Liabilities stem from personal injuries or property damage caused by environmental conditions. Statutory Law • Rules are created through legislative procedures. • Statutes provide uniform, national frameworks for pollution control, e.g. Clean Water Act. • Liabilities stem from national pollution control policies. Module 3: Solid waste, Wastewater and Gaseous Emissions Treatment Systems 36 International Treaties: Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement of 1978 • Agreement between the U.S. and Canada • Created an international joint commission to draft regulations and make recommendations on all actions affecting the Great Lakes, their tributaries, and adjacent riparian areas Module 3: Solid waste, Wastewater and Gaseous Emissions Treatment Systems 37 International Treaties: The Kyoto Protocol • Addresses greenhouse gas emissions • Signed by former President Clinton in 1998, but not yet submitted to Senate for ratification • If ratified, U.S. would have to: o o reduce greenhouse gas emissions (CO2, NOx, and CH4) 7% below 1990 levels reduce HCFC, CFC and HFC 7% below 1995 levels over the period from 2008 to 2012 • Protocol also contains provisions whereby credits for greenhouse gas emissions be earned by carbon reducing activities, e.g. reforestation Module 3: Solid waste, Wastewater and Gaseous Emissions Treatment Systems 38 International Treaties: The Montreal Protocol • Addresses ozone depletion • 1987 Protocol Requirements: o o 50% reduction in 1986 CFC productions levels by 1999 Freeze on 1986 halon production and consumption levels • London Amendment of 1990: o Phase out CFCs entirely by 2000 • Amendments of 1992: o Accelerated timetable for reducing ozone depleting substances • Implementation in U.S. through Title VI of Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990: o o Production of all Class I substances (CFCs, halons, carbon tetrachloride, and methyl chloroform) phased out by 2000 Production of Class II substances (HCFCs) phased out by 2030 Module 3: Solid waste, Wastewater and Gaseous Emissions Treatment Systems 39 International Treaties: International Organization for Standards • International Organization for Standards (ISO) is a private sector nongovernmental organization founded in Switzerland in 1947 • Promotes international harmonization and development of manufacturing, product, and communications standards. • ISO 14000 series – environmental management standards: o o o Voluntary Standards and guidance documents on environmental management, eco-labeling, auditing, life-cycle assessment, and environmental performance evaluation. Calls for environmental policies that represent a commitment to environmental compliance and pollution prevention Module 3: Solid waste, Wastewater and Gaseous Emissions Treatment Systems 40 Definitions • Ambient Standards: o Requirements that specify maximum amount of pollutant(s) a building, work area or a site may be allowed to have in its surroundings • Effluent Standards: o Restriction imposed by an environment-related government agency on quantities, rates and concentrations of materials in waste water discharges • Emission Standards: o o Legal requirements governing air pollutants released into the atmosphere Set of quantitative limits on the permissible amount of specific air pollutants that may be released from specific sources over specific timeframes Module 3: Solid waste, Wastewater and Gaseous Emissions Treatment Systems 41 Water Quality and Treatment Standards • Technological Standards: o o Specify that treatment must include certain technologies or processes Expressed without identifying either water quality of effluent to be produced or exact details of technical process to be used • Effluent Standards: o o Specifications of physical, biological and chemical quality of effluent to be produced by treatment Uniform Effluent Standards: o Most Common Target concentrations of pollutants in effluent standardized across entire country or state Has advantage of simplicity, ease of implementation and appearance of “fairness” to all who have to meet them Unfortunately, usually inefficient, leading to excessive treatment in some case and insufficient treatment in others Ambient or Stream Quality Standards: By contrast, seek to fix standards for quality of water body receiving the waste Where receiving water used for drinking, bathing, fishing or reuse, standards for receiving water relatively high However, if natural processes of dilution and biodegradation improve the quality sufficiently before significant use of the resource, then stream standards be lower Module 3: Solid waste, Wastewater and Gaseous Emissions Treatment Systems 42 Water Quality and Treatment Standards • Ambient or Stream Quality Standards: o o o o o o o Once desired stream quality know, environmental scientist then “work backwards” to determine the maximum concentrations of each pollutant to be allowed in each wastewater discharge These concentrations become the standards for that discharge Under this arrangement. Different discharges in different environmental contexts must meet different effluent standards Ambient standards advantageous to ensure efficient allocation of resources to address local environmental conditions This approach requires considerable planning and environmental science – major disadvantage Open to political and legal challenges, as different actors ask “Why should they be allowed to discharge more pollution than me?” If developed soundly and enforced, ambient standards offer a far more efficient and cost-effective approach to improve the environment Module 3: Solid waste, Wastewater and Gaseous Emissions Treatment Systems 43 Thank You Module 3: Solid waste, Wastewater and Gaseous Emissions Treatment Systems 44