Waste Minimization and Cleaner Production
Waste Minimization and Cleaner Production
Waste Minimization and Cleaner Production
Introduction
In the last 15 20 years there has been a growing world wide movement among government and industry to change the way industry interacts with the environment. The focus of this movement has been to reduce environmental impacts from industry through changes in industrial behavior and technology. All of them are based on what is commonly known as the precautionary Principle, also known by the old saying, An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. It is better, and usually much less expensive, to prevent environmental problems from happening than to fix them once they are created. And if we dont know what effects our actions will have on the environment, we should proceed with caution and try to minimize any potential effects that might occur.
Objective
The objective of this lecture is to briefly define the most common concepts used for industrial environmental management and to show their relationships. There are many actions industry can take, from the small to the very large, along a path or staircase that leads to increasingly broad impacts on and interactions with the environment and society. No industry, and no society, is really at the top of the staircase; the top, which is sustainable development, is, like quality, a goal which is always elusive and for which we should never stop striving.
Macro-Scale Concepts
Sustainable Development
Sustainable development is the development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs
It contains within it two key concepts: The concept of "needs", in particular the essential needs of the world's poor, to which overriding priority should be given; and
The idea of limitations imposed by the state of technology and social organization on the environment's ability to meet present and future needs.
Thus the goals of economic and social development must be defined in terms of sustainability in all countries -- developed or developing, market-oriented or centrally planned. Interpretations will vary, but must share certain general features and must flow from a consensus on the basic concept of sustainable development and on a broad strategic framework for achieving it.
Industrial Ecology
Industrial ecology is the means by which humanity can deliberately and rationally approach and maintain a desirable carrying capacity, given continued economic, cultural and technological evolution. The concept requires that an industrial system be viewed not in isolation from its surrounding systems, but in concert with them. It is a system view in which one seeks to optimize the total materials cycle from virgin material, to finished material, to product, to waste product, and to ultimate disposal. Factors to be optimized include resources, energy and capital
The emphasis is on forms of technology that work with natural systems, not against them...
Firm-Wide Concepts
These are concepts that affect the whole scope of the business enterprise, not just parts of it. They are essentially management philosophies and practices rather than technical practices and as such are best directed to the top levels of management.
Cleaner Production
Cleaner production means the continuous application of an integrated preventive environmental strategy to processes and products to reduce risks to humans and the environment.
For production processes, cleaner production includes conserving raw materials and energy, eliminating toxic raw materials, and reducing the quantity and toxicity of all emissions and wastes before they leave a process.
For products, the strategy focuses on reducing impacts along the entire life cycle of the product, from raw material extraction to the ultimate disposal of the product. Cleaner production is achieved by applying know-how, by improving technology, and by changing attitudes. The conceptual and procedural approach to production that demands that all phases of the life-cycle of products must be addressed with the objective of the prevention or minimization of short and long-term risks to humans and the environment.
Pollution Prevention
The USA Pollution Prevention Act of 1990 defines pollution prevention as a goal which is realized through source reduction.
The term ''source reduction'' [or pollution prevention] means any practice which Reduces the amount of any hazardous substance, pollutant, or contaminant entering any waste stream or otherwise released into the environment (including fugitive emissions) prior to recycling, treatment, or disposal Reduce the hazards to public health and the environment associated with the release of such substances, pollutants, or contaminants
The term includes equipment or technology modifications, process or procedure modifications, reformulation or redesign of products, substitution of raw materials, and improvements in housekeeping, maintenance, training, or inventory control.
Operational Concepts
Why Waste Minimization ? The generation of large volumes of waste correlates with the depletion of mostly non-renewable resources The energy requirement for the transformation and upgrading of wastes is in proportion to the quantities treated and rises exponentially with increasing dilution of the waste The increasing total costs for collection, segregation, intermediate storage, transport etc. Increased public and legislative pressures seem likely to do mitigated only by waste reduction/minimization
Since waste equals inefficiency, reducing waste increases efficiency and hence profitability
Waste Minimization
Waste Minimization (WM) is the reduction, to the extent feasible, of hazardous waste that is generated or subsequently treated, sorted or disposed. It includes any source reduction or recycling activity undertaken by a generator that results in either (1) The reduction of total volume or quantity of hazardous waste, or (2) The reduction of toxicity of hazardous waste, or both, so long as such reduction is consistent with the goal of minimizing recent and future threats to human health and the environment.
Clean Technology
The concept of zero emission processes has been espoused, such a target is thermodynamically impossible for a manufacturing processes, if such processes is regarded as an open system (a system that exchanges both material and energy with its surroundings).
Manipulating the system boundary in an attempt to produce a closed system (One that exchanges only energy and not materials with its surroundings) is analogous to the end-of-pipe solutions to material problems, which merely transfers matter from one medium to the other. Enlarging the systems boundary to incorporate the energy supply facility reveals that the enlarged system is in fact, open and depositing material into the surrounding.
Steps Necessary to conduct a Life Cycle Assessment An LCA has the following phases: Planning Screening Data collection (inventory) Data treatment (aggregation/classification) Evaluation
Planning
Planning deals with the following:
Goal of the project Who is going to use the result and what purpose Demands of different users Govt. policies Complexity of the project
Material inputs
1. Law of Thermodynamics: Conservation of energy In non-nuclear processes energy can neither be created nor destroyed. Energy can only be transformed from one form into another. The total amount of energy input to a nonnuclear transformation process is thus equal to the total amount of energy output. Conservation of mass The total mass of material inputs into a (non-nuclear) material transformation process is equal to the total mass of material outputs. Conservation of mass per chemical element The total mass of each chemical element is conserved during every (non-nuclear) material transformation process.
Transformation process Direct materials Ancillary materials Low-entropy energy Economic output Wastes & emissions High-entropy energy
Mass direct Mass ancillary Mass products Mass wastes Massemissions Energyinput Energyoutput Entropybefore Entropyafter
1. Law of TD 2. Law of TD
Solar Radiation Material Flows in the Economy (Teff ~ 6000K mainly UV, optical and IR) Needs & Wants Low-entropy Energy Services Products
high-entropy Energy
Materials
All materials that enter the economic system will eventually leave it Large amounts of low-entropy energy are needed to drive the economic system All economic activity is essentially dissipative in both materials and/or energy
Stock d Stock
t
Imports / Exports
Material
Product Assembly
Products
Extraction
Recycling
Reuse
Release
Domestic Environment
Recycling There are almost always some wastes created by production processes, so they need to be recycled as much as possible. Recycling can be broken down into closed-loop recycling (which is really just a production process extension rather than recycling), on-site recycling and re-use, off-site recycling, and reclamation.
Leachate collection and ewaporation pond at the common facility for waste management at Hyderabad (A.P.)
Pollution Control
Pollution control systems to reduce waste volume or toxicity are a necessity to manage wastes that cannot be prevented or exchanged. The relationship to the higher concepts is one of fast resort
Waste Disposal
Indian Scenario
HW generation in States - No uniform trend No. of Units generating Hazardous Wastes goneup Factors responsible: Changes in regulatory classification: o Change over from 18 waste categories with annual threshold limits to 36 processes and corresponding waste streams o Emphasis on waste minimization-zero discharge(Tanneries,textiles) o Fly-ash,gypsum sludge excluded o Units closed/New Units
Ethylene/Propylene
0.06
0.017
0.007 0.06 0.4 0.03 0.003 0.007
Xylene
Vinyl Chloride Monomer
Spent clay
Carbon Waste
0.50
0.02
4.0
0.014 4.0 0.08 0.02 2.4 60
ETP sludge
0.4
Phthalic Anhydride
Crude ester distillation residue Calcium fluoride sludge Spent alumina Spent catalyst Spent molecular sieve Spent carbon Oil soaked sand
Benzene
Metal recovery
Metal recovery
Metal recovery
Reuse for manufacturing useful items Recovery of acid Use as a fuel in the boiler Melting, extrusion and conversion to low-grade articles
Cumene
Cumene catalyst
Cumene bottoms
Acid recovery
Use as a fuel
2 1.8 1.6 1.4 1.2 1 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0 Incinerable Recyclable Land Disposable
1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
6 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13.
501 18 42 47 403
25 2984 309 116 454 133 3953 183
14.
Orissa
163
3,41,144
257
74,918
39 03 598
169 137 Nil
STATE-WISE COM PARATIVE HW GENERATING UNITS AS PER HWM RULES, 1989 & 2003
1000 900 800 700 600 500 400 300 200 100 0
889 753 575 423 271 309 257 116 47 183 133 163 207 57
Chandigarh
Haryana
Himachal
Kerala
Orissa
MP
STATE HW generating Units as per HWM RULES, 1989 HW generating Units as per HWM RULES, 2003
J& K
6052
3000 2000
1532 1589 454 700
1000 501
Karnataka
Maharashtra
Punjab
TN
Gujarat
State No. of HW units as per HWM Rules, 1989 No. of HW units as per 2003
UP
AP
Maharashtra
Gujarat
AP
Orissa
07 TSDF
Chattisgarh
Jharkhand
02 TSDF 01 TSDF
No. of sites Notified : 64 No. of sites Identified : 21
State
7.
8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13.
Gujarat
Haryana Himachal Karnataka Kerala Maharashtra MP
1207
15 92 84 1407 -
07
Nil Nil 02 Nil
16
01 02 01 02 Nil
22
01 02 02 01 06 03
14. 15.
16. 17. 18. 19.
Orissa Pondicherry
Punjab Rajasthan Tamilnadu Uttarpradesh
75 30
16 184 182 82
Nil Nil
Nil Nil Nil Nil
01 Nil
01 01 01 03
01 Nil
01 08 03 05
Incinerable waste Min. Scale of operation - about 1.0 ton per hour
Practical Difficulties: Delhi, Chandigarh, Daman, Goa
147
154
Gujarat
Maharashtra
Orissa
UP
AP
Import of specified categories permitted for Recycling using environmentally sound technology Recycling of hazardous waste is permitted for units registered with CPCB and having ESM Facilities.
Guidance Document prepared on ESM of following Recyclable wastes : Used Oil, Waste Oil, Non-ferrous metals wastes
Technology Up gradation: linked to scale of operation Large Gap between Demand and Supply w.r.t Lead , Copper and Zinc wastes.
E- Waste: Guidance document under preparation covering i ) Informal sector ii ) leaded glass iii) precious metals recovery etc.,
Thank You