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KKA 4106 Toxic and Hazardous Waste Engineering Lecture 2

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Title: KKA 4106 Toxic and Hazardous Waste Engineering Lecture 2


1
KKA 4106 Toxic and Hazardous Waste
EngineeringLecture 2
  • Dr Robiah Yunus
  • Dept. of Chemical and Environmental Eng.
  • Universiti Putra Malaysia

2
REGULATORY PROCESS
  • Regulations differ from one country to another
  • US legislative control well-established
  • Environmental Law
  • Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA)
  • Federal Hazardous Waste Regulations
  • Other Federal Statues
  • Malaysian legislation
  • Environmental Quality Act 1974
  • Environmental Quality (Dioxin and Furan)
    Regulations 2004
  • Other legislations

3
US LEGISLATIONS
4
1. ENVIRONMENTAL LAW
  • US Constitution highest law of the land
  • Treaties once ratified by the Congress,
    international treaties are 2nd in priority.
  • Federal Statutes
  • Foundation of all major environmental programs.
  • When federal becomes a law, assigned a Public Law
    number PL. Attached to number Congress passed,
    then specific number identifies the law (e.g.
    RCRA passed in 1976 by the 94th Congress
    PL94-580).
  • Statutory law put together in listing USC (United
    States Code), amended regularly.

5
ENVIRONMENTAL LAW
  • Federal Regulations
  • Example technical complexity issue congress
    drafts the law and leave to administrative
    agencies (e.g. US EPA) to provide detail law.
  • State Statues and Regulations
  • Most states follow procedures parallel to federal
    system, referred to State-Specific Procedures.
  • Local (City/County) Laws, Regulations and
    Ordinances
  • Significance of local laws and regulations varies
    greatly from one jurisdiction to another.
  • Case Law
  • In US, only legislative bodies are empowered to
    enact laws.
  • For particular cases, a dispute may arise
    concerning application and the court makes a
    judgment. These collective court decisions called
    Case Law

6
ENVIRONMENTAL LAW - REGULATIONS
  • Environmental law often set goal and leave to EPA
    to provide technical details.
  • Then, published in Federal Register
  • Federal Rules and Regulations published are
    codified in Code of Federal Regulations (CFR).

7
2. Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA)
  • General
  • First time law for management of hazardous waste
    in US, in 1976.
  • Set up a separate Office of Solid Waste within
    EPA.
  • Comprehensive including identifying wastes to a
    manifest system.
  • Generators are held responsible for hazardous
    waste from cradle-to-grave.

8
Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA)
  • Hazardous and Solid Waste Amendments of 1984
    (HSWA)
  • Amendment to RCRA. Very detailed legislation.
  • Prohibited disposal of bulk hazardous waste to
    landfills or surface impoundments.
  • Landfills must be state-of-the-art facilities.
  • Permitting HWSA included many provisions for
    permitting of treatment, storage and disposal
    facilities (TSDFs).
  • In 1988, EPA proposed extensive requirements for
    Correction Action at Solid Waste Management Units
    (SWMUs).

9
3. FEDERAL HAZARDOUS WASTE REGULATIONS
  • General
  • Based on 500 pages of hazardous waste
    regulations published in Federal Register on May
    19, 1980.
  • A waste considered hazardous waste if meets one
    or more of the following
  • specially listed in EPA regulations
  • tested and is ignitable, corrosive, reactive, or
    toxic
  • declared hazardous by the generator.

10
FEDERAL HAZARDOUS WASTE REGULATIONS
  • CERCLA (Comprehensive Environmental Response,
    Compensation, and Liability Act), 1980.
  • Identify and cleanup existing hazardous waste
    sites
  • Litigate after cleanup to recover costs

11
FEDERAL HAZARDOUS WASTE REGULATIONS
  • SARA (Superfund, Superfund Amendments and
    Reauthorization Act), 1986
  • 1986 complete rewrite of CERCLA and 4x as long.
  • Community right-to-know provisions that require
    industries to plan for emergencies and inform
    public on hazardous waste used. In part a
    response to Bhopal Tragedy.
  • Superfund process
  • Eligible sites are listed on the National
    Priority List.

12
FEDERAL HAZARDOUS WASTE REGULATIONS
  • SARA (Superfund, Superfund Amendments and
    Reauthorization Act), 1986
  • After listing, a detailed study called Remedial
    Investigation is performed.
  • A Feasibility Study is conducted at the same
    time, as basis selection for treatment.
  • Cleanup Standards how clean is clean?
    Impossible to remove all contaminants, thus,
    Applicable or Relevant and Appropriate
    Requirements (ARARs) are used.
  • Liability the Superfund process intends to make
    generator pay for cleanup.

13
4. OTHER FEDERAL STATUES
  • Toxic Substance Control Act (TSCA), 1976. Allows
    control of manufacture of toxic material. Prior
    to this toxic substance could be controlled only
    if they were released to the environment.
  • Occupational Safety and Health Act (OSHA), 1970.
    Safety and health in the work place.
  • Clean Water Act (CWA), 1972, 1977 1987. Regulates
    discharge to surface waters. Provides for the
    building of municipal wastewater treatment plants
    and established a National Pollutant Discharge
    Elimination System (NPDES). For toxic pollutants,
    Best Available Technology (BAT) must be used.
    Pretreatment standards were set.
  • Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA), 1974. Intention
    is ensure that public water supplies are
    maintained at high quality. MCLs (Maximum
    Contaminant Levels) and MCLGs (Maximum
    Contaminant Level Goals) were set, 40 CFR 141.
  • Clean Air Act (CAA). 1970, 1977, 1990. Major
    initiatives to attain and maintain National
    Ambient Air Quality Standards to ensure that all
    new sources of atmospheric emissions are
    equipped with the "Best Available Pollution
    Control Technology". Section 12 of the CAA
    identifies HAPs, Hazardous Air Pollutants.

14
LEGISLATIONSIN MALAYSIA
15
HAZARDOUS WASTE LEGISLATION
  • The Department of Environment (DOE) is empowered
    under the Environmental Quality Act 1974 to
    control and prevent pollution and to protect and
    enhance the quality of the environment.
  • A set of regulations dealing with hazardous waste
    management which regulate the storage, transport,
    treatment and disposal of hazardous wastes was
    enforced on May 1989
  • Environmental Quality (Scheduled Wastes)
    Regulations, 1989
  • Environmental Quality (Prescribed Premises)
    (Scheduled Wastes Treatment and Disposal
    Facilities) Regulations and
  • Environmental Quality (Prescribed Premises)
    (Scheduled Wastes Treatment and Disposal
    Facilities) Order, 1989

16
HAZARDOUS WASTE LEGISLATION
  • Regulations specify
  • Before disposal, be rendered innocuous
  • Wastes generated shall be reduced
  • Generators notify DOE
  • Wastes generated stored, recovered treated
    on-site
  • Land farming, incineration, disposal, off-site
    recovers, storage and treatment, by DOE licensed
    premises
  • Waste containers clear label, proper, adequate
  • Generators shall obey the requirement of
    consignment note system when transporting

17
HAZARDOUS WASTE LEGISLATION
  • 107 categories under Schedules Wastes grouped
    into 2 parts
  • Part 1 - Scheduled Wastes from Non Specific
    Sources
  • e.g. mineral oil from machines, spent oil, oil
    tanker sludge, cleaning solvent, spent alkaline
    waste, plating sludge, pathogen and clinical
    waste
  • Part 2 - Scheduled Wastes from Specific Sources
  • e.g. mineral oil from refinery, oil sludge from
    workshop, paint waste from paint factory, phenol
    from glue factory, spent catalyst from chemical
    plant

18
HAZARDOUS WASTE LEGISLATION
  • Scheduled wastes shall as far as practicable,
    before disposal, be rendered innocuous
  • Generation of scheduled wastes shall be reduced
    using the best practicable means
  • Waste generators to notify the DOE of any
    scheduled wastes generated and keep up-to-date
    inventory of scheduled wastes generated, treated
    and disposed of (refer to Annexes 1 and 2)
  • Scheduled wastes may be stored, recovered and
    treated within the premises of a waste generator
  • Land farming, incineration, disposal, off-site
    recovery, off-site storage and off-site treatment
    shall only be carried out at prescribed premises
    licensed by the DOE

19
HAZARDOUS WASTE LEGISLATION
  • Use of durable waste containers with clear
    labels. Storage of wastes shall be proper and
    adequate
  • Waste generators shall conform to the
    requirements of the consignment note system when
    transporting wastes to ensure it reaches the
    approved destination and are carried out by
    licensed transporters (refer to Annex 3)
  • Waste generators shall provide information to a
    transporters regarding the nature of the wastes
    transported and action to be taken in case of
    accidents  

20
OTHER LEGISLATION
  • Basel Convention- Technical Guideline on the
    Environmentally Sound Management of Biomedical
    and Healthcare Waste.
  • Environmental Quality (Scheduled Wastes)
    Regulations, 1989
  • Ministry of Health Malaysia, Management of
    Clinical and Related Wastes in Hospital and
    Health Care Establishments, 1993 
  • Environmental Quality (Dioxin and Furan)
    Regulations 2004

21
Environmental Quality (Dioxin and Furan)
Regulations 2004
  • Date of regulations gazetted 25 March 2004
  • Date of regulations is effective 1 May 2004
  • Parameter to control Dioxin dan Furan
  • These regulations apply to the 4 facilities
  • 1) Municipal solid wastes incinerator
  • 2) Scheduled waste incinerator
  • 3) Pulp or paper industry sludge incinerator
  • 4) Sewage sludge incinerator

22
Environmental Quality (Dioxin and Furan)
Regulations 2004
  •  New Facility
  • Compliance date 1 May 2004 onwards
  • Concentration limit for air emission of Dioxin
    and Furan 0.1 nanogram/Nm3 TEQ
  • Existing Facility
  • Compliance Date 1 Mei 2004 - 30 April 2007
  • Concentration limit for air emission of Dioxin
    and Furan
  • To comply with the air emission limit for Dioxin
    and Furan as prescribed in the license under
    Section 18 of Environmental Quality Act 1974 or
    the approved conditions stated in the environment
    impact assessment report.
  • Compliance date 1 May 2007 onwards
  • Concentration limit for air emission of Dioxin
    and Furan 0.1 nanogram/Nm3 TEQ
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