1 air emissions from ashbridges bay treatment plant by anthony ciccone, ph.d., p.eng.–golder...
TRANSCRIPT
1
Air Emissions fromAshbridges Bay Treatment Plant
ByAnthony Ciccone, Ph.D., P.Eng. –Golder AssociatesCiara De Jong, MES –Golder AssociatesAngela Li-Muller, Ph.D. –Toronto Public HealthMark Rupke, P.Eng. –WESDiane Michelangeli, Ph.D. –York UniversityJean Yves Urbain, P.Eng. –Earth Tech
Policy Analysis Tools for Air Quality and Health
19 May 2005
2
Objective of Emission Study
Evaluate the past, current and future impacts of air emissions South Riverdale and Beach Communities
3
Methodology1. Data collection and review
Plant process information (including previous studies) Ambient air monitoring data Meteorological data
2. Develop an air emission inventory Determine chemicals released Location of releases Stack and area characteristics Mass emissions into air
3. Process meteorological data4. Build input data for CALPUFF5. Select 17 chemicals for modelling6. Model chemical impact on communities 7. Analyze results
4
The Modelling Process
CALMET PredictedWind Direction Frequency
0%
2%
4%
6%
8%
10%
12%N
NNE
NE
ENE
E
ESE
SE
SSE
S
SSW
SW
WSW
W
WNW
NW
NNW
CALMET PredictedWind Speed (m/s) by Direction
0
5
10
15
20N
NNE
NE
ENE
E
ESE
SE
SSE
S
SSW
SW
WSW
W
WNW
NW
NNW
Average Maximum
Wind Direction Frequency - ABTP OnSite 1996
0%2%
4%
6%
8%10%
12%
14%
16%N
NNE
NE
ENE
E
ESE
SE
SSE
S
SSW
SW
WSW
W
WNW
NW
NNW
Wind Speed (m/s) by Direction - ABTP OnSite
0
5
10
15
20N
NNE
NE
ENE
E
ESE
SE
SSE
S
SSW
SW
WSW
W
WNW
NW
NNW
Average Maximum
CALPUFF
Emissions
Meteorology
Receptors
Concentrations
5
ABTP Historical Scenarios
1. Incinerator was in full operation (pre-1996)
2. Incinerator was in partial operation (2000-2002)
3. After incinerator was discontinued (2003-2004)
4. After incinerator was discontinued and odour control fully implemented (by 2010)
6
Concept Plan for Key Plant Areas
7
Protocol to Select Chemicals
Prioritize chemicals Ranking
• Method 1a - Calculated Toxicity Equivalent for Cancer effects
• Method 1b - Calculated Toxicity Equivalent Non-Cancer effects
• Method 1c - Ranked chemicals based on toxicity, emissions, persistence, and bioaccumulation
Select top 25 from rankings Above laboratory detection limits Important to communities
8
17 Chemicals Modeled
Arsenic Benzene Benz[a]pyrene (B[a]P) Bis(2-ethylhexyl)-
phthalate Cadmium Di-n-octyl phthalate Hexachlorobutadiene Hydrogen sulphide Lead
Mercury Nitrogen oxides PM2.5
PCBs Sulphur dioxide Total dioxins and furans Total polyaromatic
hydrocarbons (PAHs) Vinyl chloride
9
Hydrogen Sulphide24 Hr Concentration Isopleths
AAQC – N/A ug/m3
Health Benchmark
– 10 to 2 ug/m3
10
Summary of Impacts on Communities
11
Conclusions - 1
Little difference between air quality on South Riverdale vs Beaches due to ABTP Elevated stack has slightly higher
impact to the northeast because of high velocity winds from the southwest
Low elevations sources have higher impact to the northwest because of lower velocity winds from the southeast
12
Conclusions - 2
Significant process changes since 1995 has changed the ABTP air emission profile
Removal of incineration eliminated• arsenic, • cadmium, • lead,• PCBs, and • Dioxins/Furans
13
Conclusions - 3
Compared to Toronto Ambient Air While Incinerator Operating Predicted maximum levels below
Toronto measured ambient levels
14
Conclusions - 4
15 chemicals were unequivocally detected at ABTP
All detected chemicals below MOE air quality criteria/standards for all time scales
15
Conclusions - 5
Most detected chemicals below health benchmarks except Hydrogen Sulphide above the lower chronic
limit (2 ug/m3) for some scenarios Cadmium exceeds only during incineration
By 2010, all detected chemicals meet health benchmarks
All detected chemicals below Toronto measured levels during incineration
16
Conclusions - 5
Benzo[a]pyrene/PAHs less than detection limits
At B[a]P detection limits, Health benchmark exceeded for all scenarios MOE air quality criteria will be met by 2010
Maximum predicted impact was greater than measured
Impact over estimated