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Best Available Techniques (BAT) Reference Document for the Production of Cement, Lime and Magnesium Oxide (CLM BREF)
Bianca Maria Scalet
European IPPC Bureau
European Commission Joint Research Centre Institute for Prospective Technological Studies Sustainable Production and Consumption Unit
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BAT Reference Document for the production of Cement One of a series of sectoral BAT Reference Documents (33 + 2 BREFs) elaborated by the EIPPCB
Sevilla process
CL BREF originally adopted in December 2001 First BAT Reference Document to be revised (under IPPC) CLM BREF including Lime and MgO Revision finalised under the Industrial Emission Directive 2010/75/EU (IED)
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IPPC approach and related legislation
Council Directive 96/61/EC of 24 September 1996 concerning integrated pollution prevention and control
Directive 2008/1/EC of 15 January 2008 Codified version
CLM BREF revised under IPPC - BATC transformed under IED
Directive 2010/75/EU of 24 November 2010 On industrial emissions (integrated pollution prevention and control) (Recast)
IED Industrial Emissions Directive
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The European Industrial Emissions Directive (IED) Driving forces of the Industrial Emissions Directive 2010/75/EU: Give priority to intervention at source, e.g. efficiency of processes, management improvement Implement the Best Available Techniques (BAT) Assure compliance, enforcement and environmental improvements Provide a level playing field in the European Union by aligning environmental performance requirements for industrial installations
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The instrument for determining Best Available Techniques
Article 13(1) of Industrial Emissions Directive 2010/75/EC: In order to draw up, review and, where necessary, update BAT reference documents, the Commission shall organise an exchange of information between Member States, the industries concerned, non-governmental organisations promoting environmental protection and the Commission The exchange of information should address: the performance of installations and techniques in terms of emissions and consumptions the techniques applied, associated monitoring, technical and economic viability
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BAT Reference Documents (BREFs)
Sector-specific documents identifying Best Available Techniques (BREFs)
35 BREFs
BAT Conclusions with associated emission (and consumption) levels (BAT-AELs)
Emission Limit Values (ELVs) and/or other permit conditions for industrial installations
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BAT Reference documents publicly available
http://eippcb.jrc.es/reference/
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Actors in the information exchange on BAT
EU Member States Committee (IED Article 75) Forum (IED Article 13)
Industry, Member States, Env. NGOs, Commission
Members of the Committee Vote the BAT conclusions
Forum members Guidance to COM
European IPPC Bureau (EIPPCB) GLS
(Glass) Industry Member States Env. NGOs Commission
Nominate experts in TWGs Give formal opinion on BREFs
I&S
(Iron and Steel) Industry Member States Env. NGOs Commission
REF
(Refineries) Industry Member States Env. NGOs Commission
BREF authors Lead TWGs Validate/check information Draft BREFs Present BREF to Forum
35 Technical Working Groups (TWGs)
TWG members Research information Peer review draft BREFs
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Main steps of the CLM BREF review process
Step
Reactivation of the TWG (117 Members) Kick-off meeting Release of two Drafts Final TWG meeting (under IPPC) Adoption (under IPPC) New Industrial Emissions Directive Transformation BAT conclusions TWG meeting on the BATC (under IED)
Date
January-June 2005 September 2005 Sept. 2007- May 2008 September 2008 May 2010 December 2010 February 2012 May 2012
Information and data collection (deadline) June 2006
Opinion of the Art. 13 Forum
Vote of the Art. 75 Committee
September 2012
November 2012
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Publication of BAT conclusions on EU OJ April 2013
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BAT conclusions for the production of Cement
Activities covered (IED - 3.1 Annex I): Production of cement clinker in rotary kilns with a production capacity exceeding 500 tonnes per day or in other kilns with a production capacity exceeding 50 tonnes per day Activities not covered: Shaft kilns for cement kiln production
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Definition of BAT in the IED
Best
Most effective in achieving a high general level of protection of the environment as a whole Developed on a scale which allows implementation in the relevant industrial sector, under economically and technically viable conditions in which the installation is designed, built, maintained, operated and decommissioned
Available
Techniques Both the technology used and the way
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Guidelines for the BAT conclusions
Actions involved: Evaluate performance of candidate BAT Establish Best Available Techniques (BAT) for the sector Where possible, define BAT-associated Emission Levels (BAT-AELs) or other BATassociated Environmental Performance Levels (BAT-AEPLs)
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IED - Definition of BAT conclusions BAT conclusions means:
A document containing the parts of BAT reference document laying down the conclusions on best available techniques, their description, information to assess their applicability, the emission levels associated with the best available techniques, associated monitoring, associated consumption levels and, where appropriate, site remediation measures.
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Transformation of the CLM BAT conclusions under IED
Formulation of the BAT conclusions in line with IED requirements and based on the Commission Decision 2012/119/EU, without altering the technical content of the conclusions as presented in the adopted CLM BREF (2010)
BAT conclusion: standalone document, containing the necessary information but without references to other BREF sections
BATC translated in all EU languages
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Individual BAT formulation
The environmental objective of the BAT is given In order to minimise the emissions of metals from the flue-gases of the kiln firing processes, BAT is to use on or a combination of the following techniques.. In general, a list of techniques (BAT) is given; however:
The list is neither prescriptive nor exhaustive
Other techniques may be used that ensure at least an equivalent level of environmental protection 15
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BAT conclusions for Hg emissions from cement kilns
Prevention measures:
BAT on careful selection of raw materials BAT on the use of waste as fuel or raw material Analysis of any waste for: constant quality, physical and chemical criteria
Control and monitoring of emissions
Periodic monitoring of metal emissions, including Hg Continuous monitoring of dust emissions BAT and BAT-AELs for metal emissions
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BAT conclusions for metal emissions
28. In order to minimise the emissions of metals from the fluegases of the kiln firing processes, BAT is to use one or a combination of the following techniques: Technique Selecting materials with a low content of relevant a metals and limiting the content of relevant metals in materials, especially mercury Using a quality assurance system to guarantee the b characteristics of the waste materials used Using effective dust removal techniques as set out in c BAT 17
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BAT-AELs for mercury emissions
Table 4.5: BAT-associated emission levels for metals from the flue-gases of kiln firing processes Metals Hg (Cd, Tl) Unit mg/Nm3 mg/Nm3 BAT-AEL (average over the sampling period, spot measurements, for at least half an hour) <0.05 (2) <0.05 (1)
At 10 % O2
(As, Sb, Pb, Cr, mg/Nm3 <0.5 (1) Co, Cu, Mn, Ni, V) (1) Low levels have been reported based on the quality of the raw materials and the fuels. 2 ( ) Low levels have been reported based on the quality of the raw materials and the fuels. Values higher than 0.03 mg/Nm3 have to be further investigated. Values close to 0.05 mg/Nm3 require consideration of additional techniques (e.g. lowering of the flue-gas temperature, activated carbon).
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BAT conclusions for dust emissions from kilns
17. In order to reduce dust emissions from flue-gases of kiln firing processes, BAT is to use dry flue-gas cleaning with a filter. Technique (1) Applicability a. Electrostatic precipitators (ESPs) Applicable to all kiln b. Fabric filters systems c. Hybrid filters (1) A description of the techniques is given in Section 4.5.1.
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BAT-AELs for dust emissions from kilns
BAT-associated emission levels The BAT-AEL for dust emissions from fluegases of kiln firing processes is <10 20 mg/Nm3
At 10 % O2
as the daily average value. When applying fabric filters or new or upgraded ESPs, the lower level is achieved.
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Available information on mercury emissions (for the review of the CLM BREF)
Quality of available information
Emission levels <0.05 mg/Nm3 reported as achievable; however, lack of evidence concerning the conditions for achieving these levels Levels of emissions mainly influenced by raw materials
Lack of information:
Mercury emissions and link with technical options for Hg removal
Monitoring techniques for Hg (continuous monitoring of Hg, suitability to be verified)
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Work for the next review of the CLM BREF
Collect information on the following topics: Relationship between emissions and waste used in the process (type, amount) Data on process input, specifically for Hg New techniques for the reduction of mercury emissions Removal efficiencies and costs of abatement techniques Continuous monitoring of Hg in the cement industry
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Thank you for your attention
Bianca Maria Scalet European IPPC Bureau
[email protected] Tel.: +34 954 488 453 http://eippcb.jrc.es
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