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    API PUBL 4782-2016 Petroleum Refining Industry Contribution to Nationwide Surface Water Nutrient Loadings.pdf

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    API PUBL 4782-2016 Petroleum Refining Industry Contribution to Nationwide Surface Water Nutrient Loadings.pdf

    1、Petroleum Refining Industry Contribution to Nationwide Surface Water Nutrient LoadingsAPI PUBLICATION 4782AUGUST 2016Special NotesAPI publications necessarily address problems of a general nature. With respect to particular circumstances, local, state, and federal laws and regulations should be revi

    2、ewed.Neither API nor any of APIs employees, subcontractors, consultants, committees, or other assignees make any warranty or representation, either express or implied, with respect to the accuracy, completeness, or usefulness of the information contained herein, or assume any liability or responsibi

    3、lity for any use, or the results of such use, of any information or process disclosed in this publication. Neither API nor any of APIs employees, subcontractors, consultants, or other assignees represent that use of this publication would not infringe upon privately owned rights.API publications may

    4、 be used by anyone desiring to do so. Every effort has been made by the Institute to ensure the accuracy and reliability of the data contained in them; however, the Institute makes no representation, warranty, or guarantee in connection with this publication and hereby expressly disclaims any liabil

    5、ity or responsibility for loss or damage resulting from its use or for the violation of any authorities having jurisdiction with which this publication may conflict.API publications are published to facilitate the broad availability of proven, sound engineering and operating practices. These publica

    6、tions are not intended to obviate the need for applying sound engineering judgment regarding when and where these publications should be utilized. The formulation and publication of API publications is not intended in any way to inhibit anyone from using any other practices.All rights reserved. No p

    7、art of this work may be reproduced, translated, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without prior written permission from the publisher. Contact the publisher, API Publishing Services, 1220 L Street, NW, Washington

    8、, DC 20005.Copyright 2016 American Petroleum InstituteForewordNothing contained in any API publication is to be construed as granting any right, by implication or otherwise, for the manufacture, sale, or use of any method, apparatus, or product covered by letters patent. Neither should anything cont

    9、ained in the publication be construed as insuring anyone against liability for infringement of letters patent.iiiv Executive Summary This analysis was commissioned by API to provide member companies and the public with a better understanding of the water quality problems associated with nutrient dis

    10、charges to the nations surface waters, the current federal and state regulatory responses to nutrient-related water quality problems, the scientific and implementation challenges of nutrient controls, and the petroleum refining industrys relative contribution to nationwide nutrient discharges to sur

    11、face waters. The overwhelming majority of total nitrogen (TN) and total phosphorus (TP) nutrient loadings to surface waters is from nonpoint sources. A significant contribution also comes from municipal wastewater effluents. Petroleum refineries contribute only 0.1 % of the nationwide TN loading and

    12、 only 0.08 % of the nationwide TP loading to surface waters. Clearly, nutrient control efforts targeting the petroleum industry, though perhaps important in specific circumstances, will not resolve the majority of nutrient impairments of our nations waters; control efforts must focus on reductions i

    13、n nonpoint source and municipal nutrient loadings if meaningful gains in water quality are to be achieved. The key findings of this study are as follows: The two so-called macronutrients, TN and TP, are almost always the growth-limiting nutrients for aquatic plant growth and are the focus of regulat

    14、ory agency efforts to control such growth to protect water quality. The quantities of TN and TP that cause aquatic plant growth sufficient to impair water quality and designated uses are inherently water body specific. The physical and chemical characteristics of each water body are important determ

    15、inants of the type of aquatic plants, their growth rates, and the total density of such growth, which in turn determine impairment of water quality and/or designated uses of the water body. The enrichment of surface waters with the plant nutrients TN and TP causes impairments of water quality and fa

    16、ilure to attain designated water uses in a large number of surface water bodies in the United States, including rivers and streams, lakes and reservoirs, estuaries, and coastal waters. The inherent water bodyspecific characteristics of nutrient enrichment have made it difficult for states to establi

    17、sh scientifically sound water quality standards for nutrients. Because of this difficulty, many states rely on narrative water quality standards to address nutrient enrichment. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has been encouraging states to adopt numeric standards for TN and TP for the

    18、 past 20 years. The water bodyspecific characteristics of nutrient enrichment have made a “one-size-fits-all” approach to numeric nutrient standards impossible, so most states have been slow to adopt numeric nutrient standards. EPAs most recent initiative is for states to adopt “independently applic

    19、able” numeric standards for both TN and TP, regardless of which one is the limiting nutrient in a specific surface water body. Many states have rejected this approach as not scientifically justified. There are many sources of TN and TP that discharge to surface waters. These can be both natural and

    20、anthropogenic. However, the research shows that anthropogenic sources are the principal cause of excessive nutrient concentrations in surface waters. Nonpoint sources such as agriculture, fertilizer application in urban and suburban areas, urban runoff, and atmospheric deposition are typically cited

    21、 as the source of 90 % or more of the excess nutrients discharged to surface waters of the United States. This study of nutrient loading sources using data compiled from EPA databases, the scientific literature, technical textbooks, and several states has shown that on a nationwide basis (Figure ES-

    22、1): vi o 84.6 % of the TP loading and 84.1 % of the TN loading on surface waters are due to nonpointsources.o Municipal wastewater effluents (publicly owned treatment works POTWs) account for 14.1 % ofthe TP loading and 14.6 % of the TN loading.o The total industrial point source loadings of TP and

    23、TN are estimated at 1.3 % of the nationaltotals.o Petroleum refineries contribute 0.08 % and 0.1 % of the nationwide TP and TN loadings onsurface waters, respectively. These relative loadings demonstrate that nutrient control efforts must focus on reductions in nonpointsource nutrient loadings if th

    24、ere are to be any meaningful results in reducing nutrient enrichment ofthe nations surface waters. This analysis does not conclude that point source nutrient contributions are insignificant in all waterbodies, and it is not intended to justify inaction in such instances. Rather, each water body must

    25、 beevaluated by considering its physical, chemical, and biological characteristics; the point and nonpointsources that contribute nutrients; and the effects of such nutrients on aquatic plant growth beforeestablishing limitations on TN and TP for point source discharges.Figure ES-1Percent Contributi

    26、ons to Total National Nutrient Loadings vii Abbreviations BMP Best Management Practice CWA Clean Water Act DMR Discharge Monitoring Report ELG Effluent Limitation Guideline EPA Environmental Protection Agency EPCRA Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act NEIWPCC New England Interstate Wat

    27、er Pollution Control Commission NPDES National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System PCS Permit Compliance System POTW Publicly Owned Treatment Works SAB Science Advisory Board TBEL Technology-based Effluent Limit TCEQ Texas Commission on Environmental Quality TKN Total Kjeldahl Nitrogen TMDL Total

    28、 Maximum Daily Load TN Total Nitrogen TP Total Phosphorus TPDES Texas Pollutant Discharge Elimination System TRI Toxics Release Inventory WQBEL Water Qualitybased Effluent Limit ix Contents EXECUTIVE SUMMARY v ABBREVIATIONS vii CHAPTER 1INTRODUCTION. 1 Scope 1 Organization 1 Principal Finding . 1 CH

    29、APTER 2NUTRIENTS AND THEIR WATER QUALITY IMPACTS 2 Nutrients in Surface Waters . 2 Water Quality Effects of Nutrients . 4 CHAPTER 3NUTRIENT SOURCES . 7 Nutrient Data Sources 7 Petroleum Refining Industry Nutrient Loadings 8 Nutrient Sources in Refineries 9 Refinery DMR Data Analysis 10 Other Point S

    30、ource Nutrient Loadings . 15 Municipal Treatment Plants (POTWs) 15 Other Industrial Point Source Categories . 16 Nonpoint Source Nutrient Loadings . 17 Comparison of Nutrient Sources . 18 Limitations of the Nationwide Comparison 18 CHAPTER 4REGULATION OF NUTRIENT DISCHARGES 20 Water Quality Criteria

    31、 and Standards . 20 EPA Nutrient Policy and Guidance . 21 EPA Ecoregion Criteria . 21 EPA “Urgent Call to Action” 22 EPA Region 5 Position Letter . 22 EPA Letter on Nutrient Criteria and Independent Applicability . 23 Framework Memorandum to Regional Administrators . 24 EPAs Science Advisory Board R

    32、eview of EPAs Methodology for Establishing Nutrient Criteria . 24 Nutrient Status and Trends in the United States . 25 Nutrient-impaired Surface Waters 26 United States Geological Survey (USGS) National Water-Quality Assessment (NAWQA) Report on Nutrients in the Nations Streams and Groundwater, 1992

    33、2004 . 26 x The TMDL Process for Impaired Waters . 30 CHAPTER 5SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS . 31 REFERENCES 33 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS . 35 Tables Table 1Refineries in DMR Database . 11 Table 2Effluent Flow, Ammonia Nitrogen, and Total Phosphorus Concentration and Load for the 23 Refineries in the DMR Data Analy

    34、sis for the 1998 to 2010 Time Period. 13 Table 3DMR Effluent Concentrations (in mg/L) for Various Forms of Nitrogen 14 Table 4TPDES Permit Application Data for Nutrients (mg/L) 14 Table 5Municipal Point Source Nutrient Concentrations (mg/L) . 15 Table 6Municipal Point Source Nutrient Loads (Mlb/year

    35、) 16 Table 7Industrial Point Source Nutrient Loads (Mlb/year) 17 Table 8Nonpoint Source Nutrient Loadings (Mlb/year) . 18 Table 9Comparison of Nutrient Sources to U.S. Surface Waters . 18 Table 10Rivers Assessed as Impaired by Nutrient-related Causes 27 Table 11Lakes/Reservoirs Assessed as Impaired

    36、by Nutrient-related Causes 28 Table 12Bays/Estuaries Assessed as Impaired by Nutrient-related Causes 29 Figures Figure ES-1Percent Contributions to Total National Nutrient Loadings vi Figure 1The Aquatic Nitrogen Cycle . 3 Figure 2The Aquatic Phosphorus Cycle 4 Figure 3Nutrients from Nonpoint and Po

    37、int Sources Are Cycled Throughout the Hydrologic System, but May Be Affected by Different Chemical, Physical, and Biological Processes in Different Parts of the System 6 1 Petroleum Refining Industry Contribution to Nationwide Surface Water Nutrient Loadings Chapter 1Introduction The U.S. Environmen

    38、tal Protection Agency (EPA) and many states have agreed that loadings of nutrients to surface waters are generally increasing and excess nitrogen and phosphorus levels are contributing to degradation of surface water quality in certain water bodies (EPA, 2009a). EPA and the states have been working

    39、for decades on approaches to controlling nutrients, and it is probable that more stringent water qualitybased effluent limits (WQBELs) for nitrogen and phosphorus could be imposed on point source dischargers in future years. This report provides an overview of the national issue of nutrient enrichme

    40、nt of surface waters, the sources of such nutrients, and the significance of petroleum refining industry discharge contributions to nationwide nutrient loadings. Scope This study is based on using available published data on nutrient enrichment of U.S. surface waters; EPA and state nutrient control

    41、guidance, policy, and water quality standards; prior analysis performed for API by a third-party consultant; petroleum refinery effluent quality data from the EPA Integrated Compliance Information System/National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (ICIS-NPDES); and permit data collected from the

    42、 files of the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ). Organization Chapter 2 presents a description of nutrients and their effects on water quality and receiving water uses. The terminology describing nutrient enrichment in surface waters is presented, and the fundamental interactions amon

    43、g nutrients, aquatic biology, and other water quality constituents are summarized to provide a basic understanding of the issues and complexities involved in evaluating the effects of nutrients on water quality. Chapter 3 presents the evaluation of the petroleum refining industrys contribution of ni

    44、trogen and phosphorus, the primary nutrients of concern, to surface waters of the United States. The petroleum refinery contributions are compared with the contributions from other point and nonpoint sources of these constituents, including discharges from publicly owned treatment works (POTWs), agr

    45、icultural sources, and urban runoff. A ranking of nutrient contributions from the petroleum refining industry relative to the other point and nonpoint source categories is based on the combined data available for nitrogen and phosphorus. Chapter 4 provides an overview of the history of and recent de

    46、velopments in nutrient control policy and regulation. A summary of nutrient enrichment impacts of major point source categories and nonpoint sources on both national and regional scales is presented. The chapter also summarizes surface water body impairments and major nutrient total maximum daily lo

    47、ad (TMDL) studies at the national level. Chapter 5 presents a summary of the principal findings in the report and the conclusions of this evaluation. Principal Finding The overwhelming majority of total nitrogen (TN) and total phosphorus (TP) nutrient loadings to surface waters is from nonpoint sour

    48、ces. A significant contribution also comes from municipal wastewater effluents. Petroleum refineries contribute only 0.1 % of the nationwide TN loading and only 0.08 % of the nationwide TP loading to surface waters. Clearly, nutrient control efforts targeting the petroleum industry, though perhaps i

    49、mportant in specific circumstances, will not resolve the majority of nutrient impairments of our nations waters; control efforts must focus on reductions in nonpoint source and municipal nutrient loadings if meaningful gains in water quality are to be achieved. 2 Chapter 2Nutrients and Their Water Quality Impacts When the term “nutrient” is used in a water quality context, it is typically referring to substances used for growth by rooted and floating aquatic plants. Nutrients are also required by the biological treatment systems u


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