API PUBL 303-1992 Generation and Management of Wastes and Secondary Materials《废物和2次物料生成和管理》.pdf
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1、 API PUBL*303 92 D 0732290 051082b T25 , .- I l Generation and Management of Wastes and Secondary Materials Petroleum Refining Performance 1989 Survey 5 AMERICAN PETROLEUM INSTITUTE HEALTH AND ENVIRONMENTAL AFFAIRS DEPARTMENT JUNE 1992 FORWARD . API PUBLICATIONS NECESSARILY ADDRESS PROBLEMS OF A GEN
2、ERAL NATURE. WITH RESPECT TO PARTICULAR CIRCUMSTANCES, LOCAL, STATE AND FEDERAL LOWS AND REGULATIONS SHOULD BE REVIEWED. API IS NOT UNDERTAKING TO MEET DUTIES OF EMPLOYERS, MANUFACTURERS OR SUPPLIERS TO WARN AND PROPERLY TRAIN AND EQUIP THEIR EMPLOYEES, AND OTHERS EXPOSED, CONCERNING HEALTH AND SAFE
3、TY RISKS AND PRECAUTIONS, NOR UNDERTAKING THEIR OBLIGATIONS UNDER LOCAL, STATE, OR FEDERAL LAWS. NOTHING 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 PA
4、TENT. NEITHER SHOULD ANYTHING CONTAINED IN THE PUBLICATION BE CONSTRUED AS INSURING ANYONE AGAINST LIABILITY FOR INFRINGEMENT OF LETTERS PATENT. , , API PUBL*303 92 0732290 0530828 8T8 Ackno wiedgements APls . Pollution Prevention Task Force sponsored this survey, which was directed by Barbara L. Bu
5、sh, a Senior Regulatory Analyst in the Health and Environmental Affairs Department (HEA O). Other individuals who made significant contributions to the project include: Genevieve Laffly Murphy, in APls Refining Department, who served as liaison with the General Committee on Refining and the Committe
6、e on Refinery Environmental Control (CREC); Mark Hopkins from Chevron, the Chairman-of the Solid Waste Survey Workgroup that stewarded the project; Gail Levine from SUMhMTIONS, the,prime contractor for the project; Wendy Sams in APls Information Systems that developed the automated version of the qu
7、estionnaire; and Wendall Ciark, the expert consultant on refining practices. This core I group was assisted by/sfaff members from APls Statistics Department, the Office of General Counsel and the Editotial and Special Issues Department. I - - 1 , I . I - 1 I, I. . .- 4, API PUBLx303 92 M 0732270 05L
8、0829 734 . TABLE OF CONTENTS Executive Summary . :. . i Introduction ;. :. . 1 . _. -. , Methodology 3 -Data Collection . 3 Waste Minimization 5 Automated Questionnaire . a6 Survey Administration . 6 DataAnalysis . 7 Survey Design . 3 , Results 9 . *Response Rate 9 - Respondent Characteristics 9 Tot
9、al Waste Management Quantity . 12 Waste Generation 12 . Treatmerit Additives 15 Storage 15 Totat Quantity of Waste Managed . 16 Source Reduction . 18 21 Recycling . . 21 Treatment .: 1. 25 ., Waste Management . i. Land Treatment . . 29 Disposal . 31 I Waste Minimization Programs 34 Discussion 35 Was
10、te Generation . i. 35 Source Reduction . 38 . Waste Management . 39 . - I APPENDICES A - Questionnaire B - Statistical Procedures C - Summary of Source Reduction Activities E - Summary of Waste Management Practices for Individual Waste Streams L D -JYaste Management Summary Tables API PUBLa303 92 07
11、32290 0530830 456 i . TABLES 3 I 1 . Refining Waste Streams . 4 . . 2 - Estimated Wastes from the U.S. Refining Industry 14 3 . Number of Refineries Reporting Wastes . 15 I 4 . Top-five Waste Streams Removed from Storage 16 5 . Top-five Waste Streams Placed into Storage 16 6 . Estimated- Waste Quant
12、ities 17 I 7 . Summary of Source Reduction Achievements . 18 8 . Methods of Calculating Source Reduction Achievements . 19 . 9 . Summary of Source Reduction Activities . 20 10 . Incentives for Source Reduction Activities 21 22 I 11 . Summary of Recycling Practices 12 . Estimated Quantities of Recycl
13、ed Wastes 24 13 . Location of Recycling Activities . 25 14 . Summary of Treatment Methods . 26 15 . Estimated Quantities of Wastes Treated . 28 16 . Location of Treatment Activities 29 17 . Estimated Quantities of Land Treated Wastes ._ 30 * 18 . Summary of Disposal Practices . 31 19 . Estimated Qua
14、ntities of Wastes Eliminated by Disposal . 32 20 . Location of Disposal Activities 33 . 21 . Sources of Variability in Waste Generation Rates 1987-1989 . 37 22 . Barriers to Source Reduction . 38 / API PUBL*303 92 0732290 05L083L 392 I . B - Distribution of Respondents by Location 10 FIG UR ES A - N
15、umber of Respondents by Capacity Group . . 9 C - Distribution of Respondents by Complexity . 1 O D - Distribution of Respondents by Age 11 E - Distribution of Respondents by Sewer Type . 11 F - Waste Minimization Program Components 34 G - Wastes Generated: 1989 35 H - Wastes Generated: 1987-1 989 .
16、36 I -,Waste Management Practices: 1989 . 40 J - Waste Management -Practices: 1987-1 989 . 41 K - Management Practices for RCRA Hazardous Wastes 42 I / , . API PUBLX303 92 = 0732290 0510832 229 Eirecutive Summary 1989 Survey Each year, U.S. petroleum refineries process 650 million tons of crude oil
17、as they create fuels and othy petroleum products vital to the U.S. economy and way of life. Not much waste results - less than 1 percent of those 650 million tons. Still, that. amount ofwaste is a big number in its own right. This is the third annual survey of wastes generated by U.S. petroleum refi
18、neries - and how they handle those wastes. Conducted by the American Petroleum Institute, it is the only ongoing industry-wide effort of its kind. It is also the first to track “source reduction“ in refineries - preventing pollution by avoiding the creation of waste. For fhis survey, Generation and
19、Management of Wastes and Secondary Materials: Petroleum Refining Performance, API mailed questionnaires to 183 operating U. S. refineries. The 117 refineries that responded represent 74 percent of domestic refining capacity. This high response rate enabled API to develop industry-wide estimates with
20、 - a high degree of confidence and statistical accuracy. Wastes Generated U.S. refineries generated roughly 16.3 million wet tons of wastes and secondary materials in 1989 - about the same as in 1987 and 1988. The total includes non- hazardous and hazardous wastes (as classified under RCRA, the fede
21、ral Resource Conservation and Recovery Ad), byproducts, and other secbndary materials. The survey obtained information on 28 waste streams, grouped in six categories. As shown below, aqueous wastes constitute about two-thirds of the total. Four facilities (treated as outliers in the statistical anal
22、ysis) generate nearly ali of these wastes and dispose of them by injecting them into underground wells. In diminishing order of volume, the remaining wastes are oily sludges, chemicals, contaminated soils, “other,“ and spent catalysts. Types of Wastes Generated (millions of wet tons) Total Quantity
23、16.31 1 Wet Tons WS WarIn 11913 Al Other Waues Non-Aqueous Wastes 4.398 Wet Tons / 1659 con)unh.lsd sd( 747 API PUBLx303 92 0732290 0530833 365 - . 1 . With the exception of contaminated soil, the amount of each type of waste has remainedxabout the same since 1987. It appears that the amount of cont
24、aminated soil is on the risp - most likely, a result of new construction at refineries and stepped-up efforts to clean up and remediate contamination from past releases. . i Waste Management The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has created a waste management hierarchy that reflects the growing e
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