6. Emissions control appropriate measures
The appropriate measures for emissions control at regulated facilities with an environmental permit for the treatment or transfer of WEEE.
You must identify, characterise and control emissions from your activities that may cause pollution. See our guidance on controlling emissions.
1. You must contain the waste treatment process to make sure that you collect, extract and direct all process emissions to an appropriate abatement system for treatment before release.
2. You must identify the main chemical constituents of the site’s point source emissions as part of the site’s inventory of emissions to air. You must include the speciation of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) if you have identified them in the emissions inventory and it is practicable to do so.
3. You must assess the fate and impact of the substances emitted to air, following the Environment Agency’s air emissions risk assessment methodology.
4. To reduce point source emissions to air (for example, dust, volatile organic compounds and odour) from the treatment of waste, you must use an appropriate combination of abatement techniques, including one or more of the following systems:
- adsorption
- fabric filter
- wet scrubbing
- HEPA filter
- condensation and cryogenic condensation
- cyclone
- electrostatic precipitator (ESP)
- thermal oxidation
5. You must assess and design vent and stack locations and heights to make sure dispersion capability is adequate.
6. Where monitoring is required, including for odour, you must install a suitable monitoring point. Monitoring points will be required to meet MCERTS standards.
7. Your procedures must make sure you correctly install, operate, monitor and maintain abatement equipment. For example, this includes monitoring and maintaining:
- appropriate flow and chemical concentration of scrubber liquor
- the handling and disposal or regeneration of spent scrubber or filter medium
1. You must use appropriate measures to prevent emissions of dust, mud, litter and odour. See our guidance on suggested appropriate measures to control dust, mud and litter, and to control odour.
2. You must design, operate and maintain storage and treatment plant in a way that prevents fugitive emissions to air, including dust, organic compounds and odour. Where that is not possible, you must minimise these emissions.
Storage and treatment plant includes associated equipment and infrastructure such as:
- shredders
- sorting equipment
- conveyors
- skips or containers
- building fabric, including doors and windows
- pipework and ducting
3. You must make sure fugitive emissions are collected and directed to appropriate abatement and your treatment plant must use high integrity components (for example, seals or gaskets).
4. You must use your waste pre-acceptance, waste acceptance and site inspection checks and procedures to identify and manage wastes that could cause, or are causing, fugitive emissions to air. When you identify any of these wastes you must:
- take appropriate, risk assessed measures to prevent and control emissions
- prioritise their treatment or transfer
5. Where necessary, to prevent fugitive emissions to air from the storage and handling of odorous or dusty wastes, you should use a combination of the following measures:
- store and handle such wastes within a building or enclosed equipment
- keep buildings and equipment under adequate negative pressure with an appropriate abated air circulation or extraction system
- where possible, locate air extraction points close to potential emissions sources
- use fully enclosed material transfer and storage systems and equipment, for example, conveyors, hoppers, containers, tanks and skips
- keep building doors and windows shut to provide containment, other than when access is required for loading or unloading
- minimising drop height
- use misting systems and wind barriers
6. Where a dust management plan is required, you must develop and implement it following our guidance on emissions management plans for dust.
Maintenance and cleaning
7. You must set up a leak detection and repair programme. You must use it to promptly identify and mitigate any fugitive emissions from treatment plant and associated infrastructure (such as pipework, conveyors, tanks).
8. You must regularly inspect and clean all waste storage and treatment areas, equipment (including conveyor belts) and containers. You must contain any residues collected during cleaning.
9. Your maintenance and cleaning schedules must make sure that your plant is regularly cleaned to avoid large-scale decontamination activities.
10. You must take measures to prevent the corrosion of plant and equipment (for example, conveyors or pipes). This includes:
- selecting and using appropriate construction materials
- lining or coating equipment with corrosion inhibitors
- regularly inspecting and maintaining plant
11. You must have an appropriate regular maintenance programme covering all buildings, plant and equipment. This must also include protective equipment such as air ventilation and extraction systems, curtains and fast-action doors used to prevent and contain fugitive releases.
Odorous wastes
12. You must have procedures to minimise the amount of time odorous wastes spend in your storage and handling systems (for example, pipes, conveyors, hoppers, tanks). In particular, you must have provisions to manage waste during periods of peak volume.
13. You must have measures to contain, collect and treat odorous emissions, including using contained buildings and plant or equipment with appropriate air extraction and abatement. We do not consider masking agents to be appropriate measures for the treatment of odorous emissions.
14. You must monitor and maintain odour abatement systems to ensure optimum performance. For example, you should make sure that scrubber liquors are maintained at the correct pH and replenished or replaced at an appropriate frequency.
15. Contaminated waters have potential for odours. You must store them in containers or enclosed tanks that are vented to an abatement system.
16. Where you expect odour pollution at sensitive receptors, or it has been substantiated, you must periodically monitor odour emissions using European (EN) standards. For example, either:
- dynamic olfactometry according to EN 13725 to determine the odour concentration
- EN 16841-1 or -2 to determine the odour exposure
17. If you are using alternative methods for which no EN standards are available (for example, estimating odour impact), you should use ISO, national or other international standards to make sure you use data of an equivalent scientific quality. You must set out the monitoring frequency in the odour management plan.
18. Where you expect odour pollution at sensitive receptors, or it has been substantiated, you must also set up, implement and regularly review an odour management plan. It must be part of your management system and include all of the following elements:
- actions and timelines to address any issues identified
- a procedure for conducting odour monitoring
- a procedure for responding to identified odour incidents, for example, complaints
- an odour prevention and reduction programme designed to identify the sources, to characterise the contributions of the sources and to implement prevention and reduction measures
19. Where an odour management plan is required, you must develop and implement it following our guidance on odour management plans.
1. You should design the layout of the facility to locate potential sources of noise (including building exits and entrances) away from sensitive receptors and boundaries. You should locate buildings, walls, and embankments so they act as noise screens.
2. You must use appropriate measures to control noise, for example, including:
- adequately maintaining plant or equipment parts that may become noisier as they deteriorate – such as bearings, air handling plant, building fabric, and specific noise attenuation kit associated with plant or machinery
- closing doors and windows of enclosed areas and buildings
- avoiding noisy activities at night or early in the morning
- minimising drop heights and the movement of waste and containers
- using broadband (white noise) reversing alarms and enforcing the on-site speed limit
- using low-noise equipment, for example, drive motors, fans, compressors and pumps
- adequately training and supervising staff
- where possible, providing additional noise and vibration control equipment for specific noise sources – such as noise reducers or attenuators, insulation, or sound-proof enclosures
3. Where you expect noise or vibration pollution at sensitive receptors, or it has been substantiated, you must create, use and regularly review a noise and vibration management plan. This must be part of the environmental management system and must include:
- actions and timelines to address any issues identified
- a procedure for conducting noise and vibration monitoring
- a procedure for responding to identified noise and vibration events, for example, complaints
4. The noise and vibration management plan should also include a noise and vibration reduction programme designed to:
- identify the sources of noise and vibration
- measure or estimate noise and vibration exposure
- characterise the contributions of the sources
- implement prevention and reduction measures
5. Where a noise and vibration management plan is required, you must develop and implement it following our guidance on noise and vibration management plans.
1. You must identify the main chemical constituents of the site’s point source emissions to water and sewer as part of the site’s inventory of emissions.
2. You must assess the fate and impact of the substances emitted to water and sewer following the Environment Agency’s risk assessment guidance.
3. Except for uncontaminated surface water, for example roof drainage, discharges to water or sewer must comply with the conditions of an environmental permit or trade effluent consent. Relevant sources of waste water include (but are not limited to):
- water or condensate collected from treatment processes
- waste compactor run-off
- vehicle washing
- vehicle oil and fuel leaks
- washing of containers
- spills and leaks in waste storage areas
- loading and unloading areas
- uncovered storage areas
4. POPs may leach or wash out in particulates from some wastes, such as shredded WEEE plastic or granulated cable, if exposed to the weather. You must prevent the release of POPs to water or sewer by storing these wastes and any other shredded POPs waste under weatherproof covering.
5. To reduce emissions to water and sewer, if you need to treat waste water before discharge or disposal, you must use an appropriate combination of treatment techniques, including one or more of the following:
- preliminary or primary treatment – for example, equalisation, neutralisation or physical separation
- physico-chemical treatment – for example, adsorption, distillation or rectification, precipitation, chemical oxidation or reduction, evaporation, ion exchange, or stripping
- biological treatment – for example, activated sludge process or membrane bioreactor
- nitrogen removal – for example, nitrification and denitrification
- solids removal – for example, coagulation and flocculation, sedimentation, filtration or flotation
1. You must use appropriate measures to control potential fugitive emissions and make sure that they do not cause pollution. See the guidance on emissions to water and leaks from containers.
2. You must have these in all operational areas of the facility:
- an impermeable surface
- sealed construction joints
- spill containment kerbs
3. For outdoor operational areas you must also have a sealed drainage system.
4. Your sealed drainage system must collect all surface water run-off and channel it to a blind sump unless it may be lawfully discharged to water or sewer.
5. You must collect and treat separately each water stream generated at the facility, for example, surface run-off water or process water. Separation must be based on pollutant content and treatment required. You must make sure you segregate uncontaminated water streams from those that require treatment.
6. You must use suitable drainage infrastructure to collect surface drainage from areas of the facility where you store, handle and treat waste. You must also collect washing water and occasional spillages.
7. Depending on the pollutant content, you must either:
- recirculate what you have collected
- discharge it in accordance with an environmental permit or trade discharge consent
- send it for further treatment
8. You must have design and maintenance provisions in place to detect and repair leaks. These must include regularly monitoring, inspecting and repairing equipment and minimising underground equipment and infrastructure.
9. You should provide appropriate buffer storage capacity at your facility to store waste waters, taking into account:
- potential abnormal operating scenarios and incidents
- the nature of any polluting substances and their impact on the downstream waste water treatment plant and receiving environment
10. You must have appropriate measures in place to monitor, treat and reuse the water held in the buffer storage before discharging.
11. You must take measures to prevent emissions from washing and cleaning activities, including:
- directing liquid effluent and wash waters to foul sewer or collecting them in a sealed system for off-site disposal – you must not discharge them to surface or storm drains
- where possible, using biodegradable and non-corrosive washing and cleaning products
- storing all detergents, emulsifiers and other cleaning agents in suitable bunded or containment facilities, within a locked storage area, or in a building away from any surface water drains
- preparing cleaning or disinfection solutions in contained areas of the site and never in areas that drain to the surface water system
12. Where relevant, you must have measures to prevent pollution from the on-site storage, handling and use of oils and fuels. Follow the guidance on oil storage regulations for businesses.
Spill response plan
13. You must produce and implement a spillage response plan and train staff to follow it and test it.
14. Your procedures and associated training must make sure you deal with spillages immediately.
15. You must keep spill kits at locations close to areas where a spillage could occur and make sure relevant staff know how to use them. Make sure kits are replenished after use.
16. You must take measures to stop spillages from entering drains, channels, gullies, watercourses and unmade ground. You must make available proprietary sorbent materials, sand or drain mats for use when required.
17. You must make sure your spillage response plan includes information about how to recover, handle and correctly dispose of waste produced from a spillage.
Designing and maintaining surfacing and sub-surface structures
18. For sub-surface structures, you must:
- establish and record the routing of all site drains and sub-surface pipework
- identify all sub-surface sumps and storage vessels
- engineer systems to minimise leakages from pipes and make sure they are detected quickly if they do occur, particularly where hazardous substances are involved
- provide secondary containment or leakage detection for sub-surface pipework, sumps and storage vessels
- establish an inspection and maintenance programme for all sub-surface structures, for example, pressure tests, leak tests, material thickness checks or CCTV
19. For surfacing, you must design appropriate surfacing and containment or drainage facilities for all operational areas, taking into account:
- collection capacities
- surface thicknesses
- strength and reinforcement
- falls
- materials of construction
- permeability
- resistance to chemical attack
- inspection and maintenance procedures
20. You must have an inspection and maintenance programme for impermeable surfaces and containment facilities.
Tanks and bunding
21. You must bund all above-ground tanks containing liquids whose spillage could be harmful to the environment. Bunds must:
- be impermeable and resistant to the stored materials
- have no outlet (that is, no drains or taps) and drain to a blind collection point
- have pipework routed within bunded areas with no penetration of contained surfaces
- be designed to catch leaks from tanks or fittings
- have a capacity greater than 110% of the largest tank or 25% of the total tankage, whichever is the larger
- have regular visual inspections – any contents must be pumped out or otherwise removed under manual control after checking for contamination
- be fitted with a high-level probe and an alarm (as appropriate) if not frequently inspected
- have tanker connection points within the bund (where possible), otherwise provide adequate containment
- have programmed engineering inspections – normally visual, but extending to water testing if structural integrity is in doubt
-
be emptied of rainwater regularly to maintain their containment capacity