bref revision domestic glass sector icf edg – sienna – november 3rd 2007

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1 BREF revision Domestic Glass Sector ICF EDG – Sienna – November 3rd 2007 D. D. LALART LALART F. DEBLOCK F. DEBLOCK

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BREF revision Domestic Glass Sector ICF EDG – Sienna – November 3rd 2007. LALART F. DEBLOCK. Local considerations according each country : Authorities Arrêté verrier mars 2003. BAT (in BREFs). BAT-based permit or General Binding Rules. From BREF to Permit Conditions. +. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: BREF revision Domestic Glass Sector ICF EDG – Sienna – November 3rd  2007

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BREF revisionDomestic Glass Sector

ICF EDG – Sienna – November 3rd 2007

D.D. LALART LALART F. DEBLOCKF. DEBLOCK

Page 2: BREF revision Domestic Glass Sector ICF EDG – Sienna – November 3rd  2007

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From BREF to Permit Conditions

BAT (in BREFs)

BAT-based permit or General Binding Rules

Local considerations according each country : Authorities Arrêté verrier mars 2003+

Legally binding

Descriptive

BAT : BEST AVAILABLE TECHNIQUES

BREF : Reference Document

Page 3: BREF revision Domestic Glass Sector ICF EDG – Sienna – November 3rd  2007

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•WHY a REVIEW of the BREF ?

•Main concerns of a review :

New information with potential impact on BAT (gaps, emerging techniques)

Actual levels of performance(IMPLEMENTATION LEVEL ?)

Correction of errors

Coherence with other BREFs including horizontal BREFs (others sectors ; cement)

Page 4: BREF revision Domestic Glass Sector ICF EDG – Sienna – November 3rd  2007

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BREF revisionDomestic Glass Sector

• Work to be done,

• Data collection provided from EDG ICF,

• Information from other sectors and authorities,

• Cost data study,

• Water management,

• Conclusion.

Page 5: BREF revision Domestic Glass Sector ICF EDG – Sienna – November 3rd  2007

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WORK TO BE DONEREQUESTS

Page 6: BREF revision Domestic Glass Sector ICF EDG – Sienna – November 3rd  2007

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Kick off meeting in Seville. BREF revisionmeans :

1. Overall current glass industry situation in the EU-27,

2. Specific costs,

3. Environmental management systems (EMS),

4. Emission to air and downstream processes,

5. Dust collection,

6. Emission to water,

7. Energy consumption reduction.

Page 7: BREF revision Domestic Glass Sector ICF EDG – Sienna – November 3rd  2007

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Data collection providedby EDG - ICF

Page 8: BREF revision Domestic Glass Sector ICF EDG – Sienna – November 3rd  2007

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Production Range (Tones/day)

< 20 20 to 50 > 100

Number ofInstallationsIn Each Range

> 130

40 19

Increase the number of installation from EU 15 to EU 27 (especially above 100 T/D)

Updating of chapter 1 (general information) : List of main glass manufacturers Number of companies per country Share of sub sector (container - Float - tableware)

Page 9: BREF revision Domestic Glass Sector ICF EDG – Sienna – November 3rd  2007

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Substance Soda-lime Glass (mean figure) (1)

mg/Nm3 kg/tonneof melt

Oxides of Nitrogen(as NO2)

(2)

300 - 2100 (1100)140-2500 (2300)

0.2 - 6 (2,5)0,9-11 (4,8)

Oxides of Sulphur(as SO2)

80 - 310 (180)50-1000 (250)

0.1 - 0.7 (0.4)0,1-2,8 (0,7)

Particulate Matter 0.5 - 220 (90)0,5-400 (200)

0.001 - 0.3 (0.2)0,001-0,8 (0,4)

Blue : Updated value 2005

Almost reduction of 50 % of major pollutants due to BAT implementation

Page 10: BREF revision Domestic Glass Sector ICF EDG – Sienna – November 3rd  2007

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Substance Crystal & Lead Crystal (mean figure)

mg/Nm3 kg/tonneof melt

Oxides of Nitrogen(as NO2)

(2)

300 – 2300 (840)1000-2000 (1500)

0.2  - 11 (2.7)0,9-5 (1)

Oxides of Sulphur(as SO2)

300 – 2300 (840) 0.1 - 0.3 (0.2)0,1-1 (0,2)

Particulate Matter 0.1 - 13 (4)2-10 (5)

0.001 - 0.3 (0.03)0,001-0,1 (0,02)

Blue : Updated value 2005

Stability of good situation including the crystal glass

Page 11: BREF revision Domestic Glass Sector ICF EDG – Sienna – November 3rd  2007

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Information from other sectorsand authorities

Page 12: BREF revision Domestic Glass Sector ICF EDG – Sienna – November 3rd  2007

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– The container glass industry, which is the largest group,comprises glass packaging for drinks, food, perfumes,pharmaceuticals FEVE

– The flat glass industry float glass. GEPVP

– The continuous filaments of glass fibre. APFE

– The special glass industry produces mainly glass for technical applications (optics, electronics, lighting, engineering, ophthalmic lenses etc, …). borosilicate glasses are mainly included in this category. ESGA

- The Mineral wool Stone wool and Glass Wool (EURIMA) - - The frits industry ANFFECC

Need for a coherence with other sectors

Page 13: BREF revision Domestic Glass Sector ICF EDG – Sienna – November 3rd  2007

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Current level of implementation of BAT63 furnaces Primary measure Secondary measure

NOx Staged combustion: 1

Low NOx Burners: 16

Oxygen furnace: 3

Electric: 27

Total : 47 (72 %)

No SCR

Dust EP*: 3

Bag filter + Scrubber: 31

Total : 34 (52 %)

213 furnaces Primary measureSecondary measure

NOx Primary measures : 76

Oxygen furnace: 8

Electric: 3

Total : 87 (40%)

SCR : 4

Dust EP*: 65

Bag filter + Scrubber: 13

Total : 78 (36 %)

dom

estic

cont

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r

Page 14: BREF revision Domestic Glass Sector ICF EDG – Sienna – November 3rd  2007

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56 furnaces Primary measure Secondary measure

NOx FENIX : 9

Oxygen furnace: 0

3 R furnaces 14

Reburning 0

Electric: 0

Total :

SCR : 7

Dust EP*: majority

Bag filter + Scrubber: 1

1 float was electric heated in 2000 – correct operation but high operating costs

7 SCR implemented ! Technique available

FENIX is based on the combination of many primary measures : reduction of excess air – suppression of hot spot- homogenization of flame temp Also New design : overall dimension – design of burners port – separate chamber in regenator Achievement : 700-800 mg/Nm3 ( 8 % O2) patented by SG

Page 15: BREF revision Domestic Glass Sector ICF EDG – Sienna – November 3rd  2007

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"polemique statement"

Swedish Glass Industry to IPPC revision  mentions 

Lead. A new section under 5.6 about raw materials is needed, perhaps even in chapter 2 and 4. BAT should be to use glass without  lead, not even in art glass.

Official ICF answer :

any official document should be drafted in respect of the laws and legislations … ie Directive 69/493/EEC.

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There is no need for modication of two relevant references to the BREF document issued in 2001 :

1. 122 – Broad classification of Glass type, page 5 on lead crystal and crystal glass

"Lead oxide can be replaced partially or totally by barium, zinc or potassium oxides in glasses known as crystal glass that have a lower brilliance or density than lead crystal. Precise definitions associated with chemical and physical characteristics are set in Directive 69/493/EEC."

2. 221 – Raw materials for glass melting page 33

"Lead oxides (PbO and PB3O4) are used to improve the sonority and to improvethe refractive index of the glass to give better brilliance in products such as leadcrystal. Barium oxide (derived from barium carbonate), zinc oxide andpotassium oxide, may be used as alternative to lead oxide, but they producelower levels of density and brilliance than those associated with lead Crystal.There is also a penalty in the workability of handmade glass".

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Costs data study

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Cost data study• As Suggested by M Munoz and accepted by the group -> collection of cost data by an independant expert ( Ruud Beerkens TNO)

• Objective : typical costs for air pollution control methods :

- Costs per ton of molten glass- Costs per kg pollutant removed

• Data coming from :

Specific questionnaire Comparison from other sectors ( perfume bottle for sodalime) Experience from TNO

• Sofar - Preliminary report issued to coordinator

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Dust treatment : Bag filter + Dry Scrubbing (mostly used in our sector)

Heavy burden applied on sodalime productionSpecially for small furnaces (30 tpd)

Type of furnace Add cost (€/t)

With dust recycling

Add cost (€/t)

Without dust recycling

Container 300 T/D 3,8 4,1Container 200 T/D 4,4 4,8Tableware 180 T/D 4,2 Not availableTableware 30 T/D 12,6 13

Page 20: BREF revision Domestic Glass Sector ICF EDG – Sienna – November 3rd  2007

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Basic package of primary measures : Adjustables burnersSlower mixing of preheated air with fuel ; low fuel injections velocities; fuel rich combustion ; Air tight sealing ; oxygen sensors to control combustion

Tableware 180 T/D (investment 123 K€) cost per ton of molted glass 0,7 €/T

Package of extended primary measures : adaptations of furnace designIncrease the height of the combustion space ; enlarging the size of burner ports, changing slopes of burners ports and position of burners.+ electric boosting for tableware

Prices are very variable

Tableware 150T/D (operational costs 8 € per molten glass)

Others sectors 0,8 to 2,33 € per ton of molten glass

Primary Measures

Page 21: BREF revision Domestic Glass Sector ICF EDG – Sienna – November 3rd  2007

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2 cases : 30 T/D recuperative furnace 70 T/D regenerative furnace

Recuperative furnace : conversion oxyfiring might be BATRegenerative furnace : depends on local O2 price ( 0,06 €/Nm3)

regenerative

recuperative

Page 22: BREF revision Domestic Glass Sector ICF EDG – Sienna – November 3rd  2007

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Electric melting

All electric melting is mainly limited to lead crystal glass or borosilicate glass production or geographical areas enjoying very low electricity prices.

The advantage is no direct combustion (CO2, NOx) emissions and very low volume flows of flue gases (batch gases).

2 cases in contradictory data :

-30 T/D lead crystal : Electrical version is 5,4 M€ more expensive than recuperative solution Extra cost of 14 € per ton molten glass

-25 T/D lead free crystal. Electrical version cheaper and 2 €/ ton of molten glass saved

No clear trend because lack of data !

Page 23: BREF revision Domestic Glass Sector ICF EDG – Sienna – November 3rd  2007

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DUST

Some techniques with very low application in our sector :

Electrostatic precipitator ( ESP) plus dry scrubber : few equipped ; very high cost for small furnaces Exemple 35 T/D tableware : 15-16 €/ ton of molten glass ( 4 times more than container or float)

Bag Filter + semi dry scrubber : very effective for SO2 reduction but very expensive (4,5 M€ to 7 M€) – Problem of filter dust recycling Simulation for our sector : + 30 € per ton of molten glass

Wet scubber : hardly applied in glass industry 16 € per ton of molten glass (issue of the water treatment).

Page 24: BREF revision Domestic Glass Sector ICF EDG – Sienna – November 3rd  2007

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NOx reduction

Some techniques with very low application in our sector :

SCR Denox : No SCR ; by extrapolation 5 to 8 € for 100 et 35 T/D (note in Float and container 1,8 to 3,3 €/ per ton of molten glass)

SNCR Denox : hardly used ; no stable conditions of temperature

3 R process : mainly applied in Float glass industry . Cross media effect : increase of energy 7 to 12 %

Page 25: BREF revision Domestic Glass Sector ICF EDG – Sienna – November 3rd  2007

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Conclusions of the report :

Becoming aware of our difficulties

"Specific air pollution control costs expressed in extra costs as Euro per ton molten glass, are very high for furnaces with production capacities below 100 tons glass per day".

"Flue gas filtration and scrubbing for small tableware furnaces can add more than 10 Euro to the melting costs per ton molten glass".

Similar to the conclusion of the competitiveness study (carlbro) :

"It was also found that environmental pressure was one of many competitive pressures faced by the domestic glass industry"

Page 26: BREF revision Domestic Glass Sector ICF EDG – Sienna – November 3rd  2007

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Water management

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EIPPC bureau from SEVILLE is expecting :

- Methods and techniques to minimize the water consumption(assessment and perspectives)

- Environmental Management System applied for water.

- Information about water management for Pb crystal.

We are assisted in this approach by an expert M. Deffontaines from the Université of Littoral Côte D’Opale DIVERGENT.

Page 28: BREF revision Domestic Glass Sector ICF EDG – Sienna – November 3rd  2007

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Wastewater

Waste-water m3/t glass melted

Soda lime glass

Lead crystal

range (mean value)

2-9 (6)

2-54 (11)

Cleaning and purges of closed water process

Polishing ( acid, dissolved salts…)

Cutting, grinding( particles, lubrifiant Oil, …)

Cooling ( chemical Product…)

More water for crystal than sodalime ( cutting ; grinding ; acid polishing)

Page 29: BREF revision Domestic Glass Sector ICF EDG – Sienna – November 3rd  2007

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Préparation( unit opération,

mixing…)

Glass processing :Cooling 30%-40 %

Forming, Cleaning and Utilities … 60%-70%

Séparation( purges ,

supernatant …)

recycle water Stream 60%-90%

Sludge, residueVapour…

Fresh water stream 10%-40%

output wastewater

10%-40%

BATwater use in

domestic glass

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(Note 2) - For domestic glass installations utilising significant amounts of lead compounds, 1.0 mg/l is currently considered to be more appropriate. There are no

overriding technical obstacles to the achievement of 0.5 mg/l, and given the necessary time for the development and implementation of appropriate

techniques this figure will be achievable.

Issue of lead concentration

Lead (Note 2)<0.5 mg/l (table 3)

Problem of level

and method of analysis !

Page 31: BREF revision Domestic Glass Sector ICF EDG – Sienna – November 3rd  2007

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Recommendation from the expert :

Does it take into account the total lead or only the dissolved part ?

- taking sample at pipe outlet after decantation – precipitation (neutralization after acid polishing), - filtration on 1µm paper, - the dissolution in acidic medium,- the analysis.

the “total dissolved“ lead without the redissolution of precipitated part

Also higher lead concentration levels might be considered as acceptable when the total amount of lead is under control in discharge.Means level of pollution depends on the quantity of lead and its compounds discharged and not only on the concentration of lead in wastewater(in the range of 0,1 to 0,3 Kg of lead per melted ton of glass).

The minimization of water use with the implementation of closedsystem is crucial

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The implementation of an environmental management system (EMS) according to the rules of ISO 14001 permits to the company to have guidelines :

- system to detect defaults and to correct them reliably 

- system to improve factory performance (concrete targets)

Some companies have implemented the ISO 14001 or internal EMS ; Those that experienced the ISO 14001 observe a higher cost due to external audit of certification without any benefit compared to the internal system.

Environmental Management System (applied to water)

Page 33: BREF revision Domestic Glass Sector ICF EDG – Sienna – November 3rd  2007

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CONCLUSION FROM EXPERT

Use of water is high in the glass industry but the production of waste water is limited with the implementation of closed water system.

Technology of wastewater treatment uses physical and chemical operations well-known and not specific to the glass manufacturing.

The glass manufacturing companies made great effort and progress in order to reduce the flow rate of water per ton of glass melted.

Ex : In some crystal plants, there is a trend where acid polishing is replaced by fire polishing and mechanical polishing, with the possible consequence that water consumption decrease.

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Conclusion

Page 35: BREF revision Domestic Glass Sector ICF EDG – Sienna – November 3rd  2007

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Kick off meeting in seville. BREF revision means :

1. Overall current glass industry situation in the EU-27 data provided (july) + competitiveness study

2 Specific costs TNO study in process of validation)

3 Environmental management systems (EMS) Discussed in water report

4 Emission to air and downstream processes Charts updated

5 Dust collection Charts updated

6 Emission to water report finished and sent

7 energy consumption reduction Wide range ; no change

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- Validate the cost data report with TNO and integrate the main points in the BREF ( in common with others sector)

- Provide the water assessment document to Batis forum (availibility to the working group).

- Discussion about the possible changes to be proposed by Marcos Munos toward a new version of BREF.

Conclusion :Next steps

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