Waste incinerator standards reduce 1,900 tons
of air pollution annually
EPA is requiring new performance
standards to reduce emissions of air pollutants from the last
remaining category of waste incinerators requiring Clean Air Act
regulation. The category is called “other solid waste incinerators”
(OSWI). OSWI consist of very small municipal waste combustion
units and institutional waste incineration units. The final performance
standards will provide important improvements in protecting human
health and the environment by reducing approximately 1,900 tons
per year of air pollution from the estimated 248 incinerators
estimated to be subject to the new standards.
Very small municipal waste combustion
units are incinerators that burn less than 35 tons per day of
municipal solid waste collected from residential, commercial,
institutional and industrial sources. Institutional waste incineration
units are incinerators located at institutions — such as
public or private schools, churches or civic organization —
that burn solid waste generated on site. EPA has already issued
regulations to control emissions from large municipal waste combustors
(greater than 250 tons per day capacity), small municipal waste
combustors (250 - 35 tons per day capacity), medical waste incinerators,
and commercial and industrial solid waste incinerators.
These final standards will establish
emission limits for the following nine air pollutants from these
incinerators: particulate matter, sulfur dioxide, hydrogen chloride,
nitrogen oxides, carbon monoxide, lead, cadmium, mercury, and
dioxins/furans.
For additional information, click
here.
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