ENGENVI Quiz2 Reviewer 1
ENGENVI Quiz2 Reviewer 1
ENGENVI Quiz2 Reviewer 1
Liquids only
Air Pollutants
Manifests as fog or steam
Classification
By industry (spraying, coating)
Primary and Secondary
Organic mist from exhaust
Origin (Natural/Man-made)
Chemical Composition (Organic/Inorg.)
Gases (CO, SOx, NOx, Acids, Aldehydes, HC’s)
Aerosols and Gases
Acids
Source Type
Usually organic
Combustion
From incomplete combustion, industry
Transportation Emissions
Aldehydes
Industrial Processes
Contains C, H and O
Use of Solvents
From incomplete combustion
Radioactivity
Sunlight + NO2 + Olefenic HC’s
5 main air pollutants
Hydrocarbons (HC’s)
PM 10/2.5
Only H and C
Small solids or liquids (suspended)
Paraffins, Aromatics, Naphthalene
Natural or Man-made
Unburned or partially burned gas
Burning, Motors, Volcanoes, Industry
Ground Level O3 Some lost in refining and storage
Effects of Air Pollutants
Secondary pollutant
Air Pollution
Main component of smog
Most comes from coal and fossil fuels
From sunlight and motor combustion
NOx , CO, SOx, O3
Travels far
Both man-made and natural causes
NOX (1/2)
Effects: (Metal)
Combustion, Burning
Corrosion
Absorbs sun energy (photo-active; hot)
O3 is largest contributor to Cu and Al
CO
SO2 2nd most corrosive
Odorless, Colorless
Degradation
Lethal in enclosed areas
SO2, NO2 and O3 degrades Cu, Zn, Al
From Incomplete combustion
Effects: (Vegetation)
SO2
Tissue Collapse
Reactive gas, with strong odor
O3, F, SO2
From combustion, smelting
Look of Water-soaked or bruising
Aerosols (Smoke, Fumes, Dusts, Mists)
Chlorosis
Smoke
Chlorophyll reduction
Solid and liquid particles
Loss of pigments (Yellow/Pale Green)
From incomplete combustion
Slow Growth
Burning of rubbish, coal or petrol
O3 causes cell damage (brown spotting)
Fumes
O3 blocks the stomata (for respiration)
Solids only
Reduced Light intake
Condensation of vapors (volatile solids)
PM can make a thin film on the plant
From sublimation or chemical reaction Effects: (Health)
Dusts Lung Disease and Respiratory Problems
Solids only May trigger asthma as O3 irritates the
From grinding, drying, sawing dusting lungs
Dust with fluorine damages vegetation Cardiovascular Disease
Wind transferred from constructions, NO2, SO2, O3 mixes with blood
plowed fields or unpaved roads
Lung Cancer Total suspended particles
PM and O3 causes cancer PM10 or smaller
Pregnant Women and Newborns SO2 , NO2
Weaker immune system of unborn Photochemical oxidants
Respiratory disease for newborns Assignments of Airsheds:
DAO 93-14 (Air Quality and regulations relating to air Attainment Airshed
pollution control of 1993) Non- Attainment Airshed
March 18, 1993 Airshed management
Revised Air Quality Standards of 1992 Multisectoral gov. board (DENR head)
Amends the AQS of 1978 To formulate policies and standards
Applies to all possible sources of air pollution Prepare an action plan
Testing method: Opacity (Ringelmann chart) Coordinate members
emission limits for particulate matter in mg/Ncm Submit and Publish an yearly AQI
National Emission Standards for Source Specific Support groups
Air Pollutants (NESSAP)
Nine-member committee elected by
Control of Sulfur Compound Emissions
the board
Penalties: Php20/kg (should not exceed 5k)
Air Quality Management Fund (AQMR)
National Ambient Air Quality Guidelines
from DENR
(NAAQG) and standards
Finance containment and clean up
Prohibited acts:
Restoration and rehabilitation
Fugitive Particles
Allocated per airshed not city
Volatile Organic compounds emissions
Where did the DENR get the fund:
Needs to be stored and handled
From emission charges
Waste Gas disposal
Fines and penalties
Organic Solvents
Public and private grants
Nuisance
Compliance Mandates
OPEN BURNING
Air Quality Index: Mobile Source
Very Unhealthy Air Quality (Alert level) Exhaust emissions
those old or has lung problems should Certificate of Conformity
stay indoors and reduce physical activity Certificate of Compliance to
Hazardous Air Quality (Warning level) Emission standards
Above + public avoid outdoor activities Proof with Motor vehicle inspection
Extremely hazardous Air (Emergency level) system (MVIS)
All stay indoors + seal windows & doors Industrial Source
RA 8749 (PH Clean air act of 1999) Nat’l emission standards for source
Approved: June 23, 1999 specific pollutants (DAO 93-14)
Air quality management to preserve healthy air Nat’l ambient air quality standards
Covers: Permit to Operate
Mobile (Transportation) Smoke belching
Stationary (Factory) From poor vehicle maintenance
Area (Burning, dusts from construction) 72-hour grace period for fine payment
Air Quality Management Smoking Ban:
Airsheds: Started: May 25, 2001
area with same weather condition In:
No sharp boundaries Public buildings
Larger than watersheds Enclosed places, PUVs, LRT, etc.
There are 16 air shed in the Philippines Any enclosed area except residence
Criteria for AQM
Closed designated area with no
smoking signs Why the protocol started
Penalties: They saw the effect of GHG’s
6 months 1 day – 1-year Industrialization
imprisonment or Php10,000 fine developed countries is a big part to GHG
PRRD smoke ban: Organized timeline:
May 16, 2017 1979:
Nation-wide smoking ban in all public 1st climate conference (Geneva)
places 1988:
Air Quality Monitoring System Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Php 6,000,000 Change (IPCC) was started
1st unmanned machine in Metro Manila 1990:
Near busy roads in urban areas (Worst) 2nd climate conference
Process: 1st IPCC report
Measure of total suspended particles 1992:
Daily report sent to DENR-EMB 2nd earth summit (Rio de Janeiro)
Used for policy formation (Air,transpo) Creation of the UNFCC (United
Measures effectivity of policies nations framework convention on
climate change)
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Kyoto Protocol (Greenhouse gases) 2nd IPCC report
First GHG emission reduction treaty 1997:
Kyoto, Japan – Signed: December 11, 1997 Kyoto Conference
Effective: Feb. 16, 2005 150 nations attended
International Treaty in 1992 -5% GHG emissions by 2010
Commitment Periods: 1998:
First commitment (2008-2012) Buenos Aires Action Plan
Second (2012-2020) (DOHA amendment) 2001:
To prevent human interference to climate 3rd IPCC (Bonn, Germany)
1 gigaton reduction per year (since 1990 levels) Scientific proof of global warming
Greenhouse effect – gradually heats the earth 178 countries adopt the protocol
causing global warming US doesn’t participate
DOHA amendment – changes to the protocol 2002:
192 countries signed and ratified 3rd earth summit (Johannesburg)
6 didn’t sign and ratify (US only signed) 2004:
Countries (top emitters of GHG): Russia ratified the protocol
China 2005:
US Kyoto protocol took effect
UN 2011:
India Withdrawal of Canada
Russia Unworkable goals due to US and China
Japan 2012:
Six main greenhouse gases
DOHA amendment (2020 extension)
CO2
2013:
Methane (CH4)
Afghanistan adopts the protocol
Nitrous Oxide (N2O)
2015:
Hydrofluorocarbons (HFC’s)
Replacement with the Paris Agreement
Perfluorocarbons (PFC’s)
Sulphur hexafluoride (SF6)
Montreal Protocol Greenhouse Effect
Timeline: Change is too fast for life to adapt
1987: Finalized and agreed (Sept 16) Storms, droughts
Signed by 46 countries Impact: (0.5C – 1C change)
1989: Enforced (Jan. 1) Warm temperature extremes
1990: London Amendment Heatwaves
Adjust, Add, Establish, Replace Water availability
1992: Copenhagen Amendment Extreme precipitation
Higher control of CFC’s, halons Impacts on biodiversity and Ecosystem
Additional Control on Methyl bromide, Forest Impact (reduction of rainforest)
HBFC’s, HCFC’s Ocean Impacts (Sea level increase)
1997: Montreal Agreement Marine life (Dissolved O2 decrease)
No trading of Methyl bromide & reduce Coral Reef Impact (decrease due to acid)
1999: Beijing Amendment Impacts on Humans (heat-related)
No trade of bromochloromethane Food shortage (Death of crops)
Ban and freeze all use of HCFC’s Economic Impact (Climate Damage)
2016: Kigali Amendment Droughts (land dehydration)
Reduce use of HFC’s Ozone Depletion
How and Why it started: Ozone (O3)
By Mario Molina and Sherwood Rowland Three O atoms covalently bonded
Found CFC’s can destroy O3 Trace Gas
Made countries like Canada ban CFCs Highly reactive
Framework (Vienna Convention of the Produced by photodissociation
protection of the O3 layer) Stratospheric O3
Science and Policy (By Peter Morrisette) Second layer of the atmosphere
Politics (By Peter Morrissette and Haas) Protect from UVC (100%), most UVB
Importance: Cause of depletion:
To heal the O3 layers (reducing UV) Halogen, CFC, HCFC, Halon, Methyl Bromide
Carbon, Chlorine, Fluorine
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Refrigerants, aerosols, plastics
Global Environmental Challenges Inexpensive, non-flammable, non-toxic
Issues with the planet’s systems 90% from industry (north hemisphere)
State effects of humans to the environment Halons (Fire extinguishers; 1994 ban)
15 Environmental Challenges: Methyl Bromide (Toxic; 2005 US ban)
Pollution UV dissociation
Global Warming (GHGs) UV destroys CFC bonds
Overpopulation (Unsustainable) Cl attracts and captures oxygen atoms
Waste Disposal (Excessive plastics O3 holes:
Natural resource depletion (Fuel use)
Thinning of the O3 layer
Climate Change
Most prominent in the Arctic pole
Loss of biodiversity (Extinctions)
Size changes according to temperature
Deforestation (Reduction of vegetation)
Low temps cause CFCs to dissociate
Ocean acidification (Carbonic acid)
Countries at risk of O3 holes
Acid rain (Airborne pollutants)
Due to the polar vortex
Water pollution (water toxicity)
Argentina, Chile, Australia, New Zealand
Urban Sprawl (Migration to low density)
Effects of O3 depletion:
Public Health issues (Dirty water or land)
Humans (Cancer, immune sys dmg, Cataract)
Genetic Engineering (GMOs increase toxins)
Plants (Reduced growth, population that Use sustainable energy sources
feeds on plants) --------------------------------------------------------------------------
Marine Ecosystem (Dev of Phytoplankton) Climate Change
Biogeochemical Cycles (Gas cycle change) Climate change
Acid Deposition Change in global temperature (+/-),
Acid formation in the atmosphere precipitation, wind patterns, etc.
Long-range effects rather than local Due to global warming
Transboundary problem (far reaching) Climate vs Weather
Kinds of Deposition: Climate: over a long period of time
Dry (Particles and gases) Weather: may vary daily
Acid particles (Transported) Philippines setting:
Gases (Quick deposition) Tropical rainforest (No very dry season)
Wet (Rain, Snow, Fog, Mist) Tropical savanna (hills, grasslands, and trees)
Rain (pH 4.2-4.4) Tropical monsoon (high-sun seasons; hot)
Snow (More problematic than rain) Humid Subtropical (hot and humid summer,
Fog (taken up from gas phase) and cool to mild winters)
Mist (High conc from tanks) Cause:
Classifications of Acid Deposition Carbon cycle
Episodic (Short but intense; loss of life) From reservoirs of carbons:
Chronic (waters lose ability to neutralize) Atmosphere
Causes and Types Oceans
Sulfuric Acid: Rocks and fossils
Major factor in acid deposition Biological processes
From rocks or burning of coal, oil, peat Greenhouse Gases
Nitric Acid: High conc. Global Warming Potentials
Only a pollutant when conc is too high Measure of how much heat a GHG traps
From combustion (Car, Utility, industry) CO2 (GWP 1) (Base reference)
Effects (Environment): Effects:
Base Nutrient Depletion Global Warming > Climate Change
Removes original nutrients due to runoff Sea level rise
Aluminum Toxicity Damage to natural and human ecosystems
Aluminum as a heavy metal Droughts
Unsuitable for freshwater fish Ice Cap melt
Nitrogen Saturation Carbon Footprint
Excessive use of soil capacity to hold N Amount of carbon emissions
Causes soil, forest, aquatic degradation Measured in (Tons CO2 / year)
Eutrophication Contributors: (starting biggest)
Additional nitrogen enriches the coast US, Canada, South Korea, Russia, Japan
Importance:
Causes low amount O2 to be dissolved
Tracking to keep in check
Corrosion
Calculation
SO2 increases corrosion rate of stones
Listing then calculating (bruh…)
Effects (People):
Reduction:
Danger to elderly people, those with heart
Reduce, Substitute, Reuse, Plant
and respiratory disease
NOx increase ground-level O3 (Pneumonia & --------------------------------------------------------------------------
bronchitis)
Solutions: Solid Waste
Vehicle and building emission regulations Consist of all solid, semi-solid refuse
Reduce electricity use Advantages of classifying solid waste:
Easier recycling Open dumping (burying)
Stable collection Unauthorize removal of recyclables
Proper disposal Mixing of waste
Classifications: Importation of non-environmentally friendly
Organics packing items
Will decay; offensive odor Importation of misrepresented waste
Inorganics Waste management facility w/o permit
May be combustible or non Generation of waste
Minor Classifications: Waste generation
Municipal (city waste) Volume of materials before disposal
Domestic (household waste; largest share) Waste stream
Commercial (restaurants, wholesale; 2nd) Path of waste from source to disposal
Institutional (Schools, hospitals; 3rd) Waste
Construction (refurbish, demolition) Materials that has lost its value or purpose
Industrial (manufacturing, food prod.;4th) Types:
Agricultural (crops, farms) Liquid Waste
Composition: (Largest share first) Domestic, industrial or agricultural
Biodegradable Point source
Recyclables Specified and definite source
Residuals Nonpoint source
Hazardous Unknown source
Garbage vs. Rubbish Solid
garbage Plastic, Paper, Metal, Glass (4 types)
animal/vegetables; rapid decomposition Organic Waste
Rubbish domestic source
Combustible or non solids Rots/decays and produces methane
RA 9003 Decomposed by microorganisms
Ecological Waste Management of 2000 Recyclables
Passed December 2000 Can be converted to new products
Signed Jan. 26, 2001 by Arroyo Hazardous waste
Effective: Feb. 10, 2001 Flammable, toxic, reactive, corrosive
Importance: Electronic Waste
Garbage management unwanted, broken, obsolete
Preserve the environment and health Factors:
Encourage private sector participation Urbanization
Encourage cooperation Population growth
14 government offices participate in managing Economic development
3 private sectors: Effects:
NGOs Soil contamination (Plants, groundwater)
Recycling industry Water contamination (Marine, algal bloom)
Manufacturing and packaging industry Air contamination (incineration, GHGs)
LGU: Threat to human health (dengue, malaria)
Enforcement of own policies & management 4 R’s
Prohibitions: Refuse, Reduce, Reuse, Recycle
Littering in public places Composting and Incineration
Acts violating sanitation policies Benefits:
Open burning Protects the environment
Collection of non-segregated waste Source of income
Squatting in landfills Waste reduction
Conserves energy Waste Collection
Material Recovery Facilities (MRFs)
Disadvantages: From RA 9003
Not always profitable Every barangay should have MRFs
Management sites are dangerous Sorts, transports, processes, recycles waste
Not uniform and sold as raw materials
Two methods: Importance:
Composting Environmental protection
Black gold Systematic segregation
Most environmentally friendly More appealing
Pros: Sorting Facility or Recycling facility
Good for air quality Sorting facility
Increase biodiversity Only sorts
Eco-friendly All recyclables sent to recycling
Cons: Recycling facility
Only for organics To generate new raw materials
Stinky and attracts insects To maximize the use
Contamination may occur Clean vs Dirty MRF
Time consuming Clean: no putrescible (municipal waste)
Impractical for small land Dirty:putrescible (house;intense sorting)
Requirements: How does an MRF work?
O2 Material gathering
Moisture Gravitation of heavy waste
Fragment sizing Manual sorting
Green matter and N2 Magnetic attraction
Dry matter Magnetic repulsion
Heat Glass and plastic separation
Incineration: Optical sorting
Waste to energy Manual sorting (final)
Banned by RA 8749 DLSU MRF
Supported by RA 9003 Biodegradable and Non-biodegradable
Pros: Residuals waste
Efficient Chemical Hazardous Waste
Space saving
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Doesn’t contaminate groundwater
Treat of medical waste erase hazard DAO 93-14
Cons: Signed: March 18, 1999
Costly RA 8749 (PH Clean air act of 1999)
Manpower Signed: June 23, 1999 by Estrada
Bad for the air RA 9003 (Ecological Solid waste mang. of 2000)
Discourages waste management Signed: Jan. 26, 2001 by Arroyo
Compositing > Recycling > Incineration Kyoto Protocol (GHGs)
Fines and Penalties Signed: December 11, 1997
RA 6969 (Hazardous and Nuclear waste) Effective: Feb. 16, 2005
RA 9003 (Ecological solid waste mang.) Montreal Protocol (CFCs)
RA 8749 (PH clean air act of 1999) Signed: Aug. 26, 1987
Talks Concluded on: Sept. 16, 1987
Effective: Jan 1, 1989
PYROLYSIS AND SANITARY LANDFILL REUSE
Pyrolysis Use materials more than once in their
Decomposing biomass by heating in a low O2 original form
environment RECYCLE
Converts waste to energy Converting waste materials into new
3 Byproducts products, changing them from their original
Biofuel form by physical and chemical processes
Highly Oxygenated
Dark in Color
High amount of H20
Syngas
Flammable Gas
H and CO
Clean alternative to fossil fuels
Biochar
Charred organic matter
Used to improve soil quality
Sanitary Landfill
Area of land designated for the
decomposition of waste into biologically and
chemically stable materials
Isolated from surrounding environment
DISPOSAL CATEGORY 1
LGU produce less than 15 tons of waste
per day
60 cm thick clay liner
DISPOSAL CATEGORY 2
Produce more than 15 but less than 75
per day
75 cm thick clay liner
DISPOSAL CATEGORY 3
More than 75 bur less than 200 tons
75cm thick
DISPOSAL CATEGORY 4
More than 200
75cm thick
101 operating landills in PH ( 17 in
construction )
WASTE MINIMIZATION
Reducing/ Limiting quantity of hazardous wastes
Change in societal patterns that relate to
production and consumption ( process change)
Redesigning products to eliminate generation of
waste
REUSE AND RECYCLE FOR SUSTAINABILITY
SUSTAINABILITY
Mainting the earth’s scarce resources