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Please
find below the latest emissions to air data for
the Sheffield Energy Recovery Facility which we
are required to monitor on a continuous basis.
This information will be updated regularly
Years : 2008, 2007, 2006
Charts : May 2008, April 2008, March 2008, February 2008, January 2008
| Daily
Average Emissions Limit |
| • |
Dust (Particulates) |
10mg/m3 |
| • |
Total Organic Carbon |
10mg/m3 |
| • |
Hydrogen Chloride |
10mg/m3 |
| • |
Carbon Monoxide |
50mg/m3 |
| • |
Sulphur Dioxide |
50mg/m3 |
| • |
Oxides of Nitrogen |
180mg/m3 |
Please see below for
further information on the emissions monitored.
What type of substance is it?
Particulates is the term used to describe tiny particles
in the air, made up of a complex mixture of soot,
organic and inorganic materials having a particle
size less than or equal to 10 microns diameter (10
microns is equal to one hundredth part of a millimetre).
Particulates is one of the eight substances for
which the government has established an air quality
standard as part of its national Air Quality Strategy.
How is it released?
There are many man-made sources of Particulates,
including road transport and industry. There are
also natural sources, for example, volcanoes and
dust storms.
What type of substance is it?
Total Organic Carbon is part of a large group of
liquids and gases often called volatile organic
compounds (VOCs). The liquids easily vaporise at
room temperature and many are colourless and odourless.
They are of general concern because of their ability
to react with other pollutants, such as nitrogen
oxides, in the lower atmosphere to form ozone. High
concentrations of ozone at ground level can harm
human health, damage crops and affect materials
such as rubber. Some VOCs may be directly harmful
to human health, contribute to global warming or
destroy stratospheric ozone needed to shield the
earth's surface from harmful ultra violate radiation.
How is it released?
Paints, natural gas, petrol, road transport and
industrial processes are the major sources of these
compounds, however some are also produced by natural
biological processes.
What type of substance is it?
Hydrogen chloride is both a naturally occuring chemical
and is manufactured by man. It is a colourless,
chemically reactive gas with a strong, pungent odour.
In solution with water it forms a strong acid -
hydrochloric acid. The gas is acidic and corrosive.
How is it released?
The main source of hydrogen chloride releases are
coal burning power stations. Smaller quantities
are also emitted from waste incinerators.
What type of substance is it?
Carbon monoxide is both a common naturally occuring
chemical and is manufactured by man. It is a colourless,
odourless poisonous gas. Carbon monoxide is one
of the eight substances for which the government
has established an air quality standard as part
of its national Air Quality Strategy.
How is it released?
The main man-made source of carbon monoxide is petrol
vehicles which are not fitted with a catalytic converter.
Small amounts are also released from the burning
of fossil fuels in power stations and waste incinerators.
Faulty domestic gas boilers and domestic cookers
are also sources and the gas is also found in tobacco
smoke. Smaller amounts are also produced by natural
processes
What type of substance is it?
Sulphur dioxide is man-made and naturally occurring
colourless gas with a penetrating odour. It dissolves
in water to form an acidic solution of sulphurous
acid. Sulphur dioxide gas is one of the main chemicals
that causes acid rain. Concentrations sometimes
found in the polluted environment can damage crops
and forests and acidify sensitive soils and water
bodies. Sulphur dioxide is one of the eight substances
for which the government has established an air
quality standard as part of its national Air Quality
Strategy.
How is it released?
Sulphur dioxide is produced by burning coal and
oil. Power stations and oil refineries release most
of the sulphur dioxide in the air, but releases
from domestic open fires can also affect local concentrations.
Releases from its industrial uses are relatively
small. Sulphur dioxide is also found naturally in
the air at low concentrations from natural releases
such as volcanoes and forest fires.
What type of substance is it?
The term 'nitrogen oxides' (NOx) is usually used
to includes two gases - nitric oxide (NO), which
is a colourless, odourless gas and nitrogen dioxide
(NO2), which is a reddish-brown gas with a pungent
odour. Nitrogen oxides contribute to acid rain,
depletion of the ozone layer and have detrimental
effects on health. They are also greenhouse gases.
Nitrogen dioxide is one of the eight substances
for which the government has established an air
quality standard as part of its national Air Quality
Strategy.
How is it released?
Major man-made releases of nitrogen oxides are primarily
from fuel combustion (including vehicles), biomass
burning and some production processes. There are
also minor natural sources such as lightning, natural
fires and biological processes in soils and waters.
For further information about these emissions
please visit the
Environment
Agency Website.
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