May-June 2002

Odor Control, Part 2 The Perceptions of Odor

Today's odor-suppression chemicals are very effective in neutralizing malodors at MSW facilities, but they cannot do the whole job. Real or imagined odors are being perceived by annoyed and sometimes litigious neighbors. So other means must be used to supplement the suppression chemicals and keep you from being shut down.

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By Charles D. Bader

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A Comprehensive Program

Bob Gaubert, when he headed Odor Control Technology (OCT), devised a program that his company recommended to landfill operator customers as a complement to OCT odor-suppression products. The program began with a physical survey of the landfill or transfer station facility to gather physical data that would affect a determination of exactly what that operator's plan of action should be.

"These surveys almost always led to a conclusion that community action was needed," Gaubert recalls. "So then we recommended that they should proceed to take measurements. The first ‘measurement' was to take a sniff test every day at specific locations at the same time and chart the results on a scale of 1 to 5–with 5 being the most malodorous. Then the operator was advised to establish a meteorological station to gather and evaluate wind velocity, wind direction, moisture, and temperature on a methodical basis for various times of day and year. By integrating the sniff data with the weather data, the operator would begin to develop a profile to evaluate and understand complaints.

"We asked the operator to be very proactive in investigating each complaint by visiting the site and walking around with the resident to typify and verify the intensity of the stink, if any, and to identify the extent of the malodor. This personal data gathering, we found, had a valuable side effect. Apparently, just because the operator showed that he cared by making immediate responsive visits, the subsequent complaint level would drop by as much as 50%. We also had them log in whether this was the first time that resident had made a complaint. Statistically there is an inverse correlation between the validity of the complaint and the number of times a given neighbor complains. We recommended to the operators that they take new complaints very seriously."

Of course, the operator would return with potentially valuable data from these investigative visits. He could correlate these data with the meteorological data and the log of what was happening at just the time of the initial complaint. (Was gas being flared then? Was a pile being turned? Did a mechanical system go down at that time?) Not only might this pinpoint the cause of the odor, but it would also enable him to build a profile of meteorological factors that would be useful in modeling the probable plume dispersion that would be experienced under future conditions of that kind.

"Some of these factors weren't immediately obvious," Gaubert points out. "For example, if there are no clouds or no high temperature on a given day, odor compounds will go straight up into the atmosphere, and neighbors won't smell the malodor even if the wind is in their direction. Conversely, a diurnal change or a high moisture content in the atmosphere will create a lower ceiling, so the operator will have to take extra measures to make sure odors don't float over to neighboring residences.

"Based on this model, the operator will be in a position to take proactive corrective action if the same profile of conditions recurs. He can tweak his operations, perhaps delaying flare operations, changing the pretreatment that day, or increasing or redirecting the spraying of his odor-neutralization system. And with complete records of what he did and why he did it, the operator is in a strong position to contend with regulatory investigations or lawsuits."

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The phenomenon of perceived odors is difficult to address, primarily because your facility has its own conditions that are different from those of every other facility. With no formula solution available, an operator must combine detective work with science and psychology. It's frustrating, but it goes with the territory.

Frequent contributor Charles D. Bader is with Dateline II Communications in Los Angeles, CA.

Author's Bio: Charles D. Bader is with Dateline II Communications in Los Angeles, CA.

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