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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So you've just spent a lot of money installing a chemical odor-suppression system to stop the complaints from neighboring residents. But just as you've relaxed in a state of self-congratulation, the telephone rings … and it's another odor complaint. You can't understand it; you can't smell any malodors and the system appears to be working flawlessly, but there are still odor complaints.

For what it's worth, you're not alone. Almost every landfill operator or composter has experienced this phenomenon. It's called "the perception of odor." Some operators are convinced that such calls come exclusively from chronic complainers and gleefully tell stories about how they temporarily stopped complaints by undertaking, with considerable fanfare, the spraying of their facilities–with plain water. The perception of odor was combated with the perception of "doing something."

Doug Mason, vice president and chief operating officer of Continuum Chemical Company in Houston, TX, has a variation on this classic story: "Continuum products suppress malodors with an encapsulation process that does not rely on fragrances. But occasionally we've had a landfill customer request to have us add a bit of a scent so that his neighbors can detect something there; again, it's just giving these neighbors an impression that the operator is ‘doing something.' And it's ironic that using fragrance in this way or as a masking agent often results in neighbors getting tired of the same floral or similar scent all the time and thus making a different type of complaint. One landfill manager in Pennsylvania told us that they had been fined by the DEQ [Department of Environmental Quality] for disseminating pleasant fragrances."

What Causes Malodors

"We know what causes malodors," continues Mason. "Over 80% of all offensive odors are the result of the presence of just two basic types of chemicals: nitrogenous compounds and sulfur-bearing compounds. In most circumstances, the products that people use contain these elements in structural arrangements that are not odor-causing. However, in other combinations and arrangements, these same chemical elements can be obtrusive with strongly offensive odors.

"In the odor-producing process, organic material is broken down into smaller, volatile molecules. As the microbial decomposition process progresses, the nitrogen and sulfur atoms present in the organic matter are rearranged into smaller molecules that are odiferous. Ammonia is an example of a strong, pungent nitrogenous compound that is found in household cleaning products. It is also the key malodor from urine. Derivatives of ammonia, known as amines, have other characteristic foul smells. For example, simple amines, such as dimethyl amine and trimethyl amine, cause a characteristic ‘fishy' smell.

"Sulfur-based odors come in different types as well. For example, hydrogen sulfide is the odor we associate with automotive catalytic converters, rotten eggs, and landfill gas. Mercaptans are sulfur-bearing chemicals that are used to impart a strong odor to natural gas for safety purposes.

"Such odiferous chemicals are detected as they volatize into gases and are dispersed into the air we breathe. These chemicals stimulate the olfactory glands on our nasal passages that transmit a signal to the brain where detection and recognition of the odor occurs. Our products interrupt this process by converting offensive chemicals to materials having no odor. For foul odors not capable of being converted, an active encapsulation process binds malodorous substances, thereby capturing them and preventing their evaporation."

That's a good scientific description of how malodors are generated and one reasonable approach to how they can be effectively controlled, but it does not explain the perception of odors. Rick Losa of Waste Management, which uses Continuum products on a number of its landfills, believes that odor-suppression systems are useful and beneficial, but he does not discount odor complaints as being frivolous or imaginary. "You can only control so much in an open-air environment like a landfill," he points out, "so odor is a fundamental landfill phenomenon.

"If our landfill gas—recovery system goes down, we will get odor complaints. When the wind shifts, we may get complaints. We find that odor complaints are tied to events such as these, so our neighbors' perceptions of odor cannot be considered imaginary. This is a subjective issue, to be sure, but we certainly can't guarantee that if we put in the very best odor-suppression system, there won't be an odor problem. We have to deal with our neighbors and take their complaints seriously. It's an essential part of operating a landfill today."

The Need to Deal With Perceived Malodors

The penalties for not dealing proactively and effectively with perceived malodors can be very severe today. "Landfill nuisance has become a legal issue now," Losa contends. "People are suing landfill operators, not based on whether they are violating their permits, but based on the allegation that the very nature of a landfill's existence creates a nuisance that justifies some sort of compensation. The suits aren't based on any scientific limits that are being exceeded, and there is no basis established as to what constitutes a litigable nuisance, but these suits are being pursued. And if a landfill has an excessive malodor problem, its case is likely to be much more difficult to defend–even though there are no quantitative odor levels or other criteria established as to what constitutes an odor problem."

The lack of scientific data cuts two ways. While this lack hampers the plaintiff in such a suit, the operator needs good quantitative data to successfully defend a suit. This is equally true in dealing with regulators, says Bob Gaubert of Robert E Gaubert & Associates in Loganville, GA. "You have to get proactive before opposition gets too strong. Otherwise you may end up with community or regulatory action that may even put you out of business. If complaints are directed to your regulatory agency, you may not be able to avoid being put on notice, although if you can show records that indicate you're doing the best you can, your chances are better. But if they come back a second time, you'll probably be facing a lawsuit or a fine, and unless you can prove that you have been taking meaningful corrective steps, there may be a judgment that can go all the way to enforced closure."

That's exactly what happened in Marlborough, MA. A co-composting facility adjacent to the city's wastewater treatment plant caused such severe odor complaints from nearby residents that they formed a neighborhood association and filed a lawsuit against the city. A year later, a superior court issued an injunction that shut down the facility. This created an expensive waste disposal problem for the city, so a year later it solicited bids for a system to co-compost its biosolids. Waste Options of Warwick, RI, was awarded the contract for the co-composting using the city's MSW as the bulking material.

"The neighborhood association didn't want a repeat of the odor problems of the past," recalls Waste Options's Nelson Widell. "They worked with the city to set up an odor advisory committee while the new facility was still under construction. The superior court decision was incorporated into the city's contract with us, so we knew that if our facility produced nuisance odors, the lawsuit would again kick in and we could be shut down immediately. It was a particularly dicey situation for us because this site had a reputation for malodors, and that usually establishes a perception of an odor problem that is difficult to overcome.

"Also, ours was the first composting facility to be built under the Massachusetts DEP's [Department of Environmental Protection's] Draft Guidance and Policy for the Evaluation of Odors at Composting Facilities, which established an emissions limit of five dilutions to threshold at the property line. We met that standard at a cost of $2.5 million, and it is a state-of-the-art facility. However, we were still concerned about the perception of odor possibilities under our contract so we took steps to mitigate that problem too."

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A Proactive Program in Marlborough

Waste Options decided upon a proactive campaign to communicate with its neighbors rather than wait for complaints. During the early startup phases, it went directly to the neighbors to make sure they knew what was being done and how it would benefit them. And there certainly were benefits to extol. First, the new facility cut the costs of processing the city's biosolids rather than hauling them 25 mi. out of town to be incinerated. Equally important were the benefits of the recycling program that Waste Options had implemented and was managing at the site. Since the facility went on-line in August 1999, the city's recycling rate has increased from 11% to 65%. Next Page >

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