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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.
To
read part One of our series please click
here
By
Charles D. Bader
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 facilitieswith 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 gasrecovery 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 defendeven 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."
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%.
"We
had to address the odor issue, of course," Widell
says. "We took care to explain to them all the
odor-control provisions we were incorporating into the
facility design and operation, and we told them of the
odor-emissions limits that we had agreed to and that
were subsequently to be reflected as guarantees in our
contract. We showed them the high-speed roll-up doors
in the tipping building, the system of pumping the biosolids
underground, the in-vessel digester that kept the composting
from releasing odors to the outside, and the biofilter
that was itself contained in a building. I'm not
sure how much of the technical information these neighbors
absorbed, but they seemed impressed that we were doing
something' and were guaranteeing its effectiveness."
Building
on this proactive beginning, an odor committee was formed,
consisting of two members of the community, one from
the Public Works Department, one from city council,
and one from Waste Options. This gave the community
representation in all odor-related issues. In addition,
Waste Options set up a hotline and an e-mail address
to facilitate rather than impede the receipt of complaints.
"If
anyone smells anything, they can contact us by telephone
or e-mail without delay," Widell says. "In
turn, we are committed to respond immediately. We go
to that person's home to verify that the smell
is real and that it is being generated by our facility.
There is a sewage treatment plant immediately adjacent
to our facility, and for a while we were being accused
of odors they were generating. Occasionally the odor
problem proves to be ours, but almost always it results
from human error, such as a fan left off or a door left
ajar. Once we have identified such an odor problem,
the correction needed is clear-cut, and we make it immediately.
"Today
the complaints are much less frequent; for one thing,
our neighbors now can tell the difference between odors
generated by the sewage and ours, and we seem to be
winning over even those who were the most vociferous
opponents of establishing this facility in the first
place. In fact, we actually got a standing ovation at
a neighborhood open house recently, and in this fall's
elections, every one of the council membersincluding
those who had voted against the project initiallysupported
our operations as being a very good deal for the city."
Overcoming
a Reputation
It should
come as no surprise that most people assume a landfill
is smelly and will create a malodor nuisance in the
community. And as Joe Stockbridge of the Town of Colonie,
NY, found out firsthand, "Once you're tagged
as an odor source, you're it. It doesn't seem
to matter how bad the odor is or what its source really
is. The odors from every hot-tar roof installation are
attributed to you. To combat this misconception in our
town, we had to mount quite a campaign.
"First
there was the appearance issue. If people see litter
around a landfill, it reinforces their dislike for landfills
and reminds them that they are living near one. We don't
let this happen. Our landfill is landscaped like a park,
and we don't tolerate litter. We've found
that if you attend to aesthetic issues, you'll
have fewer problems with neighbors. That's not
all, of course. We make every effort to get people to
visit our landfill so that they can see what we are
doing. We have 50 to 75 tours each year, including schoolchildren
tours. If anyone expresses an interest in us, positive
or negative, we send them letters that tell them what
we are doing and invite them to walk the site.'
"We
also have an odor-control committee, made up largely
of residents. Not only do we report our activities to
this committee, we provide them with data, including
consultant reports, complaints, and complaint resolution
records. We want them to feel that they are a part of
our odor-control management team. And slowly but surely,
it helps. At least we're getting fewer hot-tar
roof complaints. Of course, we have to continue to be
diligent in looking for odors and mitigating them where
we can, and we have to show our neighbors that we're
doing our job professionally and well. We've found
that with a program like this you can earn their grudging
approval. Still, they're never going to love the
fact that you're there; after all, you're
still a landfill."
This effort
is not restricted strictly to municipally operated landfills.
Losa says Waste Management also invests time and effort
in communicating with residents who live near the company's
landfills. Waste Management encourages organized homeowner
groups to work with landfill management. "We hold
meetings, brief them about upcoming events such as the
start of a new cell, and make our monitoring reports
available to them," Losa explains. "Thus,
they have close and personal access to us and our recordsand
we have access, through them, to the community.
"This
doesn't mean that these resident groups have to
support your landfill operations. Instead, it means
that you have the ability to communicate with each other
constructively, rather than go to court. And once they
have accepted the fact that the landfill is going to
operate in their neighborhood, they usually come to
the conclusion that if they want their concerns heard,
they need to have a constructive way to communicate
with the landfill operator on an ongoing basis."
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 5with
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."
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.
To
read part One of our series please click
here
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