Economical and Environmental Impacts of Emission Mitigation in Petroleum Refineries

Economical and Environmental Impacts of Emission Mitigation in Petroleum Refineries

Author: Amani Alnahdi

Publisher:

Published: 2015

Total Pages:

ISBN-13:

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Despite the large number of products produced by oil refineries, they are considered to be one of the main source of air contaminants including, sulphur oxides SOx, hydrocarbons, nitrogen oxides NOx and carbon oxide CO2, which are primarily caused by fuel burning. Gases emanated from fuel burning in oil refinery need to be tumbled down as they create a critical environmental issue in the developed world. A number of control strategies can be applied in order to mitigate emissions and meet certain environmental regulations. This thesis addresses the development of a mathematical model for an oil refinery with consideration to multiple pollutants reduction alternatives. The objective of this study is to help decision makers of oil refineries to select the best pollution control strategies for a given emission reduction target. The model is demonstrated by an industrial scale refinery with three emissions including nitrogen oxides (NOx), sulphur dioxide (SOx) and carbon dioxide (CO2). Furthermore, this research studies the dispersion of air pollutants that are potentially released from oil refinery. As a test case, we used a potential site for oil refinery in the northern area of Toronto, Ontario, Canada. In order to predict pollutants concentrations, dispersions and transports, we used a screening model (SCREEN3), and a non-steady state Lagrangian puff model (CALPUFF), which use topographical and meteorological conditions on concentration of pollutant emissions to examine the impacts at receptor locations.


Mitigating Environmental Impact of Petroleum Lubricants

Mitigating Environmental Impact of Petroleum Lubricants

Author: Ignatio Madanhire

Publisher: Springer

Published: 2016-06-09

Total Pages: 256

ISBN-13: 3319313584

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This book explores effective environmental impact mitigation for petroleum-based lubricants to reduce their negative persistence during usage and upon end-of-life disposal. The book reviews the basic tribology of lubricants as well as initiatives that may enhance the environmental and economic effectiveness of lubricating oils from the composition design perspective across industries. Considering the blending, application, and disposal of petroleum lubricants in a holistic manner, the book presents and extends current best practices that minimize or eliminate adverse environmental impact throughout the product’s life cycle. The book reviews methods including: raw material substitution, minimizing oil losses during and after manufacturing, raw material and energy consumption reduction, and environmentally friendly applications of oil disposal as ways forward for cleaner and more effective production. This book provides readers with strategies for incorporating cleaner production practices into their operations – a benefit to both environmental legal compliance and business competitiveness – all the while preserving the environment for sustainable development. The book is therefore of interest to both manufacturers and consumers in the lubricants industry.


Environmental Issues Related to the Petroleum Refining Industry

Environmental Issues Related to the Petroleum Refining Industry

Author: Cheng Seong Khor

Publisher:

Published: 2013

Total Pages: 15

ISBN-13: 9780803186811

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Environmental considerations are increasingly affecting the profit margins of petroleum refineries and thus ought to be taken into account in the design and operations of refineries. This chapter is divided into three main parts, each addressing the three major types of environmental pollution related to the operations of a petroleum refinery: water pollution, air pollution, and noise pollution. The structure adopted in the systematic exposition of these different pollution types typically begins with the sources and characteristics of the pollutants and the consequences or effects that these pollutants bring about. Next, the related environmental regulations are covered in general. Subsequently, the associated reduction, control, and treatment technologies for the removal of the pollutants are presented in light of the legislative requirements. In the spirit of keeping up with up-to-date developments, the paper also discusses how the refining industry is reacting to global concerns over climate change as induced by greenhouse gas emissions, particularly carbon dioxide, as part of a suite of measures in the framework of refinery environmental management. The chapter concludes with a general outlook of the shape of events to come, particularly in view of the anticipated impending massive effects of global climate change.


Renewable Energy Sources and Climate Change Mitigation

Renewable Energy Sources and Climate Change Mitigation

Author: Ottmar Edenhofer

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2011-11-21

Total Pages: 1088

ISBN-13: 9781107607101

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This Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Special Report (IPCC-SRREN) assesses the potential role of renewable energy in the mitigation of climate change. It covers the six most important renewable energy sources - bioenergy, solar, geothermal, hydropower, ocean and wind energy - as well as their integration into present and future energy systems. It considers the environmental and social consequences associated with the deployment of these technologies, and presents strategies to overcome technical as well as non-technical obstacles to their application and diffusion. SRREN brings a broad spectrum of technology-specific experts together with scientists studying energy systems as a whole. Prepared following strict IPCC procedures, it presents an impartial assessment of the current state of knowledge: it is policy relevant but not policy prescriptive. SRREN is an invaluable assessment of the potential role of renewable energy for the mitigation of climate change for policymakers, the private sector, and academic researchers.


How Large Are Global Energy Subsidies?

How Large Are Global Energy Subsidies?

Author: Mr.David Coady

Publisher: International Monetary Fund

Published: 2015-05-15

Total Pages: 42

ISBN-13: 1513560506

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This paper provides a comprehensive, updated picture of energy subsidies at the global and regional levels. It focuses on the broad notion of post-tax energy subsidies, which arise when consumer prices are below supply costs plus a tax to reflect environmental damage and an additional tax applied to all consumption goods to raise government revenues. Post-tax energy subsidies are dramatically higher than previously estimated, and are projected to remain high. These subsidies primarily reflect under-pricing from a domestic (rather than global) perspective, so even unilateral price reform is in countries’ own interests. The potential fiscal, environmental and welfare impacts of energy subsidy reform are substantial.


Analytical Techniques in the Oil and Gas Industry for Environmental Monitoring

Analytical Techniques in the Oil and Gas Industry for Environmental Monitoring

Author: Melissa N. Dunkle

Publisher: John Wiley & Sons

Published: 2020-09-01

Total Pages: 464

ISBN-13: 1119523303

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A thorough introduction to environmental monitoring in the oil and gas industry Analytical Techniques in the Oil and Gas Industry for Environmental Monitoring examines the analytical side of the oil and gas industry as it also provides an overall introduction to the industry. You’ll discover how oil and natural gas are sourced, refined, and processed. You can learn about what’s produced from oil and natural gas, and why evaluating these sourced resources is important. The book discusses the conventional analyses for oil and natural gas feeds, along with their limitations. It offers detailed descriptions of advanced analytical techniques that are commercially available, plus explanations of gas and oil industry equipment and instrumentation. You’ll find technique descriptions supplemented with a list of references as well as with real-life application examples. With this book as a reference, you can prepare to apply specific analytical methods in your organization’s lab environment. Analytical Techniques can also serve as your comprehensive resource on key techniques in the characterization of oil and gas samples, within both refinery and environmental contexts. Understand of the scope of oil and gas industry techniques available Consider the benefits and limitations of each available process Prepare for applying analytical techniques in your lab See real examples and a list of references for each technique Read descriptions of off-line analytics, as well as on-line and process applications As a chemist, engineer, instructor, or student, this book will also expand your awareness of the role these techniques have in environmental monitoring and environmental impact assessments.


The socio-economic effects of air environmental regulations on the U.S. petroleum refining industry

The socio-economic effects of air environmental regulations on the U.S. petroleum refining industry

Author: Lee Alexandria Fuerst

Publisher:

Published: 1999

Total Pages: 322

ISBN-13:

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The purpose of this thesis is to exemplify the social and economic effects of environmental air regulations as related to petroleum refiners. The Clean Air Act, and subsequent amendments, have had a major impact in the petroleum refining industry. Likewise, the global climate change regulations have the potential for just as great an impact. The impacts have resulted in beneficial outcomes; reduced emissions, cleaner air, more efficient equipment, and even economic benefits through recovery systems. However, companies have spent billions in capital expenditures to adhere to the Clean Air Act and its' Amendments. The major conclusions of this paper are: Regulations should be thoroughly researched before implementation; Regulations should be based on sound science; Economic evaluations using all available financial assessment criteria resulting in a comprehensive analysis should be used; Government officials, industry organizations, and petroleum refiners should work together to determine a particular regulation's feasibility and consequential social and economic effects. As illustrated throughout this paper, regulations are needed but some have been, or are proposed to be, implemented before enough scientific research has taken place. The concept of scientific validation coupled with economics balancing has a prevalent undertone throughout the industry on any legislation. Air regulations are a social and economic issue. The social part consists of industry's role in improving the environment and refinery process, with public interests (and image) upfront. At the same time, these issues need to be economically worthwhile. This paper discusses the socioeconomic effects of environmental air regulations on the United States Petroleum Refining Industry.


Assessment of Energy Efficiency Improvement in the United States Petroleum Refining Industry

Assessment of Energy Efficiency Improvement in the United States Petroleum Refining Industry

Author:

Publisher:

Published: 2013

Total Pages:

ISBN-13:

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Adoption of efficient process technologies is an important approach to reducing CO2 emissions, in particular those associated with combustion. In many cases, implementing energy efficiency measures is among the most cost-effective approaches that any refiner can take, improving productivity while reducing emissions. Therefore, careful analysis of the options and costs associated with efficiency measures is required to establish sound carbon policies addressing global climate change, and is the primary focus of LBNL's current petroleum refining sector analysis for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. The analysis is aimed at identifying energy efficiency-related measures and developing energy abatement supply curves and CO2 emissions reduction potential for the U.S. refining industry. A refinery model has been developed for this purpose that is a notional aggregation of the U.S. petroleum refining sector. It consists of twelve processing units and account s for the additional energy requirements from steam generation, hydrogen production and water utilities required by each of the twelve processing units. The model is carbon and energy balanced such that crud e oil inputs and major refinery sector outputs (fuels) are benchmarked to 2010 data. Estimates of the current penetration for the identified energy efficiency measures benchmark the energy requirements to those reported in U.S. DOE 2010 data. The remaining energy efficiency potential for each of the measures is estimated and compared to U.S. DOE fuel prices resulting in estimates of cost- effective energy efficiency opportunities for each of the twelve major processes. A combined cost of conserved energy supply curve is also presented along with the CO2 emissions abatement opportunities that exist in the U.S. petroleum refinery sector. Roughly 1,200 PJ per year of primary fuels savings and close to 500 GWh per y ear of electricity savings are potentially cost-effective given U.S. DOE fuel price forecasts. This represents roughly 70 million metric tonnes of CO2 emission reductions assuming 2010 emissions factor for grid electricity. Energy efficiency measures resulting in an additional 400 PJ per year of primary fuels savings and close to 1,700 GWh per year of electricity savings, and an associated 24 million metric tonnes of CO2 emission reductions are not cost-effective given the same assumption with respect to fuel prices and electricity emissions factors. Compared to the modeled energy requirements for the U.S. petroleum refining sector, the cost effective potential represents a 40% reduction in fuel consumption and a 2% reduction in electricity consumption. The non-cost-effective potential represents an additional 13% reduction in fuel consumption and an additional 7% reduction in electricity consumption. The relative energy reduction potentials are mu ch higher for fuel consumption than electricity consumption largely in part because fuel is the primary energy consumption type in the refineries. Moreover, many cost effective fuel savings measures would increase electricity consumption. The model also has the potential to be used to examine the costs and benefits of the other CO2 mitigation options, such as combined heat and power (CHP), carbon capture, and the potential introduction of biomass feedstocks. However, these options are not addressed in this report as this report is focused on developing the modeling methodology and assessing fuels savings measures. These opportunities to further reduce refinery sector CO2 emissions and are recommended for further research and analysis.