Chapter 5, Section 5.1 "Petroleum Refining" discusses the air pollutant emissions from the equipment in the various refinery processing units as well as from the auxiliary steam-generating boilers, furnaces and engines, and Table 5.1.1 includes the pertinent emission factors. Table 5.1.2 includes the emission factors for the fugitive air pollutant emissions from the large wet
cooling towers in
refineries and from the oil/water separators used in treating refinery
wastewater. The fugitive air pollutant emission factors from
relief valves, piping
valves, open-ended piping lines or drains, piping
flanges, sample connections, and
seals on
pump and
compressor shafts are discussed and included in the report EPA-458/R-95-017, "Protocol for Equipment Leak Emission Estimates" which is included in the Chapter 5 section of AP 42. That report includes the emission factors developed by the EPA for petroleum refineries and for the synthetic organic chemical industry (SOCMI). In most cases, the emission factors in Chapter 5 are included for both
uncontrolled conditions before emission reduction controls are implemented and
controlled conditions after specified emission reduction methods are implemented. Chapter 7 "Liquid Storage Tanks" is devoted to the methodology for calculating the emissions losses from the six basic tank designs used for organic liquid storage:
fixed roof (vertical and horizontal),
external floating roof, domed external (or covered) floating roof, internal floating roof, variable vapor space, and pressure (low and high). The methodology in Chapter 7 was developed by the
American Petroleum Institute in collaboration with the EPA. The EPA has developed a software program named "TANKS" which performs the Chapter 7 methodology for calculating emission losses from storage tanks. The program's installer file along with a user manual, and the source code are available on the Internet. Chapters 5 and 7 discussed above are illustrative of the type of information contained in the other chapters of AP 42. Many of the
fugitive emission factors in Chapter 5 and the emissions calculation methodology in Chapter 7 and the TANKS program also apply to many other industrial categories besides the petroleum industry. ==See also==