Generation of Liquid Waste Avoiding Entrained Water
Transcription
Generation of Liquid Waste Avoiding Entrained Water
Generation of Liquid Waste Sources of oil/water liquids: RECENT CASE EXAMPLES: ITOPF Advice for Minimising Waste Generation • Skimming at sea, near shore • Pumping from flooded vessels • Run-off from shoreline cleaning Michael O’ O’Brien Senior Technical Advisor Key considerations: • Keep quantities as low as possible • Keep liquids free of debris Decanting Decant immediately, otherwise, virtually impossible at later stages • Draining out entrained water • Significant part of recovered liquid can be water • Water inevitable, some added on purpose (injection) • Can be done from any container with outlet at bottom • More and more difficult with new environmental laws • Earlier and closer is better Tanker used for liquid waste storage Avoiding Entrained Water Successful recovery and decanting operation: 200m3 oil recovered after decanting SelfSelf-sufficient skimming vessel with sweep arms & weir skimmer, designed to take in oil & water together Belt skimming system designed to take in oil with little water 1 Filtering debris from recovered oil Debris and Vacuum Recovery • Slops vs. hazardous waste • Pumpability • Closed-vs. open-top storage • Avoid damage to filters and pumps Vacuum recovery can be practical, but once debris is taken in, it is difficult to remove Filtering Debris from Oil • Difficult to filter on site • One exceptional effort shown here Generation of Solid Waste Sources of solid wastes: • Contaminated beach material (e.g. sand, stone) • Contaminated debris (e.g. rubbish, algae, driftwood) • Used sorbent material (e.g. boom, pads…) • Worn-out equipment (e.g. inflatable boom) Key ITOPF considerations: • Keep quantities as low as possible • Segregate debris • Plan for the shifting of solid waste Keep quantities low: Keep quantities low: Constant guidance & monitoring required Target the heavy oil 2 Keep quantities low: A good start to bulk cleaning… cleaning… Utilise surf washing Assisted surf washing Photos by Bernard Fichaut A disastrous next step… step… Manual recovery of bulk: • Average 100 men/day • First 8 days: 125MT sludge = 150kg sludge/man/day Æ Not too much Æ Not too little Keep quantities low: Flush the oil, then filter it out Bulk removal of stained rock: • First 5 days: 2500MT rock = 500MT rock/day Æ Far too much Æ 32 x more/day than manual Excessive removal of nearlynearly-clean sand 3 Keep quantities low: CoinCoin-sized HFO tar balls Avoid using too much boom Keep quantities low: Take advantage of winter storms Sorbent Boom (>15 km) Keep Quantities low • Don’t over-use boom Keep waste quantities low by avoiding booming: 1) at great distance, 2) resources insensitive to oil 3) in ways that damage boom Shifting Waste from Site: Shifting Waste from Site Plan for transport and temporary storage ‘containers’ containers’ OverOver-filled, splitting, piled bags Removal greatly facilitated if: 1) bags only filled to 1010-15kg 2) strong bags used 3) bags placed orderly “Heavy-lift” “Jumbo” bags “Big bags” 4 Shifting Waste from Site: If road access is available, use heavy equipment to carry weight Shifting Waste from Site: If no road access, limit weight by keeping waste in small packages Small plastic bags loaded into ‘big bags’ bags’ inside landing craft Shifting Waste from Site: Use of a crane vessel to shorten transit time Shifting Waste Efficiently/ cleanly packed waste: Æ easy temporary storage Æ nonnon-controversial storage Æ easy shipping to final disposal Temporary storage 5