• DocumentCode
    1863230
  • Title

    Environmental evaluation for Porcelain and Ceramic factory

  • Author

    Baby, S. ; Abraham, S.A. ; Rasheed, R.

  • Author_Institution
    Environ. Consultancy Dept., Wataniya Environ. Services Co., Kuwait City, Kuwait
  • fYear
    2010
  • fDate
    1-3 Aug. 2010
  • Firstpage
    438
  • Lastpage
    443
  • Abstract
    The paper explicitly presents the environmental evaluation for construction of new “Porcelain and Ceramic factory”. The study is conducted considering the construction and operation activities, infrastructure plan and process, site specific baseline studies for physical, biological and socio-economic settings of the study region. Various different techniques were employed for assessment of impact on the environment such as: review of secondary data and collateral information; analysis of thematic maps; application of remote sensing and GIS; reconnaissance filed survey; topographic and land use land cover survey to investigate onsite and offsite areas; air (mobile air lab deployment) and noise study; geotechnical survey (to investigate groundwater availability, depth); soil analysis; ecological study (Transect method to determine vegetation density and distribution pattern) and wildlife survey; and socio-economic considerations. The baseline condition showed normal air quality for all the major air pollutants like SO2, NO2, NOx, CO, O3, except the levels of Non-Methane hydrocarbon (NMHC). During operation phase it is expected to have particulate matter and emissions of fluorine and lead compounds. It was studied different kind of process waste such as streams of different sludge, broken tiles, broken refractory material; solids from dust treatments, used sorption agents and packaging waste originating from the manufacture of ceramic products will possess risk to the environment which would be reused in the plant´s own production or in other ceramic works. Therefore the impact of wastes on land (soil) rarely impairs the soil or poses very less impact on low abundance of flora and fauna at the site. The main occupational health risk identified is related to the presence in the workplace of fine airborne particulate in the form of silica dust (SiO2), deriving from silica sands and feldspar; and expo- - sure to heat from furnaces or other hot equipment. 80 % of water used would be recyclable per day as conservation measures. The Ceramic & Porcelain Tile Manufacturing project is reasonably good project for development of nation, provided all the environmental protective and sustainable measures mentioned in the paper being executed successfully.
  • Keywords
    ceramic industry; geographic information systems; land use planning; porcelain; remote sensing; socio-economic effects; GIS; biological settings; ceramic factory; collateral information; environmental evaluation; land use land cover survey; non-methane hydrocarbon; porcelain factory; reconnaissance filed survey; remote sensing; silica dust; socio-economic settings; thematic maps; topographic; Porcelain; Raw materials; Silicon compounds; Soil; Tiles; Non-Methane hydrocarbon; abatement; emission; evaluation matrix; fluorine; lead; silica dust;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Chemistry and Chemical Engineering (ICCCE), 2010 International Conference on
  • Conference_Location
    Kyoto
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-4244-7765-4
  • Electronic_ISBN
    978-1-4244-7766-1
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/ICCCENG.2010.5560345
  • Filename
    5560345