JPRS ID: 9658 WORLDWIDE REPORT ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY

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CIA-RDP82-00850R000300100021-4
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APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300104421-4 FOR OCFICIAL USE ONLY _ JPRS L/9658 ~ 1.3 Aprii 1981 Worlc~wide Re ort p ENVIRONMENTA,L QUALITY CFOUO 2~81) FBIS FOREIGN BROADCAST INFORMATION SERVICE FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300100021-4 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300104421-4 NOTE JPRS publications contain information primarily from foreign - newspapers, periodicals and books, but also from news agency transmissions and broadcasts. Materia~s from for.eign-language sources are translated; those from English-language sources are transcribed or reprinted, witb. the original phrasing and other characteristics retained. Headlines, editorial reports, and material enclosed in brackets are supplied by JPRS. Proce~sing indicai:ors such as [Text] or [ExcerptJ in the firsr line of each item, or following the last line of a brief, indicate how the original information was processed. k'here no processing indicatr~r is given, the infor- mation was summarize3 or extracted. Unfamiliar names rendered phonetically or transliterated are enclosed in parentheses. Words or names preceded by a ques- tion mark and enclosed in p3rentheses were not clear in the - original but have been supplied as appropriate in co*_!text. Other unattributed p3renthetical notes within the body of an - item originate with the source. Times within items are as _ _ given by source. The contents of this publication in no way represent the poli- ~ cies, vizws or attitudes of the U.S. Government. COPYRIGHT LAWS AND REGULATIONS GOVERNING OWNERSHIP OF _ MATERIALS REPRODUCED HEREIN REQUIRE THAT DISSEMINATION OF THIS PUBLICATION BE RESTRICTED FOR OFFICIAL USE OvI,Y. APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300100021-4 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850ROOQ3Q010Q021-4 FOR OFFICIAL USE 4NLY - JPRS L/9658 13 April 1981 , . WORLDWID~ RtPORT ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY (FOUO 2/81) - - CONTENTS ASIA JAPAN ' Government To Restrict Total N02 Amount in Big Cities ~ (ASAHI EVENING NEWS, 21 Feb 81) 1 - USSR Emissions Cut SugQested for Improving TES Safety (L. I. Kropp; TEPLOENERGETIKA, Nov 80) 2 Book Examines Climate of Past, Future ~ (Mikhail Ivanovich Budyko; KLIMAT V PROSHLOM I _ BUDLTSHCHEM, 1980) 10 WEST EUROPE INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS Environmental Pollution Rei~arations, Restoration Theory (Jean-Philippe Barde; FUTURIBLES, Feb 81) 12 FEDERAT. REPUBLIC ~F GERMANY Study Shows Poor Air Quality in Cities ~ (Sebastian Knauer; STERN, 12 Feb 81) 24 ; - _1 - a - [III - WW - 139 FOUO] FnR nRFi('TAT, 1J.4F. (~rNi.Y I APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300100021-4 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850ROOQ3Q010Q021-4 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY JAPAN GOVERNMENT TO RESTRTCT TOTAL N02 AMOUNT IN BIG CITIES Tokyo ASAHI EV_i:1I"?G NEWS iu English Z1 Feb 81 p 3 - [ Text ] The Environment Ag~ncy strictions on the total amount d~'cided Friday to itnpose re- of aic pollutants was started _ strictions oa �the total amauat in 197,4, ari~ such restrictions _ ~ nitmg~n o~cide (NO~; ooa- are impo~ed'dtt' �sulii~rous ox- ddered tk?e chief ~use of al~r ide in 24 areaa~throughout the Poputi~n. i8~~1te higli �polhltian nati . ~ . ~ areas ia, Tal~yo, KanqBaa'a, ~ Enviroifinent Agency Ai~lu .and, s OsakA' prefqctu~..;, �!!~s reatrictions an N02 - ' Rea#rictio~. an the :,s~tal ' y in 1978 and an- ae~ou~t of , N~ caa' be ~~n- . nounce,d a~po1tcy o4 ~ttaining ~sosed th~o4t~t}. revising th4.}m= the eased ~idards in 1985. plementation rflydinance of , : The agency~ aaked ~Tokyo, A'~r Pollut~oh Prebention Law: Ks~nagawa, ,A~chi; Qsalca, Hyo- But it is possible that it will go ~~and F~lcuoka . prefectures become a political problem ~Y ~ld �actrie,ve the en- - becausa of strong opposition vironnfental ~ standud ' of 0.06 i from iadustrial circles, part'x_ PP~' ~ Na2 by 1985. The cularly the steel industry. Q~qi first ~our concluded they could sequently, the Environp4ept not, while the latter two said Agency asked the cbairir~ xt~ possible. , and vice chairman of W~e Lib- restrictaon's on the ~ - ,S tot~amount of NOE will be eral-Democ,~t}~ . Party the sam`a tj~~e as .#hose on the ronment Committce and Diat total am4u0t ~ of svlfurous members ~oncerned to study oxide. Ia .drafting plans, the the mattei apd obtained theu gov ,ieriyo~s ~of the stipulated approval Fri~sty. ~ ~p ~ounce the goals ~ The Env3ronment Agency folr iadividual factories. will ask the Cabinet to decide In Takyo, the stipulated whethar thc implementqtion areas iaclude all the 23 wards ordinance should be re6}s~d � plus Musasianb, Mitaka, Cha- by t~g eqd of ~v[srCL. If t~ie fu, Hoya and'' Komae _:ties. Cabinfjr deci~p4' ,iu~ favor of Yokohama,~ Knwasaici a~d revisiop; t~e;,~vfSrnut's ~f the yokosuka cities are' included stipulated ,~reas . wiil � drafi in Kanagavya. ~~?tefecture. The plans for reducing tho toti~l sdpttiatad Areap in Aichi in- amaunt of NOr The agency clude Nagoya, Tokai and Chita wants this work to start ia We cities, aud thosq ia Osaka in- _ lauer half of fiscal 1981. clude Osaka; 3akai, Toyonaka The system oP imposing"ra ancl 14 other cities. ~UPYRIGHT: Asahi F.vening News 1981 CSO: 5000 1 FOR OFFICIAL iTSE ONLY' APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300100021-4 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850ROOQ3Q010Q021-4 I FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY USSR UDC 620.9.577.47 EMISSIONS CUT SUGGESTED FOR IMPROVING TES SAF'ETY Moscow TEFLOENERG~TIKA in Russian No 11, Nov 80 pp 2-6 [Article by L..I. Kropp, candidate of technical sciences, All-Union Thermal Engin- eering Institute: "Perfection of the Power Engineering Industr;~ and the Environment"] [Text] Heat and electric power stations will preserve their decisive role ~.n the general volume of production of electricity and heat in the visible future. The rising energy needs of the national economy will be covered, in addition to the leading aevelopment of nuclear electric power stations in the European sector of the country, mainly by the broader involvement of the Ekibastuz, Kuznetsk, Kansk- Acttinsk and certain other promising coal fields in energy production. Taking this long-term trend into account, the environmental protection developments in thermal - power engineering must be primarily oriented on increasing the ecological level of solid fuel use, as well as significant resources of natural gas allocated for power - engineering needs. From the viewpoint of organizing fuel sugply, the latter also signif ies that the main mass of natural gas resources must be sent to the municipal TES [heat and electric power stations]. Only temporary surpluses of this fuel may be burned at the condensation electric power stations that are located outside the cities. _ The law on protection of the atmospheric air that is based on the principle of restricting the absolute discharge of harmful substances into the air basin and was adopted in the USSR in 1980, has great importance in selecting the envir.onmental protection strategy in power engineering. According to the new law (as a supplement _ to the extant system of standardizing the permissible harmful pollutant concentra- tions in the atmospheric air), a system is being prepared for start-up that will regulate the maximum permissible emissions by each enterprise. The law will also significantly affect the selection of technical and technological solutions in primary production. It will ban those that result in increased atmospheric pollu- tion. At the same time, the sanitary-hygienic habitat standards are becoming stricter. In 1979, the USSR Ministry of Public Health introduced a requirement to compute the total harmful effect of sulfurous anhydride, nitrogen dioxide and carbon monoxide when they are jointly present in the atmospheric air. In the past [4], such a re- quirement in power engineering only covered oxides of sulfur and nitrogen. In practice this means that the content in flue gases of even an insignificant per- centage of chemical underburning in the form of CO (about 0.05%) makes it necessary to reduce the permissible discharges of the two other summing components. An ana- logous situation occurs when background concentrations of CO are found in the atmospheric air. 2 Fnu nFFrr.TAT. T1SE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300100021-4 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300104421-4 FOR OFFI~II~L USE ONLY One of the possible cunsequences of the new legislation is a trend towards re- stricting the height of the TES smokestacks, i.e., weakening the role of flue gas dispersal, with the simultaneous implementation of ineasures that curtail the absolute discharge of the main harmful componPnts, oxides of sulfur and nitrogen, volatile ash and certain toxic trzce pollutants. This trend wil.l als~ be stimulated by intergovernmental agreements that are conclud2d in order to restrict the so- called transboundary migration of harmful substances, in the first place, of sul- fur dioxide. This is especially important for the TES located in certain regions of the European sector of the country. In contrast to many technological industries, including nuclear electric power stations, when heat and electricity are ~roduced at the TES, different polluting ' components of fuel and its combustion products enter the atmospheric air through the purification system alm~st comp~etely in the form ot so-called organized emission that can 1-~e evacuated with the help ot u powerful centralized gas-removal channel. The role of the scattered, unorganized releases of harmful substances by the main and auxiliary equipment into the pr~~duction rooms is insignificant in the total material balance. This feature of e~lectricity production promotes an increase in the T~S ecological level at all sections of its technological plan: in the process of fuel combustion, as well as in the recovery and neutralization of the combustion products. Bas~d on the change and perfection of the corresponding links in the TES technological plan, it is possible to reduce to a certain degree practically all of the harmful contaminaats of flue gases, including sulf uric oxides. Table 1. _ Power of Method of Specific capital Specific annual Increase in fuel TES, fuel cyclic de- ~investments for exnenditures for consumption at TES sulfuriza- sulfur purifi- sulfur urification % tion of cation kop/(kW�h) % flue gases R/kW % _ _ _ � ~ 4 x 300 MW, Ammonium- 61.2 39.0 0.55 34.0 ~ " 16.8 ~ near-Moscow cyclic brown coal = 4x800 riW, Ammonium- 37.0 24.0 0.27 31.7 7'.8 Donetsk GSSh cyciic [gas, seed ~ Magnesite ~ 49.6 32,0 0.27 31.7 8.1 coal and ; coal f ines ] _ _ The interest in the new technological solutions that promote a more profitable reduction in sulfuric oxide emissions with the use of solid fuel (boilers with fluidized bed, st~am-gas units, energy-efficient processes and plans for isolating ancl recovering pyritic sulfur) is mainly due to tne excessively high capital con- sumption and energy consumption of the tradit3onal methods of cyclic sulfur-trap- pin~ at the TES [1]. This is illustrated by the data in table 1, based on the critical analyses of the VTI [F. E. Dzerzhinskiy Al1-Union Thermal Engineering Institute] and the VGPI TEP [All-Union State Planning Institute "Teploelektro- proyekt"] for two power stations that burn coal. T'he technical and economic indicators are given for the ammonium-cyclic and magnesite methods of desulfuri- zation for roughly 90% of the ccmbustie*~ products of two types of coal, near- Moscow br.own coal with sulfur ~ontent of 3.3% with combustion heat of 2460 kcal/kg, and Donetsk GSSh with sulfur content of 3.1% and combustion heat of 4730 kcal/kg. Table 1 indicates the complete (national economic) expenditures in calculation for 1 kW of rated output. In the case of successful realization of the product - 3 FUR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300100021-4 APPR~VED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300100021-4 FOR OFriCIAL USE ONLY issued by the sulfur-trapping units, and at the same time, displacement of the corresponding plants, these expenditures are reduced. In addition, a certain reduct ion in expenditures, for example, with the use of the magnesite method, can be attained by perfecting and reducing the cost of the technoiogy for producing the f inal desulfurization products. As is apparent from table 1, the capital investmen~s for sulfur trapping are from 24 to 39%, while the aperating expenditures are roughly one-third of the correspon- ding indicators of the main industry. 'I'he high level of capital investments is linked to the enormousvolume of gases to be purified and the type of fuel. The increased operating expenses are significantly governed by th~ high energy capa- city of the sulfur trapping systems. The energy expenditures conveLted to fuel comprise frotn 9 to 16% of its total constunption. This is much higher than the per- - centage of all the energy expenditures of a c.odern coal TES for in-house needs. At the s ame time, energy-consumption is the main criterion in evaluating and comparing the d ifferent measures to reduce harmful emissions. The higher this indicator, the lower Che degree of gerfection of any r~ciznological process, and the more inef- ficiently the primary resources are u;~d. From the viewpoint of simplifying the desulfurization systems for f lue gases, de- crea s ing the energy consumption, organizing this process without harmful wastes, - and a t the same time, without creating a TES~uf complex chemical production, the - exper ience of the FRG (Saaberg-H~lter firm) to perfect the lime method of purifi- carion using commercial gypsum, and the experience of Denmark (Niro Atomizer firm) - for the so-called "wet-dry" gas puri~fication are important. The development and use at TES of steam boilers that burn coal in the fluidized bed s ignificantly reduce the capital and fuel-energy expenditures per 1 T of de- _ crease in the discharge of sulfurous anhydride as compared to the traditional sul- fur iz ation methods presented in table 1. One of the advantages of this technology is the possibility of significantly more extensive bonding of sulfur dioxide by the a lkaline components of the mineral portion of fuel during its combustion, as comp ared to the standard coal-dust boilers. Therefore, when boilers are used with flui3ized bed, in certain cases the solution to the pr.oblem of desulfurization can be drastically simplified, since there is no longer any need to create a compli- - cated techno logical service that guarantees the introduction of alkaline additives into the fluidized bed, for ~xample, limestone, as well as their subsequent re- generation. Cert ain specialists make an excessively optim_stic evaluation of the noted capabil-- ity of the f luidized bed. Table 2, consequently, presents the results of computing the content of free alkali in fuel, usually represented in the form of CaO~g, the yie ld of all sulfur of the fuel in the form of dioxide, as well as their molar ratio. These results are based on the data of [2,3] and are given for certain characteristic domestic f uels. The molar ratio characterizes the theoretically poss ible degree of bonding of sulfur dioxide with natural fuel allcali during the formation of calcium sulfate. In practice, a certain excess of free alkali above the molar ratio is required. This ex~ess is sma�~ler the more advanced the process. As i s apparent from table 2, the possibility of creating the simplest technology of t he fluidized bed for practically complete desulfurization of gases b~t natural fuel alkali is quite real for the USSR power engineering only with the use of f uels that are in the upper section of the tab1E (shale, all sorts of Kansk- Achinsk coals and Kharanorskiy fuel that is adjacent to it). A definite effect 4 ~nv n~FTrTAT. iTSF. ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300100021-4 APPR~VED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300100021-4 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Table 2. Fuel (coal, shale) CaOCe content S02 output Molar ratio m�e uiv mg�equiv CaO~~ /S02 in - k of fuel k of fuel percenta es Estonian shale 5350 1000 5.35 Berezovskiy 460 125 3.~0 Nazarovo 620 250 2,48 Irsha-Borodino 250 125 2.00 Itatskiy ~ 360 250 1.45 - Kharanorskiy 260 187 1.40 Angren 35~ 820 0.425 Chelyabinsk 60 187 0.32 Bikin 50 187 0.27 Kuznetsk T(R, oxidized) 30 187 0.161 Cherem.khovo 40 690 i 0.058 Volynskiy 70 1630 0.043 Donetsk ASh [anthracite 30 1050 I 0.029 coal fines] Ekibastuz i ~