Mass emissions and concentrations
SEPA regulates emissions from industry by permitting sites to
emit substances, set at levels, which take into account the best
available technology (BAT) to reduce pollution, while also ensuring
that internationally prescribed environmental quality standards
(EQS) are met. These standards are designed to ensure that
concentrations of each substance in air, land and water do not
reach levels which could be damaging to the environment or human
health. All sites licenced under the Pollution Prevention and
Control (PPC) legislation are periodically reviewed to ensure that
they are using the latest and most appropriate abatement technology
and that emissions do not exceed any new EQS.
Industrial sites listed in the Scottish Pollutant Release
Inventory (SPRI) are also required to report the total amounts of a
substance that they emit to air or water during the period of a
year. This amount is known as the 'annual mass emission'. Annual
mass emissions alone are not necessarily directly related to
concentrations being emitted at any particular time and cannot be
used to directly predict the resulting concentrations in the
environment. Thresholds above which mass emissions of each
substance must be reported are prescribed using knowledge of the
pollutant (its toxicity, transport and persistence in the
environment) to indicate what mass emission may give rise to
'significant' environmental concentrations. Sites reporting to the
SPRI all have total annual mass emissions above the reporting
threshold for a particular substance, but this does not imply that
these sites are in breach of their licenced emission concentration
limits at any time during that year. High annual mass emissions are
often due to the large size of the industrial process, where
relatively low concentrations are released in very large flows of
air or water.