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Gas flare

A gas flare, alternatively known as a flare stack, flare boom, ground flare, or flare pit, is a gas combustion device used in places such as petroleum refineries, chemical plants and natural gas processing plants, oil or gas extraction sites having oil wells, gas wells, offshore oil and gas rigs and landfills.

Flare stack at the Shell Haven refinery in England

In industrial plants, flare stacks are primarily used for burning off flammable gas released by safety valves during unplanned overpressuring of plant equipment.[1][2][3][4][5] During plant or partial plant startups and shutdowns, they are also often used for the planned combustion of gases over relatively short periods.

At oil and gas extraction sites, gas flares are similarly used for a variety of startup, maintenance, testing, safety, and emergency purposes.[6] In a practice known as production flaring, they may also be used to dispose of large amounts of unwanted associated petroleum gas, possibly throughout the life of an oil well.[7]

Overall flare system in industrial plants edit

 
Schematic flow diagram of an overall vertical, elevated flare stack system in an industrial plant.

When industrial plant equipment items are overpressured, the pressure relief valve is an essential safety device that automatically releases gases and sometimes liquids. Those pressure relief valves are required by industrial design codes and standards as well as by law.

The released gases and liquids are routed through large piping systems called flare headers to a vertical elevated flare. The released gases are burned as they exit the flare stacks. The size and brightness of the resulting flame depends upon the flammable material's flow rate in joules per hour (or btu per hour).[4]

Most industrial plant flares have a vapor–liquid separator (also known as a knockout drum) upstream of the flare to remove any large amounts of liquid that may accompany the relieved gases.

Steam is very often injected into the flame to reduce the formation of black smoke. When too much steam is added, a condition known as "oversteaming" can occur resulting in reduced combustion efficiency and higher emissions.[8] To keep the flare system functional, a small amount of gas is continuously burned, like a pilot light, so that the system is always ready for its primary purpose as an overpressure safety system.

The adjacent flow diagram depicts the typical components of an overall industrial flare stack system:[1][2][3]

  • A knockout drum to remove any oil or water from the relieved gases. There may be several knock out drums: high-pressure and low-pressure drums taking relief flow from high-pressure and low-pressure equipment. A cold relief drum which is segregated from wet relief system because of the risk of freezing.
  • A water seal drum to prevent any flashback of the flame from the top of the flare stack.
  • An alternative gas recovery system for use during partial plant startups and shutdowns as well as other times when required. The recovered gas is routed into the fuel gas system of the overall industrial plant.
  • A steam injection system to provide an external momentum force used for efficient mixing of air with the relieved gas, which promotes smokeless burning.
  • A pilot flame (with its ignition system) that burns all the time so that it is available to ignite relieved gases when needed.[9]
  • The flare stack, including a flashback prevention section at the upper part of the stack.

The schematic shows a pipe flare tip. The flare tip can have several configurations:

  • a simple pipe flare
  • a sonic tip – upstream pressure > 5 bar
  • a multi nozzle tip, sonic or subsonic
  • a Coandă tip – a profiled tip using the Coandă effect to entrain air into the gas to improve combustion.[10]

Flare stack height edit

The height of a flare stack, or the reach of a flare boom, is determined by the thermal radiation that is permissible or tolerable for equipment or personnel to be exposed to.[11] For continuous exposure of personnel wearing appropriate industrial clothing a maximum radiation level of 1.58 kW/m2 (500 Btu/hr.ft²) is recommended. Higher radiation levels are permissible but for reduced exposure times:

  • 4.73 kW/m2 (1500 Btu/hr.ft²) would limit exposure to 3 to 4 minutes
  • 6.31 kW/m2 (2000 Btu/hr.ft²) would limit exposure to 30 seconds.[11]

Ground flares edit

Ground flares are designed to hide the flame from sight and to reduce thermal radiation and noise.[10] They comprise a steel box or cylinder lined with refractory material. They are open at the top and have openings around the base to allow combustion air to enter. They may have an array of multiple flare tips to provide turndown capability and to spread the flame across the cross-section of the flare. They are generally used onshore in environmentally sensitive areas and have been used offshore on floating production storage and offloading installations (FPSOs).[10]

Crude oil production flares edit

 
Flaring of gas in North Dakota

When crude oil is extracted and produced from oil wells, raw natural gas associated with the oil is brought to the surface as well. Especially in areas of the world lacking pipelines and other gas transportation infrastructure, vast amounts of such associated gas are commonly flared as waste or unusable gas. The flaring of associated gas may occur at the top of a vertical flare stack, or it may occur in a ground-level flare in an earthen pit (as in the adjacent photo). Preferably, associated gas is reinjected into the reservoir, which saves it for future use while maintaining higher well pressure and crude oil producibility.[12]

Advances in satellite monitoring, along with voluntary reporting, have revealed that about 150 × 109 cubic meters (5.3 × 1012 cubic feet) of associated gas have been flared globally each year since at least the mid-1990s until 2020.[13] In 2011, that was equivalent to about 25 percent of the annual natural gas consumption in the United States or about 30 per cent of the annual gas consumption in the European Union.[7] At market, this quantity of gas—at a nominal value of $5.62 per 1000 cubic feet—would be worth US$29.8 billion.[14] Additionally, the waste is a significant source of carbon dioxide (CO2) and other greenhouse gas emissions.

Biogas flares edit

 
Flare stack igniting biogas from sewage sludge digesters at a sewage treatment plant in Ontario, Canada.

An important source of anthropogenic methane comes from the treatment and storage of organic waste material including waste water, animal waste and landfill.[15] Gas flares are used in any process that results in the generation and collection of biogas. As a result, gas flares are a standard component of an installation for controlling the production of biogas.[16] They are installed on landfill sites, waste water treatment plant and anaerobic digestion plant that use agriculturally or domestically produced organic waste to produce methane for use as a fuel or for heating.

Gas flares on biogas collection systems are used if the gas production rates are not sufficient to warrant use in any industrial process. However, on a plant where the gas production rate is sufficient for direct use in an industrial process that could be classified as part of the circular economy, and that may include the generation of electricity, the production of natural gas quality biogas for vehicle fuel[17] or for heating in buildings, drying refuse-derived fuel or leachate treatment, gas flares are used as a back-up system during down-time for maintenance or breakdown of generation equipment. In this latter case, generation of biogas cannot normally be interrupted, and a gas flare is employed to maintain the internal pressure on the biological process.[18]

There are two types of gas flare used for controlling biogas, open or enclosed. Open flares burn at a lower temperature, less than 1000 °C and are generally cheaper than enclosed flares that burn at a higher combustion temperature and are usually supplied to conform to a specific residence time of 0.3s within the chimney to ensure complete destruction of the toxic elements contained within the biogas.[citation needed] Flare specification usually demands that enclosed flares must operate at >1000 °C and <1200 °C; this in order to ensure a 98% destruction efficient and avoid the formation of NOx.[19]

Environmental impacts edit

 
Flaring of associated gas from a site in Nigeria.
 
Flaring gases from an oil platform in the North Sea.
 
Flare, Bayport Industrial District, Harris County, Texas

The natural gas that is not combusted by a flare is vented into the atmosphere as methane. Methane's estimated global warming potential is 28-36 times greater than that of CO2 over the course of a century, and 84-87 times greater over two decades.[20] Therefore, to the extent that gas flares convert methane to CO2 before it is released into the atmosphere, they reduce the amount of global warming that would otherwise occur.[21]

Flaring emissions contributed to 270 Mt (megatonnes) of CO2 in 2017 and reducing flaring emissions is thought to be an important component in curbing global warming.[22] An increasing number of governments and industries have pledged to eliminate or reduce flaring.[22] The Global Methane Pledge signed at COP26, in which 111 nations committed to reducing methane emissions by at least 30 percent from 2020 levels by 2030, is also playing a role in raising the global focus on methane.

Additional noxious fumes emitted by flaring may include, aromatic hydrocarbons (benzene, toluene, xylenes) and benzo(a)pyrene, which are known to be carcinogenic. A 2013 study found that gas flares contributed over 40% of the black carbon deposited in the Arctic.[23][24]

Flaring can affect wildlife by attracting birds and insects to the flame. Approximately 7,500 migrating songbirds were attracted to and killed by the flare at the liquefied natural gas terminal in Saint John, New Brunswick, Canada on September 13, 2013.[25] Similar incidents have occurred at flares on offshore oil and gas installations.[26] Moths are known to be attracted to lights. A brochure published by the Secretariat of the Convention on Biological Diversity describing the Global Taxonomy Initiative describes a situation where "a taxonomist working in a tropical forest noticed that a gas flare at an oil refinery was attracting and killing hundreds of these [hawk or sphinx] moths. Over the course of the months and years that the refinery was running a vast number of moths must have been killed, suggesting that plants could not be pollinated over a large area of forest".[27]

Adverse health effects edit

Flares release several different chemicals including: benzene, particulates, nitrogen oxides, heavy metals, black carbon, and carbon monoxide. Several of these pollutants correlate with preterm birth and reduced newborn birth weight. According to one study from 2020, pregnant women living near flaring natural gas and oil wells have reportedly experienced a 50% greater premature birth rate.[28] Flares may emit methane and other volatile organic compounds as well as sulfur dioxide and other sulfur compounds, which are known to exacerbate asthma and other respiratory disease.[29]

A 2021 study found that a 1% increase in flared natural gas increases the respiratory-related hospitalization rate by 0.73%.[30]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Section 3: VOC Controls, Chapter 1: Flares" (PDF). EPA Air Pollution Cost Control Manual (Report) (6th ed.). Research Triangle Park, NC: U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). January 2002. EPA 452/B-02-001.
  2. ^ a b A. Kayode Coker (2007). Ludwig's Applied Process Design for Chemical And Petrochemical Plants, Volume 1 (4th ed.). Gulf Professional Publishing. pp. 732–737. ISBN 978-0-7506-7766-0.
  3. ^ a b Sam Mannan, ed. (2005). Lee's Loss Prevention in the Process Industries: Hazard Identification, Assessment and Control, Volume 1 (3rd ed.). Elsevier Butterworth-Heinemann. pp. 12/67–12/71. ISBN 978-0-7506-7857-5.
  4. ^ a b Milton R. Beychok (2005). Fundamentals of Stack Gas Dispersion (Fourth ed.). self-published. ISBN 978-0-9644588-0-2. (See Chapter 11, Flare Stack Plume Rise).
  5. ^ "A Proposed Comprehensive Model for Elevated Flare Flames and Plumes", David Shore, Flaregas Corporation, AIChE 40th Loss Prevention Symposium, April 2006.
  6. ^ "IPIECA - Resources - Flaring Classification". International Petroleum Industry Environmental Conservation Association (IPIECA). Retrieved 2019-12-29.
  7. ^ a b Global Gas Flaring Reduction Partnership (GGFR), World Bank, October 2011 Brochure.
  8. ^ "EPA Enforcement Targets Flaring Efficiency Violations" (PDF). Enforcement Alert. Washington, D.C.: EPA. August 2012. EPA 325-F-012-002.
  9. ^ Product Overview Ignition Systems, Smitsvonk, November 2001. Excellent source of information about flare stack pilot flames and their ignition systems.
  10. ^ a b c Argo Flare Services. "Argo flare services". argoflares. Retrieved 20 January 2021.
  11. ^ a b American Petroleum Institute (2020). Pressure-Relieving and Depressuring Systems (API Standard 521) (7th ed.). API. pp. Table 12.
  12. ^ Leffler, William (2008). Petroleum Refining in Nontechnical Language. Tulsa, OK: PennWell. p. 9.
  13. ^ "Global gas flaring and oil production (1996-2018)" (PDF). World Bank. June 2019.
  14. ^ Annual Energy Review, Table 6.7 Natural Gas Wellhead, Citygate, and Imports Prices, 1949-2011 (Dollars per Thousand Cubic Feet), United States Energy Information Administration, September 2012.
  15. ^ "Environmental Impact Of Using Biomass And Biogas Technology". www.biomass.net. Retrieved 2019-03-29.
  16. ^ "Basic Information about Landfill Gas". Landfill Methane Outreach Program. Washington, D.C.: EPA. 2019-12-18.
  17. ^ "Alternative Fuels Data Center: Alternative Fuels and Advanced Vehicles". afdc.energy.gov. Retrieved 2019-03-29.
  18. ^ "Management of landfill gas: LFTGN 03". GOV.UK. Retrieved 2019-03-29.
  19. ^ "NOx Emissions from Silicon Production". ResearchGate. Retrieved 2019-03-29.
  20. ^ US EPA, OAR (2016-01-12). "Understanding Global Warming Potentials". www.epa.gov. Retrieved 2022-03-16.
  21. ^ "Natural gas - Gas flaring and gas venting - Eniscuola". Eniscuola Energy and Environment. Retrieved 23 June 2018.
  22. ^ a b "Flaring emissions – Tracking Fuel Supply – Analysis". IEA. Retrieved 2020-02-12.
  23. ^ Stohl, A.; Klimont, Z.; Eckhardt, S.; Kupiainen, K.; Chevchenko, V.P.; Kopeikin, V.M.; Novigatsky, A.N. (2013), "Black carbon in the Arctic: the underestimated role of gas flaring and residential combustion emissions", Atmos. Chem. Phys., 13 (17): 8833–8855, Bibcode:2013ACP....13.8833S, doi:10.5194/acp-13-8833-2013, hdl:11250/2383886
  24. ^ Michael Stanley (2018-12-10). "Gas flaring: An industry practice faces increasing global attention" (PDF). World Bank. Retrieved 2020-01-20.
  25. ^ 7,500 songbirds killed at Canaport gas plant in Saint John (online CBC News, September 17, 2013).
  26. ^ Seabirds at Risk around Offshore Oil Platforms in the North-west Atlantic, Marine Pollution Bulletin, Vol. 42, No. 12, pp. 1,285–1,290, 2001.
  27. ^ The Global Taxonomy Initiative - The Response to a Problem (scroll down to the section entitled "Pollinating moths")
  28. ^ HSC News, University of Southern California, 17 Jul. 2020 "Living Near Natural Gas Flaring Poses Health Risks for Pregnant Women and Babies"
  29. ^ "Frequent, Routine Flaring May Cause Excessive, Uncontrolled Sulfur Dioxide Releases" (PDF). Enforcement Alert. Washington, D.C.: EPA. October 2000. EPA 300-N-00-014.
  30. ^ Blundell, Wesley; Kokoza, Anatolii (2022-04-01). "Natural gas flaring, respiratory health, and distributional effects". Journal of Public Economics. 208: 104601. doi:10.1016/j.jpubeco.2022.104601. ISSN 0047-2727. S2CID 232350369.

Further reading edit

  • Banerjee K.; Cheremisinof N.P.; Cheremisinoff P.N (1985). Flare gas systems pocket handbook. Houston, TX: Gulf Publishing Company. ISBN 978-0-87201-310-0.
  • Flare and Vent Disposal Systems on PetroWiki

Media edit

External images
World Bank video about reducing flaring

flare, flaring, redirects, here, other, uses, flare, disambiguation, flare, alternatively, known, flare, stack, flare, boom, ground, flare, flare, combustion, device, used, places, such, petroleum, refineries, chemical, plants, natural, processing, plants, ext. Flaring redirects here For other uses see Flare disambiguation A gas flare alternatively known as a flare stack flare boom ground flare or flare pit is a gas combustion device used in places such as petroleum refineries chemical plants and natural gas processing plants oil or gas extraction sites having oil wells gas wells offshore oil and gas rigs and landfills Flare stack at the Shell Haven refinery in EnglandIn industrial plants flare stacks are primarily used for burning off flammable gas released by safety valves during unplanned overpressuring of plant equipment 1 2 3 4 5 During plant or partial plant startups and shutdowns they are also often used for the planned combustion of gases over relatively short periods At oil and gas extraction sites gas flares are similarly used for a variety of startup maintenance testing safety and emergency purposes 6 In a practice known as production flaring they may also be used to dispose of large amounts of unwanted associated petroleum gas possibly throughout the life of an oil well 7 Contents 1 Overall flare system in industrial plants 1 1 Flare stack height 2 Ground flares 3 Crude oil production flares 4 Biogas flares 5 Environmental impacts 5 1 Adverse health effects 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 MediaOverall flare system in industrial plants edit nbsp Schematic flow diagram of an overall vertical elevated flare stack system in an industrial plant When industrial plant equipment items are overpressured the pressure relief valve is an essential safety device that automatically releases gases and sometimes liquids Those pressure relief valves are required by industrial design codes and standards as well as by law The released gases and liquids are routed through large piping systems called flare headers to a vertical elevated flare The released gases are burned as they exit the flare stacks The size and brightness of the resulting flame depends upon the flammable material s flow rate in joules per hour or btu per hour 4 Most industrial plant flares have a vapor liquid separator also known as a knockout drum upstream of the flare to remove any large amounts of liquid that may accompany the relieved gases Steam is very often injected into the flame to reduce the formation of black smoke When too much steam is added a condition known as oversteaming can occur resulting in reduced combustion efficiency and higher emissions 8 To keep the flare system functional a small amount of gas is continuously burned like a pilot light so that the system is always ready for its primary purpose as an overpressure safety system The adjacent flow diagram depicts the typical components of an overall industrial flare stack system 1 2 3 A knockout drum to remove any oil or water from the relieved gases There may be several knock out drums high pressure and low pressure drums taking relief flow from high pressure and low pressure equipment A cold relief drum which is segregated from wet relief system because of the risk of freezing A water seal drum to prevent any flashback of the flame from the top of the flare stack An alternative gas recovery system for use during partial plant startups and shutdowns as well as other times when required The recovered gas is routed into the fuel gas system of the overall industrial plant A steam injection system to provide an external momentum force used for efficient mixing of air with the relieved gas which promotes smokeless burning A pilot flame with its ignition system that burns all the time so that it is available to ignite relieved gases when needed 9 The flare stack including a flashback prevention section at the upper part of the stack The schematic shows a pipe flare tip The flare tip can have several configurations a simple pipe flare a sonic tip upstream pressure gt 5 bar a multi nozzle tip sonic or subsonic a Coandă tip a profiled tip using the Coandă effect to entrain air into the gas to improve combustion 10 Flare stack height edit The height of a flare stack or the reach of a flare boom is determined by the thermal radiation that is permissible or tolerable for equipment or personnel to be exposed to 11 For continuous exposure of personnel wearing appropriate industrial clothing a maximum radiation level of 1 58 kW m2 500 Btu hr ft is recommended Higher radiation levels are permissible but for reduced exposure times 4 73 kW m2 1500 Btu hr ft would limit exposure to 3 to 4 minutes 6 31 kW m2 2000 Btu hr ft would limit exposure to 30 seconds 11 Ground flares editGround flares are designed to hide the flame from sight and to reduce thermal radiation and noise 10 They comprise a steel box or cylinder lined with refractory material They are open at the top and have openings around the base to allow combustion air to enter They may have an array of multiple flare tips to provide turndown capability and to spread the flame across the cross section of the flare They are generally used onshore in environmentally sensitive areas and have been used offshore on floating production storage and offloading installations FPSOs 10 Crude oil production flares editMain article Routine flaring nbsp Flaring of gas in North DakotaWhen crude oil is extracted and produced from oil wells raw natural gas associated with the oil is brought to the surface as well Especially in areas of the world lacking pipelines and other gas transportation infrastructure vast amounts of such associated gas are commonly flared as waste or unusable gas The flaring of associated gas may occur at the top of a vertical flare stack or it may occur in a ground level flare in an earthen pit as in the adjacent photo Preferably associated gas is reinjected into the reservoir which saves it for future use while maintaining higher well pressure and crude oil producibility 12 Advances in satellite monitoring along with voluntary reporting have revealed that about 150 109 cubic meters 5 3 1012 cubic feet of associated gas have been flared globally each year since at least the mid 1990s until 2020 13 In 2011 that was equivalent to about 25 percent of the annual natural gas consumption in the United States or about 30 per cent of the annual gas consumption in the European Union 7 At market this quantity of gas at a nominal value of 5 62 per 1000 cubic feet would be worth US 29 8 billion 14 Additionally the waste is a significant source of carbon dioxide CO2 and other greenhouse gas emissions Biogas flares edit nbsp Flare stack igniting biogas from sewage sludge digesters at a sewage treatment plant in Ontario Canada An important source of anthropogenic methane comes from the treatment and storage of organic waste material including waste water animal waste and landfill 15 Gas flares are used in any process that results in the generation and collection of biogas As a result gas flares are a standard component of an installation for controlling the production of biogas 16 They are installed on landfill sites waste water treatment plant and anaerobic digestion plant that use agriculturally or domestically produced organic waste to produce methane for use as a fuel or for heating Gas flares on biogas collection systems are used if the gas production rates are not sufficient to warrant use in any industrial process However on a plant where the gas production rate is sufficient for direct use in an industrial process that could be classified as part of the circular economy and that may include the generation of electricity the production of natural gas quality biogas for vehicle fuel 17 or for heating in buildings drying refuse derived fuel or leachate treatment gas flares are used as a back up system during down time for maintenance or breakdown of generation equipment In this latter case generation of biogas cannot normally be interrupted and a gas flare is employed to maintain the internal pressure on the biological process 18 There are two types of gas flare used for controlling biogas open or enclosed Open flares burn at a lower temperature less than 1000 C and are generally cheaper than enclosed flares that burn at a higher combustion temperature and are usually supplied to conform to a specific residence time of 0 3s within the chimney to ensure complete destruction of the toxic elements contained within the biogas citation needed Flare specification usually demands that enclosed flares must operate at gt 1000 C and lt 1200 C this in order to ensure a 98 destruction efficient and avoid the formation of NOx 19 Environmental impacts edit nbsp Flaring of associated gas from a site in Nigeria nbsp Flaring gases from an oil platform in the North Sea nbsp Flare Bayport Industrial District Harris County TexasThe natural gas that is not combusted by a flare is vented into the atmosphere as methane Methane s estimated global warming potential is 28 36 times greater than that of CO2 over the course of a century and 84 87 times greater over two decades 20 Therefore to the extent that gas flares convert methane to CO2 before it is released into the atmosphere they reduce the amount of global warming that would otherwise occur 21 Flaring emissions contributed to 270 Mt megatonnes of CO2 in 2017 and reducing flaring emissions is thought to be an important component in curbing global warming 22 An increasing number of governments and industries have pledged to eliminate or reduce flaring 22 The Global Methane Pledge signed at COP26 in which 111 nations committed to reducing methane emissions by at least 30 percent from 2020 levels by 2030 is also playing a role in raising the global focus on methane Additional noxious fumes emitted by flaring may include aromatic hydrocarbons benzene toluene xylenes and benzo a pyrene which are known to be carcinogenic A 2013 study found that gas flares contributed over 40 of the black carbon deposited in the Arctic 23 24 Flaring can affect wildlife by attracting birds and insects to the flame Approximately 7 500 migrating songbirds were attracted to and killed by the flare at the liquefied natural gas terminal in Saint John New Brunswick Canada on September 13 2013 25 Similar incidents have occurred at flares on offshore oil and gas installations 26 Moths are known to be attracted to lights A brochure published by the Secretariat of the Convention on Biological Diversity describing the Global Taxonomy Initiative describes a situation where a taxonomist working in a tropical forest noticed that a gas flare at an oil refinery was attracting and killing hundreds of these hawk or sphinx moths Over the course of the months and years that the refinery was running a vast number of moths must have been killed suggesting that plants could not be pollinated over a large area of forest 27 Adverse health effects edit Flares release several different chemicals including benzene particulates nitrogen oxides heavy metals black carbon and carbon monoxide Several of these pollutants correlate with preterm birth and reduced newborn birth weight According to one study from 2020 pregnant women living near flaring natural gas and oil wells have reportedly experienced a 50 greater premature birth rate 28 Flares may emit methane and other volatile organic compounds as well as sulfur dioxide and other sulfur compounds which are known to exacerbate asthma and other respiratory disease 29 A 2021 study found that a 1 increase in flared natural gas increases the respiratory related hospitalization rate by 0 73 30 See also editBlowdown stack Flue gas stack Gas ventingReferences edit a b Section 3 VOC Controls Chapter 1 Flares PDF EPA Air Pollution Cost Control Manual Report 6th ed Research Triangle Park NC U S Environmental Protection Agency EPA January 2002 EPA 452 B 02 001 a b A Kayode Coker 2007 Ludwig s Applied Process Design for Chemical And Petrochemical Plants Volume 1 4th ed Gulf Professional Publishing pp 732 737 ISBN 978 0 7506 7766 0 a b Sam Mannan ed 2005 Lee s Loss Prevention in the Process Industries Hazard Identification Assessment and Control Volume 1 3rd ed Elsevier Butterworth Heinemann pp 12 67 12 71 ISBN 978 0 7506 7857 5 a b Milton R Beychok 2005 Fundamentals of Stack Gas Dispersion Fourth ed self published ISBN 978 0 9644588 0 2 See Chapter 11 Flare Stack Plume Rise A Proposed Comprehensive Model for Elevated Flare Flames and Plumes David Shore Flaregas Corporation AIChE 40th Loss Prevention Symposium April 2006 IPIECA Resources Flaring Classification International Petroleum Industry Environmental Conservation Association IPIECA Retrieved 2019 12 29 a b Global Gas Flaring Reduction Partnership GGFR World Bank October 2011 Brochure EPA Enforcement Targets Flaring Efficiency Violations PDF Enforcement Alert Washington D C EPA August 2012 EPA 325 F 012 002 Product Overview Ignition Systems Smitsvonk November 2001 Excellent source of information about flare stack pilot flames and their ignition systems a b c Argo Flare Services Argo flare services argoflares Retrieved 20 January 2021 a b American Petroleum Institute 2020 Pressure Relieving and Depressuring Systems API Standard 521 7th ed API pp Table 12 Leffler William 2008 Petroleum Refining in Nontechnical Language Tulsa OK PennWell p 9 Global gas flaring and oil production 1996 2018 PDF World Bank June 2019 Annual Energy Review Table 6 7 Natural Gas Wellhead Citygate and Imports Prices 1949 2011 Dollars per Thousand Cubic Feet United States Energy Information Administration September 2012 Environmental Impact Of Using Biomass And Biogas Technology www biomass net Retrieved 2019 03 29 Basic Information about Landfill Gas Landfill Methane Outreach Program Washington D C EPA 2019 12 18 Alternative Fuels Data Center Alternative Fuels and Advanced Vehicles afdc energy gov Retrieved 2019 03 29 Management of landfill gas LFTGN 03 GOV UK Retrieved 2019 03 29 NOx Emissions from Silicon Production ResearchGate Retrieved 2019 03 29 US EPA OAR 2016 01 12 Understanding Global Warming Potentials www epa gov Retrieved 2022 03 16 Natural gas Gas flaring and gas venting Eniscuola Eniscuola Energy and Environment Retrieved 23 June 2018 a b Flaring emissions Tracking Fuel Supply Analysis IEA Retrieved 2020 02 12 Stohl A Klimont Z Eckhardt S Kupiainen K Chevchenko V P Kopeikin V M Novigatsky A N 2013 Black carbon in the Arctic the underestimated role of gas flaring and residential combustion emissions Atmos Chem Phys 13 17 8833 8855 Bibcode 2013ACP 13 8833S doi 10 5194 acp 13 8833 2013 hdl 11250 2383886 Michael Stanley 2018 12 10 Gas flaring An industry practice faces increasing global attention PDF World Bank Retrieved 2020 01 20 7 500 songbirds killed at Canaport gas plant in Saint John online CBC News September 17 2013 Seabirds at Risk around Offshore Oil Platforms in the North west Atlantic Marine Pollution Bulletin Vol 42 No 12 pp 1 285 1 290 2001 The Global Taxonomy Initiative The Response to a Problem scroll down to the section entitled Pollinating moths HSC News University of Southern California 17 Jul 2020 Living Near Natural Gas Flaring Poses Health Risks for Pregnant Women and Babies Frequent Routine Flaring May Cause Excessive Uncontrolled Sulfur Dioxide Releases PDF Enforcement Alert Washington D C EPA October 2000 EPA 300 N 00 014 Blundell Wesley Kokoza Anatolii 2022 04 01 Natural gas flaring respiratory health and distributional effects Journal of Public Economics 208 104601 doi 10 1016 j jpubeco 2022 104601 ISSN 0047 2727 S2CID 232350369 Further reading editBanerjee K Cheremisinof N P Cheremisinoff P N 1985 Flare gas systems pocket handbook Houston TX Gulf Publishing Company ISBN 978 0 87201 310 0 Flare and Vent Disposal Systems on PetroWikiMedia editExternal imagesWorld Bank video about reducing flaring nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Gas flare Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gas flare amp oldid 1203368167, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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