Council Directive 1999/13/EC of 11 March 1999 on the limitation of emissions of volatile organic compounds due to the use of organic solvents in certain activities and installations
Modified by
- Regulation (EC) No 1882/2003 of the European Parliament and of the Councilof 29 September 2003adapting to Council Decision 1999/468/EC the provisions relating to committees which assist the Commission in the exercise of its implementing powers laid down in instruments subject to the procedure referred to in Article 251 of the EC Treaty, 303R1882, October 31, 2003
- Directive 2004/42/CE of the European Parliament and of the Councilof 21 April 2004on the limitation of emissions of volatile organic compounds due to the use of organic solvents in certain paints and varnishes and vehicle refinishing products and amending Directive 1999/13/EC, 304L0042, April 30, 2004
- Directive 2008/112/EC of the European Parliament and of the Councilof 16 December 2008amending Council Directives 76/768/EEC, 88/378/EEC, 1999/13/EC and Directives 2000/53/EC, 2002/96/EC and 2004/42/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council in order to adapt them to Regulation (EC) No 1272/2008 on classification, labelling and packaging of substances and mixtures(Text with EEA relevance), 308L0112, December 23, 2008
Corrected by
- Corrigendum to Council Directive 1999/13/EC of 11 March 1999 on the limitation of emissions of volatile organic compounds due to the use of organic solvents in certain activities and installations, 399L0013R(01), July 21, 1999
- Corrigendum to Council Directive 1999/13/EC of 11 March 1999 on the limitation of emissions of volatile organics compounds due to the use of organic solvents in certain activities and installations, 399L0013R(02), September 10, 1999
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for an installation falling within the scope of Directive 96/61/EC, shall have the definition specified in that Directive, for a small installation, shall mean a change of the nominal capacity leading to an increase of emissions of volatile organic compounds of more than 25 %. Any change that may have, in the opinion of the competent authority, significant negative effects on human health or the environment is also a substantial change, for all other installations, shall mean a change of the nominal capacity leading to an increase of emissions of volatile organic compounds of more than 10 %. Any change that may have, in the opinion of the competent authority, significant negative effects on human health or the environment is also a substantial change;
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1. all new installations comply with Articles 5, 8 and 9; 2. all new installations not covered by Directive 96/61/EC are registered or undergo authorisation before being put into operation.
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1. existing installations comply with Articles 5, 8 and 9 no later than 31 October 2007; 2. all existing installations must have been registered or authorised by 31 October 2007 at the latest; 3. those installations to be authorised or registered using the reduction scheme of Annex IIB notify this to the competent authorities by 31 October 2005 at the latest; 4. where an installation: -
undergoes a substantial change, or comes within the scope of this Directive for the first time following a substantial change,
that part of the installation which undergoes the substantial change shall be treated either as a new installation or as an existing installation, provided that the total emissions of the whole installation do not exceed those that would have resulted had the substantially changed part been treated as a new installation. -
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(a) either the emission limit values in waste gases and the fugitive emission values, or the total emission limit values, and other requirements laid down in Annex IIA; or (b) the requirements of the reduction scheme specified in Annex IIB.
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(a) For fugitive emissions, Member States shall apply fugitive emission values to installations as an emission limit value. However, where it is demonstrated to the satisfaction of the competent authority that for an individual installation this value is not technically and economically feasible, the competent authority can make an exception for such an individual installation provided that significant risks to human health or the environment are not to be expected. For each derogation, the operator must demonstrate to the satisfaction of the competent authority that the best available technique is being used; (b) activities which cannot be operated under contained conditions may be exempted from the controls of Annex IIA, when this possibility is explicitly mentioned in that Annex. The reduction scheme of Annex IIB is then to be used, unless it is demonstrated to the satisfaction of the competent authority that this option is not technically and economically feasible. In this case, the operator must demonstrate to the satisfaction of the competent authority that the best available technique is being used.
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(a) as regards the substances specified in paragraphs 6, 7 and 8, meet the requirements of those paragraphs for each activity individually; (b) as regards all other substances, either: -
(i) meet the requirements of paragraph 2 for each activity individually; or (ii) have total emissions not exceeding those that would have resulted had point (i) been applied.
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50 mg C/Nm 3 in the case of incineration, 150 mg C/Nm 3 in the case of any other abatement equipment,
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an identification of the activity or activities to which the plan applies, the reduction in emissions to be achieved by those activities which corresponds to that which would have been achieved by applying the emission limits as specified in paragraph 1, the number of installations affected by the plan and their total emissions and the total emission of each of the activities.
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(a) The Commission shall inform the committee referred to in Article 13 of the criteria for assessing national plans, one year after the entry into force of this Directive at the latest. (b) If the Commission, in considering the plan, the resubmitted plan, or in considering the progress reports submitted by the Member State under Article 11, is not satisfied that the objectives of the plan will be achieved within the prescribed period, it shall inform the Member State and the committee referred to in Article 13 of its opinion and of the reasons for reaching such an opinion. It shall do so within six months of receipt of the plan or report. The Member State shall then notify the Commission and inform the committee, within three months, of the corrective measures it will take in order to ensure that the objectives are achieved.
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fitness for use, potential effects on human health and occupational exposure in particular; potential effects on the environment, and the economic consequences, in particular, the costs and benefits of the options available,
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emission limit values in waste gases, fugitive emission values and total emission limit values, the requirements of the reduction scheme under Annex IIB, the provisions of Article 5(3).
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(a) none of the averages over 24 hours of normal operation exceeds the emission limit values, and (b) none of the hourly averages exceeds the emission limit values by more than a factor of 1,5.
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(a) the average of all the readings does not exceed the emission limit values, and (b) none of the hourly averages exceeds the emission limit value by more than a factor of 1,5.
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(a) the operator informs the competent authority and takes measures to ensure that compliance is restored within the shortest possible time; (b) in cases of non-compliance causing immediate danger to human health and as long as compliance is not restored under the conditions of paragraph (a), operation of the activity is suspended.
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Any activity in which an adhesive is applied to a surface, with the exception of adhesive coating and laminating associated with printing activities.
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Any activity in which a single or multiple application of a continuous film of a coating is applied to: -
vehicles as listed below: -
new cars, defined as vehicles of category M1 in Directive 70/156/EEC , and of category N1 in so far as they are coated at the same installation as M1 vehicles,OJ L 42, 23.2.1970, p. 1 . Directive as last amended by Directive 97/27/EC (OJ L 233, 25.8.1997, p. 1 ). truck cabins, defined as the housing for the driver, and all integrated housing for the technical equipment, of vehicles of categories N2 and N3 in Directive 70/156/EEC, vans and trucks, defined as vehicles of categories N1, N2 and N3 in Directive 70/156/EEC, but not including truck cabins, buses, defined as vehicles of categories M2 and M3 in Directive 70/156/EEC,
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trailers, defined in categories O1, O2, O3 and O4 in Directive 70/156/EEC, metallic and plastic surfaces including surfaces of airplanes, ships, trains, etc., wooden surfaces, textile, fabric, film and paper surfaces, leather.
It does not include the coating of substrate with metals by electrophoretic and chemical spraying techniques. If the coating activity includes a step in which the same article is printed by whatever technique used, that printing step is considered part of the coating activity. However, printing activities operated as a separate activity are not included, but may be covered by the Directive if the printing activity falls within the scope thereof. -
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Any activity where coiled steel, stainless steel, coated steel, copper alloys or aluminium strip is coated with either a film forming or laminate coating in a continuous process.
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Any industrial or commercial activity using VOCs in an installation to clean garments, furnishing and similar consumer goods with the exception of the manual removal of stains and spots in the textile and clothing industry.
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Any activity of producing complete footwear or parts thereof.
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The manufacture of the above final products, and of intermediates where carried out at the same site, by mixing of pigments, resins and adhesive materials with organic solvent or other carrier, including dispersion and predispersion activities, viscosity and tint adjustments and operations for filling the final product into its container.
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The chemical synthesis, fermentation, extraction, formulation and finishing of pharmaceutical products and where carried out at the same site, the manufacture of intermediate products.
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Any reproduction activity of text and/or images in which, with the use of an image carrier, ink is transferred onto whatever type of surface. It includes associated varnishing, coating and laminating techniques. However, only the following sub-processes are subject to the Directive: — flexography a printing activity using an image carrier of rubber or elastic photopolymers on which the printing areas are above the non-printing areas, using liquid inks which dry through evaporation, — heatset web offset a web-fed printing activity using an image carrier in which the printing and non-printing area are in the same plane, where web-fed means that the material to be printed is fed to the machine from a reel as distinct from separate sheets. The non-printing area is treated to attract water and thus reject ink. The printing area is treated to receive and transmit ink to the surface to be printed. Evaporation takes place in an oven where hot air is used to heat the printed material, — laminating associated to a printing activity the adhering together of two or more flexible materials to produce laminates, — publication rotogravure a rotogravure printing activity used for printing paper for magazines, brochures, catalogues or similar products, using toluene-based inks, — rotogravure a printing activity using a cylindrical image carrier in which the printing area is below the non-printing area, using liquid inks which dry through evaporation. The recesses are filled with ink and the surplus is cleaned off the non-printing area before the surface to be printed contacts the cylinder and lifts the ink from the recesses, — rotary screen printing a web-fed printing activity in which the ink is passed onto the surface to be printed by forcing it through a porous image carrier, in which the printing area is open and the non-printing area is sealed off, using liquid inks which dry only through evaporation. Web-fed means that the material to be printed is fed to the machine from a reel as distinct from separate sheets, — varnishing an activity by which a varnish or an adhesive coating for the purpose of later sealing the packaging material is applied to a flexible material.
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Any activity of mixing, milling, blending, calendering, extrusion and vulcanisation of natural or synthetic rubber and any ancillary operations for converting natural or synthetic rubber into a finished product.
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Any activity except dry cleaning using organic solvents to remove contamination from the surface of material including degreasing. A cleaning activity consisting of more than one step before or after any other activity shall be considered as one surface cleaning activity. This activity does not refer to the cleaning of the equipment but to the cleaning of the surface of products.
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Any activity to extract vegetable oil from seeds and other vegetable matter, the processing of dry residues to produce animal feed, the purification of fats and vegetable oils derived from seeds, vegetable matter and/or animal matter.
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Any industrial or commercial coating activity and associated degreasing activities performing: the coating of road vehicles as defined in Directive 70/156/EEC, or part of them, carried out as part of vehicle repair, conservation or decoration outside of manufacturing installations, or the original coating of road vehicles as defined in Directive 70/156/EEC or part of them with refinishing-type materials, where this is carried out away from the original manufacturing line, or the coating of trailers (including semi-trailers) (category O).
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Any coating activity of metallic conductors used for winding the coils in transformers and motors, etc.
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Any activity giving a loading of preservative in timber.
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Any activity to adhere together wood and/or plastic to produce laminated products.
Emission limit values in waste gases (mg C/Nm |
Fugitive emission values (percentage of solvent input) | Total emission limit values | Special provisions | |||||
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New | Existing | New | Existing | |||||
15—25 | 30 ( |
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> 25 | 30 ( |
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15—25 | ||||||||
> 25 | ||||||||
> 30 ( |
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1—5 | 20 ( |
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> 5 | 20 ( |
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2—10 | 75 ( |
20 ( |
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> 10 | 75 ( |
15 ( |
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Vehicle coating (< 15) and vehicle refinishing | > 0,5 | 50 ( |
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50 ( |
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5—15 | 100 ( |
25 ( |
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> 15 | 50/75 ( |
20 ( |
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10 g/kg ( |
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5 g/kg ( | ||||||||
15—25 | 100 ( |
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> 25 | 50/75 ( |
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Dry cleaning | 20 g/kg ( |
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100 ( |
11 kg/m |
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10—25 | 85 g/m |
Emission limits are expressed in grams of solvent emitted per m | ||||||
> 25 | 75 g/m | |||||||
> 10 ( |
150 g/m |
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25 g per pair | Total emission limit values are expressed in grams of solvent emitted per pair of complete footwear produced. | |||||||
30 g/m |
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5—15 | 50 ( |
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> 15 | 50 ( |
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100— |
5 % of solvent input | The fugitive emission value does not include solvent sold as part of a coatings mixture in a sealed container. | ||||||
> |
3 % of solvent input | |||||||
20 ( |
25 ( |
25 % of solvent input | ||||||
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20 ( |
5 ( |
15 ( |
5 % of solvent input | 15 % of solvent input |
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the surface area calculated from the total electrophoretic coating area, and the surface area of any parts that might be added in successive phases of the coating process which are coated with the same coatings as those used for the product in question, or the total surface area of the product coated in the installation.
Total emission limit value | |||
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New | Existing | ||
Coating of new cars (> 15) | > |
45 g/m |
60 g/m |
≤ |
90 g/m |
90 g/m | |
Total emission limit (g/m | |||
Coating of new truck cabins (> 15) | ≤ |
65 | 85 |
> |
55 | 75 | |
Coating of new vans and trucks (> 15) | ≤ |
90 | 120 |
> |
70 | 90 | |
Coating of new buses (> 15) | ≤ |
210 | 290 |
> |
150 | 225 |
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(i) where substitutes containing little or no solvent are still under development, a time extension must be given to the operator to implement his emission reduction plans; (ii) the reference point for emission reductions should correspond as closely as possible to the emissions which would have resulted had no reduction action been taken.
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(i) the operator shall forward an emission reduction plan which includes in particular decreases in the average solvent content of the total input and/or increased efficiency in the use of solids to achieve a reduction of the total emissions from the installation to a given percentage of the annual reference emissions, termed the target emission. This must be done on the following time frame: Time period Maximum allowed total annual emissions New installations Existing installations By 31.10.2001 By 31.10.2005 Target emission × 1,5 By 31.10.2004 By 31.10.2007 Target emission (ii) The annual reference emission is calculated as follows: -
(a) The total mass of solids in the quantity of coating and/or ink, varnish or adhesive consumed in a year is determined. Solids are all materials in coatings, inks, varnishes and adhesives that become solid once the water or the volatile organic compounds are evaporated. (b) The annual reference emissions are calculated by multiplying the mass determined in (a) by the appropriate factor listed in the table below. Competent authorities may adjust these factors for individual installations to reflect documented increased efficiency in the use of solids. Activity Multiplication factor for use in item (ii)(b) Rotogravure printing; flexography printing; laminating as part of a printing activity; varnishing as part of a printing activity; wood coating; coating of textiles, fabric film or paper; adhesive coating 4 Coil coating, vehicle refinishing 3 Food contact coating, aerospace coatings 2,33 Other coatings and rotary screen printing 1,5 (c) The target emission is equal to the annual reference emission multiplied by a percentage equal to: -
(the fugitive emission value + 15), for installations falling within item 6 and the lower threshold band of items 8 and 10 of Annex IIA, (the fugitive emission value + 5) for all other installations.
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(d) Compliance is achieved if the actual solvent emission determined from the solvent management plan is less than or equal to the target emission.
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(i) verification of compliance as specified in Article 9(1); (ii) identification of future reduction options; (iii) enabling of the provision of information on solvent consumption, solvent emissions and compliance with the Directive to the public.
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I1 The quantity of organic solvents or their quantity in mixtures purchased which are used as input into the process in the time frame over which the mass balance is being calculated. I2 The quantity of organic solvents or their quantity in mixtures recovered and reused as solvent input into the process. (The recycled solvent is counted every time it is used to carry out the activity.)
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O1 Emissions in waste gases. O2 Organic solvents lost in water, if appropriate taking into account waste water treatment when calculating O5. O3 The quantity of organic solvents which remains as contamination or residue in products output from the process. O4 Uncaptured emissions of organic solvents to air. This includes the general ventilation of rooms, where air is released to the outside environment via windows, doors, vents and similar openings. O5 Organic solvents and/or organic compounds lost due to chemical or physical reactions (including for example those which are destroyed, e.g. by incineration or other waste gas or waste water treatments, or captured, e.g. by adsorption, as long as they are not counted under O6, O7 or O8). O6 Organic solvents contained in collected waste. O7 Organic solvents, or organic solvents contained in mixtures, which are sold or are intended to be sold as a commercially valuable product. O8 Organic solvents contained in mixtures recovered for reuse but not as input into the process, as long as not counted under O7. O9 Organic solvents released in other ways.
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(i) Verification of compliance with the reduction option in Annex IIB, with a total emission limit value expressed in solvent emissions per unit product, or otherwise stated in Annex IIA. -
(a) For all activities using Annex IIB the solvent management plan should be done annually to determine consumption (C). Consumption can be calculated according to the following equation: -
C = I1 - O8
A parallel exercise should also be undertaken to determine solids used in coating in order to derive the annual reference emission and the target emission each year. -
(b) For assessing compliance with a total emission limit value expressed in solvent emissions per unit product or otherwise stated in Annex IIA, the solvent management plan should be done annually to determine emissions (E). Emissions can be calculated according to the following equation: -
E = F + O1
where F is the fugitive emission as defined in section (ii)(a). The emission figure should then be divided by the relevant product parameter. -
(c) For assessing compliance with the requirements of Article 5(5)(b)(ii), the solvent management plan should be done annually to determine total emissions from all activities concerned, and that figure should then be compared with the total emissions that would have resulted had the requirements of Annex II been met for each activity separately.
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(ii) Determination of fugitive emissions for comparison with fugitive emission values in Annex IIA: -
(a) Methodology The fugitive emission can be calculated according to the following equation: -
F = I1 - O1 - O5 - O6 - O7 - O8 or F = O2 + O3 + O4 + O9
This quantity can be determined by direct measurement of the quantities. Alternatively, an equivalent calculation can be made by other means, for instance by using the capture efficiency of the process. The fugitive emission value is expressed as a proportion of the input, which can be calculated according to the following equation: -
I = I1 + I2
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(b) Frequency Determination of fugitive emissions can be done by a short but comprehensive set of measurements. It need not be done again until the equipment is modified.
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