The Planning and Design of Eco-Industrial Parks in China
Ding-jiang
CHEN, You-run LI*, Jing-zhu SHEN and Shan-ying HU
Department of Chemical Engineering, Tsinghua University, Beijing, 100084, P.R.China.
Abstract: Projects of Eco-industrial Park (EIP) are initiated
in China. In this paper three cases are introduced, which are
carried out by the local authorities in corporation with the
Industrial Ecology Center in Chemical Engineering Department of
Tsinghua University. The projects are Zaozhuang EIP initiative in
Shandong Province in North China, with key feature of transforming
a traditional industrial zone to eco-industrial park; Quzhou EIP
Initiative in Zhejiang Province in East China, with key feature of
constructing web of material exchanges among dozens of chemical
plants of various sizes; and Nanhai EIP initiative in Guangdong
Province in South China, with key feature of developing
environmental protection industry in a greenfield. The planning
work focuses on identifying potential by-product exchanges,
exploring possible water/energy cascading usage, modeling
industrial symbiosis system, and developing EIP management
information system.
Keywords: Eco-Industrial Park, China
1. Introduction
Eco-Industrial Park (EIP) is an industrial
system of planned materials and energy exchanges that seeks to
minimize energy and raw materials use, minimize waste, and build
sustainable economic, ecological and social relationships [1]. A
number of EIP initiatives are emerging in recent years and
undergoing a fast development in many countries [2].
China has experienced a rapid economic growth in the last
twenty years. Now the country is facing a series of resource and
environment issues, which have blocked the economy's healthy
development. As an effective economy and environment win-win
strategy, the EIP concept has begun to be serious in consideration
by authorities and communities in some industrial regions in
China. Several EIP projects are initiated by local authorities,
which are in cooperation with academic institutions.
The Industrial Ecology Center in Chemical Engineering
Department of Tsinghua University is active in the area of EIP
research. The members of the center have taken part in three EIP
initiatives in China since 1999. The projects are Zaozhuang EIP
initiative in Shandong Province in North China, with key feature
of transforming a traditional industrial zone to eco-industrial
park; Quzhou EIP Initiative in Zhejiang Province in East China,
with key feature of constructing web of material exchanges among
dozens of chemical plants of various sizes; and Nanhai EIP
initiative in Guangdong Province in South China, with key feature
of developing environmental protection industry in a greenfield.
2. Zaozhuang EIP Initiative
Zaozhuang Industrial Park consists
of 150 hectares of land, where more than ten enterprises are
currently located in. Anchor members include a coal based ammonia
plant, a heat and power station and a cement mill. Other members
are a carpet mill, a coke factory, a ceramic factory, a carbide
factory, etc. A wastewater treatment plant and a residential area
are located in the park's vicinity.
Very few material linkages have existed among the members.
Almost all the plants have their own boiler system which
by-produce waste cinder and fly ash. They supply the solid wastes
to the cement mill as raw material. The power station provides
heat to the residential area in winter. The coke factory once
tried supplying coke-oven gas to the ceramic factory as fuel for
roasting ceramic products, but failed for technical reason.
Potential linkages based on the existed linkages are needed for
transforming the park from a traditional pattern to an
eco-industrial one. After analyzing the input and output of the
members and consulting references for technical feasibility,
several potential linkages are identified as showed in Fig.1. The
wastewater treatment plant can provide treated water to power
station and ammonia plant to satisfy the large demand for cooling
water, and at the same time, to save the scarce local water
resource. The power station can supply process steam to other
members for shutting down the inefficiency small steam boilers,
for which new investment is needed to rebuild the old steam supply
system. The carbide factory can supply its slag to the power
station to substitute part of the limestone for desulphurization
purpose. And gypsum, the product of desulphurization process, can
be supplied to the cement mill as part of raw material.
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Figure 1 - Zaozhuang
EIP Initiative |
Recruitments are also considered. A new unit of CO2 gas
fertilizer may helpful for utilizing the wasted CO2 gas release by
the ammonia plant. The CO2 gas can also be supplied to a new unit
in the carbide factory. With the gas and the carbide slag, the
unit can produces light calcium carbonate as building material.
The wasted hydrogen of the ammonia plant can be used to produce
peroxide if a peroxide unit is built. Enrollment of a brick mill
may consume the large amount of cinder and fly ash accumulated in
the past of the power station.
The design and management of EIP should be conducted based on
quantitative analysis, for which a model for EIP optimal decision
is developed with an object oriented method [3]. The model
consists of two kinds of blocks: member models and connection
models. These blocks form a modular architecture. Logical
proposition expressions are introduced into the model to express
EIP scenarios with different topological structure, so that which
can be formulated as a mixed integer nonlinear programming (MINLP)
problem. It is easy to expand, modify, and reuse the model. Three
mass and energy integrated scenarios of Zaozhuang EIP are studied
by applying the developed model. The study results provided us
rich information, such as the optimal structure of the EIP, flow
rate of material flows, profit of each facility, etc. We can use
the model to coordinate the exchange activities among members and
to help deciding whether the new units should be established and
what are the suitable capacities.
Our study shows that, comparing with the traditional form,
Zaozhuang EIP is estimated to achieve reduction in water
consumption by about 40%, sulfur dioxide discharge by about 17%,
and carbon dioxide emissions by about 13%, respectively.
3. Quzhou EIP Initiative
Quzhou EIP is a cluster of dozens of
chemical plants of various sizes, which are located in Quzhou
City, west of Zhejiang provinces. A disadvantage of the park is
that it is in the upstream area of Qiantang River, the primary
water resource of the whole Zhejiang province. The industrial
pollutions, mainly water pollution, lead to great environmental
pressures by the public and government, which force the park has
to find a solution to upgrade both economic and environmental
performances. The EIP planning project for Quzhou is of great
significance for local authority and communities.
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Figure 2 -
Demonstration of industrial food web in Quzhou EIP |
A demonstration of the industrial food web in Quzhou EIP is
showed in Fig.2. The core of the park is Juhua Group, one of
China's 18 largest chemical industrial enterprises. It covers an
area of over 600 hectares of land. Three pillar industries of the
group are fluorochemical industry, chlorine and soda chemical
industry and chemical processing of coal. At present the group has
over 30 plants, branches, 46 sets main production systems, and
complete infrastructures. It produces over 180 varieties of
products, including basic chemical raw materials, chemical
medicines, chemical ores, nonferrous metals, construction
materials, etc.
A material exchange network has been created within the core.
Several processes are well designed for co-producing as showed in
Fig.3. By-product HCl of freon unit is fed to PVC unit replace
part of the fresh HCl, which remarkably reduces the cost of
producing PVC and makes the traditional high-cost carbine-ethyne-PVC
reaction path more competitive. A poly-generation scheme for
methanol and ammonia has great market flexibility and can reduce
emission of byproduct CO2.
Dozens of companies related to the Juhua Group can be divided
into three types. Type A companies provide raw materials and
auxiliary materials to the core. Type B companies utilize chemical
products of the core for further processing. Type C companies
consume wastes mainly from the core. Juhua Group produces about
0.8 million tons of solid wastes annually, mainly cinder, fly ash
and chemical solid wastes, over 80? of which are fed to cement
mills and bricks mills located in Quzhou. The group also produced
23 thousand tons of liquid wastes annually, over 70? of which are
feed to the around small companies for recycle and reuse. For
example, the wasted H2SO4 are used to produce phosphoric
fertilizer; the wasted CCl4 of freon unit are recycled as solvent
by distillation; the wasted oil of nylon unit are used as fuel.
| [figure 3 not available] |
| Fig.3
material
exchange network within Juhua Group and companies of type
C
|
We've developed a Management Information System (MIS) for
Quzhou EIP, which assists the EIP members to gather and distribute
information, identify opportunities for waste exchange and
strengthen the environment management. The MIS is based on the
prevalent Browser/Server architecture. Users can access the system
via the Internet, with regardless of time and location. Data
highly concerned with EIP are carefully collected and organized,
including survey of members, detail input and output,
environmental monitoring data, environmental criterion, etc. All
the data can be easily queried, modified and statistically
operated by users with appropriate authority.
We've also developed a module aiding the EIP management
committee in evaluating potential member for recruitment, which is
integrated with the EIP MIS. The module applies fuzzy math
technology, considering aspects of economy, resource, environment
and job creation, which can give the committee users a
quantitative result. By applying the module, the decision-makers
can make better choices in recruitment process than ever which
mainly depend on experiences and subjective judgments.
4. Nanhai EIP Initiative
Nanhai EIP is a greenfield site
focusing on environmental protection industry (EPI), which has a
largely potential market and is becoming a key development field
in China. We plan to develop the park as one, which has co-located
green businesses within the park that implement eco-industrial
principles and at the same time combine with virtual business
networks outside the park.
Four types of environmental businesses are preferable to
others:
- Businesses of environmental equipment manufacturing, such
as sewage treatment equipment, garbage treatment equipment,
desulfurization and denitration equipment, automated environmental
monitoring instrument, etc.
- Businesses of environment friendly products, such as
biodegradable plastic, green dope, green refrigerating medium,
etc.
- Businesses of environmental protection research and
service, such as environmental academic institution, environmental
engineering company, environmental education center, etc.
- Businesses of wastes recycle, reuse and regeneration, such
as producing liquid fuels from waste plastic, wastewater
regeneration, solvent recycle, etc.
Members of the EIP may benefit from five aspects:
- Material integration, including wastes recycle and
treatment center, byproduct/waste exchanges.
- Water integration, including wastewater reduction by
cascading usage, recovering valuable material from wastewater, and
central wastewater treatment.
- Energy integration, including central heating system,
energy cascading usage, energy saving technologies (heat pump),
cleaner energy usage (solar energy, renewable bio energy are under
consideration).
- Information integration, including web capability EIP
Management Information System, environmental management and
technology service.
- Harmoniousness with the local environment, including
maintaining local nature ecosystem, park landscape design, green
buildings.
As the Nanhai EIP is a complete new one, there are much more
uncertainty but at the same time flexibility. More efforts are
needed in recruitment of new businesses, finding sources of
financing and improving the eco-industrial plan of the park.
5. Conclusion
The EIP initiatives mentioned in this paper will
continue their development and be good patterns of other regions
in China, especially the west regions where are rich in resource
but low in economic growth. Big investment in end-of-pipe control
technologies should be skipped, and jump on the economy and
environment win-win strategic bandwagon. Eco-Industrial Parks is
likely to have a growing development in the coming years in China.
Reference
[1] Eco-Industrial Park Workshop Proceedings [held
October 17-18, 1996], February 1997.
[2] Li Y. R., Shen J. Z., Hu S. Y., Chen D. J.. Study and
Progress On Industrial Ecology and Eco-industrial Parks. Journal
of chemical Industry and engineering (China). 2001,
v52(3):189-192.
[3] Chen D. J., Li Y.R., Shen J.Z., Hu S. Y.. Decision Support
System and Kernel MINLP Model for Eco-Industrial Park. The First
Joint China/Japan Chemical Engineering Symposium, Beijing, 2000.
* corresponding author
email: liyr@mail.tsinghua.edu.cn
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