Acid
Plant Database
June
22, 2015
Owner |
Lebanese Chemical
Company S.A.L. |
- |
Location |
Selaata
Lebanon |
Background |
1956 - Company established (privately owned) |
Website |
- |
Plant |
- |
Coordinates* |
34°
16' 31" N,
35° 39' 14" E |
Type of Plant |
Sulphur Burning |
Gas Source |
Sulphur |
Plant Capacity |
600,000 MTPA |
SA/DA |
- |
Status |
Operating |
Year Built |
1968 |
Technology |
- |
Contractor |
- |
Remarks |
- |
Pictures |
|
General |
Phosphoric Acid: 200,000 MTPA
GTSP: 220,000 MTPA
GSSP: 120,000 MTPA
Aluminum Sulphate: 30,000 MTPA |
News |
September 21, 2000 – Greenpeace today
demanded an answer from the Ministry of Environment regarding its failure to
fulfil the commitment made to pressure the Lebanese Chemical Company (LCC)
to state, by WHEN, its plan to implement measures to curb the toxic
pollution it is pumping into the Mediterranean Sea daily.
During a Greenpeace protest held two weeks ago against the Lebanese
Chemical Company’s (LCC) pollution in Selaata, the Director General at the
Ministry for Environment, Berj Hatjian, stated that the Ministry will demand
an assessment from LCC including plans to reduce pollution. For the first
time, the Ministry publicly admitted that a grave problem exists in Selaata.
Greenpeace today exposed a report on LCC commissioned by the Ministry
of Environment that confirms the hazards to public health and the
environment that the international environmental organisation has been
pointing to. The report, entitled "Free Trade and the Environment in Lebanon
– Case study on the Chemicals and Agro-Food Industries", was prepared by
Envirotech Ltd, a Lebanese consulting firm and requested by the United
Nations Development programme – Capacity 21 and the Ministry of Environment.
It confirms the presence of heavy metals and other toxic substances such as
cadmium, nickel and lead in the company’s discharged waste.
The report includes figures dating back to 1998 but has never been
made public. It concludes that the production practices used at LCC,
especially the production of raw materials such as phosphoric and sulphuric
acid, are causing extreme levels of pollution. The report also predicts that
the burden to the environment will increase as the production capacity at
LCC increases. The chemical (and
mainly the phosphate) industry was chosen as a case study for the report due
to the import of highly noxious and dangerous raw materials (sulphur and
phosphate) and the production of highly polluting intermediary products
(sulphuric and phosphoric acid) and the production of high air, water and
sea-polluting effluents (Phosphogypsum and Gaseous Fluoride (HF)).
The report also reveals the contradiction between LCC’s annual
production figures, reported to be 130 thousand tonnes in 1998 and related
export figures at the Lebanese Customs department, which show 230 thousand
tonnes for the same year. LCC
produced 60 thousand tonnes of phosphoric acid in 1998, this means that 270
thousand tonnes of phosphogypsum were discharged into the Mediterranean in
1998 alone. (1) “It is
outrageous that the Ministry for Environment is still refusing to take
measures to stop LCC’ pollution in the interest of public health and the
environment. Green rhetoric and empty promises will not deliver the changes
that the public has every right to demand. We are demanding that the
Ministry for Environment must address these legitimate concerns immediately
by taking action to stop the toxic discharges,” said Zeina Al- Hajj.
Greenpeace is demanding an emergency action plan to save Selaata Bay.
The government should set a priority to stop the industrial pollution along
the coast. A first step would be for the Ministry to fulfil another promise
made to ratify the Barcelona Convention Protocols and implement measures
that will effectively safeguard the Mediterranean Sea from toxic pollution.
|
MTPD - Metric Tonne per Day
STPD - Short Ton per Day
MTPA - Metric Tonne per Annum STPA - Short Ton per
Annum
SA - Single Absorption
DA - Double Absorption
* Coordinates can be used to
locate plant on Google Earth