A PRELIMINARY STUDY INTO THE ENVIRONMENTAL AND ECONOMIC CONSEQUENCES OF A SUGAR FACTORY DEPITHING OPERATION
By TJ RAINEY; AP MANN; CH BAKIR; IM O’HARA
BAGASSE STOCKPILE OPERATIONS have the potential to lead to adverse environmental
and social impacts. Dust releases can cause occupational health and safety concerns for
factory workers and dust emissions impact on the surrounding community. Preliminary
modelling showed that bagasse depithing would likely reduce the environmental risks,
particularly dust emissions, associated with large-scale bagasse stockpiling operations.
Dust emission properties were measured and used for dispersion modelling with
favourable outcomes. Modelling showed a 70% reduction in peak ground level
concentrations of PM10 dust (particles with an aerodynamic diameter less than 10 μm)
from operations on depithed bagasse stockpiles compared to similar operations on
stockpiles of whole bagasse. However, the costs of a depithing operation at a sugar
factory were estimated to be approximately $2.1 million in capital expenditure to
process 100 000 t/y of bagasse and operating costs were 200 000 p.a. The total capital
cost for a 10 000 t/y operation was approximately $1.6 million. The cost of depithing
based on a discounted cash flow analysis was $5.50 per tonne of bagasse for the
100 000 t/y scenario. This may make depithing prohibitively expensive in many
situations if installed exclusively as a dust control measure.