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  Home > Resources
Source Newsletter spring 1996  
 

Dry Cleaning Equipment Upgrades Cut Costs and Reduce Perc

Changing to new or add-on dry cleaning equipment that efficiently uses and recovers perchloroethylene (perc) can significantly reduce operating costs. Currently, perc costs approximately $10 per gallon*. To discourage perc use, taxes and fees comprise approximately 50% of purchasing costs. Efficient equipment can make your perc go further through recycling and recovery and by significantly reducing evaporative losses.

Three options exist for perc dry cleaning equipment upgrades:

1. Switch to Dry-to-Dry Machines
Switching from the more traditional transfer machines to a more efficient refrigerated dry-to-dry machine eliminates garment transfer, which can reduce perc use and purchase by as much as 90% annually. The newest dry-to-dry machines are equipped with a refrigerated condenser, which is very efficient at recovering perc and recycling it back through the machine. The new, tighter machine design also significantly reduces fugitive emissions. In addition, perc recovery from waste is increased with the new spin-filter design. This generates less waste and lowers perc emissions from waste removal.

Cost: A new refrigerated dry-to-dry machine starts at $28,000 installed for a 30-pound capacity machine.
Perc Use Reduction: Up to 90% annually.
Note: payback calculations are only based on perc savings, not hazardous waste disposal savings.

2. Add Refrigerated Condensers
If purchasing a new refrigerated dry-to-dry machine is not cost effective, a refrigerated condenser could be added to a nonrefrigerated dry-to-dry machine, or to a transfer machine. This option may be required to meet the National Emission Standard for Hazardous Air Pollutants (NESHAP) for perc dry cleaners. Refrigerated condensers operate efficiently to recover perc at high concentrations.

Cost: $7,000-8,000 installed
Perc Use Reduction: Up to 40-50% annually.
Note: payback calculations are only based on perc savings, not hazardous waste disposal savings.

3. Add Carbon Adsorption Units
In some cases, it may be effective to add carbon adsorption units (sniffers) to refrigerated dry-to-dry machines to achieve greater perc recovery. (Note: machines with refrigerated condensers work so well at recovering perc that adding a carbon adsorber for a newer machine may not be cost effective.) It should be noted that older carbon adsorption units require a high level of maintenance, and the carbon should be desorbed daily to make them effective at removing perc from the vent stream. Once the carbon adsorption sites are filled, perc is not captured efficiently if the units are not maintained. Also, over time, the carbon does not desorb as effectively, and it eventually would need to be replaced. New, improved carbon units desorb with heat, are not as costly to operate, and do not produce large quantities of contact water from steam use.

Regulatory Compliance
Dry cleaners in Minnesota must keep perc concentration in the shop under 25 parts per million (ppm) during an eight-hour period, according to rules from the Occupational Safety and Health Division of the Minnesota Labor and Industry Department (MNOSHA). This law is stricter than the federal OSHA standard, which limits perc concentration to 100 ppm.

Existing dry cleaners must comply with the Clean Air Act Amendment (CAAA) NESHAP by September 22, 1996. Depending on your annual perc consumption (greater than 140 gallons per year for dry-to-dry systems and greater than 200 gallons per year for transfer systems) you may need to add a refrigerated condenser to nonrefrigerated systems to comply with the NESHAP. In addition, certain monitoring, inspection and leak detection/repair requirements must be met.

Switching to efficient new or add-on dry cleaning equipment can help dry cleaners comply with these state and federal regulations.

More Information and Assistance
If you are a Minnesota dry cleaner and want to reduce perc use and costs, call Cindy McComas at MnTAP at 612.624.4678 or 800.247.0015. MnTAP provides free, nonregulatory technical assistance to help Minnesota dry cleaners reduce their perc emissions and associated costs.

Minnesota dry cleaners that need help with air quality, hazardous waste or wastewater rules, permits or calculations can receive free, nonregulatory help from the Small Businesses Environmental Assistance Program (SBEAP) at the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency. To request assistance or more information, call Kim Grosenheider at SBEAP at 651.282.5487 or 800.657.3938.

 

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* Information was correct at time of printing. In 2007, perc costs approximately $26.00 per gallon.
 
 
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