CEMS
Across Europe and beyond, the regulatory landscape governing industrial emissions is undergoing a fundamental shift – and the pace of change is accelerating.
The Industrial Emissions Directive (IED) and its associated Best Available Techniques (BAT) conclusions have already raised the bar significantly, tightening emission limit values for major sectors including waste incineration, large combustion plants, and chemical manufacturing. But this is just the beginning. Upcoming revisions to the IED – combined with the growing influence of the European Green Deal and evolving national legislation – will push monitoring requirements further still, demanding greater precision, wider pollutant coverage, and tighter quality assurance from operators across the continent.
For those responsible for Continuous Emission Monitoring Systems (CEMS), these changes present both a technical and an operational challenge. Monitoring technologies must now be capable of measuring extremely low emission concentrations – in some cases approaching the limits of what current instrumentation can reliably detect – while simultaneously maintaining full compliance with quality assurance frameworks such as EN 14181. Getting this balance right will require careful investment decisions, updated testing protocols, and a clear-eyed understanding of where regulation is heading next.
On Wednesday June 10th at 2PM CET, our panel of experts will cut through the complexity to explore what these regulatory shifts mean in practice for CEMS operators, equipment suppliers, test houses, and compliance teams. From the technical demands of low-range measurement to the implications of revised BAT conclusions, we'll examine the pressures shaping the future of emissions monitoring – and what forward-thinking organisations are doing to stay ahead.
This webinar is essential viewing for environmental compliance managers, CEMS operators and engineers, regulatory affairs professionals, testing bodies, and equipment manufacturers with an interest in the evolving European emissions monitoring landscape.
IET 36.3 May