Abstract

Complaints by the neighbourhood due to odour pollution from livestock farming are increasing. Therefore, some countries have already developed guidelines to address odour from livestock. These guidelines are in use to assess the necessary separation distance between livestock buildings and residential areas such that odour is not felt as an annoyance. In all these guidelines, the separation distance is calculated as a function of the rate of pollution. These are mainly power functions with an exponent between 0.3 and 0.5. The Austrian regulatory dispersion model, a Gauss model, is used to calculate the frequency distribution of the dilution factor for 12 classes of distances between 50 and 500 m downwind from the source. These data were fitted to an extended Weibull distribution of the dilution factor to determine the exponent of the power function describing the separation distance as a function of the emission. The exponent has a value of about 0.72. This result, achieved with a wind and stability statistics representative for the Austrian flatlands north of the Alps, indicates a stronger dependance of the separation distance from the odour emission than suggested by the guidelines.

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