Abstract

PurposeThis study aimed to determine the initial odor concentration which commonly urges Thais to make complaints and to propose an off-site limit for odorous emissions.Design/methodology/approachOdor concentrations measured by Nasal Rangers® and face-to-face survey interviews were simultaneously conducted with 122 residents located near 101 manufacturing centers in 20 provinces of Thailand. Along with the measured values and odor strength verbally rated by trained assessors, the number of complaint intentions, annoyance levels and health symptoms of residents were reported.FindingsThe odor concentrations in the inspected houses were <2, 2, 4, 7, 15, 30 and 60 D/T. The trained assessors stated that at the concentration of 4D/T, most odors were likely to be objectionable and unbearable when odor concentrations were higher. Correspondingly, about 80% of residents exposed to odors at this level felt some annoyance and reported health symptoms and therefore intended to register a complaint. At lower concentrations, the annoyance level as well as the decision to complain likely depended on other factors such as hedonic tone and exposure frequency.Practical implicationsThe proposed off-site reference value for odor complaint assessment was 4D/T. However, in the case of lower concentrations, additional relevant factors were crucially required to investigate the complaint.Originality/valueThis finding will help local authorities diminish subjective discretion on whether or not an odor constitutes a nuisance.

Highlights

  • As a result of economic and technological development without careful contingency planning, a large proportion of the population has been exposed to various kinds of environmental nuisances

  • Approximately 97% of the selected sites had no precipitation with a wind velocity of

  • Most meteorology data were rather homogeneous, so it was not possible to explore its influence on odor complaints

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Summary

Introduction

As a result of economic and technological development without careful contingency planning, a large proportion of the population has been exposed to various kinds of environmental nuisances. Objectionable odor has been ranked as the highest complaint in many countries including Thailand [1]. Four factors affecting nuisance occurrence, i.e. frequency, intensity, duration and odor offensiveness, called FIDO factors, have been applied worldwide. Difficulty in decisionmaking on whether a statutory nuisance could be established usually occurs The full terms of this licence may be seen at http:// creativecommons.org/licences/by/4.0/legalcode

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