Continuous Emission Monitoring. James A. Jahnke

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Management Office of Air Quality – Compliance. www.in.gov/idem/airquality (accessed 3 June 2021).

      19 International Energy Agency (IEA) (1997). International Workshop on Continuous Emissions Monitoring. London: IEA Coal Research.

      20 International Energy Agency (IEA) (1998). CEM98 – International Conference on Emissions Monitoring. EPA 450/2‐84‐004. London: IEA Coal Research.

      21 Jahnke, J.A. (1984). Transmissometer Systems – Operation and Maintenance, an Advanced Course. EPA 450/2‐84‐004. Environmental Protection Agency‐Air Pollution Training Institute. Research Triangle Park

      22 Jahnke, J.A. (1991). APTI Course 474 – Continuous Emissions Monitoring Systems. EPA 450/2‐91006A. Environmental Protection Agency‐Air Pollution Training Institute. Research Triangle Park.

      23 Jahnke, J.A. (1993). Continuous Emission Monitoring, 1ee. New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold.

      24 Jahnke, J.A. (1994). An Operator's Guide to Eliminating Bias in CEM Systems. EPA 430‐R‐94‐016. Environmental Protection Agency‐Acid Rain Division.

      25 Jahnke, J.A. (2000). Continuous Emission Monitoring, 2ee. New York: Wiley.

      26 Jahnke, J.A. and Aldina, G.J. (1979). Continuous Air Pollution Source Monitoring Systems Handbook. EPA 625/6‐79‐005. Cincinnati, OH: Environmental Protection Agency‐Center for Environmental Research Information.

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      33 Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection (PADEP) (2006). Continuous Source Monitoring Manual – Revision 8. 274‐030‐001. Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection. www.dep.pa.gov (accessed 3 June 2021)

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      37 U.S. EPA (2020a). Code of Federal Regulations – Standards of Performance for New Stationary Sources. 40 CFR 60. Washington, DC: Office of the Federal Register.

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      43 U.S. EPA (2020g). Code of Federal Regulations – Continuous Emission Monitoring. 40 CFR 75. Washington, DC: Office of the Federal Register.

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      Environmental control agencies have been the driving force for the installation of continuous emission monitoring systems. The emergence of CEM regulation in the 1970s brought a new perspective to emissions monitoring by requiring a wide range of sources to install systems and by requiring the installed systems to meet specified levels of performance. Although instrumentation had been applied in the 1960s to monitor product loss in the process industries, it was not until environmental control agencies began implementing pollutant monitoring rules that the CEM industry began to develop. This development began almost simultaneously in the United States and the Federal Republic of Germany (FRG). Monitoring requirements have since extended throughout the European Union (EU), to Canada, Latin America, the Middle East, and Asia.

      National environmental regulatory programs have

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