Every industrial plant with a discharge permit must submit an environmental self-monitoring plan. In China, it’s a legal requirement under the Environmental Protection Law and the Pollutant Discharge Permit Management Regulations. If your plan is incomplete, your monitoring data is invalid — and invalid data means non-compliance findings during inspections.
But even outside China, the principle is the same: if you’re discharging, you need to prove you’re within your permit limits. Self-monitoring is how you prove it.
This article covers what a self-monitoring plan should contain, how to design a monitoring program that satisfies regulators, and how to document everything so an inspector can verify your compliance in under an hour.
What a Self-Monitoring Plan Actually Is
A self-monitoring plan is a written document that specifies:
1. What you monitor (pollutants, parameters)
2. Where you monitor (sampling points, monitoring locations)
3. How you monitor (methods, instruments, lab analysis)
4. How often you monitor (frequency for each parameter)
5. How you record and report the data
The plan must be:
– Approved by the local environmental bureau (in China: submitted through the national pollutant discharge permit management platform)
– Available on-site for inspection
– Updated whenever your process, permit limits, or monitoring methods change
– Implemented — a plan that exists only on paper is worse than no plan, because it proves you knew what you should be doing and chose not to do it
Part 1: What to Monitor
Wastewater Parameters
The parameters you must monitor depend on your industry, your treatment process, and your permit conditions. But there’s a standard framework:
Tier 1 — Mandatory for all facilities:
– Flow rate (continuous, with totalizer)
– pH (continuous or daily composite)
– COD (Chemical Oxygen Demand)
– Ammonia nitrogen (NH₃-N)
– Suspended solids (SS)
Tier 2 — Industry-specific:
| Industry | Additional Parameters |
| Electroplating | Cr⁶⁺, total Cr, Ni, Cu, Zn, CN⁻ |
| Chemical manufacturing | Specific organic compounds listed in permit, AOX, VOCs |
| Battery manufacturing | NMP (N-methyl-2-pyrrolidone), heavy metals (Co, Ni, Mn, Li) |
| Food & beverage | BOD₅, oil & grease, total phosphorus, total nitrogen |
| Textile dyeing | Color, aniline, Cr⁶⁺, sulfide |
| Pharmaceutical | Active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs), acute toxicity |
Tier 3 — Site-specific (based on your raw materials and process):
– Any substance used in your process that could appear in wastewater
– Check your SDS (Safety Data Sheet) file: if a chemical is handled in quantities >1 ton/year, it should be on your monitoring list unless you can demonstrate it’s fully consumed or captured
Air Emissions Parameters
Organized emissions (stacks and vents):
– Particulate matter (PM)
– SO₂ (if burning sulfur-containing fuel)
– NOx (from any combustion source)
– VOCs (if using solvents, coatings, or organic chemicals)
– Industry-specific: HCl (from chlorinated processes), HF (from fluoride processes), heavy metals (from thermal processes)
Fugitive emissions:
– LDAR (Leak Detection and Repair) for flanges, valves, pump seals if handling VOCs or hazardous air pollutants above threshold quantities
– Tank vent emissions (working and breathing losses)
Noise
– Boundary noise level at the site perimeter
– Daytime limit (typically 65 dB(A) for industrial areas in China, 6:00-22:00)
– Nighttime limit (typically 55 dB(A), 22:00-6:00)
– Frequency: quarterly for most facilities; monthly if near sensitive receptors (hospitals, schools, residential areas)
Solid/Hazardous Waste
– Generation quantities by waste category
– Storage quantities on-site (must not exceed permit limits or storage time limits)
– Transfer records (manifest system for hazardous waste)
– Disposal verification (receiving facility confirmation)
Part 2: Monitoring Frequency
The monitoring frequency for each parameter depends on:
– Your permit conditions (these override everything else)
– The variability of your discharge (highly variable = more frequent)
– Your compliance history (past violations = more frequent)
Standard Frequency Guidelines (China GB Standards)
| Parameter Type | Continuous Discharge | Intermittent Discharge |
| Flow rate | Continuous (automatic) | Per batch |
| pH | Continuous (automatic) | Per batch |
| COD | Daily composite OR continuous online | Per batch |
| NH₃-N | Daily composite OR continuous online | Per batch |
| SS | Daily | Per batch |
| Heavy metals | Monthly (or daily if risk of exceedance) | Per batch |
| Specific organics | Monthly | Per batch or monthly |
| BOD₅ | Weekly | Per batch |
When to Increase Frequency
Increase monitoring frequency if:
1. You install new treatment equipment (monitor weekly for the first 3 months to establish baseline)
2. You change raw materials or process chemicals
3. A previous monitoring result exceeded 80% of the permit limit
4. You receive a complaint from neighbors or downstream users
5. The environmental bureau directs you to increase frequency after an inspection
When You Can Decrease Frequency
Decrease frequency only with written approval from the environmental bureau, and only after demonstrating 12 consecutive months of compliance with all parameters below 50% of permit limits.
Do not decrease frequency without approval. An inspector who finds you monitoring less frequently than your approved plan states will treat this as a monitoring violation — which is treated the same as an exceedance in many jurisdictions.
Part 3: Monitoring Methods
Online Continuous Monitoring (CEMS)
For larger facilities (in China: those on the “key pollutant discharge unit” list), continuous emissions monitoring systems (CEMS) are mandatory for:
– Wastewater: flow, pH, COD, NH₃-N
– Air emissions: particulate matter, SO₂, NOx (for combustion sources above a certain size)
CEMS systems must be:
– Certified by the manufacturer for the specific parameters being monitored
– Installed at the designated monitoring location (after treatment, before discharge)
– Maintained and calibrated per manufacturer schedule (typically quarterly zero/span checks, annual full calibration)
– Data-transmitted to the environmental bureau in real time (in China: via the national CEMS data platform)
Common CEMS failure modes:
– Probe fouling (especially pH probes in high-hardness water — clean weekly)
– Sample line condensation (for heated sample lines on gas analyzers — check heat tracing monthly)
– Calibration drift (zero drift >±2% of full scale in one month = recalibrate)
– Data transmission interruption (check network connection daily; maintain a local data backup)
Manual Sampling + Laboratory Analysis
For parameters not covered by CEMS, manual sampling with laboratory analysis is the standard method:
Sampling procedure:
1. Use clean, appropriate sample containers (glass for organics, polyethylene for metals, sterile for bacteriological)
2. Preserve samples per method requirements (acidification for metals, refrigeration for BOD/COD, no headspace for VOCs)
3. Label immediately — date, time, sampling point ID, sampler name, preservative used
4. Transport to lab within holding time (typically 24 hours for most parameters, 6 hours for BOD, immediate for pH/temperature/chlorine)
5. Chain of custody form accompanies every sample from collection to analysis
Lab methods (China GB standards):
| Parameter | Method | Standard |
| COD | Dichromate reflux | HJ 828 |
| NH₃-N | Nessler’s reagent spectrophotometry | HJ 535 |
| SS | Gravimetric (0.45 μm filter) | GB 11901 |
| Heavy metals | ICP-MS or AAS | HJ 700 series |
| BOD₅ | Dilution and seeding | HJ 505 |
| Oil & grease | Infrared spectrophotometry | HJ 637 |
Part 4: Documentation — The Part Everyone Gets Wrong
Your monitoring data is only as good as your documentation. An inspector will ask for three things:
1. The Monitoring Plan Itself
Keep the current approved version on-site. Keep previous versions for at least 5 years. The plan must include:
– Facility name, address, permit number
– List of all discharge points (with unique identifiers matching the permit)
– For each discharge point: parameters monitored, frequency, method, responsible person
– Map/drawing showing sampling point locations
– Quality assurance/quality control (QA/QC) procedures
2. Monitoring Records (Raw Data)
For each monitoring event, record:
– Date and time of sampling
– Sampling point identifier
– Sampler name
– Field measurements (pH, temperature, flow — measured immediately at the sampling point)
– Sample preservation method
– Laboratory analysis results (with lab report number)
– Comparison to permit limit (pass/fail with actual value)
– Any anomalies noted (weather conditions, process upsets, equipment maintenance at time of sampling)
3. Corrective Action Records
When a monitoring result exceeds the permit limit (or exceeds 80% of the limit — your internal trigger), document:
– Date and time exceedance was discovered
– Parameter and measured value
– Root cause investigation (within 48 hours)
– Corrective action taken
– Verification sampling results (proving the fix worked)
– Date of notification to the environmental bureau (in China: within 24 hours of discovery)
The 80% Rule
Set your internal alarm at 80% of the permit limit. This gives you time to investigate and correct before an actual exceedance occurs.
| Permit Limit | Internal Alarm (80%) | Action |
| COD = 500 mg/L | 400 mg/L | Increase monitoring to daily; check treatment system |
| COD = 350 mg/L | 280 mg/L | Immediate investigation; prepare contingency plan |
| COD > 500 mg/L | N/A | Exceedance — notify regulator within 24 hours |
Part 5: Quality Assurance / Quality Control
Your monitoring data must be defensible. That means you can prove, in court if necessary, that the numbers are real.
Field QA/QC
– Field blanks: One per sampling event. Take distilled water to the field in a sample container, open it at the sampling point, close it, and analyze alongside the actual samples. This catches contamination from the container or the field environment.
– Field duplicates: One per 10 samples. Two samples collected simultaneously from the same point. Results should agree within ±20% for most parameters.
– Equipment blanks: Run distilled water through the sampling equipment before use (especially pumps and tubing). This catches residual contamination from previous samples.
Laboratory QA/QC
– Calibration standards: Run at the beginning and end of each batch; must be within ±5% of known value
– Method blanks: One per batch; must be below detection limit
– Laboratory duplicates: One per batch; RPD (relative percent difference) <20%
– Matrix spikes: One per batch for complex samples; recovery 80-120%
– Proficiency testing: Participate in external proficiency testing programs at least annually
Record Retention
Keep all monitoring records for at least 5 years (China requires 5 years minimum; keep longer if your permit requires it). This includes:
– Raw laboratory data (not just summary reports)
– Instrument calibration logs
– CEMS maintenance records
– Corrective action reports
– Chain of custody forms
Part 6: Common Findings During Inspections
Based on actual inspection reports from Chinese environmental bureaus (2023-2026), here are the most common self-monitoring violations:
| Violation | Frequency | Consequence |
| Monitoring plan not updated after process change | Very common | Warning + 30-day correction period |
| Sampling point not clearly marked or inaccessible | Common | Warning + re-inspection |
| Monitoring frequency lower than plan specifies | Common | Fine (typically ¥20,000-100,000) |
| CEMS not calibrated within required interval | Common | Fine + data invalidated |
| Laboratory not accredited for the methods used | Occasional | Data invalidated; must re-sample with accredited lab |
| Records incomplete or missing for some periods | Occasional | Warning + supplemental monitoring required |
| Exceedance not reported to regulator within 24 hours | Rare but serious | Maximum fine + potential permit suspension |
| Falsified data | Rare but most serious | Criminal charges (since 2021 in China) |
The lesson: the most common violations are administrative, not technical. Your treatment system might be working perfectly, but if you can’t prove it with proper records, you’re still non-compliant.
The Self-Monitoring Calendar
Every plant environmental manager should maintain a monitoring calendar. This is a simple spreadsheet or wall chart that shows, for every week of the year:
– Which parameters are due for monitoring
– Which CEMS calibrations are scheduled
– When the quarterly noise monitoring is due
– When the annual third-party verification is due
– When the permit renewal application must be submitted
A well-maintained calendar prevents the most common violation: forgetting to monitor something on time.
Summary
A self-monitoring plan is your proof of compliance. It’s also your early warning system — if something is drifting toward a permit limit, the monitoring data tells you before the regulator does.
| Element | Key Action |
| Monitoring parameters | Know your permit limits and monitor all regulated parameters + 80% alarm thresholds |
| Monitoring frequency | Follow permit minimums; increase after process changes or near-exceedances |
| Monitoring methods | CEMS for flow/pH/COD/NH₃-N; accredited lab for everything else |
| Documentation | Raw data + lab reports + corrective actions; retain 5+ years |
| QA/QC | Field blanks, duplicates, lab spikes, proficiency testing |
| Inspection readiness | Current plan on-site + complete records + calibrated instruments + accessible sampling points |
The plant that monitors well stays out of trouble. The plant that monitors poorly finds out about its problems from the environmental bureau — which is the most expensive way to find out.