1 / 20

Wasteminz Conference October 2010 Dr Jill Sherwood Nelson Marlborough DHB Public Health Service

Assessment of public health risk from the remediation of the former Fruitgrowers Chemical Company site, Mapua: challenges and lessons learned. Wasteminz Conference October 2010 Dr Jill Sherwood Nelson Marlborough DHB Public Health Service. Outline of Presentation.

caelan
Download Presentation

Wasteminz Conference October 2010 Dr Jill Sherwood Nelson Marlborough DHB Public Health Service

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Assessment of public health risk from the remediation of the former Fruitgrowers Chemical Company site, Mapua:challenges and lessons learned Wasteminz Conference October 2010 Dr Jill Sherwood Nelson Marlborough DHB Public Health Service

  2. Outline of Presentation Background and context of the investigation What we found Conclusions Challenges Lessons learned

  3. Background Site activities • Pesticides factory, mineral processing plant, private landfill • 1932 – 1988 • Site left “orphaned” • Historic contamination • Environmental and public health risk assessed in 1990s • Remediation planned Location of Mapua Site

  4. Protected disclosure Mapua Site remediation commenced 2004 Concerns raised about remediation process 2006 Agencies involved in investigation • Parliamentary Commissioner for the Environment, Ministry of Health, Department of Labour Public Health Service involvement • Requested to undertake investigation for MoH

  5. Public Health Brief Investigate the possibility of risk to public health • Risk of exposure to any emissions and discharges • Risk to health of the population • From the start of the remediation

  6. Approach Information gathering • Identify possible hazards • Resource consent conditions for protection of public health and review of monitoring results • Community concerns Risk assessment of hazards of concern • Chemicals included in the total hazard index • other hazards if health impact appeared possible

  7. Hazards In the soil or groundwater • Testing prior to remediation • Baseline sampling early in the remediation • Unexpected finds during the remediation Resulting from the remediation process • By-products formed in soil dryer • By-products formed in MCD reactor Other • Dust • Noise and/or vibration • Odour

  8. Exposure Potential Summary as how hazards might leave the Site • Stack emissions • Fugitive emissions • Groundwater discharges

  9. Site activities during remediation (early 2007)

  10. Treated “fines”

  11. Issues re Exposure Information Monitoring • not all contaminants of concern monitored • PM10 not monitored • PUF filters not suitable to measure TSP • Tahi Street monitoring station location • No background monitoring station Modelling • OCPs – poor correlation • Dioxins – uncertainty due to assumptions in model

  12. Conclusions Risk if Site left unremediated • OCP exposure - soil and marine environment OCPs reduced to acceptable levels in soil Public health risk resulting from remediation • Low – negligible for a few chemicals during remediation • Low and manageable for a few chemicals post remediation • Unknown for a few chemicals – expert advice recommended on further environmental/biological testing • Noise and vibration – nuisance/irritation

  13. Public Health Risk During Remediation

  14. Public Health Risk Post Remediation

  15. Challenges Complexity of the science Missing historical data Lack of / poor quality monitoring data Incomplete temperature records for dryer Community concern - keeping them informed Range of agencies involved in investigation

  16. Lessons learned for future similar projects Have flexible approach – recognise may need to adapt Should have Peer Review Panel to oversee project with appropriate range of skills for the project Medical Officer of Health or representative should be on panel Be aware of potential and risk from fugitive emissions when remediation site is in residential area Robust Proof of Performance testing under normal operating and site conditions A statutory review condition in all consents that includes: “Reviewing monitoring requirements”

  17. Acknowledgements • My colleagues at Nelson Marlborough DHB Public Health Service: Dr Ed Kiddle and Geoff Cameron • Dr Deborah Read, Ministry of Health

More Related