Waste-to-Energy Facilities: MSW and Wood-waste

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Waste-to-Energy Facilities: MSW and Wood-waste Health Risk Assessments Laura Green, Ph.D., D.A.B.T. Stephen Zemba, Ph.D., P.E. Michael Ames, Sc. D. July 21, 2010

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Columbus, Ohio

Harrisburg, PA

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Why were emissions from W-to-E facilities of concern?

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Primarily because of one family of pollutants . . .

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Why are/were PCDD/F’s emitted from W-to-E facilities?

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Because of the Law of Unintended Consequences . . .

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How have things changed . . . ?

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Annual Emissions to Atmosphere (g,yr, TEQ

DF -WHO 98 )

PCDD/PCDF Emissions in the U.S. 16000 14000 12000 10000 8000 6000

4000 2000

0 1987

Municipal waste combustors

1995 Medical waste incinerators

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2000 Backyard barrel burning

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Other sources # 10

Likewise, our daily intakes of ―dioxins‖ have fallen dramatically over the decades . . .

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PCDD/F, max. impacts, ambient air Columbus, OH W-to-E

Haverhill and North Andover, MA W-to-E’s

1,700 fg/m3

2 fg/m3

(MA DEP) Harrisburg, PA W-to-E

Typical Background

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0.2 fg/m3

15 fg/m3

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Fate and transport of emitted dioxins (& other pollutants) ...

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Pollutant Emissions Air Dispersion and Deposition Source, Fate, and Transport Modeling

Soil and Vegetation

Surface Water and Sediment

Meat and Dairy

Fish

Exposure and Toxicity Assessment

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People and Wildlife

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# 15

How do we estimate concentrations in these media?

Use a series of models: deposition, mixing, partitioning, uptake, bioaccumulation . . .

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Calculate soil concentrations of emitted COCs:

CstD

Ds 1 exp ks tD ks

where: Cs Ds ks tD T1 CstD

Average soil concentration over exposure duration (mg COC/kg soil); Deposition term (mg COC/kg soil/yr); COC soil loss constant due to all processes (yr–1); Time period over which deposition occurs (time period of combustion) (yr); Time period at the beginning of combustion (yr); Soil concentration at time tD (mg/kg).

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How to we estimate risks to health there from?

We extrapolate far below range of observable health-effects Let’s look at some dose-response data . . .

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Liver tumors in laboratory rats exposed to 2,3,7,8-TCDD 0.7 NTP 521 Kociba

Probability of tumor .

0.6 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.1 0 0

20,000

40,000

60,000

80,000

100,000

Dose rate pg/kg-day

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120,000

Liver tumors in laboratory rats exposed to 2,3,7,8-TCDD . . . Low-dose range 0.35 NTP 521 Kociba

Probability of tumor .

0.3 0.25 0.2 0.15 0.1 0.05 0 0

5,000

10,000

15,000

Dose rate pg/kg-day

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20,000

For whom do we estimate health-risks?

Residents (adults, children, nursing infants) Farmers Subsistence Fishers

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Harrisburg, PA W-to-E Receptor

Exposure Pathways

Resident

Inhalation Max. offsite Ingestion of home-grown produce, impact drinking water, breast milk, soil

Farmer

Ibid. + Home-raised meats and eggs

Fisher

Ibid. + Ingestion of locally-derived fish Max. at water body

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Location

Max. at hypothetical farm

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Harrisburg, PA W-to-E results Incremental cancer risk estimate Resident

1 in 10,000,000

Farmer

7 in 100,000,000

Fisher

1 in 10,000,000

Principal risk drivers: Dioxins/furans, As, PCBs, Cr VI Cambridge Environmental Inc

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Hazard Index Receptor (health effects other than cancer)

Principal Risk Drivers

Resident

0.01

Hg++, PCBs, Mn, Ni

Farmer

0.03

Hg++, Mn, Ni

Fisher

0.01

PCBs, Mn, CH3Hg

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Proposed C&D/wood-to-Energy facility

Plainfield, CT

Plainfield, CT Renewable Energy Health Risk Assessment

Stephen Zemba, Ph.D., P.E. May 2008

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Scope of Assessment

78 emitted chemicals 29 metals/inorganic compounds 49 organic compounds Compared facility impacts both to background and to Hazard Limiting Values (HLVs)

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3

Lead Concentrations (µg/m ) in Connecticut Air 1.2

1.1

1 0.8 Impacts Due to Plainfield Renewable Energy at Maximum Permit Levels

0.6 0.4 0.18

0.2

0.012

0.0022

0.00044

Current background level

Worst-case point

Plainfield Center

0 1970's level

1980's level

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3

Arsenic Concentrations (µg/m ) in Connecticut Air 0.0018

0.0015

0.0012

0.0009

Impacts Due to Plainfield Renewable Energy at Maximum Permit Levels

0.0006

0.0003

0 Bridgeport

Groton

Hartford

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Manchester Voluntown Wallingford Waterbury Worst-case Point

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Plainfield Center

Results of Health Risk Assessment

Max. impact Incremental 1 in Cancer Risk 1,000,000 Hazard Index

0.3

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Populated Risk drivers area 2 in 10,000,000

As, Cr VI, benzene

0.06

H2SO4, acrolein, Cl2, Mn

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So, there was a time and a place — Columbus OH, early 1980’s — when Waste-to-Energy Facilities posed unacceptable risks to the environment and to public health . . .

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That time has passed . . .

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Other states – PA, CT, ME, etc.–

have long since recognized this . . .

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Massachusetts?

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Not yet . . .

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