1
Q

What does the term “contaminated site” refer to?

A

Refers to a well-delimited area where the presence of soil contamination has been confirmed

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2
Q

What are the three most common sources of contaminents in the soil, in europe?

A

41.4%: Indutrial production and commercial service

15,2%: Municipal waste treatment and disposal

14,1%: oil industry

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3
Q

What are the four most common contaminants in europe?

A

37,3%: Heavy metals

33,7%: mineral oil

13,3% Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons (PAH)

6%: Aromatic Hydrocarbons (BTEX)

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4
Q

What is a potentially contaminated site?

A

it is a site where soil contamination is suspected but not varified, detailed investigation needs to be done

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5
Q

What are the five most common contaminants in Sweden?

A

63% metals

13%: PAH

10%: Halogenated hydrocarbons

10%: dioxins

2%: oil

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6
Q

What are some of the driving forces for soil remediation?

A
  • ceased activities at the site
  • change of owner (you buy the land, you buy the problem)
  • planned use of the site change (ex the industry land is going to be used for urban expansion)

negative effects on the environment and the human health

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7
Q

Who pays for remediation?

A
  • the industry that has caused the pollution (PPP)
  • the company that builds and sells houses
  • taxpayers, for sites with no responsible body iidentified
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8
Q

What is MIFO

A

a way to classify and compaire sites
(Metodik för Inventering av Förorenade Områden)

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9
Q

What is included in MIFO 1?

A

it is a preliminary survey including:
- identification of relevant objects for assassement and industries

  • data-collection from maps and archives
  • on-site inspection
  • interviews
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10
Q

What is included in MIFO 2?

A

a preliminary site investigation including:
- an on-site inspection

  • drawing of a geological profile and sampling plan
  • sampling is done
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11
Q

What classes are there in MIFO?

A
  • class 1: Very high risk

-class 2: high risk

-class 3: moderate risk

class 4: low risk

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12
Q

what is the risk classification in MIFO based on?

A

Four environmental quality criteria:
- Hazard assessment

  • contamination level
  • migration potential
  • sensitivity/protection value
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13
Q

What is a risk?

A

the probabilit and severity of adverse effects of a substance to the environment

-Ex. if the substance does not travel in the environment or in the human body ther is no risk

“is a combination of two things – the chance that the hazard will cause harm and how serious that harm could be”

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14
Q

What is a hazard?

A

the inherent properties of a substance and the potential of a substance to cause an adverse effect

  • A hazard is anything that could cause harm
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15
Q

What is looked at at a hazard assessment?

A
  • Which contaminants are present?
  • level of hazard: from low to very high
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16
Q

What is looked at when deciding the contamination level?

A
  • level of contaminents in each of the media in which they occur, how serious are the effects?
  • what is the deviation from the reference value?
  • total amount of each pollutant
  • total amount of contaminated material
17
Q

What is looked at when deciding the migration potential?

A
  • how rapid the pollutant spreads through different media (soil, water)
18
Q

What is looked at when deciding the sensitivity/protection value?

A
  • potential exposure of humans, present and future. the sensitivity of exposed groups
  • potential risk for the environment, present and future. level of protection required
19
Q

Describe how a comprehensive assessment - risk classification can be done

A
  • migration potential on y-axis (from slightly, moderate, large and very large)
  • on x-axis: low, moderate, high, very high
  • the risk classification moves from class 4 to class 1
  • mark H (hazard), C(contamination level), S (sensitivity), P (protective value)
20
Q

What is random sampling?

A
  • take the samples at random places
  • usually used for uniform sites, ex. land-farming sites, mine and gravel pit sites.
21
Q

What is stratified random sampling?

A
  • you have divided the location in sub-places (based on ex. vegetation cover, topograpgh, soil type)
  • you take the samples at random places inside of the sub-places
22
Q

What is systematic or grid sampling?

A
  • you divide the area in to a grid
  • take a sample in simular place in each section (ex, in the upper left corner)
  • OBS! elongated spread polutions can easily be missed
23
Q

What is systematic random samping?

A
  • you divide the area in to a grid
  • you take a sample at a random location in each of the sections
24
Q

What amount of samples are reasonable for different types of pollutant sources?

A
  • hot spot: 1-3 per area
    (ex. tanks, cisterns)
  • line source: 1 every 10-15 meter
    (ex. tracks, roads)
  • no localized source: 20-30 per area if <1ha
    10-20 per area if >1 ha
    (ex. brownfield, landfills)
  • areas without polluting activities (reference point): 5 per area
    (ex. forest, green areas, field)
25
Q

What are three ways to take samples?

A
  • samples from excavated pits: dig down to 7 m
  • sampling with drilling rig: can go deeper, samples at specific points, can be disturbed by rocks
  • sampling with sonic drilling: you get a core, higher samling quality and quantity, less used because expensive