1. Setting information priorities for remediation decisions at a contaminated-groundwater site
- Author
-
Kuen-Yuh Wu, Hwong-Wen Ma, and Chung-Da Ton
- Subjects
Engineering ,Tetrachloroethylene ,Environmental Engineering ,Environmental remediation ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Decision Making ,Taiwan ,Fresh Water ,Risk Assessment ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Hazardous Substances ,Risk analysis (business) ,Hazardous waste ,Water Supply ,Hydrocarbons, Chlorinated ,Water Pollution, Chemical ,Environmental Chemistry ,Humans ,Risk management ,Waste management ,business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Environmental engineering ,General Medicine ,General Chemistry ,Contamination ,Plants ,Multiple-criteria decision analysis ,Pollution ,Trichloroethylene ,Biodegradation, Environmental ,business ,Risk assessment ,Groundwater ,Algorithms ,Water Pollutants, Chemical - Abstract
Many sites of contamination due to inappropriate disposal of hazardous materials or wastes have been found. These sites have the potential of damaging the environment and human health and thus need to be evaluated as to whether and what actions should be initiated. In the decision on whether a contaminated site should be subject to management, the knowledge concerning important parameters that would influence the decision will be beneficial to planning of data collection to support the decision. This paper presents a case study of contaminated site located in northern Taiwan, where the groundwater is contaminated by chlorinated hydrocarbons including trichloroethylene (TCE) and tetrachloroethylene (PCE). A site-specific multimedia risk assessment is performed to estimate the total risk resulting from the contamination. In addition, Monte Carlo simulation, rank correlation coefficients, and decision criteria are combined to develop a methodology for assessing the important of parameters in terms of their influence on the decision. It is found that TCE concentration, vegetable yield, deposition interception fraction of vegetables, and plant surface loss constant, are the four parameters important to the decision-making of the case problem.
- Published
- 2002