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Health Risk Assessment of a Modern Municipal Waste Incinerator
Author(s) -
Boudet Cline,
Zmirou Denis,
Laffond Mauricette,
Balducci Franck,
BenoitGuyod JeanLouis
Publication year - 1999
Publication title -
risk analysis
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.972
H-Index - 130
eISSN - 1539-6924
pISSN - 0272-4332
DOI - 10.1111/j.1539-6924.1999.tb01140.x
Subject(s) - environmental science , health risk assessment , percentile , incineration , metropolitan area , inhalation exposure , environmental health , population , risk assessment , environmental engineering , air pollution , health risk , environmental chemistry , waste management , inhalation , statistics , geography , medicine , engineering , mathematics , chemistry , archaeology , computer security , organic chemistry , computer science , anatomy
During the modernization of the municipal waste incinerator (MWI, maximum capacity of 180,000 tons per year) of Metropolitan Grenoble (405,000 inhabitants), in France, a risk assessment was conducted, based on four tracerpollutants: two volatile organic compounds (benzene and 1,1,1 trichloroethane) and two heavy metals (nickel and cadmium, measured in particles). A Gaussian plume dispersion model, applied to maximum emissions measured at the MWI stacks, was used to estimate the distribution of these pollutants in the atmosphere throughout the metropolitan area. A random sample telephone survey (570 subjects) gathered data on time‐activity patterns, according to demographic characteristics of the population. Life‐long exposure was assessed as a time‐weighted average of ambient air concentrations. Inhalation alone was considered because, in the Grenoble urban setting, other routes of exposure are not likely. A Monte Carlo simulation was used to describe probability distributions of exposures and risks. The median of the life‐long personal exposures distribution to MWI benzene was 3.2 · 10 −5 μg/m 3 (20th and 80th percentiles = 1.5 · 10 −5 and 6.5 · 10 −5 μg/m 3 ), yielding a 2.6 · 10 −10 carcinogenic risk (1.2 · 10 −10 ‐ 5.4 · 10 −10 ). For nickel, the corresponding life‐time exposure and cancer risk were 1.8 ·10 −4 μg/m 3 (0.9 ·10 −4 ‐ 3.6 ·10 −4 μg/m 3 ) and 8.6 · 10 −8 (4.3 · 10 −8 ‐ 17.3 ·10 −8 ); for cadmium they were respectively 8.3 ·10 −6 μg/m 3 (4.0 ·10 −6 ‐ 17.6 ·10 −6 ) and 1.5 · (7.2 · 10 −9 ‐ 3.1. · 10 −8 ). Inhalation exposure to cadmium emitted by the MWI represented less than 1% of the WHO Air Quality Guideline (5 ng/m 3 ), while there was a margin of exposure of more than 10 9 between the NOAEL (150 ppm) and exposure estimates to trichloroethane. Neither dioxins nor mercury, a volatile metal, were measured. This could lessen the attributable life‐long risks estimated. The minute (VOCs and cadmium) to moderate (nickel) exposure and risk estimates are in accord with other studies on modern MWIs meeting recent emission regulations, however.