AI Article Synopsis

  • The article discusses a tiered health risk assessment approach used for soil remediation in a benzene-polluted site in Beijing, highlighting the differences in remediation targets and costs between tiered II and tiered III assessments.
  • Tiered II assessment requires lower remediation levels of benzene in soil (0.26 mg/kg and 0.15 mg/kg for different depths) to maintain a low cumulative carcinogenic risk, while tiered III assessment allows for higher thresholds (2.6 mg/kg and 1.5 mg/kg).
  • Using tiered III assessment results in a significant reduction in the volume of soil needing remediation (139,537 m³) and saves around 57 million Yuan in costs, demonstrating

Article Abstract

The procedures of implementing tiered health risk assessment approach were introduced in detail, and took a large-scale site polluted by benzene in Beijing as an example, the difference on the remediation target of benzene in soil, as well as the corresponding soil remediation volume and costs, were compared. The results indicate that the benzene concentration in soil within 1.5 m in depth and the one below should be remediated to 0.26 mg x kg(-1) and 0.15 mg x kg(-1), respectively, in order to keep the cumulative carcinogenic health risk below 1 x 10(-6) based on tiered II assessment. However, according to tiered III assessment result, which is based on the benzene in soil gas within the contaminated areas in the investigated site, the soil in the corresponding depth should only be remediated to 2.6 mg x kg(-1) and 1.5 mg x kg(-1), respectively. That means the soil remediation volume delimited on tiered III assessment result is less than the one on tiered II by 139 537 m3 and the corresponding remediation costs will be reduced by 57 million Yuan, meaning the enormous economic benefits compared to the costs (around 100 thousands Yuan) spent to carry out tiered III assessment in the site.

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