Environmental Science ENSC 2800 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 17
About This Presentation
Title:

Environmental Science ENSC 2800

Description:

(Chapman, 1993):The introduction by people, directly or indirectly, of substances ... Physical pollutant variables - solids, organoleptic aspects (color, taste, etc. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:101
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 18
Provided by: CSUHa
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Environmental Science ENSC 2800


1
Environmental Science ENSC 2800
  • Spring 2002 - Class 15
  • Pollution in the Bay-Delta

2
Pollution
  • (Chapman, 1993)The introduction by people,
    directly or indirectly, of substances or energy
    which result in such deleterious effects as
  • harm to living resources
  • hazards to human health
  • hindrance to human activities
  • impairment of agricultural, industrial and other
    economic activities
  • reduction of amenities
  • Contaminant - any constituent in the
    air/water/etc. harmful to a particular end use
    regardless of its origin
  • Pollutant - any constituent in the air/water/etc.
    harmful to a particular end use that is of
    anthropogenic origin.

3
The Water (Hydrologic) Cycle
(From Nebel and Wright, 2002)
4
Point and Non-Point Pollution
(Source Nebel Wright, 2002)
5
Pristine and Protected Water?
6
Bay-Delta Sources
  • There are a wide range of pollution sources to
    the Bay-Delta, both direct and indirect.
  • Direct (to water) industrial discharges, sewer
    plant discharges, oil spills, boat heads and
    exhausts, leaching landfills (to groundwater),
    etc.
  • Indirect (to land, via air) urban runoff,
    agricultural runoff, agricultural drainage,
    forested area runoff, air pollution, etc.

7
Standard Pollutant Classes
  • Water professionals separately categorize
  • Physical pollutant variables - solids,
    organoleptic aspects (color, taste, etc.),
    turbidity, electrical conductivity, temperature,
    radioactivity.
  • Chemical pollutant variables (ever increasing
    number) - synthetic organic chemicals (e.g.
    pesticides), volatile organic chemicals (e.g.
    PAHs), inorganic chemicals (e.g. nutrients, heavy
    metals).
  • Biological pollutant variables (pathogens) -
    bacteria (also viruses and increasingly parasites
    - protozoa like cryptosporidium, giardia, amoeba,
    etc.) 

8
Clean Water Act
  • The Clean Water Act is a 1977 amendment to the
    Federal Water Pollution Control Act of 1972,
    which set the basic structure for regulating
    discharges of pollutants in the US.
  • The law gave EPA the authority to set effluent
    standards on an industry basis (technology-based)
    and continued the requirements to set water
    quality standards for all contaminants in surface
    waters.
  • The CWA makes it unlawful for any person to
    discharge any pollutant from a point source into
    navigable waters unless a permit (NPDES) is
    obtained under the Act.
  • The act now uses a watershed framework for
    setting standards and controlling non-point
    source pollution.
  • The amounts and types of pollutants than can be
    discharged or allowed to run in to waters from
    watersheds are determined based on the uses of
    the receiving body and its sensitivities.

9
Porter-Cologne Act
  • This Act (1969), California Water Code 13000 et
    seq., provides for aesthetic values, fish and
    wildlife preservation, water reclamation, and
    comprehensive planning and regulation to attain
    the highest "reasonable" water quality in
    consideration of conflicting demands.
  • The Act requires the State Water Resources
    Control Board to establish water quality
    objectives and adopt water quality control plans
    through their Regional Water Quality Control
    Boards (commonly referred to as Basin Plans).
  • It is the CA equivalent of the Clean Water Act.
  • The Bay Area Regional Water Quality Control Board
    does this for the Bay-Delta out of its offices in
    Oakland although clearly it must work with the
    other boards governing the Central Valley.

10
Safe Drinking Water Act
  • The Safe Drinking Water Act (1974) was
    established to protect the quality of drinking
    water in the U.S.
  • This law focuses on all waters actually or
    potentially designed for drinking use, whether
    from above ground or underground sources.
  • The Act authorized the EPA to establish safe
    standards of purity and required all owners or
    operators of public water systems to comply with
    primary (health-related) standards.
  • State governments, which assume this power from
    EPA in CA the Department of Health Services -
    also encourage attainment of secondary standards
    (nuisance-related).

11
California Safe Drinking Water and Toxic
Enforcement Act
  • This 1986 law (Prop 65) had two major provisions
  • That no person in the course of doing business
    shall knowingly discharge or release a chemical
    known to the state to cause cancer or
    reproductive toxicity into water or onto or into
    land where such chemical passes or probably will
    pass into any source of drinking water,
    notwithstanding any other provision.
  • No person in the course of doing business shall
    knowingly and intentionally expose any individual
    to a chemical known to the state to cause cancer
    or reproductive toxicity without first giving
    clear and reasonable warning.
  • It strengthened both the Federal CWA and SDWA.

12
Pollution Standards
  • Standards depend on the particular variable.
  • The USEPA/CA DHS sets a maximum contaminant level
    or MCL based on cancer (generally long exposure)
    and non-cancer (generally short exposure) health
    risks in its Safe Drinking Water Act regulations
    (important to those taking their water from the
    Delta, e.g. Contra Costa Water District).
  • A cancer related MCL supposedly limits an
    individuals risk of cancer from that contaminant
    to between 1 in 10,000 and 1 in 1,000,000 over a
    lifetime.
  • A non-cancer MCL limits exposure to a level below
    which no adverse effects, lifetime or immediate,
    are expected.
  • Usually, one liter samples of water are taken to
    a laboratory and standard tests are run to
    determine mg/l, µg/l, ppmv or ppbv of
    contaminants.

13
Sources of Water Contamination
  • The climate and atmospheric air quality -
    characteristics picked up while still in the
    atmosphere as water vapor or descending
    precipitation.
  • The physical and chemical character of the
    watershed - characteristics picked up in the
    hydrological cycle e.g. natural selenium picked
    up by water running through soil and rock.
  • Pollution - point source and non-point sources
    introduced directly or indirectly to the water by
    humans.
  • Clearly, humans can pollute the air and the soil
    and bedrock over a watershed leading to indirect
    pollution of the water bodies this is usually
    considered non-point source pollution since it
    takes multiple, diffuse pathways to the water
    body.
  • For example, Bay Area residents could tip
    pesticide residues down the storm drain
    (non-point direct), apply excessive pesticide to
    lawns (non-point indirect) or pour pesticide
    residues in the toilet (becomes point via sewer
    plant discharge to Bay)

14
Resource impacts of pollution
  • Pollutants will have different impacts depending
    on their character and properties and the
    purposes to which the water resource is to be
    used for.
  • The most exacting water quality requirements are
    for drinking, although some specialized
    industrial uses require higher standards.
  • Many synthetic and volatile organics (pesticides,
    PAHs, etc.) are not easily removed from water
    with standard treatment processes and may prevent
    the water from being used (e.g. MTBE
    contamination of groundwater).
  • Many pollutants can bioaccumulate in and
    biomagnify up the food webs, e.g. pesticides like
    DDT or metals like mercury and selenium.

15
Pollution Control Logic
  • Natural water bodies like rivers and streams are
    to some degree self-cleansing they flush
    themselves (e.g. to the ocean), they dilute to
    very low concentrations, they offer opportunities
    to lock up contaminants (sinks) or convert them
    to harmless substances.
  • However, too much input of a given contaminant in
    a given place over a given period can exceed
    these assimilative and neutralizing capabilities
    and lead to harmful concentrations of pollutants
    in the water column, sediments, and/or food webs.
  • Pollution input controls (CWA) prevent the
    addition of excessive quantities of pollutants
    that would impair the water body (for drinking,
    recreation, etc. not specifically for ecology
    but this tends to be covered by the others).
  • Pollution output controls (SDWA) protect the
    public health by requiring adequate treatment to
    remove pollutants that do end up in the water
    bodies used for drinking.

16
Dynamics of pollution
  • Depending on travel times, residence times,
    mixing rates, flushing action and so forth, and
    the time character and magnitude of pollution
    input (continuous, spill, etc.), impacts may be
    long-term or short-term.
  • For many surface sources, removing the source of
    pollution will rapidly result in the
    establishment of adequate water quality
    conditions (unless historically accumulated
    quantities in sediments are disturbed e.g.
    mercury, PCBs).
  • Many groundwater sources may remain contaminated
    for years, decades or longer even though the
    pollution source is eliminated because they flush
    so slowly.
  • The Bay-Delta has historical accumulated (e.g.
    mercury in sediment), historical on-going (e.g.
    mercury mine tailing seepage) and current sources
    of contamination (e.g. mercury fall-out from
    crematorium smoke).

17
Pollution Prevention
  • For centuries, the effects of pollution were
    ignored.
  • Water bodies were large compared to the volume
    and concentration of pollution, therefore
    assimilation was adequate - the solution to
    pollution was dilution.
  • As and where pollution loads were exceeded such
    that harm was done, this usually occurred
    elsewhere (downstream impacts), thus no action
    was taken.
  • Only after the 1960s excesses of rivers catching
    fire and mass fish kills in the Great Lakes was
    legislation passed to protect water bodies the
    solution to pollution became prevention.
  • Watershed management programs to eliminate
    sources of non-point source pollution (either the
    pollutant or the opportunity for its
    mobilization) and coordinate point pollution
    goals.
  • Wastewater treatment to eliminate specific
    sources of effluent e.g. sewage, collected
    stormwater (containing the non-points),
    industrial waste.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com