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Smog

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Title: Smog


1
Smog
  • Presentation 9

2
Introduction
  • Los Angeles Smog (photochemical smog) is the
    mixture of ozone, hydrocarbons and partially
    oxidized hydrocarbons, oxides of nitrogen and
    other trace gases that results from the action of
    sunlight on automobile exhaust
  • It is characterized by high temperatures and
    sunny conditions.
  •  
  • London Smog (particulate, or sulfurous smog) is a
    mixture of sulfur dioxide and sulfate and sulfite
    aerosols resulting primarily from the combustion
    of high sulfur coal followed by conversion of SO2
    to H2SO4
  • It is characterized by high humidity and low
    temperatures.

3
Introduction
  • Whereas the effects of sulfurous smog have been
    known for over 600 years, photochemical smog has
    only recently appeared in the urban environment
  • The characteristic symptoms of a brownish
    coloration of the atmosphere, reduced visibility,
    plant damage, eye irritation, and respiratory
    distress first became prominent during the middle
    1940's in Los Angeles, California
  • But it was not until the early 1950's that
    research succeeded in identifying the phenomenon
    as arising from photochemical reactions in the
    lower atmosphere
  • The prime ingredients for these reactions were
    found to be hydrocarbons and nitrogen oxides
    exhausted by automobiles, and some stationary
    sources
  • Local features of heavy automobile traffic,
    frequent and intense sunlight, geography, and
    meteorology reinforce to plague the Los Angeles
    area with some of the most concentrated and
    chronic photochemical smog
  • More recently the symptoms have appeared in many
    other metropolitan regions in both the Northern
    and Southern Hemispheres

4
Introduction
  • Photochemical smog has spread much more rapidly
    in urban regions than the growth of the
    population would suggest. This has occurred for
    two reasons
  • Emissions of the primary pollutants have
    increased more rapidly than the population owing
    to the greater individual use of motor vehicles
    and electrical power.
  • The downwind area covered by pollution increases
    more rapidly than the emission rate of an area
    source
  • Although many years research efforts have been
    directed toward elucidation of the chemical
    process of photochemical smog, the phenomenon is
    understood only in broad terms and in a few
    details

5
Introduction
  • The overall process is summarized simply in the
    Fig. below
  • The atmosphere initially contains dilute
    concentrations of gaseous organic molecules
    (predominantly hydrocarbons) and nitrogen oxides,
    which consist of both nitric oxide (NO) and
    nitrogen dioxide (NO2) and are known collectively
    as NOx
  • The energy of solar radiation triggers an initial
    reaction in NO, releasing products which can
    combine with the organic molecules
  • A series of complex reactions follow between NOX,
    organic compounds, and ambient oxygen
  • The totality of gaseous and particulate primary
    and secondary pollutants is known as
    photochemical smog

6
Photochemical Smog
  • Species Involved
  •  
  • "Limit" here refers to the Ambient Air Quality
    Standards established by the US-EPA.

7
Ozone (O3)
  • Secondary Pollutant
  • Effects
  • Respiration - premature aging of lungs.
  • Phytotoxin, i.e. Vegetation damage
  • Materials damage rubber
  • Greenhouse effect (9.6 ?m)
  • Limit 120 ppb for 1 hr. (Ambient Air Quality
    Standard)
  • 80 ppb for 8 hr
  • Ozone is an indicator of smog.

8
Nitrogen Dioxide (NO2)
  • Primary Pollutant
  • Effects
  • Lungs (acute chemical pneumonia)
  • Phytotoxin
  • Catalyst for ozone formation
  • Atmospheric acidity
  • Limit 100?g m-3 (50 ppb) annual mean

9
Carbon Monoxide (CO)
  • Primary Pollutant
  • Effects
  • Respiration (acute)
  • Cardiovascular system (chronic)
  • Limits
  • 9.0 ppm for 8 hr
  • 35 ppm for 1 hr
  • 50 ppm for 8 hr is the "level of significant
    harm"

10
Carbon Monoxide (CO)
  • Affinity for hemoglobin 200 times that of O2.
  • Concentrations above 750 ppm are fatal.
  • Concentrations gt 100 ppm cause dizziness,
    headache, loss of visual mental acuity.
  • Cigarette smoke contains ca. 400 ppm CO (also
    HCN, H2CO, Ni(CO)4, NO2).

11
Peroxyacetyl Nitrate (PAN)
  • Secondary Pollutant
  • Effects
  • Eye irritation
  • Respiratory tract (carcinogen?)
  • Phytotoxin
  • Limits None (too hard to measure)
  • Compound "X" in LA smog
  • NOx reservoir.

12
Peroxyacetyl nitrate (PAN)
  • An organic compound consisting of oxygen, and
    nitrogen as well as a short hydrocarbon chain
  • It is a principle secondary pollutant in
    photochemical smog
  • PAN is both toxic and irritating
  • At very low concentrations of only a few parts
    per billion it causes eye irritation
  • Plants are very sensitive a fraction of 1ppm
    causes extensive damage to vegetation
  • The formula for one such example of PAN is
    CH3-COO-O-NO2, and consists of a hydrocarbon,
    nitrogen dioxide, (and an ester and ether group).
  • The formula could be written as C2HO4N

13
Polynuclear Aromatic Hydrocarbons (PAH)
  • Primary Pollutant
  • Effects
  • Carcinogenic (one of the few known carcinogens in
    air)
  • Limits None

14
Polynuclear Aromatic Hydrocarbons (PAH)
  • A group of chemicals that are formed during the
    incomplete burning of coal, oil, gas, wood,
    garbage, or other organic substances, such as
    tobacco and charbroiled meat.
  • There are more than 100 different PAHs.
  • Generally occur as complex mixtures (for example,
    as part of combustion products such as soot), not
    as single compounds.
  • Usually occur naturally, but they can be
    manufactured as individual compounds for research
    purposes however, not as the mixtures found in
    combustion products
  • As pure chemicals, PAHs generally exist as
    colorless, white, or pale yellow-green solids
    with a faint, pleasant odor
  • A few PAHs are used in medicines and to make
    dyes, plastics, and pesticides. Others are
    contained in asphalt used in road construction
  • They can also be found in substances such as
    crude oil, coal, coal tar pitch, and roofing tar
  • They can occur in the air, either attached to
    dust particles or as solids in soil or sediment
  • PAHs are known carcinogens

15
Ethylene
  • As they approach maturity, many fruits (e.g.,
    apples, oranges, avocados) release ethylene.
  • Ethylene then promotes the ripening of the fruit.
  • Commercial fruit growers can buy equipment to
    generate ethylene so that their harvest ripens
    quickly and uniformly
  • Primary Pollutant
  • Effects
  • Contributes to Ozone formation
  • Limits None
  • There are other biogenic hydrocarbons isoprene,
    pinenes released by trees
  • Some plants when stressed release more ethylene

16
Formaldehyde (H2CO)
  • Colorless, flammable gas at room temperature
  • Has a pungent, distinct odor and may cause a
    burning sensation to the eyes, nose, and lungs at
    high concentrations
  • Also known as methanal, methylene oxide,
    oxymethylene, methylaldehyde, and oxomethane
  • Highly reactive
  • Breaks down into methanol (wood alcohol) and
    carbon monoxide at very high temperatures

17
Formaldehyde (H2CO)
  • Naturally produced in very small amounts in our
    bodies as a part of our normal, everyday
    metabolism and causes us no harm
  • Also be found in
  • the air that we breathe at home and at work
  • Food
  • Products that we put on our skin
  • Photochemical Smog
  • Exhaust from cars without catalytic converters or
    those using oxygenated gasoline also contain
    formaldehyde

18
Formaldehyde (H2CO)
  • "Oxygenated gasoline" is a mixture of
    conventional gasoline and one or more combustible
    liquids which contain oxygen ("oxygenates")
  • At present, the most common oxygenates are
    ethanol and MTBE (Methyl Tertiary Butyl Ether)
  • The government requires gasoline to be oxygenated
    during the winter in areas that have a carbon
    monoxide pollution problem (cold weather and
    atmospheric inversions worsen carbon monoxide
    pollution)
  • Oxygenated gasoline helps engines run leaner,
    which helps engines, particularly older engines,
    produce less carbon monoxide
  • http//www.chevron.com/prodserv/fuels/gas_qanda/ox
    ygen.shtml

19
Formaldehyde (H2CO)
  • Produced by cigarettes and other tobacco
    products, gas cookers, and open fireplaces 
  • It is also used as a preservative in some foods
  • Italian cheeses, dried foods, and fish
  • Household Products
  • Antiseptics, medicines, cosmetics, dish-washing
    liquids, fabric softeners, shoe-care agents,
    carpet cleaners, glues and adhesives, lacquers,
    paper, plastics, and some types of wood products

20
Formaldehyde (H2CO)
  • Some people are exposed to higher levels of
    formaldehyde if they live in a new mobile home
  • Formaldehyde is given off as a gas from the
    manufactured wood products used in these homes
  • Formaldehyde is used in many industries. 
  • Production of fertilizer, paper, plywood
  • It is present in the air in iron foundries 
  • Production of cosmetics and sugar, in
    well-drilling fluids, in agriculture as a
    preservative for grains and seeds, in the rubber
    industry in the production of latex, in leather
    tanning, in wood preservation, and in
    photographic film production
  • Formaldehyde is combined with methanol and
    buffers to make embalming fluid
  • Formaldehyde is also used in many hospitals and
    laboratories to preserve tissue specimens
  •  

21
Formaldehyde (H2CO)
  • Primary and secondary pollutant
  • Effects
  • Ozone formation
  • Eye irritant
  • Mutagen, suspected carcinogen
  • Limits None
  • Indoor air pollutant too

22
London-Type Smog
  • Sulfur Dioxide, SO2
  • Primary Pollutant
  • Effects
  • Produces H2SO4 found on particles and in
    precipitation
  • Acid Deposition
  • Cloud Condensation Nuclei (climate)
  • Materials degradation
  • Respiratory tract
  • Phytotoxin

23
Sulfur Dioxide (SO2)
  • Limits
  • 140 ppb for 24 hr
  • 500 ppb for 3 hr
  • 30 ppb annual mean
  • No catalytic photochemistry

24
Other Pollutants
  • Halogenated Hydrocarbons
  • Organic compounds containing one or more halogens
    substituted for hydrogen
  • fluorine (F), chlorine (Cl), bromine (Br), iodine
    (I), astatine (At)
  • The resulting substituted compound is generally
    less flammable but more toxic
  • Example Dioxin
  • Effects
  • Teratogen
  • LD50 in guinea pigs is 0.5 to 1.0 ?g/kg
  • Limits None

25
Dioxin
  • A general term that describes a group of hundreds
    of chemicals that are highly persistent in the
    environment
  • The most toxic compound is 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibe
    nzo-p-dioxin or TCDD.
  • The toxicity of other dioxins and chemicals like
    PCBs that act like dioxin are measured in
    relation to TCDD
  • Formed as an unintentional by-product of many
    industrial processes involving chlorine such as
    waste incineration, chemical and pesticide
    manufacturing and pulp and paper bleaching
  • Dioxin was the primary toxic component of Agent
    Orange, was found at Love Canal in Niagara Falls,
    NY and was the basis for evacuations at Times
    Beach, MO and Seveso, Italy
  • Dioxin is formed by burning chlorine-based
    chemical compounds with hydrocarbons
  • The major source of dioxin in the environment
    comes from waste-burning incinerators of various
    sorts and also from backyard burn-barrels
  • Dioxin pollution is also affiliated with paper
    mills which use chlorine bleaching in their
    process and with the production of Polyvinyl
    Chloride (PVC) plastics and with the production
    of certain chlorinated chemicals (like many
    pesticides)

26
Love Canal Neighborhood
  • If you get there before I doTell 'em I'm a
    comin' tooTo see the things so wondrous trueAt
    Love's new Model City
  • From a turn-of-the-century advertising jingle
    promoting the development of Love Canal
  • Give me Liberty. I've Already Got Death
  • From a sign displayed by a Love Canal resident,
    1978

27
Love Canal, NY
  • Love Canal is a neighborhood in Niagara Falls,
    New York
  • It officially covers 36 square blocks in the
    southeastern corner of the city

28
Love Canal Neighborhood
  • Quite simply, Love Canal is one of the most
    appalling environmental tragedies in American
    history. But that's not the most disturbing fact.
    What is worse is that it cannot be regarded as an
    isolated event. It could happen again--anywhere
    in this country--unless we move expeditiously to
    prevent it. It is a cruel irony that Love Canal
    was originally meant to be a dream community.
    That vision belonged to the man for whom the
    three-block tract of land on the eastern edge of
    Niagara Falls, New York, was named--William T.
    Love. Love felt that by digging a short canal
    between the upper and lower Niagara Rivers, power
    could be generated cheaply to fuel the industry
    and homes of his would-be model city. But despite
    considerable backing, Love's project was unable
    to endure the one-two punch of fluctuations in
    the economy and Louis Tesla's discovery of how to
    economically transmit electricity over great
    distances by means of an alternating current.

29
Love Canal Neighborhood
  • By 1910, the dream was shattered. All that was
    left to commemorate Love's hope was a partial
    ditch where construction of the canal had begun.
    In the 1920s the seeds of a genuine nightmare
    were planted. The canal was turned into a
    municipal and industrial chemical dumpsite.
    Landfills can of course be an environmentally
    acceptable method of hazardous waste disposal,
    assuming they are properly sited, managed, and
    regulated. Love Canal will always remain a
    perfect historical example of how not to run such
    an operation. In 1953, the Hooker Chemical
    Company, then the owners and operators of the
    property, covered the canal with earth and sold
    it to the city for one dollar. It was a bad buy.

30
Love Canal Neighborhood
  • In the late '50s, about 100 homes and a school
    were built at the site. Perhaps it wasn't William
    T. Love's model city, but it was a solid,
    working-class community. For a while.
  • On the first day of August, 1978, the lead
    paragraph of a front-page story in the New York
    Times read
  • NIAGARA FALLS, N.Y.--Twenty five years after the
    Hooker Chemical Company stopped using the Love
    Canal here as an industrial dump, 82 different
    compounds, 11 of them suspected carcinogens, have
    been percolating upward through the soil, their
    drum containers rotting and leaching their
    contents into the backyards and basements of 100
    homes and a public school built on the banks of
    the canal.

31
Love Canal Neighborhood
  • In an article prepared for the February, 1978 EPA
    Journal, I wrote, regarding chemical dumpsites in
    general, that "even though some of these
    landfills have been closed down, they may stand
    like ticking time bombs." Just months later, Love
    Canal exploded.
  • The explosion was triggered by a record amount of
    rainfall. Shortly thereafter, the leaching began.
  • I visited the canal area at that time. Corroding
    waste-disposal drums could be seen breaking up
    through the grounds of backyards. Trees and
    gardens were turning black and dying. One entire
    swimming pool had been had been popped up from
    its foundation, afloat now on a small sea of
    chemicals. Puddles of noxious substances were
    pointed out to me by the residents. Some of these
    puddles were in their yards, some were in their
    basements, others yet were on the school grounds.
    Everywhere the air had a faint, choking smell.
    Children returned from play with burns on their
    hands and faces.

32
Love Canal Neighborhood
  • And then there were the birth defects. The New
    York State Health Department is continuing an
    investigation into a disturbingly high rate of
    miscarriages, along with five birth-defect cases
    detected thus far in the area.
  • I recall talking with the father of one the
    children with birth defects. "I heard someone
    from the press saying that there were only five
    cases of birth defects here," he told me. "When
    you go back to your people at EPA, please don't
    use the phrase 'only five cases.' People must
    realize that this is a tiny community. Five birth
    defect cases here is terrifying."
  • A large percentage of people in Love Canal are
    also being closely observed because of detected
    high white-blood-cell counts, a possible
    precursor of leukemia.

33
Love Canal Neighborhood
  • When the citizens of Love Canal were finally
    evacuated from their homes and their
    neighborhood, pregnant women and infants were
    deliberately among the first to be taken out.
  • "We knew they put chemicals into the canal and
    filled it over," said one woman, a long-time
    resident of the Canal area., "but we had no idea
    the chemicals would invade our homes. We're
    worried sick about the grandchildren and their
    children."
  • Two of this woman's four grandchildren have birth
    defects. The children were born and raised in the
    Love Canal community. A granddaughter was born
    deaf with a cleft palate, an extra row of teeth,
    and slight retardation. A grandson was born with
    an eye defect.

34
Love Canal Neighborhood
  • Of the chemicals which comprise the brew seeping
    through the ground and into homes at Love Canal,
    one of the most prevalent is benzene -- a known
    human carcinogen, and one detected in high
    concentrations. But the residents characterize
    things more simply.
  • "I've got this slop everywhere," said another man
    who lives at Love Canal. His daughter also
    suffers from a congenital defect.
  • On August 7, New York Governor Hugh Carey
    announced to the residents of the Canal that the
    State Government would purchase the homes
    affected by chemicals.
  • On that same day, President Carter approved
    emergency financial aid for the Love Canal area
    (the first emergency funds ever to be approved
    for something other than a "natural" disaster),
    and the U.S. Senate approved a "sense of
    Congress" amendment saying that Federal aid
    should be forthcoming to relieve the serious
    environmental disaster which had occurred.
  • By the month's end, 98 families had already been
    evacuated. Another46 had found temporary housing.
    Soon after, all families would be gone from the
    most contaminated areas -- a total of 221
    families have moved or agreed to be moved.

35
Love Canal Neighborhood
  • State figures show more than 200 purchase offers
    for homes have been made, totaling nearly 7
    million.
  • A plan is being set in motion now to implement
    technical procedures designed to meet the
    seemingly impossible job of detoxifying the Canal
    area. The plan calls for a trench system to drain
    chemicals from the Canal. It is a difficult
    procedure, and we are keeping our fingers crossed
    that it will yield some degree of success.
  • I have been very pleased with the high degree of
    cooperation in this case among local, State, and
    Federal governments, and with the swiftness by
    which the Congress and the President have acted
    to make funds available.
  • But this is not really where the story ends.
  • Quite the contrary.
  • We suspect that there are hundreds of such
    chemical dumpsites across this Nation.

36
Love Canal Neighborhood
  • Unlike Love Canal, few are situated so close to
    human settlements. But without a doubt, many of
    these old dumpsites are time bombs with burning
    fuses -- their contents slowly leaching out. And
    the next victim cold be a water supply, or a
    sensitive wetland.
  • The presence of various types of toxic substances
    in our environment has become increasingly
    widespread -- a fact that President Carter has
    called "one of the grimmest discoveries of the
    modern era."
  • Chemical sales in the United States now exceed a
    mind-boggling 112 billion per year, with as many
    as 70,000 chemical substances in commerce.
  • Love Canal can now be added to a growing list of
    environmental disasters involving toxics, ranging
    from industrial workers stricken by nervous
    disorders and cancers to the discovery of toxic
    materials in the milk of nursing mothers.
  • Through the national environmental program it
    administers, the Environmental Protection Agency
    is attempting to draw a chain of Congressional
    acts around the toxics problem.
  • The Clean Air and Water Acts, the Safe Drinking
    Water Act, the Pesticide Act, the Resource
    Conservation and Recovery Act, the Toxic
    Substances Control Act -- each is an essential
    link.

37
Love Canal Neighborhood
  • Under the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act,
    EPA is making grants available to States to help
    them establish programs to assure the safe
    handling and disposal of hazardous wastes. As
    guidance for such programs, we are working to
    make sure that State inventories of industrial
    waste disposal sites include full assessments of
    any potential dangers created by these sites.
  • Also, EPA recently proposed a system to ensure
    that the more than 35 million tons of hazardous
    wastes produced in the U.S. each year, including
    most chemical wastes, are disposed of safely.
    Hazardous wastes will be controlled from point of
    generation to their ultimate disposal, and
    dangerous pratices now resulting in serious
    threats to health and environment will not be
    allowed.
  • Although we are taking these aggressive strides
    to make sure that hazardous waste is safely
    managed, there remains the question of liability
    regarding accidents occurring from wastes
    disposed of previously. This is a missing link.
    But no doubt this question will be addressed
    effectively in the future.

38
Love Canal Neighborhood
  • Regarding the missing link of liability, if
    health-related dangers are detected, what are we
    as s people willing to spend to correct the
    situation? How much risk are we willing to
    accept? Who's going to pick up the tab?
  • One of the chief problems we are up against is
    that ownership of these sites frequently shifts
    over the years, making liability difficult to
    determine in cases of an accident. And no secure
    mechanisms are in effect for determining such
    liability.
  • It is within our power to exercise intelligent
    and effective controls designed to significantly
    cut such environmental risks. A tragedy,
    unfortunately, has now called upon us to decide
    on the overall level of commitment we desire for
    defusing future Love Canals. And it is not
    forgotten that no one has paid more dearly
    already than the residents of Love Canal.

39
Love Canal Neighborhood
  • "We had seen burst drums in the past. Usually
    they contained various dry chemicals of bright
    colors such as lemony yellow, white, or electric
    blue. There were occasions where we kids would
    play cowboys and Indians and mix the powder with
    the thick clay into a paste then paint ourselves
    up with war paint. We washed up in the Canal
    later." Summer, 1947
  • "I was one of the kids ... that played during the
    day and hung out every night either at the school
    or in the fields. I still remember the colored
    puddles and dirt we rode our bicycles and
    motorcycles on. We dug and played in it just like
    you'd expect kids to do. I still remember the
    smell on my clothes." 1967 - 1978
  • "In the late 1970s the barrels resurfaced. A
    black oily type substance began forming in
    puddles in this field, that we as children played
    on baseball, kickball etc. We even used surfaced
    drum tops as base markers. We had no clue."
    1979

40
EPA Success StoriesLove Canal
  • More than 900 families were forced to leave their
    homes so that the site could be cleaned up. The
    problems at the site were publicized nationally
    and considered a major factor in the passage of
    the Superfund law in 1980. The site was
    officially placed on EPA's list of hazardous
    waste sites needing cleanup in 1983. EPA worked
    with the state to cap the land to prevent
    rainwater from reaching the waste, build a system
    to clean water draining from the site, clean out
    debris from the sewers and surrounding creeks,
    and remove polluted soil from nearby schools and
    residential properties. As a result of the
    cleanup, the site is now safe and is being
    returned to productive use. More than 200 new
    homes have been sold, creating an environmentally
    safe neighborhood on land once contaminated.
  • Taken from http//www.epa.gov/superfund/programs/
    recycle/success/briefs/ny_brief.htmny_2

41
Love Canal neighborhood taken off Superfund list
  • October 1, 2004
  • Taken from the Indianapolis Star
  •  
  • Niagara Falls, N.Y. -- The site of a former
    chemical dump that led to an environmental
    disaster more than two decades ago was formally
    removed from the federal Superfund list Thursday
  • The Love Canal neighborhood in Niagara Falls had
    been built on and around the former dump, and by
    the 1960s and '70s, contaminated groundwater was
    leaching into back yards and school grounds.
  • President Jimmy Carter declared two federal
    environmental emergencies in 1978 and 1980,
    leading to the evacuation of 950 families.
    Passage of the Superfund law soon followed.
  • Some homes have been revitalized and reinhabited
    others were bulldozed and the land deemed safe
    only for industry.

42
Superfund Sites
  • Omaha, 2005 asking for 20 million slated about 7
    million

43
NPL Site Narrative for Omaha Lead
  • (February 26, 2002) The Omaha Lead site includes
    surface soils present at residential properties,
    child care facilities, schools, and other
    residential-type properties in the city of Omaha,
    Douglas County, Nebraska that have been
    contaminated as a result of air emissions from
    lead smelting operations. The total area of the
    Omaha Lead site is approximately 8,840 acres. The
    site is being proposed to the NPL because of the
    presence of lead contamination in soil at
    residential properties, child care facilities,
    schools, and other residential-type properties.

44
NPL Site Narrative for Omaha Lead
  • The Asarco facility conducted lead refining
    operations from the early 1870s until 1996. The
    Asarco facility is located on approximately 23
    acres on the west bank of the Missouri River in
    downtown Omaha. During the operational period,
    lead and other heavy metals were emitted into the
    atmosphere through smoke stacks. The pollutants
    were transported downwind in various directions
    and deposited on the ground surface due to the
    combined process of turbulent diffusion and
    gravitational settling. In addition, Gould, Inc.,
    operated as a lead battery recycling plant and
    was considered a secondary lead smelter in the
    area. The Gould, Inc., plant closed in 1982.
    Several other businesses in the Omaha area
    utilized lead in their manufacturing process.
    Subsequently in 1998, the Omaha City Council
    solicited assistance from the U.S. Environmental
    Protection Agency (EPA) in addressing problems
    with lead contamination in the Omaha area. The
    EPA initiated the process to investigate the lead
    contamination in the area under the authority of
    the Comprehensive Environmental Response,
    Compensation, and Liability Act.

45
NPL Site Narrative for Omaha Lead
  • An ongoing removal action included excavation of
    lead-contaminated soils from a number of
    properties. The criteria for removal included
    child care facilities and residences where blood
    lead concentrations in children were equal to or
    greater than 10 micrograms per deciliter (ug/dl)
    and where soil samples (collected outside the
    roof drip line) contained lead concentrations
    equal to or greater than 400 milligrams per
    kilogram (mg/kg). Currently, removals have
    occurred at over 290 properties. No further
    remedial action at these 290 properties is
    anticipated based on information currently
    available.

46
NPL Site Narrative for Omaha Lead
  • EPA prepared a Preliminary Assessment/Site
    Inspection Report in 2001. This report summarized
    numerous investigations that have been conducted
    at the Omaha Lead site. Results of these
    investigations indicate that lead contamination
    is present at elevated concentrations up to 2.5
    miles from the former Asarco facility.
  • Approximately 65,615 residents (20) are located
    within the identified area of soil contamination.
    There are twenty Omaha Public Schools within this
    area including fifteen elementary schools, one
    middle school, two high schools, and two special
    study centers. The total enrollment at the twenty
    schools is 11,725 students. There are
    approximately 240 child care facilities within a
    3-mile radius of the center of the site. The
    total number of children attending these
    facilities is unknown. Several parks and golf
    courses are present within the identified area of
    soil contamination. These parks are accessible to
    the public and provide recreational opportunities
    to the public. In addition, approximately 135
    acres of wetlands are located within the 4-mile
    radius of the site.

47
Updates
  • http//www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A112
    46-2004Nov24.html
  • http//www.epa.gov/superfund/sites/npl/nar1660.htm
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