Globally there are significant numbers of historic landfills,and in England alone there are over 1200 in low-lying coastal areas.Approximately one-third of these historic coastal landfills are near designated ecologic...Globally there are significant numbers of historic landfills,and in England alone there are over 1200 in low-lying coastal areas.Approximately one-third of these historic coastal landfills are near designated ecological sites,and without intervention,10%are expected to start eroding within 40 years.Indeed,some sites are already eroding and releasing waste,and erosion is likely to become more common with the anticipated effects of climate change.Mitigating the pollution risk from all historic coastal landfills under threat of erosion would be prohibitively expensive;consequently,it is necessary to understand which sites pose the greatest pollution risk to prioritise management resources.This paper proposes a new risk screening assessment that can support coastal managers in identifying which historic coastal landfills pose the greatest pollution risk at a national scale for minimal cost using existing datasets.The proposed method determines an overall risk index for each site by considering the risk of pollution from eroding historic coastal landfills in two stages:the first stage assesses the risk of waste being released(waste release index),and the second assesses the risk to various receptors(pollution index).The highest risk sites can then be prioritised for further investigation or remediation.展开更多
基金carried out as part of a project funded by the Environment AgencySouthend Borough Council,and supported by Essex County Council.
文摘Globally there are significant numbers of historic landfills,and in England alone there are over 1200 in low-lying coastal areas.Approximately one-third of these historic coastal landfills are near designated ecological sites,and without intervention,10%are expected to start eroding within 40 years.Indeed,some sites are already eroding and releasing waste,and erosion is likely to become more common with the anticipated effects of climate change.Mitigating the pollution risk from all historic coastal landfills under threat of erosion would be prohibitively expensive;consequently,it is necessary to understand which sites pose the greatest pollution risk to prioritise management resources.This paper proposes a new risk screening assessment that can support coastal managers in identifying which historic coastal landfills pose the greatest pollution risk at a national scale for minimal cost using existing datasets.The proposed method determines an overall risk index for each site by considering the risk of pollution from eroding historic coastal landfills in two stages:the first stage assesses the risk of waste being released(waste release index),and the second assesses the risk to various receptors(pollution index).The highest risk sites can then be prioritised for further investigation or remediation.