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Risk assesment and corrective
action: For many years, risk assessment
has been a valuable interpretive tool to define the relative significance
of contamination in food, soil, water, and air. Since their introduction
over a decade ago, risk assessment
methodologies have continued to improve and now provide a valuable
tool to reduce costs and close environmentally distressed sites.
Risk-Based Corrective Action (RBCA) requires the identification
of specific contaminant levels and the site-specific evaluation
of potential exposure pathways. To determine the appropriate cleanup
level for a site, a sufficient amount of data must be obtained
to make reasonable judgments on the type of exposure at a site.
The American Environmental Consultants staff is experienced
in all aspects of risk assessment,
including collecting, compiling, and evaluating the following:
- The contaminant distribution at the site
- The media which is contaminated (soil or groundwater)
- The exposure pathway (e.g., hydrogeologic information or institutional
controls)
- Potential receptors
- The intended site use
The purpose of the risk based corrective action is to provide
site owners with a mechanism to efficiently demonstrate that site
specific characteristics, such as as geology, hydrogeology, engineered
barriers and institutional controls provide sufficient protection
to human health and the environment. The risk based exposure pathways
that are generally considered for a risk based corrective action
consist of drinking water ingestion, ingestion of soils, inhalation
of soils, and possible dermal contact. For most sites, a risk-based
approach will reduce the costs and time required to achieve closure.
Although risk assessment was
once reserved for only costly Cercla
SuperFund sites, today this remedial decision-making tool
is increasingly used for sites of all sizes and complexities for
setting cleanup criteria.
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