Unbalanced Burden? Potential Population-Level Health Risks and Benefits of Superfund Cleanup

Barges with backhoes and piles of backfill material working on the Hudson River

site beyond controlling the pollution source. "The best estimate of the benefits of fifteen DALYs avoided by dredging, even when multiplied by a factor of ten, is very restricted for [such an] investment," says senior author Olivier Jolliet, a professor of environmental health sciences at the University of Michigan.
The authors mention that future work could compare health risks of consuming local foods against their health benefits, such as the positive effects on early cognitive development and cardiovascular health from eating omega-3 fatty acids in fish. 8 Potential ecological, social, and economic effects of environmental dredging also could be addressed.
Before the Hudson River cleanup project began, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) conducted an air quality evaluation 9 for dredging, comparing estimated concentrations of air pollutants at the site to threshold-based regulatory standards 10 for protecting individual health. "EPA's selected cleanup approach-dredging and off-site disposal-considered air emissions from project equipment in terms of compliance with applicable standards," says EPA Region 2 Public Affairs Director Mary Mears. The agency concluded that the project "would not significantly impact air quality" based on assumptions including one locomotive running for 30 minutes during the day, twice per day. 9 "This highlights the distinction between EPA's traditional framework for assessing individual risks versus a comparative, population-based approach taken by the present study," says first author Jacob Kvasnicka, a PhD candidate at the University of Toronto. "When we considered the actual data . . . on rail shipments and included long-distance transport in an overall evaluation of population health benefits versus risks for the dredging alternative, the findings painted a different picture." That said, the study was limited by substantial uncertainties in estimating noncancer health benefits of reducing PCBs in fish.
In this 22 September 2011 photograph, barges are piled high with material used to backfill dredged areas and to protect caps in areas where PCBs remained. The U.S. EPA will survey the site every 10 years in perpetuity, along with special inspections after any flooding or other "high flow events," to ensure the caps remain intact. Image: © Albany Times Union.

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Other limitations included uncertainty in estimating the local population's PCB exposures from eating fish. And the authors point out that as existing locomotives are gradually replaced by cleaner trains, rail-related emissions and associated health risks are expected to decrease considerably, highlighting the importance of such standards. 11 "The authors clearly indicate that they are looking at a subset of risks and benefits involved with decisions about remediation of the Hudson River," says Donna Vorhees, Director of Energy Research with the Health Effects Institute, who was not involved with the research. "This limited scope may affect the utility of results because it is unknown how risks and benefits would compare if all were considered and, where possible, quantified." Nevertheless, the study does raise new considerations for future cleanup projects. The study "highlights the need to minimize sediment transport distances and to assess health burdens and trade-offs affecting the overall population rather than just aiming to maintain individual risk below a given threshold," says Jolliet. "It raises the question of how to best use substantial financial compensations from polluters to benefit local communities and the environment." Wendee Nicole is an award-winning Houston-based writer. Her work has appeared in Discover, Scientific American, and other publications.