Risk Assessment and Environmental Impacts: Economic and Social Implications

Author(s):  
Maria Claudia Lucchetti ◽  
Gabriella Arcese ◽  
Olimpia Martucci ◽  
Chiara Montauti
Author(s):  
Stephen G. Zemba ◽  
James J. Binder ◽  
Michael R. Ames ◽  
Richard R. Lester

Until recently, landfills and waste-to-energy (WTE) facilities were the two basic technologies available to process residual (post-recycled) municipal solid waste. These technologies have both advantages and drawbacks, and their relative merits have been debated many different ways. Risk assessments of both technologies have been used to examine their potential threats to human health and the environment, and have found both landfills and WTE facilities can be operated in an environmentally acceptable manner. Neither alternative, however, has gained general public acceptance, and planned projects are often controversial. There remains considerable skepticism, for example, that landfill liners will be effective over long periods of time, and a general uneasiness over the safety of waste combustion. The interest in emerging conversion technologies, such as gasification and anaerobic digestion, as an alternative to conventional landfills and WTE facilities is thus understandable. However, there is some concern that the environmental impacts of conversion technologies are not well understood, as no commercial facilities exist in the United States. Development of a risk assessment framework for evaluating conversion technologies will serve two purposes. First, it will ultimately facilitate objective evaluation of potential risks to health and the environment as well as comparative evaluation with respect to traditional landfill and WTE technologies. Second, it will initiate a conceptual model of environmental impacts that will be useful in identifying key emissions and data gaps. Our presentation will set forth an initial risk assessment framework, focusing on the emissions and residuals of conversion technologies, and using available data to characterize and project health risk impacts.


Author(s):  
Salvatore Arpaia ◽  
Olivier Christiaens ◽  
Paul Henning Krogh ◽  
Kimberly M Parker

Abstract This chapter focuses on the importance of problem formulation (PF) in the environmental risk assessment process, which involves the identification of the possible hazards associated with a stressor, i.e. transgenic RNAi expressing plants or RNAi-based pesticides. The risk hypotheses developed from the PF that can be used to hypothesize pathways to risk and support the design of experimental studies to determine environmental impacts are also discussed.


Author(s):  
Salvatore Arpaia ◽  
Olivier Christiaens ◽  
Paul Henning Krogh ◽  
Kimberly M Parker

Abstract This chapter focuses on the importance of problem formulation (PF) in the environmental risk assessment process, which involves the identification of the possible hazards associated with a stressor, i.e. transgenic RNAi expressing plants or RNAi-based pesticides. The risk hypotheses developed from the PF that can be used to hypothesize pathways to risk and support the design of experimental studies to determine environmental impacts are also discussed.


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