Industrial Ecology Programme, Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU) Høgskoleringen 5, NO-7491, Trondheim, Norway.
Integr Environ Assess Manag. 2011 Oct;7(4):678-86. doi: 10.1002/ieam.246. Epub 2011 Aug 26.
Life cycle assessment is increasingly used to assess the environmental performance of fossil energy systems. Two of the dominant emissions of offshore oil and gas production to the marine environment are the discharge of produced water and drilling waste. Although environmental impacts of produced water are predominantly due to chemical stressors, a major concern regarding drilling waste discharge is the potential physical impact due to particles. At present, impact indicators for particulate emissions are not yet available in life cycle assessment. Here, we develop characterization factors for 2 distinct impacts of particulate emissions: an increased turbidity zone in the water column and physical burial of benthic communities. The characterization factor for turbidity is developed analogous to characterization factors for toxic impacts, and ranges from 1.4 PAF (potentially affected fraction) · m(3) /d/kg(p) (kilogram particulate) to 7.0 x 10³ [corrected] for drilling mud particles discharged from the rig. The characterization factor for burial describes the volume of sediment that is impacted by particle deposition on the seafloor and equals 2.0 × 10(-1) PAF · m(3) /d/kg(p) for cutting particles. This characterization factor is quantified on the basis of initial deposition layer characteristics, such as height and surface area, the initial benthic response, and the recovery rate. We assessed the relevance of including particulate emissions in an impact assessment of offshore oil and gas production. Accordingly, the total impact on the water column and on the sediment was quantified based on emission data of produced water and drilling waste for all oil and gas fields on the Norwegian continental shelf in 2008. Our results show that cutting particles contribute substantially to the total impact of offshore oil and gas production on marine sediments, with a relative contribution of 55% and 31% on the regional and global scale, respectively. In contrast, the contribution of particulate emissions to the total impact on the marine water column is of minor importance. We conclude that particles are an important stressor in marine ecosystems, particularly for marine sediment, and particulate emissions should therefore be included in a (life cycle) impact assessment of offshore oil and gas production.
生命周期评估越来越多地用于评估化石能源系统的环境性能。海上石油和天然气生产向海洋环境排放的两种主要污染物是采出水和钻井废物。尽管采出水的环境影响主要是由于化学胁迫物造成的,但钻井废物排放的一个主要关注点是由于颗粒而产生的潜在物理影响。目前,生命周期评估中尚无颗粒排放的影响指标。在这里,我们为颗粒排放的 2 种不同影响开发了特征化因子:水柱浊度增加区和海底群落的物理掩埋。浊度的特征化因子是根据毒性影响的特征化因子开发的,范围从 1.4 PAF(潜在受影响部分)·m³/d/kg(p)(颗粒千克)到从钻井平台排放的钻井泥浆颗粒的 7.0 x 10³[校正]。掩埋特征化因子描述了由于颗粒在海底沉积而受影响的沉积物体积,对于切割颗粒而言,等于 2.0 × 10(-1) PAF·m³/d/kg(p)。该特征化因子是根据初始沉积层特征(如高度和表面积)、初始底栖反应和恢复率来量化的。我们评估了在海上石油和天然气生产的影响评估中纳入颗粒排放的相关性。因此,根据 2008 年挪威大陆架上所有油气田的采出水和钻井废物排放数据,量化了对水柱和沉积物的总影响。我们的结果表明,切割颗粒对海洋沉积物中海上石油和天然气生产的总影响贡献很大,在区域和全球范围内的相对贡献分别为 55%和 31%。相比之下,颗粒排放对海洋水柱总影响的贡献则相对较小。我们的结论是,颗粒是海洋生态系统中的一个重要胁迫物,特别是对海洋沉积物而言,因此应将颗粒排放纳入海上石油和天然气生产的(生命周期)影响评估中。