Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management, 235 Promenade Street, Providence, RI 02908, USA.
Risk Anal. 2012 Dec;32(12):2182-97. doi: 10.1111/j.1539-6924.2012.01843.x. Epub 2012 May 29.
Drinking water supplies are at risk of contamination from a variety of physical, chemical, and biological sources. Ranked among these threats are hazardous material releases from leaking or improperly managed underground storage tanks located at municipal, commercial, and industrial facilities. To reduce human health and environmental risks associated with the subsurface storage of hazardous materials, government agencies have taken a variety of legislative and regulatory actions--which date back more than 25 years and include the establishment of rigorous equipment/technology/operational requirements and facility-by-facility inspection and enforcement programs. Given a history of more than 470,000 underground storage tank releases nationwide, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency continues to report that 7,300 new leaks were found in federal fiscal year 2008, while nearly 103,000 old leaks remain to be cleaned up. In this article, we report on an alternate evidence-based intervention approach for reducing potential releases from the storage of petroleum products (gasoline, diesel, kerosene, heating/fuel oil, and waste oil) in underground tanks at commercial facilities located in Rhode Island. The objective of this study was to evaluate whether a new regulatory model can be used as a cost-effective alternative to traditional facility-by-facility inspection and enforcement programs for underground storage tanks. We conclude that the alternative model, using an emphasis on technical assistance tools, can produce measurable improvements in compliance performance, is a cost-effective adjunct to traditional facility-by-facility inspection and enforcement programs, and has the potential to allow regulatory agencies to decrease their frequency of inspections among low risk facilities without sacrificing compliance performance or increasing public health risks.
饮用水供应有可能受到各种物理、化学和生物来源的污染。在这些威胁中,包括从市政、商业和工业设施中泄漏或管理不当的地下储油罐中释放的危险物质。为了降低与危险物质地下储存相关的人类健康和环境风险,政府机构采取了各种立法和监管行动——这些行动可以追溯到 25 年以上,包括建立严格的设备/技术/操作要求以及设施逐一检查和执行计划。鉴于全国有超过 47 万地下储油罐泄漏的历史,美国环境保护署继续报告称,在 2008 财年发现了 7300 个新的泄漏,而近 10.3 万个旧泄漏仍有待清理。在本文中,我们报告了一种替代的基于证据的干预方法,用于减少在罗得岛商业设施中地下储罐中储存石油产品(汽油、柴油、煤油、取暖/燃料油和废油)时潜在的泄漏。本研究的目的是评估新的监管模式是否可以作为传统设施逐一检查和执行计划的一种具有成本效益的替代方案,用于地下储油罐。我们得出结论,替代模式,强调技术援助工具,可以在合规表现方面产生可衡量的改进,是传统设施逐一检查和执行计划的具有成本效益的补充,并且有可能让监管机构在不牺牲合规表现或增加公共健康风险的情况下,降低低风险设施的检查频率。