Environmental Laboratory, Engineer Research and Development Center, US Army Corps of Engineers, 696 Virginia Rd, Concord, MA 01742, USA.
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 77 Massachusetts Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
Sci Total Environ. 2015 Apr 1;511:309-18. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2014.11.003. Epub 2014 Dec 29.
Dredging to maintain navigable waterways is important for supporting trade and economic sustainability. Dredged sediments are removed from the waterways and then must be managed in a way that meets regulatory standards and properly balances management costs and risks. Selection of a best management alternative often results in stakeholder conflict regarding tradeoffs between local environmental impacts associated with less expensive alternatives (e.g., open water placement), more expensive measures that require sediment disposal in constructed facilities far away (e.g., landfills), or beneficial uses that may be perceived as risky (e.g., beach nourishment or island creation). Current sediment-placement decisions often focus on local and immediate environmental effects from the sediment itself, ignoring a variety of distributed and long-term effects from transportation and placement activities. These extended effects have implications for climate change, resource consumption, and environmental and human health, which may be meaningful topics for many stakeholders not currently considered. Life-Cycle Assessment (LCA) provides a systematic and quantitative method for accounting for this wider range of impacts and benefits across all sediment management project stages and time horizons. This paper applies a cradle-to-use LCA to dredged-sediment placement through a comparative analysis of potential upland, open water, and containment-island placement alternatives in the Long Island Sound region of NY/CT. Results suggest that, in cases dealing with uncontaminated sediments, upland placement may be the most environmentally burdensome alternative, per ton-kilometer of placed material, due to the emissions associated with diesel fuel combustion and electricity production and consumption required for the extra handling and transportation. These results can be traded-off with the ecosystem impacts of the sediments themselves in a decision-making framework.
疏浚以维持航道的通航能力对于支持贸易和经济可持续性非常重要。疏浚沉积物从水道中被清除,然后必须以符合监管标准的方式进行管理,在管理成本和风险之间进行适当的平衡。最佳管理替代方案的选择通常会导致利益相关者之间发生冲突,涉及与更便宜的替代方案(例如,开放式放置)相关的当地环境影响之间的权衡,更昂贵的措施需要在远离建造设施的地方处置沉积物(例如,垃圾填埋场),或可能被视为有风险的有益用途(例如,海滩填海或岛屿建设)。目前的沉积物放置决策通常侧重于沉积物本身对当地和即时环境的影响,而忽略了运输和放置活动带来的各种分布式和长期影响。这些扩展影响涉及气候变化、资源消耗以及环境和人类健康,这可能是许多目前未被考虑的利益相关者的有意义的话题。生命周期评估 (LCA) 提供了一种系统和定量的方法,可以在所有沉积物管理项目阶段和时间范围内考虑更广泛的影响和收益。本文通过对纽约/康涅狄格州长岛海峡地区潜在的旱地、开放式和围堵岛放置替代方案进行比较分析,应用摇篮到使用的 LCA 对疏浚沉积物的放置进行了研究。结果表明,在处理未受污染的沉积物的情况下,由于与柴油燃料燃烧和额外处理和运输所需的电力生产和消耗相关的排放,每放置材料吨公里,旱地放置可能是最具环境负担的替代方案。这些结果可以在决策框架中与沉积物本身的生态系统影响进行权衡。