Office of Research and Development, National Risk Management Research Laboratory, Environmental Protection Agency, 26 W. Martin Luther King Drive, MS-CHL, Cincinnati, OH 45268, USA.
Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education (ORISE) Fellow, 26 W. Martin Luther King Drive, MS-CHL, Cincinnati, OH 45268, USA.
J Environ Manage. 2017 Dec 15;204(Pt 1):472-485. doi: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2017.09.026.
Although an explosion of new building materials are being introduced into today's market, adequate up-front research into their chemical and physical properties as well as their potential health and environmental consequences is lacking. History has provided us with several examples where building materials were broadly deployed into society only to find that health and environmental problems resulted in unintended sustainability consequences. In the following paper, we use lead and asbestos as legacy building materials to show their similar historical trends and sustainability consequences. Our research findings show unintended consequences such as: increased remediation and litigation costs; adverse health effects; offshoring of related industries; and impediments to urban revitalization. As numerous new building materials enter today's market, another building material may have already been deployed, representing the next "asbestos." This paper also proposes an alternative methodology that can be applied in a cost-effective way into existing and upcoming building materials, to minimize and prevent potential unintended consequences and create a pathway for sustainable communities. For instance, our findings show that this proposed methodology could have prevented the unintended incurred sustainability costs of approximately $272-$359 billion by investing roughly $24 million in constant 2014 U.S. dollars on up-front research into lead and asbestos.
尽管当今市场上涌现出大量新型建筑材料,但对其化学和物理特性以及潜在的健康和环境影响进行充分的前期研究仍然不足。历史为我们提供了一些例子,即建筑材料被广泛应用于社会,结果却发现健康和环境问题导致了意想不到的可持续性后果。在本文中,我们使用铅和石棉这两种传统建筑材料来展示它们类似的历史趋势和可持续性后果。我们的研究结果表明存在以下意外后果:修复和诉讼成本增加;对健康产生不利影响;相关产业转移;以及阻碍城市复兴。随着众多新型建筑材料进入当今市场,另一种建筑材料可能已经投入使用,成为下一个“石棉”。本文还提出了一种替代方法,该方法可以以经济有效的方式应用于现有和即将推出的建筑材料,以尽量减少和预防潜在的意外后果,并为可持续社区创造途径。例如,我们的研究结果表明,通过在前期研究中投入约 2400 万美元(按 2014 年不变美元计算),该方法本可以防止由于铅和石棉而导致的大约 2720 亿至 3590 亿美元的意外可持续性成本。