Filippelli Gabriel M, Dietrich Matthew, Shukle John, Wood Leah, Margenot Andrew, Egendorf S Perl, Mielke Howard W
Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences and Environmental Resilience Institute Indiana University Indianapolis IN USA.
ZevRoss Spatial Analysis Ithaca NY USA.
Geohealth. 2024 Jun 18;8(6):e2024GH001045. doi: 10.1029/2024GH001045. eCollection 2024 Jun.
Lead exposure has blighted communities across the United States (and the globe), with much of the burden resting on lower income communities, and communities of color. On 17 January 2024, the US Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) lowered the recommended screening level of lead in residential soils from 400 to 200 parts per million. Our analysis of tens of thousands of citizen-science collected soil samples from cities and communities around the US indicates that nearly one quarter of households may contain soil lead that exceed the new screening level. Extrapolating across the nation, that equates to nearly 30 million households needing to mitigate potential soil lead hazards, at a potential total cost of 290 billion to $1.2 trillion. We do not think this type of mitigation is feasible at the massive scale required and we have instead focused on a more immediate, far cheaper strategy: capping current soils with clean soils and/or mulch. At a fraction of the cost and labor of disruptive conventional soil mitigation, it yields immediate and potentially life-changing benefits for those living in these environments.
铅暴露给美国(乃至全球)的诸多社区带来了危害,其中大部分负担落在了低收入社区和有色人种社区。2024年1月17日,美国环境保护局(USEPA)将住宅土壤中铅的推荐筛查水平从百万分之400降至百万分之200。我们对美国各地城市和社区通过公民科学收集的数万个土壤样本进行分析后发现,近四分之一的家庭土壤中的铅含量可能超过新的筛查水平。据全国推算,这相当于近3000万户家庭需要减轻潜在的土壤铅危害,潜在总成本在2900亿美元至1.2万亿美元之间。我们认为,这种大规模的缓解措施在所需规模上并不可行,因此我们转而关注一种更直接、成本低得多的策略:用干净的土壤和/或覆盖物覆盖现有土壤。与具有破坏性的传统土壤缓解措施相比,它成本和劳动力仅为其一小部分,却能为生活在这些环境中的人们带来立竿见影且可能改变生活的益处。