Lead in environmental health
(Third of three parts)
Part 3: Remediation of lead-polluted soils
Lead poisoning can be prevented by effectively controlling their environmental sources (like leaded petrol, paints, pipes, ceramics, cosmetics, etc.), especially when coupled with public education and enforceable regulations.
Lead-polluted soils represent the single largest pool of this toxic metal in the environment. From mining sites to manufacturing operations to urban infrastructure, soil-borne lead can disperse and pose health threats to humans. However, other than to children, lead in soil does not pose any health concern to the rest of the population if the soil is properly managed.
Generally, lead in soil is hardly taken up by plants. Even in farm soils amended with sewage sludge, this metal is minimally taken up by roots — the reasons being the presence of organic matter (
Soil pollution by lead is generally confined in the surface layer — true in areas impacted by smelting, urban areas from air pollution, and neighborhoods with leaded paints. Remediation (also referred to as reclamation in metal industry) seems easy to execute in these areas since only a few centimeters of the top soil are polluted; however, when the total land area is taken into account, it becomes a formidable task.
There are regulatory guidelines when remediation should be undertaken. When the soil level of lead (the US Environmental Protection Agency uses the Toxicity Characteristic Leaching Procedure, or TCLP, an extraction method) is suspected to cause ecological and/or human effects, a risk assessment is called for. This can be either an ecological or human health risk assessment. The former is usually preferred because it is more cost-effective as it does not involve any human subject.
When risk-based remediation is deemed necessary, remediation can take the form of conventional, engineering-based technologies (like soil excavation, soil flushing or washing, etc) or ecological-type approaches (like phytoremediation, in situ chemical stabilization, etc). The former technologies are typically more expensive and invasive than the latter; however, the latter are limited to only surficial —[sur(face) + (super)ficial] — treatments and becomes inapplicable when pollution has migrated deeply (greater than one meter).
Phytoremediation refers to a group of approaches that involves the use of certain green plants to aid in stabilizing the soil structure against wind and water erosion by providing ground cover (i.e., phytostabilization). The plants usually have dense root systems and the aerial parts protect the ground from the forces of wind and raindrops, keeping the soil in place. Certain plants have abilities to take up unusually high amounts of the metal from the soil, accumulating it in the foliage (i.e., phytoextraction). This requires plant species that have dense aboveground vegetation. Other plants have extensive root systems to intercept and sequester soluble contaminants from water and waste streams (i.e., rhizofiltration). These species are generally aquatic. Others have been modified by biotechnology to uptake, sequester and eventually volatilize organo-metallic compounds into the atmosphere (i.e., phytovolatilization).
To clean up a site using phytoremediation, a combination of two or more approaches may be necessary. A mining or smelting site is a complex scenario where erosion, leaching/runoff, and high amounts of soluble lead may be present. The issue is exacerbated when there are communities around it and safe drinking water needs to be ensured. In this case, a combination of phytoremediation and in situ chemical stabilization may be opted.
In situ chemical stabilization requires treatment of the soil on-site where amendment materials are used by mixing them with the surface soil. Like phytoremediation, this approach is limited to only the surface layer. Alkaline biosolids (a form of sewage sludge compost), coal fly ash, livestock manure compost, and phosphate rocks can be used as ameliorants.
Phosphate rocks (or hydroxy-apatite) are mined in
The main goal in phytoextraction (also called phytomining) is to recycle the lead from the soil profile to the plant biomass. It is ideal to employ hyperaccumulator species since they take up metals in large amounts, or greater uptake can be induced by adding chelating agents in the soil to solubilize the metal. One major drawback with this method is that the roots cannot take up all the solubilized metal as the chelated metal could move beyond the root zone.
Prof. W. Wenzel from
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Domy Adriano is a professor emeritus at the
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