1 / 16

W.R.Grace

W.R.Grace. By: Mark Nagorney Allison Polster Dan King. Site Description:. Located in the towns of Acton and Concord, Massachusetts Approximately 260 acres Former location of the American Cyanamid Company and the Dewey & Almy Chemical Company. Site Description:.

Télécharger la présentation

W.R.Grace

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. W.R.Grace By: Mark Nagorney Allison Polster Dan King

  2. Site Description: • Located in the towns of Acton and Concord, Massachusetts • Approximately 260 acres • Former location of the American Cyanamid Company and the Dewey & Almy Chemical Company

  3. Site Description: • Solid and hazardous wastes were buried in or placed onto an on-site industrial landfill and several other disposal areas • These other waste sites included the Battery Separator Lagoons, the Battery Separator Chip Pile, the Boiler Lagoon, and the Tank Car Area • All discharges sent to the unlined pits by W.R Grace were ceased in 1980

  4. Site Description: • They produced sealant products for rubber containers, latex products, plasticizers, resins, and other products • W. R. Grace purchased the properties of American Cyanamid and Dewey & Almy in 1954 • W. R. Grace facility produces materials used to make concrete, container sealing compounds, latex products and paper and plastic battery separators. • Liquid wastes from the manufacturing process were disposed of into several unlined lagoons • These lagoons were the: primary lagoon, secondary lagoon, north lagoon, and the emergency lagoon

  5. Threats and Contaminants • Volatile Organic Compounds • 1,1 DCE • Benzene • vinyl chloride • ethyl benzene • inorganics including • iron, • manganese • lead • Arsenic • chromium • nickel

  6. Threats and Contaminants1,1 DCE • 1,1-Dichloroethylene • Organic liquid with a mild, sweet, chloroform-like odor • Most all of it is used in making adhesives, synthetic fibers, refrigerants, food packaging and coating resins • Other names • 1,1-DCE • 1,1-Dichloroethene • Asym-dichloro-ethylene • Vinylidene chloride • When released into water, 1,1-DCE will evaporate from soil and will leach into the groundwater where its fate is unknown, but degradation is expected to be slow • This is the treatment method approved by the EPA: Granular activated charcoal in combination with Packed Tower Aeration

  7. Threats and Contaminants1,1 DCE • Regulation: • The MCLG is set at 7 parts per billion • Given present technology and resources, this is the lowest level to which water systems can reasonably be required to remove this contaminant should it occur in drinking water • Health Effects: • Short period of exposed time: Liver damage • Long period of exposed time: liver and kidney damage, as well as toxicity to the developing fetus; cancer

  8. Benzene • Benzene is a clear, colorless aromatic liquid • Highly Flammable • The greatest use of benzene is as a building block for making plastics, rubber, resins and synthetic fabrics like nylon and polyester • Other uses include: as a solvent in printing, paints, dry cleaning and so on • Other names: • Benzol 90 • Pyrobenzol • Polystream • Coal naphtha • Phene

  9. Benzene • Regulation: • The MCLG for benzene has been set at zero • The MCL has been set at 5 parts per billion • Health Effects: • Short term exposure: temporary nervous system disorders, immune system depression, anemia • Long term exposure: chromosome aberrations, cancer

  10. Clean-up • Clean up is being handled in 4 stages: Interim Actions and three long-term operable unit (OU) remedial phases which focus on aquifer restoration • OU 1- soil removal and remediation, landfill and lagoon closures • OU 2-residual soil contamination • OU 3-on-site and off-site groundwater, surface water, sediments and wetlands

  11. Initial Action • The companies responsible for site contamination removed the hazardous storage tanks from the site in 1982 and 1983.

  12. Aquifer Restoration • The companies held responsible have installed and operated an Aquifer Restoration System • This system pumps contaminated groundwater and then removes the contaminants by air stripping/volatilization

  13. Landfill and Lagoon Closure • The EPA's recommended cleanup plan included: • excavating and transporting for off-site incineration the highly contaminated material from the Blowdown Pit • excavating and stabilizing the material in the Blowdown Pit, the Primary Lagoon, Secondary Lagoon, North Lagoon, and Emergency Lagoon by mixing it with cement, lime, and fly ash to form a solid • excavating the soils from the Battery Separator Lagoons • Boiler Lagoon, and Tank Car area; placing both the stabilized and non-stabilized materials excavated from the site in the existing industrial landfill and covering these materials with a cap to prevent surface water or rain water from coming into contact with the buried contaminants; closing the Chip Pile area • modifying the Aquifer Restoration System to address emission controls • extensive monitoring activities in each area

  14. Groundwater Treatment • W.R. Grace has maintained and operated a groundwater pump and treatment system which removes volatile organic compounds from groundwater since 1985 • Currently the companies responsible has been performing a Remedial Investigation/Feasibility Study and human health and ecological risk assessment for on and off site groundwater, surface water and sediments to determine the nature, extent, levels and threats of hazardous contaminants • A Final Remedial Investigation/Feasibility Study will be prepared and submitted by the companies responsible under, Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection and town oversight by the end of this June

  15. Environmental Progress • Removing the storage tanks, contaminated materials and installing the aquifer restoration system have greatly reduced the potential for exposure to hazardous substances in groundwater • September of 1997 over 100,000 cubic yards of contaminated materials were excavated or treated on-site by thermal treatment & solidification • Some highly contaminated materials were shipped offsite so they could get proper disposal • The Aquifer Restoration System has removed approximately 7,600 pounds of total VOCs from groundwater.

  16. Current Site Status • OU 1 and OU 2 activities at the site have been completed • Activities such as the removal, solidification/stabilization, and placement/capping of contaminated soils and sludges into an on-site landfill have been done • groundwater recovery and air stripping tower is currently operating at the site

More Related