Abstract

Gentle Remediation Options (GRO) are remediation measures involving plants, fungi, bacteria, and soil amendments that can be applied to manage risks at contaminated sites. Several studies and decision-support tools promote the wider range of benefits provided by GRO, but there is still skepticism regarding GRO implementation. Key issues that need to be better communicated are the various risk mitigation mechanisms, the required risk reduction for an envisioned land use, and the time perspective associated with the risk mitigation mechanisms. To increase the viability and acceptance of GRO, the phytomanagement approach implies the combination of GRO with beneficial green land use, gradually reducing risks and restoring ecosystem services. To strengthen the decision basis for GRO implementation in practice, this paper proposes a framework for risk management and communication of GRO applications to support phytomanagement strategies at contaminated sites. The mapping of the risk mitigation mechanisms is done by an extensive literature review and the Swedish national soil guideline value model is used to derive the most relevant human health exposure pathways and ecological risks for generic green land use scenarios. Results indicate that most of the expected risk mitigation mechanisms are supported by literature, but that knowledge gaps still exist. The framework is demonstrated to support the identification of GRO options for the case study site given two envisioned land uses: biofuel park and allotment garden. A more easily understandable risk management framework, as proposed here, is expected to act as a communication tool to educate decision-makers, regulatory bodies and other stakeholders for better understanding of risk mitigation mechanisms and preliminary timeframes of various GRO, particularly in the early stages of a brownfield redevelopment project.

Highlights

  • Soil contamination due to human activity is a widespread phenomenon with serious implications for human health and environmental degradation

  • To strengthen the decision basis for Gentle Remediation Options (GRO) implementation in practice, this paper proposes a framework for risk management and communication of GRO applications to support phytomanagement strategies at contaminated sites

  • The expected timeframes identified from literature are very generic and identified for groups of contaminants but could still be of considerable use to decision-makers

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Summary

Introduction

Soil contamination (used as synonymous to pollution) due to human activity is a widespread phenomenon with serious implications for human health and environmental degradation. “Green” alternatives to conventional soil remediation are Gentle Remediation Options (GRO), which are in-situ remediation measures that utilise plants, fungi, bacteria, and soil amendments to break contaminant linkages while improving or maintaining soil functions. While they may not be well-suited to highly contaminated sites, ‘hotspots’ or point source terms such as buried tanks or oil spills, GRO are suitable for contaminated sites that pose low to medium risks to human health and the environment (Andersson-Sköld et al, 2014; Cundy et al, 2016; Enell et al, 2016; GREENLAND, 2014a)

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