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Cleaning of Mercury Contamination in Gabraith Street in Squamish, B.C. Canada 8 March 2004 Presented by Lindsey Dunn Saleh Salim.

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Presentation on theme: "Cleaning of Mercury Contamination in Gabraith Street in Squamish, B.C. Canada 8 March 2004 Presented by Lindsey Dunn Saleh Salim."— Presentation transcript:

1 Cleaning of Mercury Contamination in Gabraith Street in Squamish, B.C. Canada 8 March 2004 Presented by Lindsey Dunn Saleh Salim

2 Introduction n Canadian Occidental Petroleum Ltd. (COPL) operated chlor-alkali plant from 1965-1991 n Property owned by BC Rail and BCR Properties Ltd., plant owned by FMC of Canada Ltd.

3 Location n The plant is located on Gabraith Street in Squamish British Columbia, Canada. n 45 acres just south of downtown Squamish n The property is enclosed by the Howe (South), Cattermole Creek (West), and Mamquam Blind Channel (East) n The soil on site is a dredged sediment over formal tidal floats and saltwater marches

4 Chlor-Alkali Processes n Caustic soda and chlorine are produced by the electrolysis of an aqueous solution of sodium chloride (brine) n Approximately 4.2% of mercury released in atmosphere from chlor-alkali n Due to environmental concerns, mercury processes since abandoned and ion-exchange membrane technology used

5 Source of Mercury Contamination n Plant discharged and spilled mercury into the land, water, and air as a result of plant processes. n “Old Lagoon” was named as it was a main discharge area for discharge sludge from wastewater treatment diluted with saltwater n From 1965-1974 (pre-environmental standards) plant discharged 2-31 kg/day or 1000-10,000 kg/year of mercury into the environment n 1974-1991: 1 kg/day or 370 kg/year discharged

6 Resulting Contamination n On site: the soil contained 65,635 m 3 of waste with Hg levels > 2ppm, 22,905 m 3 of special waste (Hg >100 ppm), ground water found to have unacceptable Hg levels (>2ppm) –“Old Lagoon” held 36,000 m 3 of Hg contaminated sludge, half of which could be considered “special waste”, ground water held dissolved mercury at levels 100x standards) –Surface vegetation found to have elevated levels of mercury n Off site: High levels of Hg found in sedimentation of water ways Channel, Creek n Highest levels found in Mamaquam Blind Channel at SW corner of property near dock n Howe Sound lake bottom organisms, aquatic vegetation, and general aquatic life (fish, birds, crabs, ect) found to have mercury traces

7 Risks associated with Mercury n Mercury causes adverse effects to the human and environmental health n Mercury changes to methylmercury by a chemical reaction in organic environments n Methymercury then has the ability to bio-accumulate within a food chain where by humans are at the greatest risk as the rate in which mercury is removed from the body cannot match the rate in which it is ingested.

8 Problems due to Contamination n Canadian Occidental petroleum Ltd(COPL) forced to change name to Nexen n Nexen paid Millions n Site left unused n Over 1700 rails cars of contaminated soil shipped to landfill

9 Environmental Impacts n Kills Aquatic life n Destroys vegetation n Make land unusable n Effects can be seen in generations to come

10 Alternative Remediation Technique n Precipitate Flotation method n Causes heavy metals to precipitate with iron elements in soil n Completely leaves site pollutant free n Compact device allowing onsite cleaning up n Separates contaminates from soil, thus allowing soil to be buried back onsite

11 Remediation Efforts n COPL and BC Rail agreed to complete voluntary clean-up but never completed work n Mandatory remediation was then required to a depth of 3 m n Difficulties included the hydrostatigraphy, tidal influences, presence of surface impoundments in the form of effluent and peroxide ponds, hydroecolgocial complexity n Cost equal to $45 million n Carried out by Nexen Inc. (formally COPL)

12 Remediation Techniques n Ground water recovery and treatment n Contaminated soil and sludge excavation and stabilization n Soil Washing

13 Techniques Considered n Electrochemical Remediation Technologies (ECRTs) –Strong electrical current sent through ground to remove metals and mercury –Limited because not economical for large areas –Location concerns: If mercury were to be mobilized it could send a large amount of concentrated mercury directly into aquatic environment surrounding site

14 New Mercury Capturing Technique n Presented by Noram Engineering and Constructors Ltd at 2002 Remediation Technologies Symposium n Uses lignin derivatives and a flocculating agent to remove and stabilize metal contaminants from contaminated water n Uses a lignin-ferric absorbent material to capture and immobilize metals in soil

15 Groundwater Remediation n Technique similar to wastewater treatment of suspended soils n Lignin dissolved in captured groundwater so that it bonds to free mercury n Coagulate to form colloidal lignin-mercury particles n Ferric chloride added to flocculate the mix and cause mercury to fall out of suspension n Result is groundwater with Hg < 1  g/l and a non-leaching mercury sludge

16 Soil Remediation n Soil mixed with a solid ferric-lignin adsorbent n Absorbent captures mercury in order to stabilize and immobilize n Contaminated soil extracted and disposed

17 Current State n BC Rail transferred 71 acres, worth $35 million, of clean land to the town of Squamish n Waterfront property will be commercially and residentially developed in preparation of the 2010 Olympics which will be held in BC


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