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Environmental Assessment and Sustainability CIV913 CHEMICAL ASSESSMENT of RIVER WATER QUALITY.

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Presentation on theme: "Environmental Assessment and Sustainability CIV913 CHEMICAL ASSESSMENT of RIVER WATER QUALITY."— Presentation transcript:

1 Environmental Assessment and Sustainability CIV913 CHEMICAL ASSESSMENT of RIVER WATER QUALITY

2 CHEMICAL ASSESSMENT Monitoring the State of the Freshwater Environment Provides a sound scientific understanding of present. Understanding of how conditions are changing. Hence: Facilitates environmental management through: –Basis for assessing priorities for action. Objectives and standards. –Charts progress against plans and targets. Provides information for the public and interested groups.

3 CHEMICAL ASSESSMENT Environment Agency (EA) –River Quality Objectives (RQO) –General Quality Assessment (GQA) Chemical Biological –Statutory Water Quality Objectives (SWQO) –Local Environmental Agency Plan (LEAP)

4 CHEMICAL ASSESSMENT Statutory Standards –Environmental Quality Standards (EQS) Non-Statutory Standards. –Environmental Quality Objectives (EQO) –River Classification Schemes eg GQA.

5 CHEMICAL ASSESSMENT Statutory Standards. International and National –Dangerous Substances Directive 76/464/EEC ** List I and List II substances UK Interpretation of List II UK National Network Sites –Freshwater Fish Directive 78/659/EEC * Rivers and canals Salmonid Waters (salmon and trout) Cyprinid Waters (roach, bream, chub)

6 CHEMICAL ASSESSMENT Statutory Standards. Directive on the Quality of Surface water Abstracted for Potable Supply 75/440/EEC –Applies to designated sites. –Mandatory limits for 21 substances eg 95 percentile NO 3 limit of 50 mg/l * –Guideline values for 31 substances.

7 CHEMICAL ASSESSMENT River Classification: Non-statutory. Used for planning and trend analysis. Chemical, biological, nutrients and aesthetics UK currently has chemical and biological. –Chemical parameters expressed as percentiles: Dissolved Oxygen (DO). 10 percentile. BOD (Inhibited). 90 percentile. Total ammonia. 90 percentile. –6 Grades of chemical quality*

8 CHEMICAL ASSESSMENT Sampling. Time based. Concentration versus time. –Exposure of fish to pollutant Volume based. Load versus flow. –Impact of a discharge on the river quality. Approaches identical when flow is constant. UK Water Industry almost exclusively TIME BASED.

9 CHEMICAL ASSESSMENT Sampling Grab Sampling (Snap or Spot). –Instantaneous behaviour –Used for judging compliance with percentile or maximum type standards. –Suffers when there are extremes of quality –Most common form for routine monitoring and classification in UK.

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12 CHEMICAL ASSESSMENT Sampling Composite Sampling (Flow related) –Representative measure of a continuous process. –Low resource requirements –Gives average concentrations or loads. –Used increasingly for factory compliance monitoring.

13 CHEMICAL ASSESSMENT Statistical Approach (Avoid data-rich/Information poor) Sampling error (Uncertainty) Confidence Levels and Intervals –Important in compliance monitoring. –Higher confidence levels have wider intervals –More samples reduce the interval at a given level

14 CHEMICAL ASSESSMENT Statistical Approach (Avoid data-rich/Information poor) Parametric and non-parametric methods. –Parametric allows fewer samples eg 12 pa –UK River Classification assumes:* Normal distribution for DO Log-normal distribution for BOD and NH 4

15 CHEMICAL ASSESSMENT Sampling Programmes. Restricted sampling windows eg 09.00 to 16.00 hrs Relative and absolute objectives. –eg trend detection (relative) –eg what is mean nitrate level for water intake in a given river (absolute)

16 CHEMICAL ASSESSMENT Sampling Location. Divide river into stretches with defined beginnings and endings eg –major outfalls, major tributaries. –each stretch approximately 10Km (UK) One sampling point per stretch –accessible –not too close to local effects eg weirs, plumes, outfalls.

17 CHEMICAL ASSESSMENT Sampling Locations. Measure DO on-site. Store sample at< 5’C and send for analysis Transport time.

18 CHEMICAL ASSESSMENT Monitoring for Dangerous Chemicals in the UK List I : Surface waters downstream of Point Sources. All plants liable to handle and discharge All sewage treatment works with these substances Mainly cadmium, mercury and HCH (hexachlorocyclohexane, known as lindane) HCH from imported wool, treatment of seeds and domestic wood preservative. Cd failures mainly from minewaters.

19 CHEMICAL ASSESSMENT Monitoring for Dangerous Substances in the UK List II Substances Failures mainly copper, zinc and pH. –Main sources, industrial, domestic, mine drainage, contaminated land leachate. Zinc and pH. –China clay, contaminated land, point sources. Most pesticide discharges are diffuse.

20 CHEMICAL ASSESSMENT Monitoring Chemicals for Freshwater Fish DO, BOD, pH, ammonia, zinc, copper, and temperature. Domestic and industrial discharges, and drought main causes of failure River Ecosystem classification –RE1 - RE5

21 CHEMICAL ASSESSMENT Monitoring for Water Abstraction. Dissolved hydrocarbons, colour, copper, dissolved iron, nitrate and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) main causes of failure. Hydrocarbon, colour and iron mainly from natural sources. Nitrate limit 50mg/l. –68 Nitrate Vulnerable Zones. (Arable farming) –Control agricultural practice –Nitrogen limits on STWs >10,000pe.

22 Advantages and Disadvantages of Chemical Methods Advantages Quantitative Easy to sample Analysis easy (getting easier) Disadvantages Indirect –interpretation required Usually discontinuous you only find what you are looking for


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