The three workshops held, Ground Water,
Ecological Risk and Human Health Risk, held on Sunday 23 June
(preceeding the main conference) were to address the issues and
source characterization and contaminant modeling in ground water,
ecological and human health risk assessment. These workshops were
very popular and filled quickly.
Groundwater Workshop
CONVENER:
Dr Mike Annable (University of Florida), Professor Suresh Rao
(Purdue University) and Mr Dave Thomas (Golder
Associates)
This workshop aimed to cover the topics of site
characterisation techniques, water flow and contaminant transport
and applications to site remediation design and management.
The morning session included contaminated site
scenarios, regulatory drivers, hydrologic, biogeochemical and
traditional site characterisation techniques followed by innovative
site characterisation techniques and TRIAD approaches. This session
also addressed the fundamentals and principles of groundwater flow
and contaminant transport including flow and transport equations,
non-reactive solute transport, sorption and retardation models and
transformation synthesis.
The afternoon continued with a look at modelling followed by US
and Australian case studies in this area. The session focussed on
applications to site remediation design covering technology types,
excavation and containment options, extraction methods including
in-situ flushing, air sparging and thermal techniques and passive
options for remediation such as monitored natural attenuation,
transformation and destruction. The workshop concluded with a
discussion of Australian case studies.
Ecological Risk Workshop
CONVENER:
Associate Professor Megharaj Mallavarapu and Dr Belinda
Thompson
This workshop focussed on providing state of the
art knowledge on scientific basis for ecotoxicology and risk
assessment of contaminants (both organics and inorganics) and
contaminated sites. This course was targeted at scientists,
research students, regulators, contaminated land auditors,
consultants and industries responsible for management of
contaminated sites.
Program:
This course included both theory and practical lectures including
case studies. Theoretical lectures included:
- Scientific basis for Ecological risk assessment
- International framework for Ecological risk assessment
- National framework for Ecological Risk assessment and NEPM
- General concepts involving contaminant bioavailability
- Tools and techniques for Ecological risk assessment
- Heavy metal bioavailability: influence of soil and metal
properties
- Organic contaminant bioavailability: influence of soil and
contaminant properties
- Consequences of bioavailability to risk assessment of
contaminated sites
- Case studies on ecological risk assessment
Human Health Risk Workshop
CONVENERS:
Professor Simon Pollard and Professor Paul Nathanial
The workshop offered instruction in risk
assessment essentials and an expert exposure assessment update for
contaminated land professionals.
The morning session addressed the essential
features of human health risk assessment for practitioners,
including problem definition and conceptual model development,
source-pathway-receptor screening, risk criteria and the
appropriate use of soil guidelines, options appraisal and risk
communication. The session addressed the realistic
capabilities and common misconceptions of risk assessment, allowing
participants to apply these concepts professionally and responsibly
within a regulatory context.
The afternoon session provided an expert exposure
assessment session, bringing participants up to date on aspects
including recent work on individual exposure pathways, exposure and
land use scenarios and the derivation of soil assessment guideline
values. Participants left with a firm understanding of the
professional use and capabilities of human health risk assessment
and an appreciation of its limitations. The aim was to avoid
a ‘numbers-driven’ mentality, instead applying risk and
exposure assessment to informing better, more credible and
scientifically defensible decisions on land contamination and risk
management.