PhytoDec A Decision Support System to quantify cost/benefit relationships of the use of vegetation in the management of heavy metal polluted soils and dredged sediments
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Country: EU Projects
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Start Date:
31/8/2000
Duration: 48
months
Project Type: RTD
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Contract Number: EVK1-CT-1999-00024
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Organisation Type:
EC Project |
Topics:
Contaminated land-->Remediation options-->In situ treatment technologies Contaminated land-->Remediation options-->Recycling/reuse Contaminated land-->Risk management-->Selection of remediation options Sediments
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Project objectives:
PhytoDec aimed at the construction of a Decision Support System (DSS) to assess the practical applicability of phytoremediation in quantitative terms; together with an annexed analytical protocol for monitoring purposes the DSS constitutes the main project deliverable. The DSS enables the assessment of practical applicability of the use of vegetation to abate soil pollution, in comparison to other soil remediation options, through relating cost parameters to environmental effectiveness parameters. The approach, adopted to reach this main project objective within the four years of project duration starts with filling the most important remaining process-related knowledge gaps, that greatly affect phytoremediation practical applicability, including:
long term cost/benefit relationships;
the importance of environmental side-effects;
effective monitoring of phyto-stabilisation effects;
prediction of phyto-extraction duration, based on soil chemical and plant physiological processes.
During DSS-construction extensive attention is given to the validation of the DSS and more specifically its process-related calculation routines. This is achieved though carrying out mesocosm experiments and field trials during all four years of project duration. Extension to end-users starts in an early project phase, making use of all partner's scientific, political and potential end-user networks. At the end of the project a workshop will be organised to finally present the DSS to a representative and influential group of end-users at a European level.
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Project
Summary:
The use of vegetation to reduce migration of heavy metals from soils and soil amendments to groundwater and surface water, has received much attention in recent years. Process studies and field trials however are poorly interconnected and field trials results not comparable. Cost/benefit relationships to compare this method with others are rudimentary. Therefore this project aims at developing a decision support system (DS) and validate it through intensive monitoring of mesocosm experiments and field trials. Field sites are selected on the basis of (i) pollution level/history, (ii) hydrological/soil conditions, (iii) ongoing soil remediation researchMissing know-how is gathered as well, related to (i) environmental side-effects of the method, (ii) monitoring phytostabilisation, (iii) phyto-extraction 'fading out'. In-project extention to end-users turns the DSS into a management tool, ready to be used by policy-makers and problemowners.
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Achieved Objectives:
During the project a decision support system (Phyto-DSS) was constructed that enabled the assessment of cost/effectiveness relationships for the use of vegetation to abate soil pollution, in comparison to other soil remediation options;
Phyto-DSS was validated in mesocosm experiments and field trials, evaluating numerous and greatly varying phytoremediation approaches under different conditions (climate, soil composition, pollution level and pollution history).
Additional experiments and model development were carried out. The topics were:
Improving phytostabilisation monitoring techniques through the application of specific and validated solvent extraction techniques.
Quantification of environmental side-effects: soil ecological effects as a result of interaction with rhizosphere soil life and interaction with PAH-degradation (natural attenuation) in dredged sediments
Evaluation of phyto-extraction 'fading out' mechanisms, supporting (or not) the model assumption, that plant uptake of heavy metals depends on actual bio-available fractions, i.e. heavy metals present in the soil solution.
Improving arsenic modelling, to obtain a reliable 'transfer function' for arsenic to be used for the Phyto-DSS mechanistic basis.
Carrying out plant physiological experiments (using autoradiography techniques) to study the fate of heavy metals in roots and shoots as a tool to select appropriate vegetation types for phytoextraction and phytostabilisation.
Carrying out rapid soil additive tests to check general phytoavailability after amending different additives, using lettuce and tobacco as indicator plants.
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Product Descriptions:
PhytoDec aimed at the construction of a Decision Support System (DSS) to assess the practical applicability of phytoremediation in quantitative terms; together with an annexed analytical protocol for monitoring purposes the DSS constituted the main project deliverable.
The decision support system and the manual can be downloaded from the project web page (ready for application level.
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Additional Information:
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Project Resources:
REC (Risk reduction, Environmental merit and Costs) Decision Support System
REC-model for diffusively polluted areas. Decision support system for remediation strategies, including Risk, Environmental merits and Costs
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Weblink:
http://www.alterra-research.nl/pls/portal30/docs/folder/phytodec/index.htm
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Funding Programme(s):
EC Framework Programme 5
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Link to Organisations:
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Submitted by:
Prof Paul Bardos
Who does what?
03/07/2003 17:48:00
Updated by:
Professor Paul Bardos
Who does what?
03/10/2006 14:17:00
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