Inventory of PCBs in Chicago and Opportunities for Reduction in Airborne Emissions and Human Exposure
Chicago
Air Pollutants
Sewage
Polychlorinated Biphenyls
01 natural sciences
6. Clean water
12. Responsible consumption
Waste Disposal Facilities
13. Climate action
Air Pollution
11. Sustainability
Humans
Soil Pollutants
Environmental Monitoring
0105 earth and related environmental sciences
DOI:
10.1021/acs.est.5b00906
Publication Date:
2015-10-06T23:08:50Z
AUTHORS (4)
ABSTRACT
Urban areas are important regional sources of airborne polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) and population-scale airborne exposure, yet a comprehensive bottom-up source inventory of PCB emissions has never been quantified at urban scales in the United States. Here we report a comprehensive parcel level inventory of PCB stocks and emissions for Chicago, Illinois, developed with a transferable method from publicly available data. Chicago's legacy stocks hold 276 ± 147 tonnes ∑PCBs, with 0.2 tonnes added annually. Transformers and building sealants represent the largest legacy categories at 250 and 20 tonnes, respectively. From these stocks, annual emissions rates of 203 kg for ∑PCBs and 3 kg for PCB 11 explain observed concentrations in Chicago air. Sewage sludge drying contributes 25% to emissions, soils 31%, and transformers 21%. Known contaminated sites account for <1% of stocks and 17% of emissions to air. Paint is responsible for 0.00001% of stocks but up to 7% of ∑PCBs emissions. Stocks and emissions are highly concentrated and not correlated with population density or demographics at the neighborhood scale. Results suggest that strategies to further reduce exposure and ecosystem deposition must focus on the largest emissions sources rather than the most contaminated sites or the largest closed source legacy stocks.
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