<>EPA
www.epa.gov/ord/lrp
science in ACTION
BUILDING A SCIENTIFIC FOUNDATION FOR SOUND ENVIRONMENTAL DECISIONS
LAND RESEARCH
PROGRAM
COMPARING WAYS TO REDUCE RISK ASSISTS
WITH REDUCTION OF HIGH-PRIORITY CHEMICALS
Issue
EPA has identified 31 "high-
priority chemicals" in waste that
are of particular concern because
of their toxicity, persistence, and
tendency to bioaccumulate.
Having achieved its goal of
reducing the presence of these
chemicals in hazardous waste by
50 percent, EPA set a new goal:
an additional 10 percent reduction
of priority chemicals by 2008.
EPA is engaged in a national
initiative to encourage public and
private organizations to form
voluntary partnerships with EPA
to reduce the use or release of any
of the 31 priority chemicals.
Under the National Partnership
for Environmental Priorities
(NPEP) initiative, EPA and its
volunteer partners are working to
reduce four million pounds of
priority chemicals used or
released into the environment by
2011.
Science Objective
To support the NPEP initiative,
the Land Research Program in
EPA's Office of Research and
Development initiated a study in
2005 to compare risk-reduction
efforts at waste-management
units (e.g., landfill, waste pile,
aerated tank, surface
impoundment, or land-application
unit) to show the expected
benefits of reducing the use and
release of priority chemicals.
Scientists selected these five
waste-management units for
study because they exemplified
waste-management scenarios at
industrial facilities across the
United States.
The Multimedia, Multipathway,
Multireceptor Risk Assessment
(3MRA) modeling system was
used for the risk assessments.
The study was designed to
provide an integrated assessment
of the benefits of reducing
priority chemicals by predicting
increased protection across a wide
range of waste concentrations.
This research has enabled
scientists in the Land Research
Program to generate important
risk-assessment information. This
research effort:
• Identified which human health
or ecological receptor will be at
greatest risk
• Identified dominant media (e.g.,
air) and exposure pathways
(e.g., inhalation) for each
waste-management unit and
chemical
• Demonstrated the usefulness of
the 3MRA modeling system for
conducting national exposure
and risk studies
Application and Impact
Decision-makers can use this
comparative risk-reduction
analysis to weigh their concerns
against anticipated scenarios in
order to select a waste-
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U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
Office of Research and Development
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&EPA
www.epa.gov/ord/lrp
science in ACTION
BUILDING A SCIENTIFIC FOUNDATION FOR SOUND ENVIRONMENTAL DECISIONS
LAND RESEARCH PROGRAM
con l i n u eil from fro n I
management plan that leads to the
least risk. Regulators and policy
makers can use the analysis to
determine waste-minimization
strategies for a given chemical
and waste-management unit.
The analysis is being used by the
EPA office of Solid Waste to
establish a performance metric of
priority chemical reduction. In
addition, consideration can be
given to the benefit of pursuing
voluntary reduction programs for
selected chemicals. For example,
the Office of Solid Waste's
Resource Conservation Challenge
uses the analysis to supplement
the objectives of the Resource
Conservation and Recovery Act.
Calculating the percentage
increase in the number of
protected waste sites and
comparing it with the percentage
reduction in the concentration of
high-priority chemicals in the
waste stream will inform waste-
management solutions that
enhance environmental
protection.
REFERENCES
Babendreier, J.E., W. Brandes, Z. Saleem, et al.
(2005). "A Comparative Risk Reduction Analysis
of the Office of Solid Waste's Waste Minimization
Priority Chemicals (WMPC) Initiative Using the
3MRA Multimedia Modeling System."
Presentation for the Board of Scientific Counselors
Land Goal Research Program Review Panel,
Cincinnati, OH, December.
Priority Chemicals and Chemical Fact Sheets
http://www.epa.gov/epaoswer/hazwaste/minimize/
chemlist.htm
CONTACT
Justin Babendreier, EPA's National Exposure
Research Laboratory, 706-355-8344,
babendreier.justintoiepa.gov
October 2008
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
Office of Research and Development
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