Environmental Incident Management
Environmental Incident Management
Environmental Incident Management
ENVIRONTMENTAL
INCIDENT
MANAGEMENT
SPEAKER
I What is an Incident?
IV Case Studies
V Q&A
What is an
INCIDENT?
WHAT IS AN INCIDENT?
employee without necessarily touching them, including heights, noise, SPILL (OIL/CHEMICAL SUBSTANCES)
radiation and pressure. PROPERTY DAMAGE
• Safety. These are hazards that create unsafe working conditions. NEAR MISS
• Ergonomic. Ergonomic hazards are a result of physical factors that can
result in musculoskeletal injuries.
• Psychosocial. Psychosocial hazards include those that can have an
adverse effect on an employee’s mental health or wellbeing.
4
I ENVIRONMENTAL INCIDENT
Air Pollution - Black Smoke - Chemical Spill - Oil Spill - Fly tipping - Waste
The biggest oil spill in US history - 4 million barrels (1 barrel = 159 Liter)
4 Million Barrels Of Oil to Liters = 635,949,179.712
What is the
importance of
incident
management?
Environmental Incident Management
Workflow:
- Prevention/Mitigation
- Preparation
- Response
- Recovery
MITIGATION / PREVENTION
Booms
In-situ burning (ISB)
Absorbents 8
RECOVERY
9
CASE STUDY:
CHERNOBYL
The Worst Nuclear Power Plant
Disaster in History
OVERVIEW 10 days fire
26 April 1986, The Worst Nuclear Power Plant
Disaster in History - Level 7, Chernobyl Plant - 30 workers died due to ARS
Ukraine
1000 workers exposed (Люди Чернобыля, 2015)
high-level radiation
Explosion
(World Nuclear Association, 2016)
Human
• Internal dose
Iodine-131, • External dose
caesium-134, Urban Environment
▪ Non-cancer diseases:
Internal dose from the ingestion of • Radiation induced cataracts in clean-up workers
food products and water • Potentially increased risk of cardiovascular diseases
among clean-up workers
(Timeline of events | The Chernobyl Gallery, 2017) (Timeline of events | The Chernobyl Gallery, 2017) (Timeline of events | The Chernobyl Gallery, 2017) (Timeline of events | The Chernobyl Gallery, 2017)
Involved Stakeholders
Monitoring
Involved Stakeholders - Immediate
The term “liquidator” is now used to describe workers who entered areas designated as “Somebody had to do it…”
“contaminated” between 1986 and 1989 to help reduce the consequences of the Alexander Fedotov (liquidator)
explosion.
• These people included:
• power plants operators
• emergency workers such as firefighters
• military personnel
• as well as many non-professionals.
• Their tasks included:
• cleaning up the debris from around the reactor
• construction of the sarcophagus
• decontamination, road building
• destruction and burial of contaminated buildings, forests and equipment.
Another involved stakeholders:
• The Pripyat department of the Ministry of Home Affairs, Deputy Health Minister, and
other Soviet bureaucrats
• Police assistance
All pictures, (The Chernobyl Gallery, 2007)
• Media
Involved Stakeholders – Post Accident
The Chernobyl Forums
• The Chernobyl Forum is an initiative of the
IAEA, in cooperation with:
• WHO (World Health Organisation)
• UNDP (United Nations Development Programme)
• FAO (Food and Agriculture Organization),
• UNEP (United Nations Environment Programme)
• UN-OCHA (Office for the Coordination of
Humanitarian Affairs)
• UNSCEAR (United Nations Scientific Committee on
the Effects of Atomic Radiation)
• World Bank
• Governments of Belarus, the Russian
Federation and Ukraine. The Forum was
created as a contribution to the United
Nations’ ten-year strategy for Chernobyl,
launched in 2002
(Chernobyl’s Legacy: Health, Environmental and Socio-Economic Impacts and Recommendations
to the Governments of Belarus, the Russian Federation and Ukraine, 2005)
Monitoring
Meteorological Information :
Atmospheric precipitation plays an important
role in determining whether an area might
receive heavy contamination
(IAEA., 2006)
(IAEA., 2006)
Monitoring – Water River Groundwater
Method: spectrometers
In all water bodies the radioactivity
levels declined rapidly during the first
few weeks
Due to decay of short lived isotopes
and absorption of nuclides to
catchment soils and river bed
sediments (IAEA., 2006)
(IAEA., 2006)
(Chernobyl’s Legacy: Health, Environmental and Socio-Economic Impacts and Recommendations to the
(IAEA., 2006) Governments of Belarus, the Russian Federation and Ukraine, 2005)
Countermeasure
Remediation
Clean Up
Lesson Learnt
Recommendation
Sarcophagus A giant metal concrete and structure
Methods Targets
• Banning cattle slaughter • Milk
• Food Processing • Meat
• Diet Changing • Potatoes
• Indoor Feeding • Root Vegetables
• Radiological monitoring • Grain
• Deep ploughing
Livestock, (The Chernobyl Gallery, 2007)
Outside countries actions
• Sweden: Cattle were not put on to pasture if the ground
deposition exceeded 10 kBq/m2 of 131I and 3 kBq/m2 of
radiocaesium
Methods Targets
• Fire Prevention • Food Product
The fallout from Chernobyl, (NBC News, 2011)
• Alteration • Meat Consumption
• Restriction • Firewood
• Access • Ash for fertilizer
Aquatic - Water - Liquid Remediation
• Massive silt traps were constructed, along with an enormous 30m-
deep underground barrier to prevent groundwater from the
destroyed reactor entering the Pripyat River.
• To protect water systems from the transfer of radionuclides from
contaminated soils.
• The most effective countermeasure was the early restriction of
drinking water abstraction and the change to alternative supplies.
• Restrictions on the consumption of freshwater, fish have proved Liquid Radioactive Waste Treatment Plant (LRTP) (Taylor, 2016)
Methods Targets
• Construct Protective Dam/Silt traps • Groundwater
• Cooling Pond • River
• Liquid Radioactive Waste Treatment Plant • Lake
(LRTP) • Freshwater
• The Interim Spent Fuel Storage Facility • Fish
(Under Construction) • Liquid Waste The Interim Spent Fuel Storage Facility(Taylor, 2016)
Solid Remediation
• Industrial Complex for Radwaste Management (ICSRM) is the newest facility.
Common process:
• The solid radioactive wastes temporarily stored in bunkers is removed for treatment.
• These wastes are processed into a form suitable for permanent safe disposal.
• Low- and intermediate-level wastes are separated into combustible, compactable, and non-
compactable categories. These are then subject to incineration, high-force compaction, and
cementation respectively.
• Highly radioactive and long-lived solid waste is sorted out for temporary separate storage.
• In the third step, the conditioned solid waste materials are transferred to containers suitable for
permanent safe storage.
• The storage area is designed to hold 55,000 m3 of treated waste which will be subject to Aerial view of the Vektor complex site (Savannah River Nuclear Solutions, 2011)
radiological monitoring for 300 years.
Methods
• Incineration
• High-Force Compaction
• Cementation
• Phytoremediation
• Solid radioactive waste storage facility
• Radioactive Waste Disposal Storage (RWDS)
• Radioactive Waste Interim Localization Sites
(RWILS)
Buryakovka RWDS Site(Savannah River Nuclear Solutions, 2011)
Decommissioning Process of Facility
Kompleksny RWDS:
• contaminated soil
• metal structures
• chunks of the roofing materials
• concrete from the ChNPP Fourth Reactor Unit was placed
into metal 1.5-m3 containers and those metal containers
were installed into waterproof reinforced concrete tanks
Podlesny RWDS:
• Metal
• dumped non-containerized waste
• reactor graphite
• fragments of reactor structures and other metal
structures
• chunks of fuel assemblies
• decontamination waste
Buryakovka RWDS:
• associated with contaminated machinery
• metal and reinforced concrete structures
• protective clothing
Kompleksny RWDS Site(Savannah River Nuclear Solutions, 2011) • debris
The New Safe Confinement (NSC)
• A New Safe Confinement (NSC) structure is due to be
completed in 2017, being built adjacent and then moved
into place on rails.
• It is an arch 110 metres high, 165 metres long and
spanning 260 metres, to cover both unit 4 and the hastily-
built 1986 structure.
• The arch frame is a lattice construction of tubular steel
members, equipped with internal cranes.
• The NSC is the largest moveable land-based structure ever
built.
• The hermetically sealed building will allow engineers to
remotely dismantle the 1986 structure that has shielded
the remains of the reactor from the weather since the
weeks after the accident.
• It will enable the eventual removal of the fuel-containing
materials (FCM) in the bottom of the reactor building and
accommodate their characterisation, compaction and
packing for disposal.
WORKER COMPETENCY
Human error:
Operator/Worker knowledge
and competency are essential.
Mobile Communication – Clear instruction, Action registered,
interconnection with other controllers, read and confirm the
message before take the decision.
NEW TECHNOLOGY
The new safe confinement (NSC)
is the newest technology for LONG TERM
TECHNOLOGICALLY
dealing with Chernobyl disaster ENIRONMENTAL,
BASED REMEDIATION
impact. HEALTH AND SOCIAL
MEASURES
RESEARCH
(BALONOV, 2006)
END
THANK YOU
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