This section presents ATSDR's evaluation of the air exposure pathway for the TSCA Incinerator. The PHA focuses largely on the air exposure pathway because it presents the most likely route by which residents might come into contact with the incinerator's environmental releases. ATSDR considers other exposure pathways (e.g., drinking surface water, contacting soils, eating fish and other locally harvested food items) in Section V of this PHA. Further, ATSDR is currently preparing another PHA that evaluates off-site environmental contamination levels in multiple media, whether that contamination originates from the TSCA Incinerator or from other sources.
This section describes the use of a screening procedure to identify contaminants of potential health concern for the TSCA Incinerator; Section IV then evaluates the public health implications of exposures to those contaminants. This section begins by describing the methodology ATSDR routinely uses to evaluate air exposures (see Section III.A), and then reviews what contaminants have been measured in the TSCA Incinerator's air emissions (see Section III.B), how those contaminants move through the air (see Section III.C), and what levels of contamination have been measured in the local air (see Section III.D). Those interested in only an overview of the air exposure pathway should refer to the summary (see Section III.E), which synthesizes the information on emissions, fate and transport, and ambient air monitoring.
ATSDR's public health assessment process emphasizes the importance of exposure pathways, or the different ways that people can come into contact with environmental contaminants. Analyzing exposure pathways is important because, if residents are not exposed to a site's environmental contamination, then the contaminants cannot pose a public health hazard and additional analyses are not necessary. If residents are exposed to site-related contaminants, then further analysis is needed to characterize the exposure — that said, however, the fact that exposure occurs does not mean that residents necessarily will have health effects or get sick. In fact, for many contaminants, environmental exposures are often far lower than the exposures people experience through their diets and perhaps through their occupations. In cases where exposures do occur, ATSDR must answer several questions to understand the public health implications:
These are just some of the issues ATSDR considers when assessing whether harmful health effects might result from exposure.
An initial step in the exposure pathway evaluation is clearly defining the issues to be evaluated. As stated previously, this section focuses entirely on the air exposure pathway in order to address the issues of greatest concern to residents. ATSDR has not overlooked the possibility that contaminants released from the TSCA Incinerator might be found in other environmental media (e.g., surface water, groundwater, soil). Rather, ATSDR will consider this possibility in an upcoming PHA that examines an extremely broad data set of recent off-site contamination levels. To define further the air exposure issues for this PHA, ATSDR identified the populations of concern and the time frames, locations, and contaminants of greatest interest. The text box below outlines the scope of the air exposure pathway evaluation.
Scope of the Air Exposure Pathway Evaluation
Who: What populations are considered in the exposure evaluation? As Section II explains, this PHA addresses exposures that local community members might experience, outside of any ORR-related occupational exposures.
When: What exposure time frame does this PHA consider? This PHA examines exposures only for when the TSCA Incinerator conducted routine operations—1991 to the present. Future exposures may occur as long as the incinerator operates.
Where: Over what area does this PHA evaluate exposures? Modeling studies predict that the highest residential exposure levels to the TSCA Incinerator's emissions are at off-site locations nearest to ETTP, and exposure levels steadily decrease with distance from the site. However, there is no "magic line" that separates exposed and non-exposed populations. This PHA evaluates exposures for locations within 5 miles of the TSCA Incinerator, with the understanding that the highest exposures occur in this area and that all exposures at locations further away are undoubtedly lower.
What: What contaminants does this PHA consider? The PHA examines exposures to contaminants that the TSCA Incinerator likely releases. Emissions from sources other than the TSCA Incinerator are considered in these evaluations, as appropriate, to provide perspective on exposures. Section III.B.1 identifies eight groups of contaminants that ATSDR considers in this PHA.
After establishing the scope of this evaluation, ATSDR used a screening process to identify the contaminants of potential health concern that warrant more detailed consideration (see Section IV). Figure 9 depicts this screening process, in which measured or estimated environmental contamination levels — in this case, ambient air concentrations and radiation levels — are compared with medium-specific comparison values. Comparison values (see definition in Appendix E) are developed from the scientific literature concerning exposure and health effects. To be protective of human health, most comparison values have safety factors built into them. For some contaminants, the safety factors are quite large (a factor of 100 or greater). As a result, contamination levels lower than their corresponding health-protective comparison values are generally considered to be safe and not expected to cause harmful health effects. In other words, these comparison values are generally (and intentionally) selected to be lower than the lowest environmental concentrations known to be associated with adverse health effects, considering an ample margin of safety. But the opposite is not true: contamination levels greater than comparison values are not necessarily harmful. Rather, contaminants found above comparison values require a more detailed toxicologic or radiologic evaluation. In short, ATSDR uses health-protective comparison values to identify contaminants of potential health concern, which require more detailed evaluations (see Section IV) to assess the public health implications of exposure. Appendix D defines the specific comparison values used in this PHA.
The remainder of this section draws from emissions studies, air dispersion modeling studies, and ambient air monitoring or ambient air sampling studies to identify contaminants released by the TSCA Incinerator and to select contaminants of potential health concern. Section III.E summarizes the findings of this exposure pathway evaluation.
Figure 9. Process for Selecting Contaminants of Potential Health Concern
III.B. Emissions: What Contaminants Are Released to the Air?
Since 1991, DOE and other parties have compiled extensive information on the amounts of air pollutants that the TSCA Incinerator releases. This section reviews that information, both for stack emissions (Section III.B.2) and for fugitive emissions (Section III.B.3). As noted earlier in this PHA, stack emissions from the TSCA Incinerator are air releases through confined streams, specifically the main stack and the TRV. "Fugitive emissions" refers to all other releases, such as passive venting, wind-blown dust, and evaporative losses. Before reviewing information on stack and fugitive emissions, this section first identifies eight groups of contaminants that hazardous waste incinerators commonly release. The analyses throughout this PHA focus entirely on these groups of contaminants.
This section then reviews emissions data primarily to identify contaminants released from the incinerator. ATSDR typically does not base conclusions on emissions data alone — air emissions disperse considerably between their sources and the locations where people might be exposed. For this reason, ATSDR's environmental health conclusions are based on a combined assessment of emissions data, fate and transport studies, and ambient air monitoring and ambient air sampling studies.
Groups of contaminants ATSDR evaluated. This PHA evaluates the public health implications of exposure to the following eight groups of contaminants:
Taken together, these groups include more than 500 individual contaminants. Refer to Table 6 for more information on these groups. |
III.B.1. Groups of Contaminants to Evaluate
Incinerators release many different contaminants into the air. These include typical combustion by-products, products of incomplete combustion, and incombustible materials in the waste stream. The emission rate of a given contaminant typically varies with time and depends on the composition of waste material being treated, the incinerator's operating parameters, and the effectiveness of air pollution controls. Multiple federal agencies have published review documents evaluating general public health issues for incineration facilities and identify contaminants that tend to be of greatest concern (ATSDR 2002; EPA 1998; NRC 2000). Using information in these review documents, ATSDR identified eight groups of contaminants to evaluate in this PHA. Table 6 identifies these groups, defines what contaminants fall into them, and explains how they relate to the TSCA Incinerator. The analyses that follow are organized around these contaminant groups.
Table 6. Contaminant Groups Evaluated in this PHA
Group Name |
Contaminants within the Group |
Relationship to Incineration Facilities |
---|---|---|
Particulate matter |
PM2.5, PM10, TSP |
Virtually all combustion processes generate airborne particles and droplets. Air pollution controls at the TSCA Incinerator remove most particulate matter from the air exhaust, but some particulates are released. |
VOCs |
Numerous organic compounds with low molecular weight and high volatility |
Waste feeds at the TSCA Incinerator, especially the liquid feeds, contain many VOCs. While the incineration process efficiently destroys most VOCs in the waste feed, trace amounts might pass through untreated. Incomplete combustion might generate trace amounts of other VOCs. |
PCBs |
209 individual chemicals, known as PCB congeners, that share a common chemical structure |
PCBs are found in liquid and solid waste feeds to the TSCA Incinerator. Although the incinerator must destroy more than 99.9999% of the PCBs in these feeds, trace amounts might pass through the incinerator untreated. PCBs are not combustion by-products. |
Metals |
Numerous elements which, when pure, conduct heat and electricity and are generally hard and strong |
Metals pass through incineration processes untreated, either into the residuals (e.g., ash) or into the air emissions. Though air pollution controls at the TSCA Incinerator remove considerable amounts of metals from the air exhaust, some metals from the waste feed do pass into the air untreated. |
Acidic gases |
Multiple inorganic compounds, such as hydrogen chloride and hydrogen fluoride |
Acidic gases form in nearly all fuel and waste combustion processes, including incineration. The TSCA Incinerator’s air pollution controls remove over 99% of hydrogen chloride in the process gas stream. |
Dioxins and furans |
210 individual chemicals, known as congeners, that share some common chemical structures |
Dioxins and furans form in processes that burn mixtures containing both chlorine and organic material. Incinerator and air pollution control design can greatly reduce, but not eliminate, formation and release of dioxins and furans. |
PAHs |
Numerous organic compounds characterized by having multiple aromatic rings |
The TSCA Incinerator likely destroys PAHs in the waste feed efficiently. Most PAHs in air emissions likely result from incomplete combustion of organic materials in the waste feeds. |
Radionuclides |
Unstable or radioactive forms of any element |
The waste feed to the TSCA Incinerator contains radionuclides, which pass through the combustion chambers untreated. The radionuclides leave the facility either in residuals (e.g., ash) or in air emissions. Air pollution controls remove most radionuclides from the gas stream, but trace amounts do pass through the entire process and vent into the air. |
Note: In this PHA, the term "dioxins" refers to the group of chemicals known as chlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins, and "furans" refers to the group of chemicals known as chlorodibenzofurans. ATSDR notes that the TSCA Incinerator likely emits additional pollutants, such as trace amounts of additional semi-volatile organic compounds. However, the waste composition data that ATSDR reviewed (DOE 2003a) suggests that the quantities of these compounds emitted are likely immeasurably small.
Since 1988, DOE and its contractors have conducted numerous studies to measure both how efficiently the TSCA Incinerator destroys wastes and how much contamination the site releases into the air. The following discussion summarizes the available information on the TSCA Incinerator's emissions, first for routine releases through the main process stack and then for episodic releases through the TRV:
Table 7 summarizes key findings of the stack emissions tests and reveals two notable findings. First, the table shows that emission rates have been measured for all eight groups of contaminants that ATSDR is evaluating in this PHA. While some groups of contaminants have been studied more extensively than others, there are no notable data gaps in terms of the contaminants that have been considered. Second, the final column in Table 7 indicates that the measured emission rates generally met permitted limits, in cases where such limits have been established. As the exceptions, a small fraction of the measured emission rates for particulate matter have exceeded permitted limits, and some stack gas concentrations for semi-volatile metals (cadmium and lead) in 2000 and 2001 exceeded technology-based (i.e., not health-based) emissions standards that EPA would later establish in MACT standards. Fortunately, fairly extensive ambient air monitoring data are available for these contaminants. As Section III.D details, those ambient air monitoring data indicate that off-site airborne levels of particulate matter, cadmium, and lead have always been below levels of health concern, despite the fact that emission rates and stack gas concentrations have occasionally exceeded permitted limits or emissions standards.
Table 7. Emissions Data Available for the Groups of Contaminants
Contaminant Group |
Air Emission Rates Measured Using: |
Overall Findings |
||
---|---|---|---|---|
Trial Burns |
Performance Tests |
Continuous Sampling |
||
Particulate matter |
Ö |
Ö |
Ö |
The overwhelming majority of tests, but not every test, have shown compliance with permitted limits for stack gas concentrations and emission rates. In addition, an extremely large volume of ambient air monitoring is available to support health conclusions on particulate matter (see Section III.D). Continuous emissions monitoring is about to begin. |
VOCs |
Ö |
|
|
No permit limits are available for individual VOCs. Conclusions are based on dispersion modeling analyses (see Section III.C). |
PCBs |
Ö |
|
|
Both trial burns showed that the incinerator’s DRE for PCBs is higher than the required limit (99.9999%). Modeling estimates (see Section III.C) and monitoring data (see Section III.D) for PCBs were also considered. |
Metals |
Ö |
Ö |
Ö |
All tests conducted since the incinerator began routine operations have shown compliance with health-protective emissions limits for beryllium, lead, and mercury. Stack gas concentration limits have consistently been met for mercury and low-volatile metals (arsenic, beryllium, and chromium). In 2000 and 2001, some stack gas concentrations for cadmium and lead exceeded limits that EPA would later establish in MACT standards. ATSDR used an extensive database of ambient air monitoring results to evaluate the metals further (see Section III.D, Appendix A.3). |
Acidic gases |
Ö |
Ö |
|
Every measured emission rate of hydrogen fluoride and hydrogen chloride to date has been at least an order of magnitude lower than the corresponding permitted emission limits. |
Dioxins and furans |
Ö |
|
|
Stack gas concentrations of dioxins and furans have always been lower than levels set in the recent emissions standards. Ambient air monitoring data for dioxins and furans were also reviewed (see Section III.D). |
PAHs |
Ö |
|
|
There are no permit limits for individual PAHs. Conclusions are based on dispersion modeling analyses (see Section III.C). |
Radionuclides |
|
|
Ö |
There are no permit limits for individual radionuclides. Conclusions are based on dispersion modeling analyses (see Section III.C) and ambient air monitoring data (see Section III.D). |
Notes: Refer to Appendix A for detailed reviews of the trial burns, performance tests, and continuous emissions monitoring at the TSCA Incinerator.
Emission rates have never been measured during times when the TRV is open. Measuring such emissions presents several logistical challenges. For instance, specialized equipment would be necessary to sample releases, given that afterburner gases would likely be at temperatures (>2,200 degrees Fahrenheit) that would damage conventional stack testing equipment. Further, field personnel who sample air in close proximity to such high-temperature gases face very serious health and safety issues. Finally, the short time scales of TRV releases present difficulties — many EPA stack testing methods require sampling of at least an hour's duration to get adequate sample volumes. For these reasons, ATSDR is not convinced of the feasibility of measuring emission rates when the TRV is open, especially considering that DOE already collects ambient air samples at upwind and downwind locations during these times. Refer to Section III.D for ATSDR's review of the ambient air sampling that has occurred during the TRV events.
Residents are not exposed directly to the incinerator's emissions. ATSDR reviews emissions data to better characterize what is released. Air monitoring data (see Section III.D) offer the best insights into airborne contamination levels that people might breathe. |
In summary, DOE has extensively characterized routine emissions through the incinerator's main stack. In reaching health conclusions for the TSCA Incinerator, ATSDR considered the measured emission rates, along with findings from the fate and transport and ambient air monitoring studies. ATSDR does not view the absence of measured emission rates for TRV openings as a critical data gap, given the fact that air samples are collected during all TRV events and that the events occur so infrequently. (Note, not all samples collected during TRV events are currently analyzed.)
Measuring fugitive emission rates is inherently difficult, considering that industrial facilities' releases can occur from numerous locations. The exact amount of fugitive emissions from the TSCA Incinerator is not known, but two observations suggest that the amount is relatively low. First, DOE is required to implement a fugitive emissions monitoring program, in which periodic measurements of organic vapors are taken throughout the facility to ensure that process leaks and other fugitive emissions sources are identified and promptly controlled. Second, the following facility design features help minimize fugitive emissions:
Combined, these observations suggest that the fugitive emissions are minimal, though the exact amount of fugitive emissions remains unknown. The independent panel of experts chartered by the Governor of Tennessee reached a similar finding regarding the TSCA Incinerator's fugitive emissions (Iglar et al. 1998).
ATSDR does not view the lack of quantitative fugitive emissions data as a critical data gap — the extensive ambient air monitoring data and ambient air sampling data for this site (see Section III.D) characterize the air quality impacts from all local sources of emissions, including the fugitive emissions from the TSCA Incinerator.
III.C. Fate and Transport: How Do the Contaminants Move through the Air?
Dispersion models estimate air quality impacts from an emissions source based on a scientific understanding of how contamination moves through the air. The models can only estimate ambient air concentrations, and these estimates may understate or overstate actual air quality impacts. The accuracy of modeling outputs largely depends on the scientific rigor of the model itself and the quality and representativeness of model input parameters. |
ATSDR identified two air dispersion modeling studies of the TSCA Incinerator's emissions. The independent panel chartered by the Governor of Tennessee conducted one study (Iglar et al. 1998) and DOE conducted the other (DOE 1997–2002). To address limitations in these studies, ATSDR conducted an additional modeling evaluation. Appendix B presents detailed reviews of these three modeling studies.
The independent panel's modeling study concludes that the incinerator's air quality impacts are greatest at locations southwest and northeast of the TSCA Incinerator. This finding is not surprising, given the prevailing wind patterns and local terrain features. The exact point of maximum impact was predicted to be 0.4 miles southwest of the stack, at a location within ETTP (Iglar et al. 1998). ATSDR used modeling results predicted at this on-site location to identify contaminants of concern. This approach is believed to be health-protective because the maximum air quality impacts found within ETTP are higher than the incinerator-related impacts that most residents experience, whether for short-term or long-term exposures.
Table 8 outlines key findings from the three modeling studies reviewed in this PHA. While detailed reviews of the individual studies are in Appendix B, several general observations should be noted. First, between the three modeling studies, all eight groups of contaminants of interest for the TSCA Incinerator were evaluated, leaving no notable data gaps. Second, with one exception addressed below, the modeling for every contaminant group found that estimated annual average ambient air concentrations were lower than health-based comparison values. In the cases of particulate matter, most VOCs, PCBs, acidic gases, dioxins and furans, and PAHs, the estimated concentrations were all more than 100 times lower than the corresponding health-based comparison values. While ATSDR acknowledges that modeling analyses such as these have inherent uncertainties, these analyses appear to be scientifically sound and to offer reasonable accounts of the incinerator's air quality impacts (see Appendix B). Of course, no air dispersion model is perfect; for this reason, ATSDR carefully reviewed the extremely large volume of ambient air monitoring data (see Section III.D) for this site to assess the accuracy of the modeling estimates. Overall, the information in Table 8 suggests that the TSCA Incinerator's air emissions do not cause residents to be exposed to unhealthful levels of air contaminants, at least over the long term.
Three additional comments on the modeling analyses deserve mention. 1) all of the modeling studies considered for this PHA predicted ambient air concentrations representative of chronic exposures as a result of routine stack releases, and did not consider potential acute exposures nor non-routine releases through the TRV. ATSDR's review of ambient air sampling data during TRV events (see Section III.D) provides perspective on the acute exposure scenarios that appear to be of greatest concern. 2) the extensive ambient air monitoring data (see Section III.D) for many of the contaminants, especially particulate matter, metals, and radionuclides, compensates for any inherent uncertainties in the modeling analyses. 3) using the independent panel's modeling analysis, ATSDR selected chromium as a contaminant of concern. This selection was made due to the lack of information on the relative amounts of trivalent and hexavalent chromium in the ambient air. Section IV.C of this PHA revisits this issue.
Table 8. Fate and Transport Modeling Results Available for the Groups of Contaminants
Contaminant Group |
Modeling Evaluation Conducted by: |
Overall Findings |
||
---|---|---|---|---|
Governor of Tennessee’s Independent Panel |
DOE |
ATSDR |
||
Particulate matter |
Ö |
|
|
The estimated annual average concentration of particulate matter at the point of maximum impact was 0.067 µg/m3 — considerably lower than both EPA’s health-based air quality standards and the levels of airborne particulate matter routinely found in this part of the country. |
VOCs |
Ö |
|
Ö |
The TSCA Incinerator efficiently destroys VOCs. Even at the point of maximum impact, the estimated VOC concentrations were mostly three orders of magnitude below health-based comparison values. |
PCBs |
Ö |
|
Ö |
Modeling conducted by both the independent panel and ATSDR found that estimated ambient air concentrations of PCBs from routine operations are more than 1,000 times lower than health-based comparison values, even for the year when the greatest amount of PCBs was processed. |
Metals |
Ö |
|
|
Chromium was selected as a contaminant of concern, but estimated air concentrations of all other metals were safely below health-based comparison values. |
Acidic gases |
Ö |
|
Ö |
Estimated ambient air concentrations of acidic gases are more than 400 times lower than their corresponding health-based comparison values. |
Dioxins and furans |
|
|
Ö |
Estimated ambient air concentrations of dioxins and furans are immeasurably low, even at the point of maximum impact, where exposure concentrations are more than 100 times lower than health-based comparison values for cancer effects. |
PAHs |
|
|
Ö |
ATSDR’s modeling analysis of emissions data collected during a recent trial burn suggests that the highest annual average concentration of total PAHs (0.000005 µg/m3) is far below levels of health concern, even if one conservatively assumed that only the most toxic PAH is present. |
Radionuclides |
|
Ö |
|
DOE has estimated (using an EPA-approved model) that, in all years during which the TSCA Incinerator operated, air emissions of radionuclides from the entire ORR cause an effective dose equivalent to the maximally exposed resident of less than 1.7 mrem/year — a dose far below health-protective values established in EPA regulations. Extensive ambient air monitoring data are consistent with this estimated dose. |
Notes: Appendix B reviews the three modeling evaluations listed above and identifies additional modeling studies that have been conducted.
Modeling addressed releases from routine operations. See Section III.D for ambient air sampling results during non-routine releases (i.e., TRV events).
III.D. Ambient Air Monitoring and Ambient Air Sampling: What Are the Levels of Air Contamination?
This section reviews the results of ambient air monitoring and ambient air sampling studies, or studies that measure contamination in the air that people breathe. Studies conducted by DOE, EPA, and TDEC weighed heavily in the conclusions ATSDR developed for this PHA. In response to a community concern, ATSDR also obtained and reviewed data compiled by TVA, but those data were not collected to assess air quality impacts from the TSCA Incinerator. Appendix C presents ATSDR's detailed reviews of the relevant ambient air monitoring and ambient air sampling studies.
Terminology. In the field of air pollution, ambient air generally refers to outdoor air that people might breathe. Ambient air is commonly measured by equipment placed at a fixed outdoor location. Ambient air monitoring differs from air sampling in that monitoring typically implies periodic measurement of air contamination levels. Monitoring provides useful insights on how air quality changes over the long term. Air sampling, on the other hand, generally refers to air quality measurements of discrete events, such as a TRV opening. |
Across all the studies conducted to date, an extremely large volume of ambient air monitoring and ambient air sampling data are available to characterize the TSCA Incinerator's air quality impacts. These data span the entire time frame during which the TSCA Incinerator has operated (1991 to the present), have been collected in locations believed to have the greatest air quality impacts, and have thoroughly characterized ambient air concentrations for multiple contaminant groups, especially particulate matter, metals, and radionuclides.
Both ambient air monitoring and ambient air sampling measure airborne contamination levels. But it is important to remember that measured concentrations reflect contributions from all nearby emissions sources and some distant ones. Thus, even though monitoring and sampling studies have been designed to characterize air quality impacts from the TSCA Incinerator, the air contamination levels measured do not necessarily originate only from the incinerator. ATSDR's interpretations throughout this section are sensitive to this issue. Nonetheless, the public health evaluations presented in this PHA are ultimately based on the measured air contamination levels that people might inhale, regardless of the source or sources believed to account for most of the contamination.
Table 9 gives an overview of the air quality measurements available for the eight groups of contaminants evaluated in this PHA. The remainder of this section provides more detailed summaries of the relevant air quality measurements collected both during routine operations at the TSCA Incinerator (see Section III.D.1) and during episodic releases, mainly TRV openings (see Section III.D.2). ATSDR used these measurements to characterize potential chronic and acute exposures to incinerator emissions.
Table 9. Ambient Air Monitoring and Ambient Air Sampling for the Groups of Contaminants
Contaminant Group |
Study Conducted by: |
Overall Findings |
||
---|---|---|---|---|
DOE |
EPA |
TDEC |
||
Particulate matter |
Ö |
|
|
DOE has collected more than 2,000 particulate matter samples, both PM10 and TSP, at or near ETTP since the TSCA Incinerator first began operating. Every measured concentration and every annual average concentration has been well below EPA’s corresponding health-based air quality standards. |
VOCs |
|
|
|
VOCs have not been measured in any studies at ETTP. However, air dispersion modeling studies estimated the incinerator’s likely incremental impacts on airborne VOC levels: these air quality impacts were consistently more than 100 times lower than levels of public health concern. |
PCBs |
Ö |
|
|
Routine PCB monitoring has not occurred, but DOE has measured PCB concentrations during TRV events, when emissions might be expected to peak. Even the highest total PCB concentration recorded during a TRV event (0.00082 μg/m3) is well below health-based comparison values. |
Metals |
Ö |
|
Ö |
DOE has routinely monitored ambient air concentrations of metals since the TSCA Incinerator first processed wastes, and TDEC has conducted side-by-side monitoring to verify that DOE’s monitoring results are valid. Combined, these measurements suggest that airborne levels of arsenic, cadmium, and chromium require more detailed evaluations. Section IV.B of this PHA assesses the public health implications of exposure to these contaminants. |
Acidic gases |
|
|
|
Although acidic gases have not been measured in any of the ambient air monitoring or ambient air sampling studies, estimated air concentrations of hydrogen chloride and hydrogen fluoride were both more than 400 times lower than levels of public health concern, even at the point of maximum air quality impacts. |
Dioxins and furans |
Ö |
|
|
Like PCBs, dioxins and furans have not been monitored routinely near the TSCA Incinerator, but they have been measured during TRV events. The measurements did not find contamination to be at levels of health concern, especially considering the limited exposure durations for these events. |
PAHs |
|
|
|
Although PAHs have not been measured in any of the ambient air monitoring or ambient air sampling studies, ATSDR’s air modeling study found incinerator-related air quality impacts from PAH emissions to be orders of magnitude below health-based comparison values. |
Radionuclides |
Ö |
Ö |
Ö |
DOE, EPA, and TDEC have all conducted extensive monitoring near the TSCA Incinerator for ambient levels of radiation and radionuclides. This monitoring, which is continuous and has spanned almost the entire duration of TSCA Incinerator operations, has shown that concentrations of radionuclides are considerably lower than corresponding health-based comparison values. |
Notes: Refer to Appendix C for detailed reviews of the ambient air monitoring and ambient air sampling results listed in this table.
Modeling addressed releases from routine operations. See Section III.D for ambient air sampling results during non-routine releases (i.e., TRV events).
III.D.1. Measurements During Routine Operations
The following paragraphs briefly review the results of the ambient air monitoring and air sampling that DOE, EPA, and TDEC have conducted during the TSCA Incinerator's routine operations. For three out of the eight groups of contaminants that ATSDR is evaluating, over the last 15 years an extremely large volume of air quality measurements have been made . While Appendix C describes detailed features of the individual monitoring efforts, the following paragraphs (and Table 9) highlight notable trends across the studies:
When reviewing air quality measurements for metals, ATSDR identified several opportunities for improving and enhancing the existing ambient air sampling networks. First, ATSDR noted that a stated purpose of TDEC's program is "to provide an independent verification of monitoring results as reported by the DOE" (TDEC 1996–2002). ATSDR agrees that this is an important objective. Given that DOE and TDEC now operate metals sampling equipment at the same locations, TDEC should be able to perform a quantitative verification of the sampling results, consistent with the program goals. But no detailed data comparisons were documented in the site reports that ATSDR reviewed. Recognizing that independent co-located measures of the same air contaminants provide an excellent opportunity for verifying the quality of DOE's metals data, ATSDR has recommended that TDEC conduct such an analysis and document findings in a future annual environmental report (see Section IX).
ATSDR was prepared to conduct its own comparison of DOE's and TDEC's ambient air sampling data for metals, but could not do so due to how the two agencies' annual environmental reports present metals data. Although general trends in the two data sets appear to be consistent, a quantitative comparison is impossible because the annual reports do not document detection limits and sometimes aggregate data from multiple stations into area-wide averages. Because these and other reporting practices limit the utility of the measurement results, ATSDR has recommended several improvements to the data presentation in DOE's and TDEC's annual environmental sampling reports. Section IX of this PHA lists these recommendations.
Some data trends illustrate potential conflicts between data reported by DOE and TDEC. In DOE's sampling, both arsenic and cadmium apparently were detected in an overwhelming majority of air samples. In TDEC's sampling, on the other hand, these metals appear to have been detected infrequently. This apparent conflict is best explained by the use of analytical methods with differing sensitivities. TDEC currently uses an analytical method with detection limits ranging from 0.001 to 0.01 µg/m3, while the method DOE uses achieves much lower detection limits. ATSDR has recommended that TDEC independently verify the accuracy of DOE's metals data, whether through using more sensitive analytical methods or through other means.
In addition to DOE's sampling efforts, TDEC has collected air samples at regular intervals for radionuclides at ETTP (see Appendix C.3), but this sampling did not commence until 1996. The samples that TDEC collected were all analyzed by an EPA laboratory. The sampling device is installed at DOE's K-2 station (see Figure 10), approximately ¾-mile from one of DOE's perimeter monitoring stations. As the text box below indicates, there is reasonable agreement between DOE's and EPA's measurements for uranium isotopes, especially considering that the sampling devices are not co-located. Also encouraging is the fact that both networks reported a similar relative abundance across the different uranium isotopes.
Overall, both DOE and EPA have reported extensive sampling results for airborne radionuclides at locations downwind from the TSCA Incinerator. Both sets of sampling results show that exposures to airborne radionuclides, even at the location believed to be most impacted by incinerator emissions, are well below levels of potential health concern. Also significant is the fact that the independent data measures are reasonably consistent, which suggests (but does not prove) that neither set suffers from serious data quality problems.
Figure 10. Locations of Ambient Air Monitoring and Ambient Air Sampling Stations
In summary, ambient air monitoring data and air sampling data for particulate matter, metals, and radionuclides have been collected in multiple locations around ETTP over the entire history of the TSCA Incinerator's routine operations. While the available data do not characterize all eight contaminant groups considered in this PHA, they do quantify air quality impacts for three groups of contaminants that incinerators cannot destroy. Section III.E describes how ATSDR factored trends and patterns among these data into the overall air exposure pathway evaluation.
III.D.2. Measurements During Episodic Releases
The chief episodic releases of concern for the TSCA Incinerator are those that occur during TRV events — gases that have passed through the afterburner are vented directly to the atmosphere without first passing through air pollution controls. It is important to note, however, that the waste feed to the TSCA Incinerator immediately shuts down when TRV events occur, thus the increased emissions are short-lived therefore minimizing the potential air quality impacts during these episodes. It should be noted that the extent to which emission rates increase during TRV events vary greatly from one pollutant to the next. On the one hand, mercury emissions are basically the same during routine operations and during TRV events, given the limited ability of the air pollution controls to remove this contaminant. On the other hand, emission rates for pollutants efficiently collected by air pollution controls (e.g., hydrochloric acid) will increase substantially for short periods of time. The effects of TRV events on emissions for other pollutants fall between these two extremes.
As Table 2 indicates, 18 TRV events occurred between 1991 and 2004, and DOE collected and analyzed valid air samples at two locations during 9 of these events. The sampling locations are located southwest and northeast of the TSCA Incinerator, and therefore lie in the path of the prevailing winds. In fact, the two sampling locations lie in between the TSCA Incinerator and the nearest off-site residents; thus, measurements at these locations likely provide an upper-bound estimate of short-term exposure concentrations that residents might have experienced during TRV events. Currently, DOE evaluates the circumstances surrounding each TRV event to determine whether off-site ambient air samples should be analyzed. For instance, DOE could judge that analyzing samples is not necessary if a TRV event occurs when small quantities of wastes are being processed or if a previous sampling event already characterized the anticipated air quality impacts. Following is a summary of the monitoring data that have been collected to date:
As an alternate approach to assessing these concentrations, ATSDR compared the highest measured values to the range of background concentrations reported for the ETTP area (DOE 2003b). According to sampling that occurred while the TSCA Incinerator was down, background total dioxin levels near ETTP range from 0.000000774 to 0.00000416 µg/m3, and the highest measured dioxin concentration during a TRV event falls within this range. ATSDR notes that the range of background concentrations reported for ETTP is reasonably consistent with ranges of background concentrations that have been reported for other parts of the country (ATSDR 1998). Therefore, even the highest dioxin concentration measured during a TRV event does not appear to be unusually elevated. Given this observation and the extremely short exposure duration, ATSDR believes that the measured concentrations are not at levels of health concern and do not warrant further evaluation.
For total furans, the highest measured concentration during a TRV event is actually three times greater than the upper bound of the background measurements made at ETTP (DOE 2003b), but furan levels during the other TRV events were generally consistent with background levels. After review of an evaluation of the highest likely acute exposures, ATSDR does not view this lone detection above background levels as being of public health concern. Although very limited information is available on health effects in humans or animals after inhalation exposure to furans (ATSDR 1994), ATSDR has published a minimal risk level (MRL) for acute ingestion exposures to a potent furan congener. The acute ingestion MRL is 0.001 μg/kg/day. By definition (see Appendix D), this MRL is an ingestion dose likely without an appreciable risk for adverse non-cancer effects following a short-term exposure. For a typical adult (who weighs 70 kg), this acute MRL would represent an approximate ingestion intake of 0.07 μg/day. During the TRV openings, however, the highest likely inhalation intake is approximately 0.000047 μg/day.2 Therefore, the highest inhalation intake that an individual might have reasonably experienced during TRV openings is nearly 500 times lower than the ingestion intake associated with the acute ingestion MRL. This large margin provides some confidence that acute furan exposures during TRV openings are not associated with adverse health effects. As Section IX of this PHA notes, ATSDR recommends that DOE continue to collect ambient air samples during TRV openings to ensure that these events do not cause residents to be exposed to harmful levels of air pollutants.
In summary, DOE has analyzed ambient air samples during half of the TRV events that occurred between 1991 and 2004. These data suggest that ambient air concentrations of PCBs, dioxins, and furans are not unusually elevated following these events, especially when compared to background levels. This observation, combined with the infrequent nature of the events and their short duration, implies that air quality impacts for these pollutants during TRV openings are negligible.
When preparing this PHA, ATSDR considered the need for DOE to analyze a greater fraction of the ambient air samples collected during the TRV events. The conclusion regarding TRV events would change only if the ambient air concentrations of dioxins, furans, and PCBs were consistently and dramatically higher than those that have been measured to date. ATSDR has no reason to expect that such elevated concentrations will occur, but a sensible way of assessing this is to analyze only those samples collected during TRV events associated with high waste feed rates or PCB inputs. In other words, the criteria that DOE currently uses when deciding whether to analyze samples should provide sufficient insights on whether air quality impacts during TRV events are unusually higher than the concentrations that have been measured to date. Based on this analysis, ATSDR is not recommending any change to the current ambient air sampling and analysis framework for TRV events.
While there is limited evidence of short-term air quality impacts during these events based on the groups of contaminants measured, ATSDR acknowledges that it is possible for some groups of contaminants (namely acidic gases) to have substantially increased emissions during TRV events. As one example, the air pollution control efficiencies for hydrochloric acid suggest that air emissions during TRV events might be approximately 1,000 times greater than emissions during routine operations (see Comment #40 in Appendix G). Based on this observation, ATSDR has estimated that short-term ambient air concentrations of hydrochloric acid nearest the incinerator might reach levels of approximately 600 µg/m3.3 Human exposure studies suggest that this upper-bound estimate of short-term exposure, while elevated, is not expected to be associated with adverse health effects. Specifically, a controlled exposure study found that human asthmatics exposed to hydrochloric acid at concentrations up to 2,700 µg/m3 for 45 minutes did not experience any respiratory effects as gauged by multiple pulmonary function tests (Stevens et al. 1992). Considering that asthmatics did not develop respiratory symptoms when exposed to 2,700 µg/m3 of hydrogen chloride, it is unlikely that any residents would experience adverse health effects should off-site ambient air concentrations of hydrochloric acid near the TSCA Incinerator ever reach 600 µg/m3 during a TRV event.
III.E. Synthesis of Information
This entire section has focused on evaluating three critical elements of the air exposure pathway: emissions, fate and transport, and ambient air monitoring. One must consider all three elements in order to have a complete understanding of the air quality issues surrounding the TSCA Incinerator (see Figure 11).
Figure 11. Synthesizing Information for the Air Exposure Pathway
The following discussion integrates the information presented above in an attempt to answer key questions: Is there enough information on the contaminant group to reach conclusions? Is the information in the available studies consistent? Are more detailed analyses required for any contaminants? Is further sampling needed for any of the contaminants? ATSDR's evaluation of these issues for the eight groups of contaminants follows:
Referring to the previous discussion, ATSDR concludes that further analyses are needed to evaluate the public health implications of exposures to arsenic, cadmium, and chromium. For all other metals and groups of contaminants, the studies that have characterized emissions, fate and transport, and ambient air monitoring clearly show that the TSCA Incinerator's air emissions do not cause residents to be exposed to unhealthful levels of air contaminants.
Residents near the TSCA Incinerator are exposed to airborne arsenic, cadmium, and chromium that originate from several nearby emissions sources. Extensive ambient air monitoring data suggest that the amounts of these metals in the air are below levels expected to cause adverse health effects. Ongoing monitoring will help ensure that ambient air concentrations of these metals remain at safe levels in the future. |
The previous section of the PHA used a screening analysis to select contaminants of concern for the TSCA Incinerator. In the screening, ATSDR compared the highest measured or estimated ambient air concentrations for all eight groups of contaminants with deliberately conservative health-based comparison values. Through that process, arsenic, cadmium, and chromium were found to warrant further evaluation, and all other air contaminants considered were safely below levels of public health concern. This section presents a more detailed analysis for the three contaminants requiring further evaluation, considering issues such as background concentrations, potential air quality impacts due to emissions from the TSCA Incinerator, and toxicological evaluations for both short-term (acute) and long-term (chronic) exposures and for both non-cancer and cancer health outcomes.
In Sections IV.A, IV.B, and IV.C, the "toxicological evaluation" bulleted items first address potential non-cancer health outcomes, immediately followed by a separate evaluation for cancer health outcomes. It is appropriate to separate these evaluations due to the different approaches used to address public health implications. Additionally, sub-headers for "non-cancer evaluation" and "cancer evaluation" have been added to emphasize that the evaluations are indeed separate.
The remainder of this section presents ATSDR's detailed evaluations for arsenic (Section IV.A), cadmium (Section IV.B), and chromium (Section IV.C). Concluding statements (Section IV.D) discuss the adequacy of the data supporting ATSDR's evaluations and present recommendations for ensuring that inhalation exposures to the contaminants of concern remain at safe levels in the future.
ATSDR selected arsenic as a contaminant requiring further evaluation because the highest annual average concentration of arsenic measured near ETTP (0.000809 µg/m3) was approximately four times greater than a highly protective health-based comparison value for cancer effects (0.0002 µg/m3) — this comparison does not mean that the measured arsenic concentrations are harmful or are even caused largely by the incinerator's emissions. Rather, the initial comparison simply means that further evaluation is needed to assess the public health implications of exposure, regardless of the origin of the airborne arsenic. To put potential inhalation exposures to arsenic into perspective, ATSDR considered the following observations:
What is a "cancer effect level"? ATSDR defines a cancer effect level as the lowest exposure dose in a study, or group of studies, that produces significant increases in the incidence of cancer between the exposed population and its appropriate control population. What is a "lowest observed adverse effects level" (LOAEL)? ATSDR defines a LOAEL as the lowest tested dose of a substance that has been reported to cause harmful (adverse) health effects in people or animals. |
Non-cancer evaluation. According to a literature review of numerous studies of arsenic exposure in humans and experimental animals, the lowest found exposure concentration that has been associated with non-cancer adverse health effects is 0.7 µg/m3 (ATSDR 2000a). Specifically, a case-control epidemiological study among residents near a smelter found that exposures at this level were associated with a greater risk for stillbirths, compared with the risk for residents in a non-exposed group (Ihrig et al. 1998). ATSDR notes, however, that the highest annual average concentration of arsenic measured near the TSCA Incinerator is more than 850 times lower than the exposure concentration that might be associated with increased stillbirths. Because the measured airborne levels of arsenic are dramatically lower than exposure concentrations found to be associated with non-cancer health effects in humans and experimental animals, ATSDR concludes that inhalation of airborne arsenic near ETTP is not expected to cause similar non-cancer effects among local residents.
Cancer evaluation. The National Toxicology Program (NTP), part of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, has classified arsenic as a "known human carcinogen." Accordingly, ATSDR assessed whether exposure to airborne arsenic near the TSCA Incinerator might be associated with cancer outcomes. Such assessments typically consider long-term exposure concentrations. In this case, the highest long-term average ambient air concentration of arsenic measured near ETTP is 0.0004 µg/m3 — an average based on nearly 10 years of monitoring at a location immediately downwind from the site. In contrast, ATSDR's review of the literature has reported arsenic-related cancer effect levels in humans ranging from 50 to 380 µg/m3 (ATSDR 2000a). Therefore, the highest annual average exposure concentration measured near the TSCA Incinerator is more than 100,000 times lower than the cancer effect levels reported in six different studies of human exposures. Given this large margin, ATSDR does not believe the measured concentrations of arsenic pose a significant health concern for cancer outcomes.
In summary, modeling studies predict that the TSCA Incinerator has little impact on ambient air concentrations of arsenic. This observation is consistent with the fact that measured airborne arsenic levels near the TSCA Incinerator fall within the range of concentrations measured in other remote locations of the United States. Using both these observations and a review of the toxicological and epidemiological literature, ATSDR concludes that inhalation exposures to airborne arsenic near the TSCA Incinerator are not expected to cause adverse health effects. Refer to Section IV.D for recommended actions to ensure that future exposures to arsenic near the TSCA Incinerator remain at safe levels.
ATSDR selected cadmium as a contaminant requiring further evaluation — the highest annual average concentration of cadmium measured in the vicinity of ETTP (0.001963 µg/m3) was approximately three times greater than the corresponding health-based comparison value for cancer effects (0.0006 µg/m3) — this comparison does not mean that the measured cadmium levels are harmful or are even caused largely by the incinerator's emissions. Rather, the initial comparison simply means that further evaluation is needed to assess the public health implications of exposure, regardless of the origin of the airborne cadmium. After evaluating all information available on airborne cadmium near the incinerator, ATSDR made the following observations:
Non-cancer evaluation. To evaluate non-cancer outcomes, ATSDR compared the measured concentrations near the TSCA Incinerator with exposure levels that have been shown to cause, or are suspected of causing, adverse health effects, whether in human or in experimental animals. More than 30 available peer-reviewed studies provide quantitative data related to inhalation toxicity of cadmium (ATSDR 1999a). Overall, the lowest concentration reported to produce non-cancer health effects, whether from acute or chronic exposure, is 13 µg/m3 — an exposure concentration that caused increased non-cancerous cell growth in the lungs of experimental animals (ATSDR 1999a). All measured ambient air concentrations of cadmium near the TSCA Incinerator are at least 1,000 times lower than this level, which suggests that residents' inhalation exposures near ETTP are not at levels expected to cause non-cancer health effects. ATSDR acknowledges that using effects levels observed in animals to evaluate human exposures involves considerable uncertainty. It should be noted, however, that the lowest exposure concentration of cadmium shown to cause adverse non-cancer outcomes in humans (23 µg/m3) is on the same order of magnitude as that shown to cause adverse outcomes in animals.
Cancer evaluation. ATSDR also evaluated potential cancer outcomes associated with cadmium exposures, considering that NTP has classified cadmium as a "known human carcinogen." When evaluating potential cancer risks, ATSDR usually assesses potential lifetime average exposure levels. The highest long-term average ambient air concentration of cadmium near ETTP is 0.000044 µg/m3, which is based on nearly 10 consecutive years of monitoring data collected at a location immediate downwind of the TSCA Incinerator. ATSDR's review of carcinogenic outcomes associated with cadmium found cancer effect levels in animals and humans ranging from 13.4 to 100 µg/m3 (ATSDR 1999a). In this case, the cadmium exposures near the TSCA Incinerator are more than 300,000 times lower than the lowest cancer effect level derived from the literature. Accordingly, ATSDR concludes that the TSCA Incinerator's emissions do not result in nearby residents' exposure to cadmium at levels associated with cancer effects.
Overall, all information ATSDR reviewed to date suggests three key findings for cadmium: 1) the TSCA Incinerator has relatively minor air quality impacts; 2) the inhalation exposures that residents might experience are not unusually high when compared with those observed in other parts of the country; and 3) the actual exposure levels are not expected to cause adverse cancer or non-cancer health effects. Section IV.D discusses future actions that are warranted to ensure that cadmium exposures remain at safe levels in the future.
Evaluating ambient air contamination of chromium often presents challenges: chromium exists in multiple forms, each having a significantly different toxicity. The most common forms found in ambient air are trivalent chromium and hexavalent chromium. Trivalent chromium is relatively benign and is actually an essential nutrient for humans. Hexavalent chromium is considerably more toxic, both for cancer and non-cancer outcomes. Complicating matters is the fact that most commonly used environmental sampling and analytical methods measure ambient air concentrations of total chromium, without specifying the relative amounts of the hexavalent and trivalent forms.
When conducting the screening analysis (see Section III), ATSDR initially assumed that all chromium is present in the more toxic hexavalent form. Under this assumption, both modeled and measured levels of total chromium exceeded the health-based comparison values for hexavalent chromium — this comparison does not mean that the measured chromium levels are necessarily harmful or are even caused largely by the incinerator's emissions. Rather, the initial comparison simply means that further evaluation is needed to assess the public health implications of exposure to chromium. The following paragraphs present ATSDR's more detailed evaluations of exposures to chromium, which consider the reality that total chromium includes both trivalent and hexavalent forms:
The total chromium concentrations measured around ETTP clearly fall within the range of concentrations reported for similar settings. For instance, ATSDR reports that average airborne concentrations of total chromium in rural settings are generally lower than 0.010 µg/m3 (ATSDR 2000b). Similarly, ambient air monitoring that EPA recently conducted at a remote location near Louisville, Kentucky, found an annual average concentration of total chromium of 0.0027 µg/m3 (EPA 2002). Moreover, ongoing ambient air monitoring in Nashville for an EPA nationwide monitoring network has shown that average concentrations of total chromium are approximately 0.004 µg/m3 (ERG 2004). In short, extensive ambient air monitoring data collected elsewhere in the country suggest that the annual average concentrations of total chromium measured near ETTP are not unusually elevated.
Non-cancer evaluation. To assess potential non-cancer outcomes, ATSDR considered EPA's reference concentration (RfC) for hexavalent chromium particulates, which is 0.1 µg/m3. By definition, an EPA RfC represents an exposure concentration that is likely to be without harmful health effects throughout a lifetime of continuous inhalation exposure. Because the highest long-term average measured concentration of total chromium (0.0006 µg/m3) is more than 150 times lower than the RfC, ATSDR concludes that residents' exposures to chromium near the TSCA Incinerator are not expected to cause non-cancer health effects, even if one assumes that all of the airborne chromium is in the more toxic hexavalent form.
Cancer evaluation. According to NTP, hexavalent chromium is a "known human carcinogen." Consensus agencies have not classified the carcinogenicity of trivalent chromium, but ATSDR has noted that epidemiological studies in industries where workers are exposed to trivalent chromium have been consistently negative (ATSDR 2000b). Therefore, the evaluation of potential cancer outcomes in this PHA focuses primarily on hexavalent chromium exposures. ATSDR would prefer to base this evaluation on measured ambient air concentrations of hexavalent chromium, rather than on measures of total chromium. As is typical, however, at many sites that ATSDR evaluates, no data are available on the relative amounts of hexavalent and trivalent chromium in the air near the TSCA Incinerator.
Nonetheless, ATSDR believes the available data provide ample insights on the potential for cancer outcomes resulting from inhaling hexavalent chromium, even without the chemical speciation data. Specifically, ATSDR's Toxicological Profile for Chromium presents 11 different cancer effect levels: 10 for studies of human exposures (mostly occupational) and one for an animal study (ATSDR 2000b). The lowest cancer effect level reported is 40 µg/m3 for an occupational cohort that was exposed to a mixture of trivalent and hexavalent chromium. In contrast, the highest long-term average exposure concentration near the TSCA Incinerator is more than 66,000 times below the lowest cancer effect level. Such a large margin of safety provides assurance that the exposures that community members near ETTP experience do not reach levels known to be associated with cancer outcomes.
An important consideration in this evaluation is the chemical form of chromium found in the air near the TSCA Incinerator, given that hexavalent chromium appears to be a much more potent carcinogen. While the chemical speciation issue cannot be resolved from the available measurements, ATSDR notes that a growing body of evidence from EPA monitoring networks is showing that hexavalent chromium typically accounts for less than 10% of total chromium in ambient air (e.g., Swift et al. 2003). Moreover, studies have suggested that hexavalent chromium typically accounts for less than 1% of air emissions of total chromium from municipal waste incinerators (ATSDR 2000b). The qualitative insights on chemical speciation combined with the large margin between exposure levels and cancer effect levels strongly suggest that the TSCA Incinerator does not emit chromium in amounts believed to be associated with cancer outcomes.
The previous evaluation shows that air emissions of chromium from the TSCA Incinerator appear to contribute only slightly to ambient air concentrations of chromium near ETTP. Further, the measured ambient air concentrations of total chromium fall within the range of concentrations expected for a rural location. While the relative amounts of trivalent chromium and hexavalent chromium in ambient air near ETTP are not known, ATSDR's evaluation strongly suggests that realistic estimates of inhalation exposures are below levels of health concern, both for cancer and non-cancer outcomes.
The foregoing is ATSDR's evaluation of public health implications of exposure to arsenic, cadmium, and chromium in ambient air near the TSCA Incinerator. For all three metals, the available sampling and modeling data suggest that emissions from multiple local sources, and not just the TSCA Incinerator, contribute to the measured airborne concentrations. Regardless of the predominant source of the metals, the airborne concentrations measured near ETTP are reasonably consistent with those measured in rural and suburban areas across the country. Further, and more importantly, inhalation exposures to the measured concentrations are at levels well below those observed to be associated with adverse health effects, both in animals and in humans.
The conclusions in this section rest heavily on trends among nearly 10 years of ambient air monitoring data that DOE has collected in the vicinity of the TSCA Incinerator, including at a location believed to be near where the incinerator's emissions have their greatest air quality impacts. While the data generated by DOE appear to be of a known and high quality and provide a sound basis for this PHA's conclusions, an excellent opportunity exists to provide independent verification of DOE's air quality measurements for arsenic, cadmium, and chromium. Specifically, TDEC is currently measuring ambient air concentrations of metals at one of the locations where DOE also measures ambient air concentrations of metals. To provide insights into measurement accuracy, ATSDR recommends TDEC quantify differences between metals monitoring data gathered by DOE and those gathered by TDEC at all stations with co-located samplers. Although the TSCA Incinerator does not appear to be the primary source of arsenic, cadmium, and chromium in the ambient air, ATSDR recommends that DOE and TDEC continue routine ambient air monitoring as long as the TSCA Incinerator processes waste. This will provide assurance that incinerator emissions, in combination with emissions from other sources, do not result in unacceptable exposures. Section IX of this PHA presents these and other recommendations that ATSDR has made for this site.
Next Section Table of Contents