4.8 Article

Human health tradeoffs in wellhead drinking water treatment: Comparing exposure reduction to embedded life cycle risks

Journal

WATER RESEARCH
Volume 128, Issue -, Pages 246-254

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.watres.2017.10.014

Keywords

Water treatment tradeoffs; Life cycle assessment; Hexavalent chromium; Arsenic

Funding

  1. United States Environmental Protection Agency [EPA-F2013-STAR-E1]
  2. Dr. Ronald and Sharon Thomas Graduate Fellowship
  3. [EPA-STAR-RD835175]
  4. [EPA-STAR-RD83560301]

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Treatment of drinking water decreases human health risks by reducing pollutants, but the required materials, chemicals, and energy emit pollutants and increase health risks. We explored human carcinogenic and non-carcinogenic disease tradeoffs of water treatment by comparing pollutant dose response curves against life cycle burden using USEtox methodology. An illustrative wellhead sorbent groundwater treatment system removing hexavalent chromium or pentavalent arsenic serving 3200 people was studied. Reducing pollutant concentrations in drinking water from 20 mu g L-1 to 10 mu g L-1 avoided 37 potential cancer cases and 64 potential non-cancer disease cases. Human carcinogenicity embedded in treatment was 0.2-5.3 cases, and non-carcinogenic toxicity was 0.2-143 cases, depending on technology and degree of treatment. Embedded toxicity impacts from treating Cr(VI) using strong base anion exchange were <10% of those from using weak base anion exchange. Acidification and neutralization contributed >90% of the toxicity impacts for treatment options requiring pH control. In scenarios where benefits exceeded burdens, tradeoffs still existed. Benefits are experienced by a local population but burdens are born externally where the materials and energy are produced, thus exporting the health risks. Even when burdens clearly exceeded benefits, cost considerations may still drive selecting a detrimental treatment level or technology. (C) 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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