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Risk Assessment forms the core of
the contaminated land investigation and assessment process.
The purpose of investigations is to obtain information
on sources, pathways and receptors
present on or adjacent to a site. The presence of a
linkage between these may then constitute a risk, the
significance of which must be assessed and is dependent
upon a number of factors.
Essentially, the process seeks to
determine what risk, if any, is created by the presence
of contaminants through determining if there are pathways
through which the contaminants may impact sensitive
receptors, and is the risk acceptable or not.
This need to make judgments about
the degree of risk is crucial in determining
what action to take. In many cases it is often neither
feasible nor realistic to think in terms of total clean
up of past damage. The overall approach in dealing with
past land contamination is therefore one of risk
assessment and management, identifying, assessing
and judging risks, taking actions to mitigate them,
as well as monitoring and reviewing progress.
Risk is a combination of the probability,
or frequency, of occurrence of a defined hazard and
the magnitude of the consequences of the occurrence.
In the context of land contamination,
there are three essential elements to any risk:
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Source (contaminant)
– a substance which is located in, on or under
the land and has the potential to cause harm to
human health, water resources or the wider environment; |
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Pathway –
the means or route by which a source of contamination
can migrate; an identified receptor can be exposed
to, or be affected by an identified source; |
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Receptor –
something which could come to harm, including human
health, water resources, surface water courses or
the wider environment; |

Each of these elements can exist independently.
They create a potential risk where they are linked together.
The linked combination of “contaminant –
pathway - receptor” is known as a pollutant linkage.
On any individual site, one single
pollutant linkage or number of different pollutant linkages
may be present. Different pollutant linkages may also
be related. The same receptor may be linked to a number
of different contaminants via the same migration pathway.
Contaminants can migrate to a receptor via more than
one pathway and receptors maybe at risk from more than
one source of contamination.
Phase 1 and Phase
2 site investigations are used to identify
potential sources, pathways
and receptors. Each pollutant linkage
needs to be separately identified, understood and dealt
with if appropriate.
Without a pollutant linkage,
there is not a risk – even if a contaminant
is present. Where there is a pollutant linkage, and
therefore some measure of risk, it is important to identify
whether that risk is significant. The
level of risk needs to justify the actions taken to
deal with the risk.
The question of whether risk is unacceptable
in any particular case requires scientific and technical
assessment of the circumstances on the site and the
use of appropriate criteria to judge the risk combined
with professional judgment.
In some cases it is possible to use
contaminant fate and transport modeling through complex
risk assessment models to determine the level of risk
present.
Most commonly the Contaminated
Land Exposure Assessment (CLEA) model is used
to make a preliminary generic assessment of the significance
to human health of contaminants found; other models
such as SNIFFER, RBCA, the Environment
Agency R&D 20 models maybe used
to make assessments, dependent upon the nature of the
sources, pathways and receptors identified.
The nature and level of risk is defined
by variability in the condition and circumstances of
any particular piece of land. The details of the use
of the land itself, as well as the surrounding land,
determine whether particular receptors and
pathways are present and, if they are,
the extent to which they might potentially be affected
by contamination. The same concentration of a contaminant
can have widely differing implications in different
circumstances. Risk assessment allows
this to be considered in a structured and pro-active
way so that appropriate and cost effective decisions
are taken.
Voelcker Consultants has been involved
in a wide range of development projects using risk
assessment as a key tool within site investigations
of potentially contaminated sites. We are able to provide
a comprehensive contaminated land investigation service
including:
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Production of Phase
1 Desk Study reports through extensive
information gathering, analysis and interpretation;
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Designing, commissioning and
supervising Phase 2 Intrusive Site
Investigations, to meet the requirements of both
the client and statutory authorities; |
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Design & Implementation of
remedial schemes and undertaking post remediation
monitoring (Phase 3); |
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Validation of remediation (Phase
4) and production of Post Remediation Validation
Reports and remediation statements; |
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Liaison with statutory authorities
(e.g. the Environment Agency, local authorities,
HSE etc.); |
Voelcker Consultants undertake site
investigations and reporting in accordance with relevant
guidelines, including BS 10175: 2001 and Environment
Agency guidance.
We have extensive experience
in undertaking site investigations on a wide range of
sites. Please contact
for a discussion of your requirements.
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