The course provides a practical framework for organizations to manage potential and existing contaminated lands. It teaches you how to easily integrate environmental management into the business management structure to control the impacts which the activities, operations, products and services have on the environment and the public.
Upon successful completion of this course, the delegates will be able to:
- Identify and classify contaminated lands environmental hazards and risks.
- List the drivers and benefits for carrying out contaminated land risk-based assessment and management
- Evaluate variation in risk assessment parameters/approaches and their influence on risk management
- Understand the role of risk assessment in safety management.
- Discuss the hierarchy of risk management strategies.
- Determine when a qualitative vs. quantitative risk assessment is required
- Apply the principle of “Uncertainty & Risk-based Decision-making”.
- Statutes, Regulations and Relevant To The Human Health Evaluation
- Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA)
- National Oil and Hazardous Substances Pollution Contingency Plan (NCP)
- Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA),
- The Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA)
Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA)
- Remedial Investigation/ Feasibility Study (RI/FS)
- Data Collection
- Data Evaluation
- Exposure Assessment
- Risk Characterization
- Human exposure
Risk-based Decisions-making
- Risk-based Decision-making Model
- Dealing with information precision and resource needs
- Barriers to Risk-based Decision making
- Key factors in choosing risk assessment methods
Developing Contaminated Land Risk Assessment Conceptual Model and Strategies
- Source-Pathway-Receptor (SPR) model
- Scenario building
- Screening and prioritizing the risk
- Exploit staged approach to environment risk assessment
- Structured decision making
Risk and Reliability Criteria
- The problem with “acceptable risk”
- Principle of “as low as reasonably practicable” (ALARP)
- Risks to community, employees and others
- Economic factors in risk criteria
- Regulatory approaches to setting risk criteria
This training is primarily intended for risk assessors and project managers involved with the characterization, remediation, and/or re-use of sites. It is also aimed at professionals in the Safety, Health & Environment field who have responsibility for the environmental risk assessment and management activity within their organization.