THE US MERCURY EMISSION INVENTORY FOR THE ARCTIC COUNCIL ACTION PLAN

The Arctic Council, having agreed to act to reduce exposures to a number of priority pollutants in the Arctic region, has initiated a mercury project via the Arctic Council Action Plan (ACAP). The project is led by the Danish EPA with a Steering Group from all eight Arctic countries-Canada, Denmark,...

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Main Authors: K Rackley, A Pope, J Mobley, S Durkee, M Engle
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:http://oaspub.epa.gov/eims/eimsapi.dispdetail?deid=85011
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spelling ftepa:oai:epaEIMS:85011 2023-05-15T13:00:10+02:00 THE US MERCURY EMISSION INVENTORY FOR THE ARCTIC COUNCIL ACTION PLAN K Rackley A Pope J Mobley S Durkee M Engle 2007-12-13T13:23:13Z http://oaspub.epa.gov/eims/eimsapi.dispdetail?deid=85011 unknown NATIONAL EXPOSURE RESEARCH LABORATORY Text 2007 ftepa 2008-03-03T01:40:44Z The Arctic Council, having agreed to act to reduce exposures to a number of priority pollutants in the Arctic region, has initiated a mercury project via the Arctic Council Action Plan (ACAP). The project is led by the Danish EPA with a Steering Group from all eight Arctic countries-Canada, Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, Russia, Sweden, and United States. The overall project objective is to contribute to a decrease of mercury releases from Arctic countries. This will be accomplished partly by contributing to the development of a common regional framework for an action plan or strategy for the decrease of mercury emissions, and partly by evaluating and selecting one or a few specific point sources for implementation of control measures. It is felt that the decrease of mercury releases from key sources should serve as a demonstration of existing possibilities, giving inspiration to other control measures in the region. One of the first steps in the action plan is the development of an inventory of mercury releases to the land, air, and water. Characterization of mercury usage and its disposition will provide the framework for an action plan and strategy for decreasing the amount of mercury in the environment. A detailed questionnaire was developed to collect consistent data from the involved countries, including key information on modeling parameters (e.g., latitude/longitude, stack parameters, chemical composition, and emissions control technology). EPA completed the U.S. portion of the questionnaire to provide data and information to the project. All data sources are publicly available and most are from EPA inventories, e.g., National Emissions Inventory (NEI) for air emissions and Toxics Release Inventory (TRI) for solid waste disposal and water discharges. The results characterize the mobilization of mercury in the US to the land, air, and water. The overwhelming mobilization action is land disposal associated with gold mining. The most significant air source category is coal combustion. Other sources of air emissions include gold mining, chlor-alkali plants, municipal waste combustors, medical waste incinerators, and industrial boilers. There were minimal discharges to water bodies noted from the data available. The ACAP project should result in availability of data to enable assessment of mercury issues in the Arctic and is expected to be a model for international data exchange on mercury and other pollutants. The overall project is intended to identify research opportunities for engineering demonstrations that provide scientific information on mercury control options in the Arctic and around the world. Although this work was reviewed by EPA and approved for publication, it may not necessarily reflect official Agency policy. Text ACAP Arctic Council Arctic Iceland Environmental Protection Agency (EPA): Science Inventory Arctic Canada Norway
institution Open Polar
collection Environmental Protection Agency (EPA): Science Inventory
op_collection_id ftepa
language unknown
description The Arctic Council, having agreed to act to reduce exposures to a number of priority pollutants in the Arctic region, has initiated a mercury project via the Arctic Council Action Plan (ACAP). The project is led by the Danish EPA with a Steering Group from all eight Arctic countries-Canada, Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, Russia, Sweden, and United States. The overall project objective is to contribute to a decrease of mercury releases from Arctic countries. This will be accomplished partly by contributing to the development of a common regional framework for an action plan or strategy for the decrease of mercury emissions, and partly by evaluating and selecting one or a few specific point sources for implementation of control measures. It is felt that the decrease of mercury releases from key sources should serve as a demonstration of existing possibilities, giving inspiration to other control measures in the region. One of the first steps in the action plan is the development of an inventory of mercury releases to the land, air, and water. Characterization of mercury usage and its disposition will provide the framework for an action plan and strategy for decreasing the amount of mercury in the environment. A detailed questionnaire was developed to collect consistent data from the involved countries, including key information on modeling parameters (e.g., latitude/longitude, stack parameters, chemical composition, and emissions control technology). EPA completed the U.S. portion of the questionnaire to provide data and information to the project. All data sources are publicly available and most are from EPA inventories, e.g., National Emissions Inventory (NEI) for air emissions and Toxics Release Inventory (TRI) for solid waste disposal and water discharges. The results characterize the mobilization of mercury in the US to the land, air, and water. The overwhelming mobilization action is land disposal associated with gold mining. The most significant air source category is coal combustion. Other sources of air emissions include gold mining, chlor-alkali plants, municipal waste combustors, medical waste incinerators, and industrial boilers. There were minimal discharges to water bodies noted from the data available. The ACAP project should result in availability of data to enable assessment of mercury issues in the Arctic and is expected to be a model for international data exchange on mercury and other pollutants. The overall project is intended to identify research opportunities for engineering demonstrations that provide scientific information on mercury control options in the Arctic and around the world. Although this work was reviewed by EPA and approved for publication, it may not necessarily reflect official Agency policy.
format Text
author K Rackley
A Pope
J Mobley
S Durkee
M Engle
spellingShingle K Rackley
A Pope
J Mobley
S Durkee
M Engle
THE US MERCURY EMISSION INVENTORY FOR THE ARCTIC COUNCIL ACTION PLAN
author_facet K Rackley
A Pope
J Mobley
S Durkee
M Engle
author_sort K Rackley
title THE US MERCURY EMISSION INVENTORY FOR THE ARCTIC COUNCIL ACTION PLAN
title_short THE US MERCURY EMISSION INVENTORY FOR THE ARCTIC COUNCIL ACTION PLAN
title_full THE US MERCURY EMISSION INVENTORY FOR THE ARCTIC COUNCIL ACTION PLAN
title_fullStr THE US MERCURY EMISSION INVENTORY FOR THE ARCTIC COUNCIL ACTION PLAN
title_full_unstemmed THE US MERCURY EMISSION INVENTORY FOR THE ARCTIC COUNCIL ACTION PLAN
title_sort us mercury emission inventory for the arctic council action plan
publishDate 2007
url http://oaspub.epa.gov/eims/eimsapi.dispdetail?deid=85011
geographic Arctic
Canada
Norway
geographic_facet Arctic
Canada
Norway
genre ACAP
Arctic Council
Arctic
Iceland
genre_facet ACAP
Arctic Council
Arctic
Iceland
op_source NATIONAL EXPOSURE RESEARCH LABORATORY
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