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The Reduction of Stranded Oil by In Situ Shoreline Treatment Options
Authors:Edward H Owens  Gary A Sergy  Chantal C Guénette  Roger C Prince  Kenneth Lee
Institution:a Polaris Applied Sciences, Inc., #302, 755 Winslow Way, Bainbridge Island, WA 98110, USA
b Environment Canada, #200, 4999, 98th Ave., Edmonton AB, Canada T6B 2X3
c SINTEF Applied Chemistry, Environmental Engineering, 7034 Trondheim, Norway
d ExxonMobil Research and Engineering Co., Annandale, NJ 08801, USA
e Centre for Offshore Oil and Gas Environmental Research, Bedford Institute of Oceanography, Fisheries and Oceans Canada, P.O. Box 1006, Dartmouth, NS, Canada B2Y 4A2
Abstract:The Svalbard Shoreline Field Trials quantified the effectiveness of sediment relocation, mixing, bioremediation, bioremediation combined with mixing, and natural attenuation as options for the in situ treatment of oiled mixed-sediment (sand and pebble) shorelines. These treatments were applied to oiled plots located in the upper beach at three experimental sites, each with different sediment character and wave-energy exposure. Systematic monitoring was carried out over a 400-day period to quantify oil removal and to document changes in the physical character of the beach, oil penetration, oil loading, movements of oil to the subtidal environment, biodegradation, toxicity, and to validate oil-mineral aggregate formation.The results of the monitoring confirmed that sediment relocation significantly accelerated the rate of oil removal and reduced oil persistence where oil was stranded on the beach face above the level of normal wave activity. Where the stranded oil was in the zone of wave action, sediment relocation accelerated the short-term (weeks) rate of oil loss from the intertidal sediments.Oil removal rates on a beach treated by mechanical mixing or tilling were not significantly higher than those associated with natural recovery. However there is evidence that mixing/tilling may have enhanced microbial activity for a limited period by increasing the permeability of the sediment.Changes in the chemical composition of the oil demonstrated that biodegradation was significant in this arctic environment and a bioremediation treatment protocol based on nutrient enrichment effectively doubled the rate of biodegradation. However, on an operational scale, the success of this treatment strategy was limited as physical processes were more important in causing oil loss from the beaches than biodegradation, even where this oil loss was stimulated by the bioremediation protocols.
Keywords:Oil spill  shoreline treatment  mixing  sediment relocation  bioremediation
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