首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     检索      


Nanoremediation and International Environmental Restoration Markets
Authors:Paul Bardos  Brian Bone  Miroslav ?erník  Daniel W Elliott  Sarah Jones  Corinne Merly
Institution:1. r3 Environmental Technology Ltd.;2. University of Brighton, United Kingdom;3. Bone Environmental Consultant Ltd.;4. Institute of Nanomaterials, Advanced Technologies and Innovations;5. Geosyntec Consultants, Princeton, NJ;6. Groundwater Protection and Restoration Group, University of Sheffield, United Kingdom;7. Institute for Groundwater Research, Waterloo, Canada
Abstract:Nanoscale zero‐valent iron (nZVI) is the most commonly used nanoremediation material. While there has been a reasonable level of application of nZVI technologies for in situ remediation in the United States, its utilization across Europe has been much more limited. There has been significant uncertainty about the balance between deployment risks and benefits for nanoparticles (NPs), which has affected the regulatory position in several countries. Some member states of the European Union (EU) take a strong precautionary view of the risks from the deployment of NPs into the subsurface, preventing the adoption of the technology. This article provides a risk–benefit assessment for nZVI based on published information and describes the steps that will be taken by a major European research project (NanoRem), as part of its work to provide a basis for better informed decision making in European environmental restoration markets. A key part of this process is dialogue between practitioners and researchers. NanoRem therefore has an active process of communication with different stakeholder networks (regulators, service providers, and site owners). NanoRem hopes to stimulate a consensus on appropriate use of nanoremediation and thereby stimulate effective technology transfer to the European remediation market. ©2015 The Authors
Keywords:
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号