TY - JOUR
T1 - The Impact of Air Pollution from Industrial Fires in Urban Settings
T2 - Monitoring, Modelling, Health, and Environmental Justice Perspectives
AU - Deary, Michael E.
AU - Griffiths, Simon D.
PY - 2024/7/21
Y1 - 2024/7/21
N2 - Industrial fires at facilities including waste management sites, warehouses, factories, chemical works, and fuel storage depots are relatively frequent occurrences. Often, these fires occur adjacent to urban communities and result in ground-level airborne pollutant concentrations that are well above guideline values. Land, water, livestock, and crops may also be contaminated by the emissions and by firefighting activities. Moreover, impacted communities tend to have a higher proportion of minority ethnic populations as well as individuals with underlying health vulnerabilities and those of lower socio-economic status. Nevertheless, this is an aspect of air quality that is under-researched, and so this review aims to highlight the public health hazards associated with industrial fires and the need for an effective, coordinated, public health response. We also review the range of monitoring techniques that have been utilised in such fires and highlight the role of dispersion modelling in predicting plume trajectories and in estimating population exposure. We recommend establishing 1 h guideline values for particulate matter to facilitate timely public health interventions, and we highlight the need to review regulatory and technical controls for sites prone to fires, particularly in the waste sector.
AB - Industrial fires at facilities including waste management sites, warehouses, factories, chemical works, and fuel storage depots are relatively frequent occurrences. Often, these fires occur adjacent to urban communities and result in ground-level airborne pollutant concentrations that are well above guideline values. Land, water, livestock, and crops may also be contaminated by the emissions and by firefighting activities. Moreover, impacted communities tend to have a higher proportion of minority ethnic populations as well as individuals with underlying health vulnerabilities and those of lower socio-economic status. Nevertheless, this is an aspect of air quality that is under-researched, and so this review aims to highlight the public health hazards associated with industrial fires and the need for an effective, coordinated, public health response. We also review the range of monitoring techniques that have been utilised in such fires and highlight the role of dispersion modelling in predicting plume trajectories and in estimating population exposure. We recommend establishing 1 h guideline values for particulate matter to facilitate timely public health interventions, and we highlight the need to review regulatory and technical controls for sites prone to fires, particularly in the waste sector.
KW - airborne pollution
KW - dispersion modelling
KW - emergency response
KW - guideline values
KW - industrial fires
KW - landfill
KW - monitoring techniques
KW - particulate matter (PM)
KW - public health hazard
KW - waste management
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85199620824
U2 - 10.3390/environments11070157
DO - 10.3390/environments11070157
M3 - Review article
SN - 2076-3298
VL - 11
JO - Environments
JF - Environments
IS - 7
M1 - 157
ER -