Ecotoxicological assessment of pollutant flux released from bottom ash reused in road construction
Gaëlle Triffault-Bouchet1, Bernard Clément1* and Gérard Blake2
1Laboratoire des Sciences de l’Environnement, ENTPE, Rue Maurice Audin, 69518 Vaulx-en-Velin, France 2Laboratoire Transferts et Effets des Polluants sur L’environnement, Université de Savoie, 73376 Le Bourget du Lac, France
Two approaches have been used to assess the impact of municipal solid waste incineration bottom ash on lentic ecosystems, especially lake coastlines. One of the aims of this study was to complete the methodology for the assessment of waste ecocompatibility by assessing a scenario in which bottom ashes are reused as road embankment. A laboratory lysimeter was chosen to simulate the road embankment and produce the bottom ash leachate. The first approach was based on three bioassays. Results led to the following ranking of these bioassays based on organisms sensitivity, in descending order: algae Pseudokirchneriella subcapitata>duckweed Lemna minor>cladoceran Daphnia magna. At the same time, leachates were assessed with a 2 litre freshwater/sediment microcosm. All species were impaired. Toxicity effects increased with leachate concentration, from 1.56% to 8.0%. Comparison between bioassays and microcosm assays revealed that the representativeness is higher in the multispecies systems. Finally, bottom ashes have been assessed in a simplified risk assessment procedure. Predicted environmental concentration is close to the concentration that caused first effects in microcosms. Recommendations are made for the reuse of bottom ashes as road embankment.