Assessment of the governance system for the management of the East Sea-Jung dumping site, Korea through analysis of heavy metal concentrations in bottom sediments SCIE SCOPUS KCI

Cited 16 time in WEB OF SCIENCE Cited 18 time in Scopus
Title
Assessment of the governance system for the management of the East Sea-Jung dumping site, Korea through analysis of heavy metal concentrations in bottom sediments
Author(s)
Song, Ki-Hoon; Choi, Ki-Young; Kim, Chang-Joon; Kim, Young-Il; Chung, Chang-Soo
KIOST Author(s)
Choi, Ki Young(최기영)Kim, Chang Joon(김창준)KIM, YOUNG IL(김영일)
Alternative Author(s)
송기훈; 최기영; 김창준; 김영일; 정창수
Publication Year
2015-12
Abstract
As with many countries, the Korea government has made a variety of efforts to meet the precautionary principle under the London Convention and Protocol acceded in 1994 and 2009. However, new strategies for the suitable marine dumping of waste materials have since been developed. In this study, the distribution and contamination of heavy metals including Al, Fe, Mn, Li, Co, Cr, Ni, Cu, Zn, As, Cd, Pb and Hg in bottom sediments were analyzed and compared to various criteria in order to evaluate the effectiveness of the management of the East Sea-Jung (ES-Jung) dumping site by the Korea government. The results indicate that the average metal concentrations were significantly lower than Effects Range Low (ERL) values, and generally similar to or lower than the Threshold Effect Levels (TEL) from the Sediment Quality Guidelinces (SQGs). According to analyses of various metal contamination indexes (Enrichment Factor: EF, Pollution Load Index: PLI and the Index of Geoaccumulation: Igeo), most areas were found to be uncontaminated by heavy metals with the exception of several moderately contaminated stations (ESJ 33, 54, 64 and ESJR 20). Heavy metal concentrations in areas grouped as G1, G2, DMDA, N-Ref and S-Ref which showed similar characteristics between 2007-2013 and 2014, were compared. Unexpectedly, most concentrations in the northern reference area (N-Ref) were much higher than those in the actual dumping areas (G1 and G2), may be due to the influences from nearby cities to the west of the ES-Jung site, rather than from the dumping site itself. Additionally, heavy metal concentrations in the dredged material dumping area (DMDA) were found to be low although they have slightly increased over time and those in the southern reference area (S-Ref) were found to have gradually decreased with year. The concentrations of most metals in the East Sea-Jung dumping site were similar to or less than those in the Earth's crust and approximately the same as those in continental sediments. As a result, this site can be considered as uncontaminated or slightly contaminated. This implies that the efforts made by the Korea government to manage and govern the dumping site through various policies, including 'the focal point system', 'the responsibility zones system' and 'the principle of pollution causing party liability', have been successful.
ISSN
1738-5261
URI
https://sciwatch.kiost.ac.kr/handle/2020.kiost/2365
DOI
10.1007/s12601-015-0065-6
Bibliographic Citation
OCEAN SCIENCE JOURNAL, v.50, no.4, pp.721 - 740, 2015
Publisher
KOREA OCEAN RESEARCH DEVELOPMENT INST
Subject
SEWAGE-SLUDGE DISPOSAL; FIRTH-OF-CLYDE; SURFACE SEDIMENTS; GRAIN-SIZE; CONTAMINATION; POLLUTION; RIVER; DISTRIBUTIONS; ENRICHMENT; SPECIATION
Keywords
dumping site; heavy metal; waste materials; East Sea; London Convention
Type
Article
Language
English
Document Type
Article
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