March-April 2009

Dust Control and Soil Stabilization

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Photo: Enssolutions Ltd.
Compacting a section of the Red Hill Valley Trail after Entac was applied.

By Janet Aird

2 Comments


Chevron has been removing its sumps in the Santa Maria Valley, which is now a residential and agricultural area, for the last 10 years.

“The project is the restoration of a former oil and natural gas field,” says Josh Friddell, the project manager who oversees Chevron’s contractors. “The oil field operations need to be restored. It’s our due diligence to make the land the same as before.”

It’s a very straightforward process, he says. Workers dig down to get the hydrocarbon-impacted sand and haul it away, then they backfill the pits with clean sand. “The project is winding down as we’re moving forward,” he says. “We’re taking out more of the bigger areas we can get to and leaving some of the smaller areas.”

The only problem facing the crews is the mountains of clean sand they create while they’re digging out the sumps, which can be exposed to the wind for two days before all the impacted sand is removed and the clean sand placed back into the pits.

Crews typically use water for dust control on the roads, Friddell says. On the stockpiles, however, they use Soil-Sement, an acrylic polymer emulsion from Midwest Industrial Supply in Canton, OH, as well as other polymers. It acts as a dust suppressant on the stockpiles of clean soil as well as a vapor barrier to keep the hydrocarbon-impacted soil from becoming airborne.

Soil-Sement is a good alternative to tarps and plastic liners, Friddell says. “It’s so easy to apply. There are a lot of safety issues with tarps. They’re big and bulky, and they take a lot of manpower. They also cause a lot of stress injuries. You can easily do the same thing by using a polymer.”

According to Gonzalo Garcia, an environmental specialist with Chevron Environmental Management, “Polymers are effective barriers for wind-blown dust and to keep VOCs down. They’re very effective and easy to apply.”

Soil-Sement can be diluted with either fresh or seawater for both soil stabilization and erosion control. When it bonds with the soil, it creates a crust that reduces PM10 and PM2.5 fugitive dust emissions. It also resists ultraviolet light and water. It’s environmentally safe, nontoxic, noncorrosive, and nonflammable, and it doesn’t pollute groundwater, disturb vegetation, or change the alkalinity or acidity of soil. It can last for three to six months, depending on soil type, climate, and type and amount of traffic.

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For the Santa Maria Valley project, crews spread the polymer with hoses or from trucks in a concentration of 0.28 gallon per square yard, Friddell says, typically with their own water. They use just enough to create a thin crust that makes a temporary barrier against the wind. It might leave a little bit of white residue, Garcia says, but it’s hardly noticeable.

Soil-Sement penetrates into the sand as far as the water does, Friddell says. Because they don’t apply it in a heavy-enough volume to provide a thicker crust, it breaks up easily, especially when crews add to the piles or start filling the holes. Next Page >

What Do You Think?

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edo

April 8th, 2009 8:48 AM PT

I'm glad to see this important discussion on dust control and soil stabilization. The use of materials that can stabilize large areas will become increasingly important. Allow me to expand the discussion of impacts on health; impacts to both those conducting dust control and the surrounding public. As we are aware by reading the other Forester journals, those for example dealing with water and energy, water is becoming scarce. It is also becoming expensive to move water, either from deep within the ground or for long distances. Thus water is becoming too expensive in some areas to continue farming. In some cases this will see large areas of former agricultural land going out of production and then later perhaps into housing developments. In many areas with a long history of agricultural production, farm chemicals have built up in the soils and in some areas there may be a history of years of land applied sewage sludge (biosolids). As these areas are prepared for housing or other development, the generated dust may represent a human health hazard well above that encountered in grading or stabilizing other types of land. Dr Richard Seager of the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory (LDEO) of Columbia provides a map showing the projected drought area and this map can be Googled. These are the areas that are expected to be hardest hit. The LDEO report indicates that drought conditions are expected to resemble the Dust Bowl years of the 1930s and Texas' worst-ever drought of the 1950s. The LDEO study found, however, that unlike those former droughts, the new conditions will not be temporary. Thus, we are discussing very large areas that may be impacted by regional dust storms. How does all that potentially impact the dust control and soil stabilization industry? First, let's get some idea of what may be found in some of these soils. Aside from pesticides that may have built up, we have the potential for some serious pathogens that accompany the land application of biosolids. The current trend for industry is to recombine toxic and hazardous waste as well as sewage into "new" products and thus claim exemptions from liability in handling those hazardous materials; many are now being sewered. The solids from all this are then placed on American farmlands as biosolids under the rubric of fertilizer or soil amendment. In addition, we are seeing discarded tires shredded and added to sewage sludge which is composted, the tires being added as a bulking agent. There is insufficient research here as it is unclear that the composting operations are actually able to destroy the toxins and allergens. Latex is a major emerging allergen. If these materials are added to soils and if these soils later abandoned, they may blow about when reworked. This added sophistication will then need guidance from the erosion control industry and the industry itself will need to become expert in these areas. Let's take these two scenarios and combine----drought and land with a long history of ag production accompanied by the addition of heavy biosolids application. Why is this important? Biosolids contain numerous pathogens and in addition, these pathogens may be multi-antibiotic resistant. This is also important since antibiotic resistance is now killing more people in this country that AIDS. The genetic information found in biosolids may be passed to and then maintained by the soil microbes. Further, some pathogens are able to form capsules or spores and these can last for decades. The British during the Second World War experimented with anthrax in the soil on a small island off the British coast and found that they needed to quarantine it for the next 50 years. Anthrax is an example of the large genus Bacillus, one whose members can form spores and easily survive sewage treatment to be found within biosolids. How heavily might biosolids be applied to farms? I have colleagues studying this that have records showing 70 tons per acre and that was on top of what ever was applied the previous month. So some soils can be fairly heavily contaminated. There are cases in Georgia where the levels of heavy metals in the soils from introduced biosolids have killed cattle and destroyed the productive capacity of the soils. The court records memorialize these events. The soil that blew around in 1930s dust bowel days was relatively clean but caused long-standing respiratory illness in many Americans. At that time, however, pesticides had not been developed to any extent and the use of sewage sludge and all its attendant industrial toxins and antibiotic resistant pathogens was something of the unknown future. But now we have soils that are heavily contaminated with various industrial wastes and antibiotic resistant pathogens, thus if they start to blow around as noted above, the human health impacts are going to be significant. Since these are regional areas, those responsible for preparedness are facing a daunting task and most government agencies are ill prepared to deal with such events. Nonetheless, this lack of preparedness may represent an opportunity for the erosion control industry. Dr. Edo McGowan

PatrickFord

February 10th, 2009 8:13 AM PT

Very nice article. I only would of like to see the pictures linked to the sucessful (Enssolutions) Red Hill project. It gives the impression that it was a Parsons project photo.

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