On-site analyses as a decision support tool for dredging and sustainable sediment management
Lemière, Bruno and Laperche, Valérie and Wijdeveld, Arjan and Wensveen, Marco and Lord, Richard and Hamilton, Alasdair and Haouche, Laurence and Henry, Mathieu and Harrington, Joe and Batel, Branislav and Lehette, Pascal (2022) On-site analyses as a decision support tool for dredging and sustainable sediment management. Land, 11 (2). 274. ISSN 2073-445X
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Filename: Lemiere_etal_Land_2022_On_site_analyses_as_a_decision_support_tool_for_dredging_and_sustainable_sediment_management.pdf
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Abstract
Beneficial use of dredged sediments, either in harbours or waterways, is based on their potential as alternative resources. Such sediments can be considered as bulk materials for industrial needs, which is predicated on their current waste status or meeting end-of-waste constraints. They also can be an integral part of beneficial use projects using sediments as a bulk component, including civil engineering and landscaping. This is particularly important for beneficial use projects focusing on climate change effects mitigation, such as flood protection works, coastline defence or littoral urban areas redevelopment. When dredged sediment is used as a bulk material, its acceptability is based on an assumed homogeneity of its properties. On-site analyses allow pre-dredging detailed mapping at a denser scale than laboratory ones; monitoring dredgings during operations and during processing; and continuous control of their properties at the implementation site. This is currently possible only for a selection of inorganic analytes. When dredgings are part of a larger beneficial use project, on-site analyses facilitate first the baseline survey and the sediment source characterisation. Continuous monitoring of the sediment load allows a fast detection of contamination hot spots and their adequate management. Site survey via on-site instruments allow end users and communities to check themselves the contamination level, hence acceptability is better. On-site dredged sediment analyses monitor both building properties and environmental compliance; soil and sediment analyses at receiving sites; surface and groundwater, either for impact assessment or for monitoring works. On-site instruments provide immediate results and allow dynamic or adaptive sampling strategies, as well as allowing operational decisions in real time. Confirmation by laboratory analyses is required for validation, but on-site sample screening for laboratory analyses 37 improves their efficiency.
ORCID iDs
Lemière, Bruno, Laperche, Valérie, Wijdeveld, Arjan, Wensveen, Marco, Lord, Richard ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5737-5140, Hamilton, Alasdair, Haouche, Laurence, Henry, Mathieu, Harrington, Joe, Batel, Branislav and Lehette, Pascal;-
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Item type: Article ID code: 79228 Dates: DateEvent11 February 2022Published11 January 2022AcceptedSubjects: Technology > Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General) > Environmental engineering Department: Strategic Research Themes > Energy
Faculty of Engineering > Civil and Environmental EngineeringDepositing user: Pure Administrator Date deposited: 24 Jan 2022 09:37 Last modified: 11 Nov 2024 13:21 Related URLs: URI: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/id/eprint/79228