Investigating arsenic impact of ACC treated timbers in compost production (A case study in Christchurch, New Zealand)

The arsenic concentration is an important issue in compost production. The main inputs of a compost factory, including kerbsides, green wastes, food industry wastes, and river weeds are investigated in this study. Also, this study investigated how treated timbers, ashes, and other contamination can...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Environmental pollution (1987) Vol. 262; p. 114218
Main Authors: Safa, Majeed, O’Carroll, Daniel, Mansouri, Nazanin, Robinson, Brett, Curline, Greg
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: England Elsevier Ltd 01-07-2020
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Summary:The arsenic concentration is an important issue in compost production. The main inputs of a compost factory, including kerbsides, green wastes, food industry wastes, and river weeds are investigated in this study. Also, this study investigated how treated timbers, ashes, and other contamination can impact arsenic concentration in compost production. The results showed that most treated timbers and all ashes of treated and untreated timbers contained significant amounts of arsenic. These results revealed that the presence of a small amount of treated timber ashes can significantly increase the arsenic concentration in composts. The results of the study show the arsenic concentration in compost increase during cold months, and it dropped during summer, which would be mostly because of high arsenic concentration in ashes of log burners. This study shows ashes of burning timbers can impact arsenic contamination mostly because of using Copper-Chrome-Arsenic wood preservatives (CCA). Also, the lab results show the arsenic level even in ashes of untreated timber is around 96 ppm. The ashes of H3, H4, and H5 treated timbers contain approximately 133,000, 155,000, and 179,000 ppm of arsenic, which one kg of them can increase arsenic concentration around 10 ppm in 13.3, 15.5 and 17.9 tons of dry compost products. The main problem is many people look at ashes and treated timber as organic materials; however, ashes of treated and untreated timbers contained high concentrations of arsenic. Therefore, it was necessary to warn people about the dangers of putting any ashes in organic waste bins. [Display omitted] •The arsenic concentration in compost increases during cold months, and it dropped during summer.•The arsenic concentration would be mostly because of high arsenic concentration in ashes of log burners.•This study shows ashes of burning timbers can impact arsenic contamination mostly because of using Copper-Chrome-Arsenic wood preservatives (CCA). Main finding: Treated timbers and ashes of burning timbers would be the main source of arsenic contamination in compost products in New Zealand mostly because of using Copper-Chrome-Arsenic wood preservatives (CCA) and.
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ISSN:0269-7491
1873-6424
DOI:10.1016/j.envpol.2020.114218