Abstract
Abstract
The former Allied Feeds site is located on the Rhodes Peninsula adjacent to Homebush Bay, in Sydney, Australia. The adjacent Lednez site was historically used for manufacturing a range of chemicals, including tar, explosives, and chlorinated compounds. Through these activities, both sites and the Homebush Bay were contaminated with dioxins/furans, chlorobenzenes, chlorophenols, and organochlorine pesticides. Both properties have been remediated for open space, medium- and high-density residential use, and commercial development. The Lednez-site remediation activities also include dredging and treating contaminated sediments from Homebush Bay. Combined, these projects represent the largest dioxin remediation project that has been undertaken in the world using a thermal treatment technology. On the Allied Feeds site, about 175,000 tonnes of dioxin-contaminated soil has been treated using a directly heated thermal desorption plant. The project is significant because (1) it is the first large-scale thermal remediation project conducted in Australia, (2) the project has been implemented at a time when local environmental regulations were evolving, (3) the feed material contains high concentrations of dioxins/furans and potential dioxin/furan precursor compounds (e.g., chlorophenols and chlorobenzenes), (4) the feed material contains a high proportion of fine-grained spent lime with a high moisture content, (5) the project is being conducted adjacent to a major waterway in a highly developed urban area, and (6) the site is being redeveloped for residential and commercial use concurrently with remediation activities. The project has included a number of regulatory, technical, and logistical challenges, including the development of best practice regulatory standards, control of fugitive emissions, processing of a difficult and complex feed material, and compliance with stringent environmental requirements. This article discusses a number of project issues, the results of the regulatory compliance test program, and the production operations phase of the project.
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