Title
Risks to health and environment of the use of lead in products in the EU
Author
Tukker, A.
Buist, H.
van Oers, L.
van der Voet, E.
TNO Bouw en Ondergrond
Publication year
2006
Abstract
The EU Commission's Services asked TNO and CML to perform a study into the risks of the present uses of lead over time, as an input to a discussion on the need of a further reduction of the use of this material. The study was set up as a substance flow analysis to analyse trends in uses and emissions of lead in Europe between 2000 and 2030. The study showed among others that the flow to (final) landfill of lead is declining from about 290 ktpa in 2000 to 220 ktpa in 2003 for the EU15. Alloys, or more specifically lead in electronic equipment, contribute to about 5% of these flows. The study also compared current actual exposures in the environment, of workers, and the general public (adults and young children) to authoritative limit values set in the EU. From this, it appeared that under unfavorable conditions (high dust/soil intake via hand-mouth behavior) young children may exceed their tolerable daily intake (TDI). The study hence concluded that for children, there is a need for further information and/or testing. It has to be stressed, however, that this purely risk based approach leaves several questions about sustainable lead management unanswered. It gives a 'picture' at a given moment in time. Successes in lowering exposure were mainly reached by reducing direct emissions from various sources (e.g. emissions to air via leaded gasoline). However, it is also clear that the use and hence the economical stock of lead is growing, as is the stock in landfills and certain residues from Municipal Solid Waste Incinerators (MSWIs), which might be re-used. This led to a discussion driven by the fear for slow 'enrichment' of the economical and ecological system with lead, and hence a possible higher exposure in future. © 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Subject
Health
Food and Chemical Risk Analysis
EU15
Lead
Lead products
Material flow analysis
MFA
Risk assessment
SFA
Substance flow analysis
Europian Union (EU)
Lead products
Material flow analysis (MFA)
Substance flow analysis (SFA)
Economic and social effects
Environmental impact
Health risks
Industrial emissions
Lead
Risk assessment
Toxic materials
Environmental engineering
alloy
drinking water
gasoline
lead
Economic and social effects
Environmental engineering
Environmental impact
Health risks
Industrial emissions
Lead
Risk assessment
Toxic materials
environmental risk
European Commission
health risk
lead
air pollution control
article
corrosion
dust
ecosystem
environmental exposure
flow measurement
food contamination
health hazard
human
incineration
landfill
lead poisoning
municipal solid waste
pollution
risk assessment
soil analysis
To reference this document use:
http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:71f8e0d9-8514-452e-a04a-782cb9270795
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.resconrec.2006.03.005
TNO identifier
239632
ISSN
0921-3449
Source
Resources, Conservation and Recycling, 49 (2), 89-109
Document type
article