A review of environmental fate, body burdens, and human health risk assessment of PCDD/Fs at two typical electronic waste recycling sites in China

This paper reviews the levels of polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins and dibenzofurans (PCDD/Fs) in different environmental media, human body burdens and health risk assessment results at e-waste recycling sites in China. To provide an indication of the seriousness of the pollution levels in the e-was...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Science of the total environment 2013-10, Vol.463-464, p.1111-1123
Hauptverfasser: Chan, Janet Kit Yan, Wong, Ming H.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This paper reviews the levels of polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins and dibenzofurans (PCDD/Fs) in different environmental media, human body burdens and health risk assessment results at e-waste recycling sites in China. To provide an indication of the seriousness of the pollution levels in the e-waste recycling sites in China, the data are compared with guidelines and available existing data for other areas. The comparison clearly shows that PCDD/Fs derived from the recycling processes lead to serious pollution in different environmental compartments (such as air, soil, sediment, dust and biota) and heavy body burdens. Of all kinds of e-waste recycling operations, open burning of e-waste and acid leaching activities are identified as the major sources of PCDD/Fs. Deriving from the published data, the estimated total exposure doses via dietary intake, inhalation, soil/dust ingestion and dermal contact are calculated for adults, children and breast-fed infants living in two major e-waste processing locations in China. The values ranged from 5.59 to 105.16pgWHO-TEQ/kgbw/day, exceeding the tolerable daily intakes recommended by the WHO (1–4pgWHO-TEQ/kgbw/day). Dietary intake is the most important exposure route for infants, children and adults living in these sites, contributing 60–99% of the total intakes. Inhalation is the second major exposure route, accounted for 12–30% of the total exposure doses of children and adults. In order to protect the environment and human health, there is an urgent need to control and monitor the informal e-waste recycling operations. Knowledge gaps, such as comprehensive dietary exposure data, epidemiological and clinical studies, body burdens of infants and children, and kinetics about PCDD/Fs partitions among different human tissues should be addressed. ► PCDD/F levels at e-waste recycling sites in China were reviewed. ► Data on environment & body burden and health risk assessment results were reviewed. ► The estimated total exposure doses exceeded WHO’s recommended value. ► Measures on safer e-waste recycling operations should be implemented. ► Dietary intake is the most important exposure route.
ISSN:0048-9697
1879-1026
DOI:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2012.07.098