A health-based regulatory chain framework to evaluate international pesticide groundwater regulations integrating soil and drinking water standards

Pesticide residues in groundwater, mainly transported from contaminated soil, may threaten drinking water sources and cause adverse health effects. Therefore, pesticide groundwater standards were implemented by international environmental agencies to ensure the quality of groundwater, which serves a...

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Main Author: Zijian Li
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2018-12-01
Series:Environment International
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0160412018317355
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spelling doaj-32e1fb60663941b0bde9db9ea50613c22020-11-25T01:25:43ZengElsevierEnvironment International0160-41202018-12-0112112531278A health-based regulatory chain framework to evaluate international pesticide groundwater regulations integrating soil and drinking water standardsZijian Li0Corresponding author at: Parsons Corporation, Chicago, IL 60606, USA.; Parsons Corporation, Chicago, IL 60606, USA; Department of Civil Engineering, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH 44106, USAPesticide residues in groundwater, mainly transported from contaminated soil, may threaten drinking water sources and cause adverse health effects. Therefore, pesticide groundwater standards were implemented by international environmental agencies to ensure the quality of groundwater, which serves as the direct drinking water source in many countries. However, regulatory inconsistencies are always found among groundwater, soil, drinking water, and even health standards due to the lack of communication among the regulatory processes. This study first developed a health-based regulatory chain framework to analyze pesticide groundwater regulations integrating soil, drinking water, and health regulations. Six regulatory indexes associated with probabilistic risk assessments and pesticide transport modeling were constructed to evaluate the performance of pesticide groundwater regulations identified from 56 countries. Worldwide pesticide groundwater regulations were analyzed by quantifying the impact on the downstream (exposure pathways in general) pesticide drinking water standards and human health and the influence from upstream (environmental pathways in general) soil regulations. The results indicated that in general, worldwide pesticide soil regulations do not encompass a sufficient number of pesticides or provide appropriate standard values to be compatible with groundwater regulations. The computed indexes between pesticide groundwater and drinking water regulations indicated more positive results than soil regulations because most European nations have groundwater regulations that are compatible with those of drinking water. However, most pesticide groundwater regulations could not protect human health according to the health-based indexes. Hopefully, the regulatory framework developed in this study will help environmental agencies comprehensively evaluate and establish pesticide groundwater regulations. Keywords: Pesticide residue, Groundwater regulation, Groundwater contamination, Public health, Risk assessmenthttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0160412018317355
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Zijian Li
spellingShingle Zijian Li
A health-based regulatory chain framework to evaluate international pesticide groundwater regulations integrating soil and drinking water standards
Environment International
author_facet Zijian Li
author_sort Zijian Li
title A health-based regulatory chain framework to evaluate international pesticide groundwater regulations integrating soil and drinking water standards
title_short A health-based regulatory chain framework to evaluate international pesticide groundwater regulations integrating soil and drinking water standards
title_full A health-based regulatory chain framework to evaluate international pesticide groundwater regulations integrating soil and drinking water standards
title_fullStr A health-based regulatory chain framework to evaluate international pesticide groundwater regulations integrating soil and drinking water standards
title_full_unstemmed A health-based regulatory chain framework to evaluate international pesticide groundwater regulations integrating soil and drinking water standards
title_sort health-based regulatory chain framework to evaluate international pesticide groundwater regulations integrating soil and drinking water standards
publisher Elsevier
series Environment International
issn 0160-4120
publishDate 2018-12-01
description Pesticide residues in groundwater, mainly transported from contaminated soil, may threaten drinking water sources and cause adverse health effects. Therefore, pesticide groundwater standards were implemented by international environmental agencies to ensure the quality of groundwater, which serves as the direct drinking water source in many countries. However, regulatory inconsistencies are always found among groundwater, soil, drinking water, and even health standards due to the lack of communication among the regulatory processes. This study first developed a health-based regulatory chain framework to analyze pesticide groundwater regulations integrating soil, drinking water, and health regulations. Six regulatory indexes associated with probabilistic risk assessments and pesticide transport modeling were constructed to evaluate the performance of pesticide groundwater regulations identified from 56 countries. Worldwide pesticide groundwater regulations were analyzed by quantifying the impact on the downstream (exposure pathways in general) pesticide drinking water standards and human health and the influence from upstream (environmental pathways in general) soil regulations. The results indicated that in general, worldwide pesticide soil regulations do not encompass a sufficient number of pesticides or provide appropriate standard values to be compatible with groundwater regulations. The computed indexes between pesticide groundwater and drinking water regulations indicated more positive results than soil regulations because most European nations have groundwater regulations that are compatible with those of drinking water. However, most pesticide groundwater regulations could not protect human health according to the health-based indexes. Hopefully, the regulatory framework developed in this study will help environmental agencies comprehensively evaluate and establish pesticide groundwater regulations. Keywords: Pesticide residue, Groundwater regulation, Groundwater contamination, Public health, Risk assessment
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0160412018317355
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