Reword Assignment Chapter 10

Chapter 10 Discussion Questions

Question-What would the US diet look like if there had never been any food advertising or promotion? What would US food system look like?

Answer-Promotion is used to market all forms of food in the US food system from oats to frozen vegetables to meat to soft drinks, fast food, and candy. Health concerns have arisen because a large proportion of the marketing reaching food consumers is for foods that dietary recommendations indicate should be consumed in moderation. This brings me to believe that the US diet would be better if there had never been any food advertising or promotion. There would also be lower rates of obesity and illness. The US food system would not be what is today with advertising because outside of what individual normally consume, there would not be any type of major influence on people’s eating habits.

Question-What difference has the increasing amount of segmentation in modern marketing methods made to the effects of promotional marketing?

Answer-It recognizes, that a one-size-fits-all approach to marketing no longer works among diverse, sophisticated consumers. Children and youth represent an important demographic market because, as one-quarter of the US population, they are a large base of potential customers and influence purchases made by parents and households. They also constitute the future adult market, creating the incentive for manufacturers to instill brand loyalty that will last into adulthood. The effectiveness of promotional marketing was enhanced because foods were positioned to appeal to and reach different target groups.

Question- Is restricting food advertising and promotion desirable or doable today? Is using marketing for promoting healthier eating a preferable approach? What other strategies might be used to alter the marketing environment in order to improve eating behaviors?

Answer-I don’t believe restricting food advertising and promotion is desirable, because to the allows big name brands to appeal to and influence large groups. This is the driving force behind to success of big food brands. Due to the fact that majority of the food items that are marketed today are items that should only be consume in moderation, I do not think it is preferred by certain industries and companies to promote healthier eating. Currently there are many agencies and groups that are advocating eating healthier. In order to alter the marketing environment to improve eating behaviors would require companies to be more concern about the health effects of over consuming their processed products and less of the dollars they’ll earn promotion it.

 

Question-What kind of full systems change would reduce the incentive for the private food sector to engage in promotional marketing in the first place?

Answer-The private sector must play a large role in helping consumers select more health-promoting foods. They are presented with both opportunities and challenges by the scientific consensus that specific changes in eating habits are likely to substantially reduce the public’s risk of heart disease, cancer, and many other diet-related chronic diseases. If the private food sector had to fully disclose the actual risk involved with the consumption and/or over consumption of their products it would reduce incentive for the private food sector to engage in promotional marketing.

Question-To what extent is it a free speech issue to allow marketers to put out whatever messages they wish, targeting whomever they wish, with whatever frequency they wish? What about if they mask their identities?

Answer-It becomes a free speech issue when marketers are purposely fabricating the benefits and risk associated with the consumption or use of their products. Marketers should not be able to mask their identities, because I feel if markets chose not to identify themselves then it would cause issues of trust and discernment associated with that particular product or brand.

 
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400 Word Answer

Keohane and Olson, Chapter 5, Question 6: In the international treaty “game” described by Keohane & Olmstead Figure 5.5, both countries would be better off if each contributed to the clean-up of a shared pollution problem, but this is not what we expect to happen. Why is this better outcome unlikely to occur?

Assignment Instructions:

Your response should show depth and detail and should reference assigned reading materials (use citations where possible at least 3 references including the book chapter).  Citing real world examples will be helpful in meeting the minimum 350 to 400-word length requirement.  Include citations and references in accordance with APA guidelines.

Must be Plagiarism Free!!!

 
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UNIT V, VI & VIII

Course Syllabus

Course Description

An examination of advanced practical theory as it applies to the classical industrial hygiene field. Review an array of investigative, scientific, engineering, organizational, and social skills that are necessary to effectively control occupational and environmental health hazards.

Course Textbook(s)

Fuller, T. P. (2015). Essentials of industrial hygiene. Itasca, IL: National Safety Council.

Course Learning Outcomes

Upon completion of this course, students should be able to:

1. Summarize the historical underpinnings of the field of industrial hygiene. 2. Examine the role of the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), National Institute for Occupational

Safety and Health (NIOSH), and other relevant organizations that influence workplace safety and health. 3. Assess toxicological principles related to industrial hygiene issues. 4. Compare various occupational exposure limits (OELs) and their uses. 5. Explain key industrial hygiene concepts such as routes of entry and hierarchy of controls. 6. Examine different types of industrial hazards commonly addressed by the industrial hygienist. 7. Evaluate common industrial hygiene related hazard assessment and control strategies. 8. Apply industrial hygiene management principles and practices to workplace situations.

Credits

Upon completion of this course, the students will earn 3 hours of college credit.

Course Structure

1. Study Guide: Course units contain a Study Guide that provide students with the learning outcomes, unit lesson, required reading assignments, and supplemental resources.

2. Learning Outcomes: Each unit contains Learning Outcomes that specify the measurable skills and knowledge students should gain upon completion of the unit.

3. Unit Lesson: Unit Lessons, which are located in the Study Guide, discuss lesson material. 4. Reading Assignments: Units contain Reading Assignments from one or more chapters from the textbook and/or

outside resources. 5. Suggested Reading: Suggested Readings are listed within the Study Guide. Students are encouraged to read the

resources listed if the opportunity arises, but they will not be tested on their knowledge of the Suggested Readings. 6. Learning Activities (Non-Graded): Non-Graded Learning Activities are provided to aid students in their course of

study. 7. Journals: Students are required to submit Journals in Units I-VIII. Journals provide students the opportunity to reflect

critically on course concepts and ideas. Specific information about accessing the Journal rubric is provided below. 8. Unit Assessments: This course contains Unit Assessments, which test student knowledge on important aspects of

the course. These tests may come in many different forms, ranging from multiple choice to written response questions.

9. Unit Assignments: Students are required to submit for grading Unit Assignments. Specific information and instructions regarding these assignments are provided below. Grading rubrics are included with each assignment. Specific information about accessing these rubrics is provided below.

10. Ask the Professor: This communication forum provides you with an opportunity to ask your professor general or

MOS 6301, Advanced Industrial

Hygiene

MOS 6301, Advanced Industrial Hygiene 1

 

 

Agency for Toxic Substances & Disease Registry (http://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/substances/index.asp) Occupational Safety and Health Administration (https://www.osha.gov/chemicaldata/)

Information about accessing the grading rubric for this assignment is provided below.

Unit IV Essay

After reading the Unit IV Lesson and your assigned readings, choose three substances that were discussed. One substance must be a gas/vapor hazard, one must be an aerosol hazard, and one must be a biological hazard.

Write a minimum of one page for each hazard you choose (a minimum of three pages total), which summarizes the following information:

Explain whether the substance is a chemical or biological hazard, and explain how you determined that. Explain the key chemical properties (vapor pressure, vapor density, molecular weight, relative size) as applicable, and describe how these properties affect the different routes of exposure. Based on the chemical properties, how would you identify which exposure route is the most important? Analyze how the substance could enter the body through the dermal route, and discuss why the dermal route would or would not be important. Describe the region of the respiratory system where deposition would be expected (only for the aerosol hazard).

You should use your textbook and resources from the CSU Online Library to obtain information for this assignment. You must use proper APA formatting for all references that you use. The title page and reference page do not count toward meeting the required page count.

Information about accessing the grading rubric for this assignment is provided below.

Unit V Article Review

In the Health and Medical Collection database within the CSU Online Library, locate and read the following article:

Swierczynska-Machura, D., Brzeznicki, S., Nowakowska-Swirta, E., Walusiak-Skorupa, J., Wittczak, T., Dudek, W., . . . Palczynski, C. (2015). Occupational exposure to diisocyanates in polyurethane foam factory workers. International Journal of Occupational Medicine and Environmental Health, 28(6), 985-998.

Write a summary of the article that addresses the following variables:

Summarize the industrial hygiene sampling procedures that were used in the study to evaluate a chemical hazard. Explain the results of each of the sampling procedures used, how those results were used to evaluate occupational exposures, and the potential health effects of chemical hazards. Provide your opinion as to which of the sampling procedures used in the study provided the most accurate and precise information about the occupational exposures of the workers and potential health effects. Explain why you chose one particular sampling procedure over the others.

You should use the textbook and resources from the CSU Online Library to obtain information for this assignment. Your article review must be a minimum of three pages in length, not counting the title page and reference page. Use APA style when writing the paper, making certain to include in-text citations and references.

Information about accessing the grading rubric for this assignment is provided below.

Unit VI Scholarly Activity

In the following assignment, you will be given two different questions concerning the material covered in this unit. Each question should be answered using a minimum of 250 words. Any resources, including your textbook, that are utilized to answer the questions should be cited and referenced using APA formatting. A template has been provided here for you to use to answer the questions. Enter your answers into the template, and upload the template into the assignment area within Blackboard. The questions you will be answering are shown below (and in the template).

The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) currently has a permissible exposure limit (PEL) for noise of 90 dBA at an 8-hour time-weighted average (TWA) exposure with an action level of 50% of that exposure. OSHA uses a 5 dB exchange rate (doubling rate); this means that if the exposure increases from 90 dBA to 95 dBA, the allowed exposure time decreases to one-half—from 8 hours to 4 hours.

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) and the American Conference of Governmental Industrial Hygienists (ACGIH) recommend using an exposure limit of 85 dBA instead of 90 dBA and also recommend using a 3 dB exchange rate. These levels are much more protective than the levels currently used by OSHA.

Discuss the merits of each of the two methods. Provide your opinion as to which of the approaches you believe should be used. Support your answer with at least one professional/scholarly reference.

OSHA does not currently have a regulation specifically covering ergonomic issues. OSHA has issued several guidelines for some specific industries. Consider a workplace you are familiar with where there is a potential for repetitive motion injuries.

Discuss what methods you would use to identify tasks that would present the greatest risk for repetitive motion injuries. How would you establish an ergonomics program to address the issues? What would be the greatest obstacles in establishing the ergonomics program?

MOS 6301, Advanced Industrial Hygiene 3

 

 

Information about accessing the grading rubric for this assignment is provided below.

Unit VIII Research Paper

For the following research paper assignment, you have been asked to perform an evaluation of employee exposures at a small automobile parts manufacturing facility. The manufacturing processes include two metal presses, two machining stations, three welding stations, a small paint booth, and a shipping/receiving area. There are two employees working at each press, one person working at each machining station, one person working at each welding station, two people working in the paint booth, and four employees working in the shipping/receiving area.

One of the presses is a 2,000-ton press, and the other press is a 200-ton press. The 2,000-ton press is the greatest noise source for the facility. The machining area uses a metal working fluid. The safety data sheet (SDS) for the metal working fluid is attached here. All welding is performed on stainless steel. The painting booth uses a powder coating operation, but the employees use xylene and methyl ethyl ketone (MEK) to clean the parts prior to the powder coating operation. At the end of the shift, one of the employees uses 1,3 butadiene to clean the nozzles for the paint booth. The facility uses two electric forklifts to move materials between the production area and the storage warehouse and between the warehouse and the shipping area. All employees work an 8-hour shift.

Part 1:

Using the information on anticipation and control we studied in the textbook, identify the hazards that are present in the facility. In your discussion, explain why you chose the hazards, and describe whether you believe the hazards to be actual hazards or potential hazards (which require further evaluation). Describe the specific location(s) at the facility where the hazards are located, and determine how many employees are potentially at risk in those areas.

Your response for Part 1 should be at least one page in length.

Part 2:

Using the information on evaluation that we studied in the textbook, summarize how you would measure the personal exposures to the hazards that you identified in Part 1. Use the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) website (https://www.osha.gov/dts/sltc/methods/toc.html) or the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) website (http://www.cdc.gov/niosh/docs/2003-154/default.html) to select the specific sampling and analytical method that would work best to evaluate any chemical hazards you identified. Provide a summary of the sampling media you would use, include the sampling flow rate, discuss how long you would sample, and explain how you would calibrate the sampling train. Include a discussion about why you selected the specific sampling and analytical method.

Your response to Part 2 should be at least one page in length.

Part 3:

Access the attached sampling results here. For each set of results, perform the following actions:

Calculate the 8-hour time weighted average (TWA) exposure. Compare the results to the appropriate OSHA permissible exposure limit (PEL). Determine which results exceed an established OSHA PEL.

Write a one-page summary of the sampling results; document the exposures that exceeded an OSHA PEL, and identify those areas that you believe will require the application of controls to reduce risk. Include your calculations, include a list of the OSHA PELs you compared the results to, and explain how you decided that an exposure exceeded an OSHA PEL.

Part 4:

Using OSHA’s hierarchy of controls, recommend the control methods that you believe would be the most effective for reducing the risks associated with the exposures that exceeded the OSHA PEL above. Explain how you would implement the controls and how you would evaluate the effectiveness of the controls. Also, discuss any interim control methods you would recommend for the facility.

This section should be at least one page in length.

Include a reference page and in-text citations for all sources you used in this project, including your textbook, using proper APA format.

Information about accessing the grading rubric for this assignment is provided below.

APA Guidelines

The application of the APA writing style shall be practical, functional, and appropriate to each academic level, with the primary purpose being the documentation (citation) of sources. CSU requires that students use APA style for certain papers and projects. Students should always carefully read and follow assignment directions and review the associated grading rubric when available. Students can find CSU’s Citation Guide by clicking here. This document includes examples and sample papers and provides information on how to contact the CSU Success Center.

Grading Rubrics

MOS 6301, Advanced Industrial Hygiene 4

 

  • MOS 6301, Advanced Industrial Hygiene
  • Course Syllabus
    • Course Description
    • Course Textbook(s)
    • Course Learning Outcomes
    • Credits
    • Course Structure
    • CSU Online Library
    • Unit Assignments
      • Unit I PowerPoint Presentation
      • Unit II Essay
      • Unit IV Essay
      • Unit V Article Review
      • Unit VI Scholarly Activity
      • Unit VIII Research Paper
    • APA Guidelines
    • Grading Rubrics
    • Communication Forums
    • Schedule/Grading
 
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ENV100T Week 1 WileyPLUS Weekly Exam -SCORE 100 PERCENT

Question 1

Why is a risk analysis usually performed in solving environmental problems?

To provide public awareness and endorsement.

To monitor the initial assessment and modeling of the problem.

To solicit public opinion about how evidence should be interpreted when selection a course of action.

To analyze the potential effect of an intervention versus doing nothing.

Question 2

A state agency has contacted you to do a scientific assessment of kudzu in a nature preserve in southern Georgia. They are concerned about the effects of the non-native invasive vine on a small rare plant that grows on the forest floor in the preserve, but which is found nowhere else in the state. Kudzu is only growing in the east side of the preserve because it hasn’t yet had time to invade further. In order to assess the effects of kudzu on the rare plant, you set up the following experiment:

Site 1. On the east side of the park with the kudzu, you set up ten 1m × 1m plots on the forest floor. In each plot you count the number of individuals of the rare plant.

Site 2. On the west side of the park without the kudzu, you set up ten 1m × 1m plots of the forest floor. In each plot you count the number of individuals of the rare plant.

Based solely on the data represented in the associated table, what can you report to the agency that contracted you to do this study?

Site Mean number of individuals of rare plant per plot

Site 1 1.7

Site 2 4.2

Kudzu is shading out the rare plant.

The rare plant is unaffected by the presence of the kudzu.

Fewer individuals of the rare plant grow in the presence of kudzu when compared to areas without kudzu.

It will be impossible to remove kudzu from the park because it grows too fast.

Question 3

The resource shown here can be classified as:

1. perpetually renewable

2. nonrenewable

3. renewable only if they are replanted and given time to grow

1 only

2 only

3 only

both 1 and 2

Question 4

What does this graph suggests about our current use of fossil fuels?

We are treating this resource sustainably as the number of barrels of oil consumed has increased over time.

We are depleting this non-renewable resource at a rate faster today than 20 years ago.

The price of oil will continue to decrease as there is more oil supply than there is demand.

We have found many new sources of oil as reflected in the increase in oil consumption.

Question 5

What does the phrase “environmental sustainability” imply?

The actions of humans directly impact the wellbeing of the natural environment.

Future generations will have the resources necessary for quality of life.

A shared global responsibility is necessary for conservation practices.

All of the above are implied by environmental sustainability.

Question 6

Which of the following ecological footprints is the largest?

Ecological footprint of a single individual in U.S.

Ecological footprint of a single individuals in France

Ecological footprint of a single individuals in India

Ecological footprint of 6 individuals in India

Question 7

The photograph below is an image of Times Square in New York City. Based on the photo, what do you think is USA’s most likely contribution to environmental problems?

1. Environmental sustainability due to the population density in NYC

2. People overpopulation due to the population density in NYC

3. Consumption overpopulation as reflected by the advertising billboards

1 only

2 only

3 only

1 and 2 are both reflected in the photograph

Question 8

What is the environmental significance of the process of “consumption”?

Consumption can outstrip the natural resources available and lead to overexploitation of the environment.

Extravagant consumption can create an environment of raising one’s status among peers.

The process of consumption is an economic act, providing the “demand” necessary for the “supply” of the environment.

Consumption can generate economic growth that relies significantly on the importation of natural resources, which benefits the environments of less-developed countries.

Question 9

A personal perspective based on a collection of basic values and beliefs about how the environment works, that helps us make sense of our place and purpose in it, and determine right and wrong behaviors describes:

Voluntary simplicity

Deep ecology worldview

Western worldview

Environmental worldview

Question 10

What does the photograph BEST represent?

A deep ecology worldview.

Sustainable consumption.

Child labor.

Poverty.

Question 11

Widespread adoption of sustainable consumption at the global level will not be easy because:

sustainable consumption requires the eradication of poverty which requires that poor people increase their consumption of certain essential resources to improve the quality of their lives and these resources are no longer available.

sustainable consumption requires that the consumption patterns of people in highly developed countries must change to allow for the eradication of poverty and such changes in the lifestyles of people in highly developed countries is a challenge.

sustainable consumption requires that everyone embrace voluntary simplicity on a compulsory basis and while this is supported by politicians, economists are not in support.

sustainable consumption requires the excessive reliance on global resources that will result in a tragedy of the commons.

Question 12

Which of the actions indicated in the photographs below would be the BEST way to address the goal of mitigating climate change for achieving sustainable living:

Energy Neutral Construction

Family Planning in Egypt

Bicycle Rack in Amsterdam

Restoration in Indonesia

Energy Neutral Construction

Family Planning in Egypt

Bicycle Rack in Amsterdam

Restoration in Indonesia

Question 13

A type of sustainable consumption which recognizes that individual happiness and quality of life are not necessarily linked to the accumulation of material goods but rather that a person’s values and character define that individual more than how many things he or she own is known as:

environmental ethics

voluntary simplicity

sustainable development

environmental justice

Question 14

What rights does environmental justice seek to provide?

Adequate protection from environmental hazards.

Adequate wealth to live in clean neighborhoods.

The right to follow western worldview ideas.

Ability to live the deep ecology lifestyle.

Question 15

Environmental sustainability implies:

the actions of humans directly impact the wellbeing of the natural environment

future generations will have the resources necessary for quality of life

the environment can function indefinitely without going into a decline from the stresses imposed by human society on natural systems

all of these choices

Question 16

Which of the following is the BEST example of sustainable consumption?

Constructing a house on farmland on the edge of town and carpooling to work.

Flying to the Bahamas for a weekend getaway.

Preparing a meal at home with food bought at the local farmers market.

Purchasing five pairs of shoes at a local minority owned business.

Question 17

National income accounts are incomplete estimates of national economic performance because national income accounts do NOT include

gross domestic product

net domestic product

estimates of imported goods and services

estimates of external costs such as natural resource depletion and the environmental cost of economic activities

Question 18

Which of the following was probably the MOST significant event in 1999 to impact the environment?

The Kyoto Protocol was signed by the United States.

The Exxon Valdez created the world’s largest oil spill.

World human population reached 6 billion individuals.

The first Earth Day celebration was held.

Question 19

What type of pollution control strategy does the Clean Air Act mainly depend on?

command-and-control regulation.

incentive-based regulation.

relative control regulation.

environmental impact statements.

Question 20

What is the BEST definition of preservation?

Setting aside land and natural resources.

Careful management of land and resources.

Using land and natural resources based on current needs.

Multiple use management of land and natural resources.

Question 21

The study of how people use their limited resources to try to satisfy their unlimited wants is:

business analysis.

model testing.

hypothesis development.

economics.

Question 22

In economic terms, oils and chemicals burning in the Cuyahoga River would represent:

a national income account

overuse of a sink

overuse of a source

an increase in natural capita

Question 23

What does the diagram below illustrate?

EIS

NEPA

NIMBY

Kyoto Protocol

Question 24

All of the following endangered species have recovered enough to be removed from the endangered species list except:

American alligator

California gray whale

Bald eagle

Manatee

Question 25

Any part of the natural environment used to promote the welfare of people or other species is called:

conservation

preservation

a resource

multiple use management

 
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Essay Questions Must Use APA Citations And Short Answers Of 50 Words Is Okay. 1. What Is The Significance Of Malaria Worldwide,…

Essay Questions Must use APA citations and short answers of 50 words is okay. 1. What is the significance of malaria worldwide, and what are some recent developments in the battle against the disease? 2. What are the environmental advantages of recycling? 3. List the major components of MSW. 4. Define pollution, pollutant, nonbiodegradable and environment. 5. What are the “dirty dozen” POPs? Whay are they on the list? Multiple Choice 1. If the precautionary principle had been applied to the evidence of the dangerous health effects of smoking tobacco from the 1950s to the 1970s, we would still be waiting for the final word and no government actions would have been taken.  tobacco companies would have been given much more time to research the health effects before any government regulations were passed.  cigarette manufacturers would have been required to demonstrate that smoking was safe and government regulations would have come much earlier.  more tobacco products would have been sold. 2. If the precautionary principle is applied, a pharmaceutical company that discovers a new drug for blood pressure must demonstrate the safety of the drug before it is approved.  the need for the new drug before it is approved.  that the drug is cost-effective before it is approved.  that the drug poses no environmental risks. 3. Examining an old abandoned home several months after a flood, a relief worker suddenly experiences difficulty breathing. At the hospital, she learns that she experiencedAnswer  a chronic respiratory illness more common in the developed world.  a chronic respiratory illness more common in the developing world.  an acute respiratory illness more common in the developed world.  an acute respiratory illness more common in the developing world. 4. Which one of the following has been declining globally over the past several decades?Answer  nitrous oxide levels in the troposphere  methane levels in the troposphere  halocarbon levels in the troposphere  pH of the worlds oceans 5. Which of the following illustrates a risk assessment of climate system change? Answer  using natural gas instead of coal to generate electricity  using solar and nuclear power to generate electricity instead of burning coal  measuring the levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere  determining what sorts of crops will be better suited to the new climate 6. Because many places that people build homes are at high risk of a physical disaster, some people have suggested that town zoning boards identify such high risk environments as “stupid zones.” Which one of the following would probably not be located in such a “stupid zone”?Answer  A new home is built in Iowa, about 2 feet above normal water levels and 1,000 feet away from the Mississippi River.  A log cabin home is constructed in a dry, drought-prone, coniferous forest in California.  A new home in South Dakota sits 200 feet up a hillside, overlooking a vast natural prairie.  Along the coast of southern Florida, a retired couple builds their dream home. 7. Which one of the following is not an example of geoengineering?Answer  injecting sulfate aerosols into the stratosphere  erecting large carbon dioxide scrubbers to sequester carbon dioxide in deep reservoirs  seeding the oceans with iron to promote the growth of phytoplankton  erecting large fields of wind turbines to generate electricity to power automobiles 8. One of the greatest risks of diarrheal disease outbreaks in industrialized countries results fromAnswer  poorly trained public health inspectors in the food industry.  contamination in the mass production of food.  the increased demand for organic products.  the addition of preservatives in foods 9. Secondary air pollutants are formed byAnswer  the evaporation of solvents and gasoline.  the incomplete combustion of fuels.  primary pollutants reacting with other compounds in the atmosphere.  radioactive substances such as radon reacting with primary pollutants. 10. Which one of the following generally increases the pollution of the air?Answer  bright sunlight  generation of hydroxyl radicals  sea salt aerosols entering the air over an ocean  gases released by a volcanic eruption 11. On average in the United States, every day each person produces aboutAnswer  10-20 gallons of wastewater containing about a gallon of waste.  50-100 gallons of wastewater containing about three gallons of waste.  150-200 gallons of wastewater containing less than a half gallon of waste.  300-400 gallons of wastewater containing about 10 gallons of waste. 12. Air pollution in a heavily industrialized region would be reduced and the air would be healthier if that region Answer  received less rain.  received less sunshine.  were next to an ocean.  used more coal to generate electricity. 13. Duckweed is a small, flowering plant that floats at the water’s surface. It tends to grow best when nutrient levels are high. When duckweed is abundant, it forms tight mats that cover the surface of ponds and lakes.Consider a situation in which spring storms bring an influx of water and nutrients into a small 4-acre pond, and duckweed populations suddenly explode. Duckweed covers the surface of the pond, but is regularly washed over the spillway and replaced by the growth of new duckweed plants.Use the paragraph above to answer the following questions.In this pond, experiencing cultural eutrophication, the growth of this duckweed willAnswer  add nutrients to the pond and encourage the growth of phytoplankton.  remove nutrients from the pond and encourage the growth of phytoplankton.  add nutrients to the pond and slow the growth of phytoplankton.  remove nutrients from the pond and slow the growth of phytoplankton. 14. In developed countries, nonrecycled municipal solid waste (MSW) is more likely to beAnswer  burned when the population densities are high.  burned when the population densities are low.  buried when the population densities are high.  buried when the population is located near an ocean. 15. Lakes in the Midwestern United States that experience sustained acid precipitation over hundreds of years will graduallyAnswer  increase their pH because of the buffering effects of limestone.  increase their pH because of the depletion of the buffering effects of limestone.  decrease their pH because of the buffering effects of limestone.  decrease their pH because of the depletion of the buffering effects of limestone. 16. Small urban gardens in vacant lots and on rooftops are increasing in number. These gardensAnswer  are able to make most cities agriculturally self-sufficient.  recycle most of the compost generated by the city’s sewage treatment facilities.  are able to recapture most of the carbon dioxide in the city, making the cities carbon neutral.  recycle compost, create jobs for unskilled workers, and provide limited amounts of fresh produce. 17. As a result of the lessons learned from the 1984 Bhopal, India, disaster, the 1986 EPCRA requiresAnswer  all companies handling toxic wastes to be located at least one mile from any city border.  emergency response teams in every company that makes a product in the United States.  companies that handle more than 5 tons of hazardous materials to provide detailed information to local emergency planning committees.  All of the responses are correct. 18. Lingering in a long line at the dry cleaners, waiting for holiday clothing, a woman starts to feel dizzy and tired with a quickly developing headache. Someone suggests that her symptoms might be from breathing something used in the shop. A substance that can cause such symptoms, and is commonly used in dry cleaning, is aAnswer  heavy metal.  halogenated hydrocarbon.  radioactive hydrocarbon.  safe and gentle natural compound. 19. New REACH Regulations approved by the European Union change the way chemical safety is determined. Unlike the United States approach, the Reach Regulations require that the safety of these chemicals is the obligation ofAnswer  industry and not the federal government.  the consumer and not the federal government.  the federal government and not the industry.  cities and states and not the industry. 20. Urban sprawl has resulted inAnswer  wildlife habitat fragmentation.  decreased reliance on fossil fuels.  decreased production of greenhouse gases.  increased dependence on family farms for food. 21. High crime rates in U.S. cities are generally the result ofAnswer  high population densities.  higher levels of education.  poor social conditions.  the lack of public transportation. 22. In January 2010, three California Condors died when they accidentally ate lead ammunition used to kill the animals they were consuming. The California Condors’ deaths represent an example ofAnswer  acute toxic effects of consuming high levels of lead.  chronic toxic effects of lead resulting from biomagnification.  chronic toxic effects of lead resulting from bioaccumulation.  chronic toxic effects of lead resulting from biomagnification and bioaccumulation. 23. Consider a comparison of people living well in densely populated cities versus people living well in less dense suburbs. For the people living in the cities, it isAnswer  less expensive to provide social services and utilities and impacts the environment less.  less expensive to provide social services and utilities but impacts the environment more.  more expensive to provide social services and utilities and impacts the environment more.  more expensive to provide social services and utilities but impacts the environment less. 3 points  Question 30 24. The safe movement of hazardous materials by rail or highway in the United States is regulated byAnswer  individual states and cities.  the Department of Transportation.  the regulations of the RCRA.  the Justice Department.
 
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5 Questions 2 Parts Each

Instructions: On the following pages

 

(1) WRITE IN THE QUESTION IN FULL

(2) Answer the question without copying word for word from the book, this means discuss like in a rational conversation. Do NOT expect full credit for one word or phrase answers.

 

(3) In ADDITION FOR EACH QUESTION – what does this topic teach you or how have you seen something about this topic in the real world that pertains to home and work. Do NOT Split the answer just to fill space, you must add value to this.

 

20 points each

 

1 point off per page if your name is not on each page

 

DUE AT START OF CLASS

Penalty 10 points per day late or portion thereof – submit via dropbox for this quiz.

CHAPTER 19:

 

ENTER QUESTION: WRITE IN THE QUESTION IN FULL WITH PAGE # Q #

Page 396 Question 4

 

What are industrial smog and photochemical smog, and how do they differ?

 

 

MAIN ANSWER: Answer the question without copying word for word from the book, this means discuss like in a rational conversation. Do NOT expect full credit for one word or phrase answers. Cover the Who, What, Where, When, Why How as much as possible.

 

 

YOUR OBSERVATION(s): In ADDITION FOR EACH QUESTION – what does this topic teach you or how have you seen something about this topic in the real world that pertains to home and work. Do NOT Split the answer just to fill space, you must add value to this.

 

CHAPTER 20:

 

ENTER QUESTION: WRITE IN THE QUESTION IN FULL WITH PAGE # Q #

Page 414 Question 7

 

Suggest some ways in which seasonal changes in plant growth is Canada might affect songbird populations in Mexico.

 

MAIN ANSWER: Answer the question without copying word for word from the book, this means discuss like in a rational conversation. Do NOT expect full credit for one word or phrase answers. Cover the Who, What, Where, When, Why How as much as possible.

 

YOUR OBSERVATION(s): In ADDITION FOR EACH QUESTION – what does this topic teach you or how have you seen something about this topic in the real world that pertains to home and work. Do NOT Split the answer just to fill space, you must add value to this.

 

CHAPTER 21:

 

ENTER QUESTION: WRITE IN THE QUESTION IN FULL WITH PAGE # Q #

Page 437 Question 8

 

Tell whether each of the following represents points source population or nonpoint source pollution : fertilizer runoff from farms, thermal pollution from a power plant, urban runoff, sewage from a ship, erosion sediments from deforestation.

 

 

MAIN ANSWER: Answer the question without copying word for word from the book, this means discuss like in a rational conversation. Do NOT expect full credit for one word or phrase answers. Cover the Who, What, Where, When, Why How as much as possible.

 

YOUR OBSERVATION(s): In ADDITION FOR EACH QUESTION – what does this topic teach you or how have you seen something about this topic in the real world that pertains to home and work. Do NOT Split the answer just to fill space, you must add value to this.

 

CHAPTER 22:

 

ENTER QUESTION: WRITE IN THE QUESTION IN FULL WITH PAGE # Q #

Page 455 Question 8

 

Biological control is often much more successful on a small island than on a continent. Offer at least one reason why this might be the case.

 

 

MAIN ANSWER: Answer the question without copying word for word from the book, this means discuss like in a rational conversation. Do NOT expect full credit for one word or phrase answers. Cover the Who, What, Where, When, Why How as much as possible.

 

YOUR OBSERVATION(s): In ADDITION FOR EACH QUESTION – what does this topic teach you or how have you seen something about this topic in the real world that pertains to home and work. Do NOT Split the answer just to fill space, you must add value to this.

 

 

CHAPTER 23:

 

ENTER QUESTION: WRITE IN THE QUESTION IN FULL WITH PAGE # Q #

Page 473 Question 9

 

What are the goals, strengths, and weaknesses of the Superfund program?

 

 

MAIN ANSWER: Answer the question without copying word for word from the book, this means discuss like in a rational conversation. Do NOT expect full credit for one word or phrase answers. Cover the Who, What, Where, When, Why How as much as possible.

 

YOUR OBSERVATION(s): In ADDITION FOR EACH QUESTION – what does this topic teach you or how have you seen something about this topic in the real world that pertains to home and work. Do NOT Split the answer just to fill space, you must add value to this.

 
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Industrial Hygiene Powerpoint

Create a powerpoint presentation of 15 slides( not counting title and reference slides) that provides an overview of the three major environmental, health, and safety (EHS) disciplines.  Include each of the following elements:

  • summary of the responsibilities for the discipline
  • evaluation of types of hazards addressed by the discipline
  • description of how industrial hygiene practices relate to safety and environmental programs
  • description of how industrial hygiene practices relate to environmental programs
  • evaluation of types of control methods commonly used by the discipline
  • interactions with the other two disciplines
  • major organizations associated with the discipline

Construct your presentation using a serif type font sucha as Times New Roman.  For ease of reading, do not use a font smaller than 28 points.

 
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PHIL320

Assignment Instructions
See the screenshot of the initial setting of the C-Roads World Climate Simulator below. It is necessary to use Google Chrome or Firefox to run the simulator. It is recommended that you use the online version. This simulator is accessed at

http://forio.com/simulate/climateinteractive/c-learn

C-Roads SIM screenshot initial setttings

This is the BAU (Business as Usual) projections for temperature increase of 4.2 degrees Celsius by 2100. Under “Graphs” the CO2 concentration is above 800 (ppmm), far above the 450 maximum indicated by scientists. These are far above the dotted lines which indicate the scientific recommended goal to minimize the impact of climate change. Here the current scenario matches the BAU because no changes have been made by the user. There are drop-down menus at the top (Simulation, Graphs, etc.). Also, the years (2100) and % on the table beneath that can be changed. This will automatically adjust the outcomes of the online simulation. Additionally, under “Simulation” you can adjust a category called Assumptions and Sensitivities. See my initial simulation below.

Instructor’s initial SIM

Here you can see that I have capped emissions for every region at the year 2050 and an annual decrease of 2%, with a 3% reduction in deforestation and a 4% promotion of afforestation. The simulation indicates that this will result in a 3.1 degree rise in temperature by the year 2100, far above the recommended limit of 2 degrees. Under Graphs > Impacts > Sea Level Rise, I was also able to determine that the projected sea level rise would only be slightly less than the BAU level 1+ meter. Obviously, this scenario indicates that much more needs to be done to have a positive effect on climate change and to avoid the recommended maximums (always indicated by dotted lines on the graph) in order to avoid the massive negative impacts of climate change. Under Window > 2100 Data Table, my SIM showed the following.

Year 2100

Atmospheric CO2 concentration (ppm)639.2

Atmospheric CO2eq concentration (ppm)681.6

High climate sensitivity temperature change (ºC)4.2

Temperature change (ºC)3.1

Low climate sensitivity temperature change (ºC) 1.8

Sea level rise from 2000 (m)1.1

Go ahead and explore different simulations with variables in the table, regionally and global, and the options of the Simulation and Graphs menus from the menu bar. See what it might take to bring about a positive effect on climate change achieve the recommended scientific limits on temperature change and CO2 levels etc. It is good to type some notes as you go to note the different variables and your exploration of the simulation because this SIM is online and cannot be saved. You will be composing a 250 word narrative describing your interaction with the simulation. Also, you will want to save and upload an image of one of your SIMs in the textbox. This can be done with any method by which you take a screenshot, upload the image to your student workspace, set the image for public viewing (Workspace > Actions > Edit Details > Publicly Viewable) and upload it here using the Image button (12th button on the middle row of the text editor). In Windows, you can hit the PrtScrn (Print Screen) button and use MS Paint, Windows Photo Viewer, or another program to paste it and save it. In Firefox you can now take and save and download screenshots from the browser itself. Any method which works for you will be fine.

The image of your SIM and your 250 word narration of your experience and outcomes placed in the textbox and submitted complete this assignment.

For more information, feel free to explore the following website.

http://www.ipcc.ch/

Intergovernmental Panel on Climate ChangeThe IPCC assesses the scientific, technical and socio-economic information relevant for the understanding of the risk of human-induced climate change.

 
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Journal 5

Journal 5 – Oil Spill – ENVS 100 Online Class

❖ Read this handout beforehand, to be sure you have everything you need.

❖ Post a synthesis reflection of what you learned. Incorporate information from all of the required questions in Parts A, B, and C. (Do not simply answer the questions…Write about what you learned from them.) Feel free to expand your reflection in the directions of your interest!

The objectives of this hands-on activity are: 1. To simulate an oil spill in the marine environment and to try several methods of cleaning up the spill.

You will be simulating oil in open water, oil on a beach, and oil on the feathers of a bird.

2. To calculate the size of an oil spill and determine whether it exceeded the legal limits.

3. To consider the sources and impacts of nonpoint-source oil pollution

4. To connect this activity with other course concepts

5. To attempt bioremediation using local seawater (optional)

!

http://education.nationalgeographic.com/education/file/national-geographic-magazine-geography-offshore-oil/?ar_a=1

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Supplies you will need for SECTION A:

• To simulate the open ocean, a coast, and wildlife: o Container: One deep dinner-sized plate or pie pan or Tupperware-style storage container o Water: To simulate water ☺ o Drinking straw: To create wind o Sand: Enough to build a beach in your plate o Feather: One feather from a craft-supplies store or pillow (or otherwise completely sterilized)

• Oils (to simulate spilled oils) – Small quantities of each o Cooking oil (olive, canola, corn, etc.) o Mineral oil o Other oils of your choosing (castor, etc) o Note: If you want your oil to look more like crude oil, you can mix in some powdered chocolate and shake well. o DO NOT USE REAL MOTOR OIL! It requires special hazardous-materials (hazmat) disposal methods!

• Cleaners (to simulate liquid cleanup methods) – Small quantities of each o Dishwashing liquid (or shampoo) o Rubbing alcohol (or isopropyl alcohol, or vodka) o Cold water o Hot water

• Sorbents and containments (to simulate physical cleanup methods) o Cotton pads or cotton balls or gauze pads (to simulate sorbent pads) o Small quantities of dried grass clippings (to simulate straw bales) o Other materials of your choosing, such as:

▪ Piece of nylon pantyhose material ▪ Coffee filter ▪ Toilet paper ▪ Cotton string ▪ (Etc)

o Optional: Tweezers (to help you gently move the materials around)

Supplies List for Optional SECTION D – CAUTION: Uses diesel fuel and fertilizers

• To attempt oil bioremediation (optional) □ Pond water or sea water □ Clear glass bottle or jar with tight-fitting screw top or stopper □ A few slow-release fertilizer pellets or a drop of liquid fertilizer (from gardening store) □ Small volume of automotive diesel (from gas station)

NOTE: When you are done with the experiment, dispose of the supplies via your town’s hazardous materials (hazmat) protocols. Gas stations, oil-change outlets, car washes, county hazmat locations, etc might accept them.

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SECTION A – Oil Spill and Cleanup Simulations

Part 1 – Oil-in-Open Water Simulation

1. Fill your plate with water (to a depth of about 1/2”). Pour a small amount of your first simulated “crude oil” onto the surface of the water. Record your observations.

2. Using the drinking straw, blow on the surface of the oiled water, lightly at first, then more strongly. This is a simulation of wind transport and mixing. What happens to the oil?

3. Use the drinking straw to stir the oil and water as vigorously as possible without spilling the liquid over the rim of the plate. This is a simulation of mixing by wave action. What happens to the oil?

4. a. Add several drops of the dishwashing liquid to the surface of the oil/water mixture. This is a simulation of the use of an oil dispersant. Record your observations.

b. Can you think of any benefit to using an oil dispersant in the real world? If so, what?

c. Can you think of any negative consequences of using a dispersant? If so, what?

5. Empty out your plate, then fill it with water again, and add some more oil. Place two sorbent pads (cotton/gauze) on the surface, and drag them around gently with your fingers (or tweezers). Remove the sorbent pads. How well did the sorbent pads soak up the oil?

6. Remove the sorbent pads, add a little more oil if necessary, then sprinkle some dried grass clippings (to simulate straw) onto the oily surface. Gently move the grass clippings around, then remove them. How well did the grass clippings soak up the oil?

Part 2 – Oil-on-Beach Simulation

7. Clean your plate and create a “wet sand beach” with some open water. Pour some of your simulated “crude oil” onto the surface of the beach. What happens to the oil?

8. Using fingers or tweezers, dip a sorbent pad in each of the following, and attempt to clean oil off the beach. For each substance, describe your relative success in cleaning the oil off the sand. 
 • Cold Water • Hot Water • Rubbing Alcohol • Liquid/Dish Soap

9. What special problems are evident with regard to cleaning oil off a sand beach?

Part 3 – Oiled Bird Simulation

10. Remove your “beach” and clean your plate. Dip a sterilized feather into your simulated “crude oil”, then place it on your plate. Using sorbent pads, attempt to clean the oil off the feather with each of the following, and describe your observations: 
 • Cold Water • Hot Water • Rubbing Alcohol • Liquid/Dish Soap

Part 4 – Other Scenarios

11. Now use the other equipment and materials at your disposal (see the supplies list above, and use your imagination). Repeat portions of the simulations above, to try to clean up the ocean water and your beach as best you can. Record your methods and your results for each scenario.

Part 5 – Conclusions

12. Based on your observations during these simulations, what would be your recommendations for clean-up techniques in a real oil spill in Puget Sound, for each of the following situations? (Note: Doing nothing is one possible option.) Explain your reasoning. 
 • Open Ocean • Beaches • Oiled Wildlife

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SECTION B – Calculations (show your work, in enough detail that I can follow your reasoning) 13. An oil spill, with the appearance of black to dark brown, is sighted by a commercial airliner flying over the Great Barrier Reef.

The spill is estimated to be 1.5 kilometers long and 50 meters wide. How much oil (in liters) would there be in the spill? (Remember that to produce a black to dark brown color, the oil would have to be at least 100 microns thick.)

14. A Coastwatch surveillance aircraft photographs a ship trailing a silvery oil discharge from its stern. The discharge is 13.5 nautical miles and at least the width of the vessel which is 37.5 meters. An oil spill on the water that gives a silvery sheen is approximately 1 micron in thickness. How much oil (in liters) has the ship discharged into the sea?

15. A fishing boat reports an oil spill near a ship to the local maritime authority. The ship is radioed and asked whether oil was being discharged from its vessel. The captain reports that the ship has discharged only 10 liters of heavy fuel waste oil during a bilge pump-out which is mixed with 100 tonnes of sea water. Has the ship exceeded the legal limit of oil discharge of 15 parts per million (15 parts of oil to 1 million parts of water)? Assume oil and sea water have the same density for the calculation (but see the tables in the background section for closer estimates).

NOTE: MATH HINTS for Questions #13-15 are at the end of the Background Information section of this document!

SECTION C – Extensions and Connections 16. Not all oil pollution comes from a single, localized source such as an oil tanker. In fact, in many locations the majority comes

from nonpoint sources such as storm drains, household car washing, poor car maintenance (oil drips), etc. Most people do not realize that water in storm drains is not treated before being discharged, and thus may contain very high concentrations of oil and other pollutants if they – and their neighbors, family, and local businesses – are not careful. List the following: • As many nonpoint sources of oil pollution as you can think of (residential and other) • Their impacts on the environment and wildlife • Ideas for how to minimize the pollution and its impacts

17. Step back and put the information you learned in this activity into the context of the rest of this course. Write a synthesis of how this all connects.

Optional : SECTION D – Diesel Oil Bioremediation

18. Do the “Experiment Demonstrating Oil Bioremediation”, posted at: https://www.amsa.gov.au/community/kids-and- teachers-resources/kids/teachers/experiment_bioremediation/index.html , or an alternative. Report your results when you have completed the experiment (it takes about a week). Document each stage with words, sketches, photographs, and/ or video. NOTE: When you are done with the experiment, dispose of the supplies via your school’s/town’s hazardous materials (hazmat) protocols. Gas stations, oil-change outlets, car washes, county hazmat locations, etc might accept them. “The experiment…is very simple and costs very little to do. In bioremediation you need: oil eating organisms (bugs), nutrients, oxygen, water and the food “oil”. There are plenty of natural organisms, bacteria, fungi etc in the air and water around us so there is no need to go searching for them.”

Background Information

Oil in the Marine Environment A small amount of oil leaks into the ocean from natural seeps on the sea floor. In recent decades, however, our growing dependence on marine transportation for petroleum products, offshore drilling, near-shore refining, and urban runoff have superceded the natural seepage of oil into the ocean by at least a factor of ten. Of course, the most highly publicized oil releases are associated with relatively rare, but catastrophic tanker accidents such as the Exxon Valdez, but these account for only a small percentage (about 3%) of the average amount of oil spilled into the ocean each year. Much more oil enters the marine environment each year through “routine” shipping operations and runoff from land-based sources.

Once oil is spilled into the ocean, several things happen to it. First, it is often transported and spread by winds, waves, tides, and currents. Lighter, more volatile components of the oil evaporate into the atmosphere, contributing to air pollution. Heavier, dense components of the oil ball up and sink to the bottom, coating or becoming incorporated into bottom sediments and harming benthic organisms for years. Storm winds and waves can mix oil and water into a frothy emulsion (known as “chocolate mousse”) that impacts pelagic organisms, such as plankton, birds, fish, and marine mammals. Most components of oil do not dissolve easily in water, but those that do can harm the delicate juvenile forms of marine organisms even in minute concentrations. The insoluble components of oil form sticky layers of oil on the surface that prevent free diffusion of gases, clog organisms’ feeding structures and gills, kill larvae,

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and decrease the light available for photosynthesis. When the skin or fur of marine mammals become coated with oil, they are often unable to regulate their body temperature (remember they, like us, are endotherms), and may die of hypothermia.

Methods of Oil Spill Cleanup The first step in oil spill cleanup is typically containment by booms made of logs or linked plastic floats. Skimmers, or special boats that recover oil using conveyor belts or vacuum hoses are then used to scoop up the confined floating oil. In some cases, absorbent material, known as sorbents, are used to make it easier to collect the oil. Examples might include natural materials such as straw, or sorbent pads made of some absorbent but floatable material like polypropylene. In some cases, burning of the surface oil is carried out, but this in itself is hazardous and has obvious environmental consequences. Oil dispersant chemicals, which are similar to detergents, are sometimes sprayed on oil spills to help break them up and disperse them, but these chemicals present environmental hazards of their own. Bioremediation, involving the introduction of natural or genetically-engineered oil-eating bacteria, has been shown to be partially effective in reducing quantities of spilled oil, but is tricky to use, and has not yet been proven to be completely risk-free in the marine environment. Finally, when oil fouls beach or rocky shoreline areas, cleanup methods employed in the past have included high pressure sprays of water or steam. While this method definitely improves the appearance of the shoreline, biological studies have shown that in most cases it does more harm than good, and sometimes effectively sterilizes the environment, killing everything that the oil didn’t.

All oil spill cleanup methods are only partially successful, and in many cases research has found that the cleanup may actually make the environmental damage worse than it would have been if the spill had been left alone. Oil in the marine environment is toxic and ugly, but it is ultimately biodegradable, and nature will, over many years or decades, eventually repair itself if left alone. The cheapest and most effective oil spill treatment is to prevent them from happening in the first place.

The Exxon Valdez Spill On March 24, 1989 at 4 minutes past midnight, the oil tanker Exxon Valdez struck a reef in Alaska’s spectacular Prince William Sound. An environmental nightmare began that changed not only Prince William Sound, but the world. No longer would people blindly believe promises from corporations that their operations were completely safe.

A total of 11,000,000 gallons of Alaska North Slope crude oil leaked from the ruptured hull of the ship, impaled by the jagged rocks of Bligh Reef. Within two months, the oil had been driven along a path stretching 470 miles to the southwest. The initial cleanup of the spill took three years, and the cost was over $2.1 billion. The death toll in terms of wildlife was staggering; the full impact may never be known.

On October 8, 1991, an agreement was reached between the State of Alaska, the federal government, and Exxon on both criminal charges and civil damage claims. In settlement of civil charges, Exxon would pay the State of Alaska and the United States $900 million over a 10-year period. This money would be used for restoration and would be administered by six government Trustees; three federal, three state. In settlement of criminal charges, Exxon would pay a fine of $250 million. Two “restitution funds” of $50 million each were established, one under state control and one under federal authority. Against strong opposition from many Alaskans, $125 million of the balance was forgiven due to Exxon’s cooperation during the cleanup, and upgraded safety procedures to prevent a reoccurrence. The remaining $50 million was divided between the Victims of Crime Act account ($13 million) and the North American Wetlands Conservation Fund ($12 million). On September 16, 1994, a jury in federal court returned a $5 billion punitive damages verdict against Exxon. The company, however, has appealed several times since that time.

In a January 2004 ruling, a U.S. District Court ruled that Exxon must pay a slightly reduced $4.5 billion in punitive damages, but with $2.25 billion added on for back interest (total $6.75 billion). Exxon continued to appeal, and the case was finally heard before the U.S. Supreme Court in 2008. The court reduced Exxon’s punitive damages to $507.5 million, about one-tenth of the original penalty.

Joseph Hazelwood was the captain of the Exxon Valdez the night she ran aground. Despite his admission that he had consumed at least three drinks before boarding the ship, Hazelwood was acquitted in 1990 of operating the tanker while drunk. He was convicted of the misdemeanor offence of illegally discharging oil, and on July 8, 1998, the Alaska Appeals Court upheld Hazelwood’s sentence on that charge. Hazelwood currently lives on Long Island, New York, and works as a maritime insurance adjustor for a company owned by his lawyer.

The Exxon Valdez, re-named the SeaRiver Mediterranean, is still carrying oil around the world. Although she has been barred from ever entering Alaskan waters again, Exxon applied to have that court ruling reversed. The appeal was rejected.

An application to merge with Mobil to form the world’s largest corporation was opposed by Senator Slade Gorton on March 4, 1999, due to Exxon’s non-payment of assessed penalties. The merger of the two oil giants occurred later that year despite the senator’s objections. Exxon-Mobil has since become the most profitable company in the world.

Searching for positive results of the spill requires a creative definition of the term “positive.” As a direct or indirect result of the Exxon Valdez disaster, tighter environmental regulations have been imposed on many industries. The most important regulation attempting to protect against a repeat of the spill is the modern standard for tanker ships, which now must be built with double hulls, so that if the outer skin is punctured, no oil will leak. Among other benefits, large tracts of land have been added to Kenai Fjords National Park, using funds from the Exxon fines.

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FIGURE 1:

Gulf of Alaska map with an overlay of the path the Exxon Valdez oil took and how long it took to

get there.

http://library.thinkquest.org/10867/spill

Mathematics and Oil Spills (http://www.amsa.gov.au/Marine_Environment_Protection except to Americanize spellings)

 

Conversion factors for oil spills

When an oil spill occurs many different units of measure may be used to describe the size of the spill. This can be very confusing for the public as often media reports use the largest figure to describe the oil spill.

Volumes of Oil
 barrels x 35 = imperial gallons 
 barrels x 42 = US gallons 
 cubic meters x 264.2 = US gallons 
 cubic feet x 7.481 = US gallons 
 metric tons x 294 = US gallons

US gallons x 0.833 = imperial gallons US gallons x 3.785 = liters US gallons x 0.0238 = barrels (or divide by 42) US gallons x 0.0034 = metric tons 
 1 cubic meter is 1000 liters 1 metric tonne of water is 1,000 liters of water

The amount of oil on the water

Sometimes ships need to discharge oily bilges at sea. The current legal limit for this oily discharge is 15 parts of oil to one million parts of water (or 15 parts per million (ppm)). A discharge of 15 ppm cannot be seen on the water therefore if you can see an oil spill it is an illegal discharge.

When bringing a case to court, authorities need to estimate the amount of oil which may be in the discharge. Oil spills spread quickly on the surface of the sea and the area of the spill is key information which is reported to authorities. In maritime language, nautical miles (nm) is used to describe distance travelled by vessels. You will often need to convert this measurement to metric units to then calculate the amount of oil in the spill.

Nautical miles x 1.852 = metric conversion to kilometers

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General glossary of terms used in oil spill observations

Spill characteristics appear differently under low light conditions and under strong winds conditions. • Light sheen: A light, almost transparent, layer of oil. Sometimes confused with windrows and natural sheen resulting from

biological processes. (e.g., coral spawning or algal bloom). • Silver sheen: A slightly thicker layer of oil that appears silvery or shimmery. • Rainbow sheen: Sheen that reflects colors. • Brown oil: Typically a 0.1 mm – 1.0 mm thick layer of water-in-oil emulsion. (Thickness can vary widely depending on wind and

current conditions). May be referred as heavy or dull colored sheens. [Note: 0.1 millimeters = 100 micrometers = 100 microns = 100 µm]

• Mousse: Water-in-oil emulsion often formed as oil weathers: colors can range from orange or tan to dark brown. • Black oil: Area of black colored oil sometimes appearing with a latex texture. Often confused with kelp beds and other natural

phenomenon. • Windrows: Oil or sheen oriented in lines or streaks. Brown oil and mousse can be easily confused with algae scum collecting in

convergence lines, algae patches, or mats or kelp or fucus. Sometimes called streaks, stringers or fingers. • Tarballs: Weathered oil that has formed a pliable ball. Size may vary from pinhead to about 30 cm. Sheen may or may not be

present. • Tar mats: Non-floating mats of oily debris (usually sediment and/or plant matter) that are found on beaches or just offshore. • Pancakes: Isolated patches of oil shaped in a mostly circular fashion. Pancakes can range in size from a few meters across to

hundreds of meters in diameter. Sheen may or may not be present.

Densities (mass per volume)

Water (H2O) = 1.00 g/cm3 Surface sea water ≈ 1.02 g/cm3

Vegetable oil ≈ 0.92 g/cm3

http://www.iea.org/textbase/work/2004/eswg/SIP9.pdf

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Viscosities (resistance to flow)

* IFO – Intermediate Fuel Oil; ** HFO – Heavy Fuel Oil

http://www.amsa.gov.au/Marine_Environment_Protection

For further information: • http://www.psp.wa.gov/ • http://www.psparchives.com/publications/puget_sound/sos/07sos/2007_stateofthesound_fulldoc.pdf • https://www.amsa.gov.au/community/kids-and-teachers-resources/ • http://www.seattlepi.com/news/article/In-busy-shipping-lanes-threat-of-big-oil-spill-1101231.php • http://www.ecy.wa.gov/programs/tcp/sites_brochure/lower_duwamish/lower_duwamish_hp.html • http://duwamishcleanup.org/community-engagement/ • http://www.simetric.co.uk/si_liquids.htm

 

Natural Product Petroleum Product Approx. Viscosity cSt @ 20 C

Water 1

Kerosene 1.0 – 2.0

Gasoline 1.5 – 2.0

Turpentine 1.5 – 2.0

Milk (whole) 2

Automotive diesel 3 – 5

Heating oil 10

Marine diesel oil 13

Salad oil 60

Canola oil 70

Olive oil 100

IFO* 40 200

SAE 10W30 Lube oil 200

Varnish 300

IFO* 80 500

Glycerine 600

Castor oil 1,000

IFO* 180 2,000

Corn syrup 5,000

HFO** 280 5,000 – 25,000

Honey 10,000

HFO** 380 10,000 – 100,000

Hot fudge syrup 25,000

Molasses 50,000

Heavy molasses 100,000

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What Happens to Spilled Oil? (http://www.amsa.gov.au/Marine_Environment_Protection) When oil enters the sea, many physical, chemical and biological processes act on the oil. Many changes happen at once – the slick moves and spreads and environmental processes alter its character. Some of the processes are most important immediately after the spill and other processes become increasingly important as time goes on.

Spreading: Oil is lighter than water, so it floats on the surface as a slick. The slick (or spill) spreads over the surface of the water due to the force of gravity. Spreading decreases steadily as time passes. Dissolution: Occurs when the water-soluble components of oil break down into the large volume of water surrounding the spill. Only a very small percentage of oil dissolves. Sedimentation: The force of gravity will cause some of the oil to travel through the water and settle on the bottom. Movement: An oil spill will move in the same direction and at a similar speed as the water. It is moved by currents, tide and wind. Biodegradation: Many species of marine micro-organisms or bacteria, fungi and yeasts feed on the compounds that make up oil. Hydrocarbons (oil) consumed by these micro-organisms can be partially metabolized or completely metabolized to carbon dioxide and water. The rate of biodegradation depends on the temperature of the oil and water mixture. Evaporation: Causes some of the oil to transfer to the atmosphere. Lighter hydrocarbons evaporate more rapidly than heavy components. Weathering: Is a progressive series of changes in oil characteristics caused by physical, chemical and biological processes. The rate of weathering is highly dependent on the type of oil spilled – the lighter it is, the faster it is likely to weather. Dispersion: The spilled oil is spread into the upper layers of the water column by natural wave action. Oxidation: The chemical combination of hydrocarbons with oxygen is known as oxidation. Oxidation is slow compared with other weathering processes. Emulsification: Is the combination of two liquids – one suspended in the other. In the case of oil, the emulsion can be either oil-in-water or water in oil. Milk is an oil-in-water emulsion; butter is a water-in-oil emulsion. Both types of emulsification require wave action and occur only for specific oil compositions. Water-in-oil emulsions are extremely stable and may persist for months or years after a spill. Water-in-oil emulsions containing 50 to 80 per cent water are most common, and have a reddish-brown colour and grease like consistency. They are some times called ‘chocolate mousse’ because of their pudding-like appearance.

The Effects of Oil on Wildlife (http://www.amsa.gov.au/Marine_Environment_Protection) We have all seen pictures and videos of wildlife covered in black, sticky oil after an oil spill. These pictures are usually of oiled birds. Many people are not aware that it is not just birds that get oiled during a spill. Other marine life such as marine mammals can also suffer from the effects of an oil spill. Even small spills can severely affect marine wildlife.

Not all oils are the same. There are many different types of oil and this means that each oil spill is different depending on the type of oil spilt.

Each oil spill will have a different impact on wildlife and the surrounding environment depending on: • the type of oil spilled, • the location of the spill, • the species of wildlife in the area, • the timing of breeding cycles and seasonal migrations, • and even the weather at sea during the oil spill. Oil affects wildlife by coating their bodies with a thick layer. Many oils also become stickier over time (this is called weathering) and so adheres to wildlife even more. Since most oil floats on the surface of the water it can affect many marine animals and sea birds. Unfortunately, birds and marine mammals will not necessarily avoid an oil spill. Some marine mammals, such as seals and dolphins, have been seen swimming and feeding in or near an oil spill. Some fish are attracted to oil because it looks like floating food. This endangers sea birds, which are attracted to schools of fish and may dive through oil slicks to get to the fish.

Oil that sticks to fur or feathers, usually crude and bunker fuels, can cause many problems. Some of these problems are: • hypothermia in birds by reducing or destroying the insulation and waterproofing properties of their feathers; • hypothermia in fur seal pups by reducing or destroying the insulation of their woolly fur (called lanugo). Adult fur seals have blubber and would not suffer from

hypothermia if oiled. Dolphins and whales do not have fur, so oil will not easily stick to them; • birds become easy prey, as their feathers being matted by oil make them less able to fly away; • marine mammals such as fur seals become easy prey if oil sticks their flippers to their bodies, making it hard for them to escape predators; • birds sink or drown because oiled feathers weigh more and their sticky feathers cannot trap enough air between them to keep them buoyant; • fur seal pups drown if oil sticks their flippers to their bodies; • birds lose body weight as their metabolism tries to combat low body temperature; • marine mammals lose body weight when they can not feed due to contamination of their environment by oil; • birds become dehydrated and can starve as they give up or reduce drinking, diving and swimming to look for food; • inflammation or infection in dugongs and difficulty eating due to oil sticking to the sensory hairs around their mouths; • disguise of scent that seal pups and mothers rely on to identify each other, leading to rejection, abandonment and starvation of seal pups; and • damage to the insides of animals and birds bodies, for example by causing ulcers or bleeding in their stomachs if they ingest the oil by accident. Oil does not have to be sticky to endanger wildlife. Both sticky oils such as crude oil and bunker fuels, and non-sticky oils such as refined petroleum products can affect different wildlife. Oils such as refined petroleum products do not last as long in the marine environment as crude or bunker fuel. They are not likely to stick to a bird or animal, but they are much more poisonous than crude oil or bunker fuel. While some of the following effects on sea birds, marine mammals and turtles can be caused by crude oil or bunker fuel, they are more commonly caused by refined oil products. Oil in the environment or oil that is ingested can cause: • poisoning of wildlife higher up the food chain if they eat large amounts of other organisms that have taken oil into their tissues; • interference with breeding by making the animal too ill to breed, interfering with breeding behaviour such as a bird sitting on their eggs, or by reducing the

number of eggs a bird will lay; • damage to the airways and lungs of marine mammals and turtles, congestion, pneumonia, emphysema and even death by breathing in droplets of oil, or oil fumes

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or gas; • damage to a marine mammal’s or turtle’s eyes, which can cause ulcers, conjunctivitis and blindness, making it difficult for them to find food, and sometimes

causing starvation; • irritation or ulceration of skin, mouth or nasal cavities; • damage to and suppression of a marine mammal’s immune system, sometimes causing secondary bacterial or fungal infections; • damage to red blood cells; • organ damage and failure such as a bird or marine mammal’s liver; • damage to a bird’s adrenal tissue which interferes with a bird’s ability to maintain blood pressure, and concentration of fluid in its body; • decrease in the thickness of egg shells; • stress; • damage to fish eggs, larvae and young fish; • contamination of beaches where turtles breed causing contamination of eggs, adult turtles or newly hatched turtles; • damage to estuaries, coral reefs, seagrass and mangrove habitats which are the breeding areas of many fish and crustaceans, interfering with their breeding; • tainting of fish, crustaceans, molluscs and algae; • interference with a baleen whale’s feeding system by tar-like oil, as this type of whale feeds by skimming the surface and filtering out the water; and • poisoning of young through the mother, as a dolphin calf can absorb oil through its mother’s milk. Animals covered in oil at the beginning of a spill may be affected differently from animals encountering the oil later. For example, early on, the oil maybe more poisonous, so the wildlife affected early will take in more of the poison. The weather conditions can reduce or increase the potential for oil to cause damage to the environment and wildlife. For example, warm seas and high winds will encourage lighter oils to form gases, and will reduce the amount of oil that stays in the water to affect marine life. The impact of an oil spill on wildlife is also affected by where spilled oil reaches. For example, fur seal pups are affected more than adults by oil spills because pups swim in tidal pools and along rocky coasts, whereas the adults swim in open water where it is less likely for oil to linger. Dugongs also feed on seagrass along the coast and therefore be more affected by oil spills. Different resources will be needed to combat an oil spill, depending on the number and type of wildlife that is affected. Quick and humane care of wildlife affected by oil spills is required by law. The National Oiled Wildlife Response guidelines have been developed at both the Commonwealth and State/Territory level under Australia’s national strategy to respond to oil and chemical spills in the marine environment. This strategy is known as the National Plan to Combat Pollution of the Sea by Oil and other Noxious and Hazardous Substances (National Plan).

Math Hints for Oil Spill Calculations

13. An oil spill, with the appearance of black to dark brown, is sighted by a commercial airliner flying over the Great Barrier Reef. The spill is estimated to be 1.5 kilometers long and 50 meters wide. How much oil (in liters) would there be in the spill? (Remember that to produce a black to dark brown color, the oil would have to be at least 100 microns thick.)

You are asked for the volume of oil (in liters).

Volumes are 3-dimensional: Volume (V) = Length (L) x Width (W) x Height (H)

Here, the Length and Width are given, and the Height is the thickness of the oil.

Convert L, W, and H to meters (so you can multiply them all together to get cubic meters, m3).

One kilometer = 1000 meters (Use this to convert L from km to m)

One micron = 1 micrometer = 1 x 10-6 meters = 0.000001 meter (Use this to convert H from microns to meters)

Now multiply: V = L x W x H

Now convert to liters – Per the table on page 7 of this handout, 1 cubic meter is 1000 liters. (Use this to convert V from m3 to liters)

Hint: Your final answer should be 7500 liters. You must show me all steps, including units with all numbers.

14. A Coastwatch surveillance aircraft photographs a ship trailing a silvery oil discharge from its stern. The discharge is 13.5 nautical miles and at least the width of the vessel which is 37.5 meters. An oil spill on the water that gives a silvery sheen is approximately 1 micron in thickness. How much oil (in liters) has the ship discharged into the sea?

Do the same thing as in Q#13 above, with one additional conversion step:

Per page 7: Nautical miles x 1.852 = metric conversion from nautical miles to kilometers

Hint: Your final answer should be a little less than 1000 liters. Show your work.

15. A fishing boat reports an oil spill near a ship to the local maritime authority. The ship is radioed and asked whether oil was being discharged from its vessel. The captain reports that the ship has discharged only 10 liters of heavy fuel waste oil during a bilge pump- out which is mixed with 100 tonnes of sea water. Has the ship exceeded the legal limit of oil discharge of 15 parts per million (15 parts of oil to 1 million parts of water)? Assume oil and sea water have the same density for the calculation (but see the tables in this handout for closer estimates).

Try this one on your own. You’ll need to know (page 7) that 1 metric tonne of water = 1000 liters of water. Also, 15 ppm = 15 parts oil to 1,000,000 parts water. Likewise, a concentration of 1 ppm equals 1 liter oil in 1,000,000 liters seawater.

Hint: Your final answer should be YES – The concentration you calculate should vastly exceed the legal limit of 15 ppm. Show your work.

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Fire Protection Technology

Refer to the Points to Ponder Scenario in the Unit II Lesson to respond to this discussion board. Do you think the byproducts of combustion would reach the warehouse’s fire protection, detection, or suppression system to alarm or suppress the fire? Why, or why not?

Please include the name of the person or question to which you are replying in the subject line. For example, “Tom’s response to Susan’s comment.”
ALSO PLEASE RESPOND TO ANOTHER STUDENTS COMMENT BELOW

Frank:

Looking at the scenario, there are numerous items that stand out as “red flags” to me.  First was the fact that the system was not rated for the combustible storage.  That means that the system would not put out enough GPM to suppress or control the fire.  There would also be a good chance that the system would be overrun by the amount of fire and heat produced and would have no effect at all but maybe slowing the fire for a few minutes before it overran the system.  Secondly, The report states that the system was barely operational. It didn’t say why.  I know during unit 1 there were issues with the availiable water coming into the building was inadequate due to the old pipes in the area.  It could be a housekeeping issue or something was broken and was in the process of being fixed.  Any way, there should have been a fire watch and getting this system operational should have been a top priority.  Third, the power was out and there was no back up power to the building due to flooding. All of the fire suppression and alarm systems should have their own emergency backup in case of power failure.  Fourth, the detectors were only in the ceiling.  That is not good for any fire that starts on the ground level or in those stacks.  With that much space between the detectors and combustibles, by the time the heat reached the detectors to alarm it, the fire would be extremely large and would most likely overrun the suppression system possibly before it even activates. SInce “unchecked fire” doubles in size every 2 minutes, without a lower temp detector closer to the ground, the system would not even have a chance to get this fire under control, even if it activated.  In closing, I do not think that the system would have had enough time to respond or activate in this scenario.  The entire system was designed incorrectly for this building.  The fire would have had way too much time to build before the system would even activate.

 
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