January 28, 2025
Book Chapter

Developing a remediation framework

Abstract

When harmful contaminants are detected in soil, sediment, or groundwater (or suspected due to industrial activities), remediation efforts may be required to protect human health and the environment. This chapter will introduce and discuss the steps in the general site remediation process that are key when approaching any remediation strategy, regardless of the site complexity. While these steps are described in a linear fashion, in most cases, the approach is more fluid and iterative depending on the desired outcomes and success of each progressive clean-up effort along the way. This chapter will additionally articulate some key considerations which may be important to the overall remediation strategy depending on the particular needs and desired outcomes. From these more general discussions, the chapter will branch into a case-study of the remediation approach, or process steps, previously/currently/in the future taking place at the Hanford Site, as one example of a complex waste sites in the United States. As indicated earlier, while a remediation strategy can be more simply described by a progression of general process steps, it is far more likely to observe fluidity and strategy evolution over time from the first conceived strategy as remediation progress occurs. The chapter concludes with a brief discussion of how the strategy at the Hanford Site has evolved to provide a singular example of what this evolution might look like for other complex waste sites.

Published: January 28, 2025

Citation

Muller K.A., C. Bottenus, and C.D. Johnson. 2024. Developing a remediation framework. In Remediation of Legacy Hazardous and Nuclear Industrial Sites: Perspectives from Hanford, edited by S.T. Arm and H.P Emerson. 5 - 27. Boca Raton, Florida:CRC Press. PNNL-SA-180215. doi:10.1201/9781003329213-2

Research topics