Report provides clarity on sawmill contamination
9 October 2008
Media Statement
Report
provides clarity on sawmill contamination
The Ministry for
the Environment has published a technical report which
outlines the extent of dioxin contamination at sawmill sites
in New Zealand.
The report is the result of an
investigation by consultants of 255 sites where
pentachlorophenol (known as PCP) was used as a treatment of
timber in sprays or dips until its withdrawal in 1988. PCP
contained dioxin impurities in its commercial
forms.
Sue Powell, general manager of the
Ministry’s Local Government Group, says the report
provides excellent information for territorial authorities:
“The report shows that there is one very large, six large,
28 medium, and 220 small sawmill sites where PCP was used.
The consultants obtained data at 17 sawmills to estimate the
extent of dioxin present.”
Of the 255 sites, 100
are no longer sawmills. Most are zoned commercial or
industrial, but a small number of sites are now used for
residential purposes and land records were not clear whether
those sites had been appropriately managed.
“The
risk of health impacts is regarded as low, but as a
precaution health and council officials visited those sites
and spoke to residents. All of the residents were aware of
the land’s former sawmill use,” Sue Powell
said.
The report updates the national estimate of
dioxin in soils at sawmill locations, and contributes to a
reporting obligation under the Stockholm Convention on
Persistent Organic Pollutants.
Sue Powell says all
councils in New Zealand have received the report, and under
the Resource Management Act’s 2005 amendments are obliged
to ensure their land databases correctly reflect sites known
to have a history of contamination.
“Councils
should require the clean-up or ongoing management of former
sawmill sites where PCP was used before approving future
land-use changes.”
As part of its usual work, the
Department of Labour will visit current and former sawmill
sites to ensure employers know about the soil contamination
that may be present, and to provide them with information on
safe management practices.
The report is available
at
http://www.mfe.govt.nz/publications/hazardous/assessment-dioxin-contamination-sawmill-sites-2008-10/index.html.
For answers to frequently asked questions on dioxin, see
http://www.mfe.govt.nz/issues/hazardous/contaminated/dioxin-faq/.
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