Some 18 years after the Exxon Valdez ran aground and spilled nearly 11 million gallons of crude oil into Alaska’s Prince William Sound, the oil continues to cause environmental problems along some of Alaska’s shoreline.
To help determine why the oil continues to linger long after experts predicted it would disappear, Temple University has been awarded a three-year, $1.2 million grant by the Exxon Valdez Oil Spill Trustee Council.
“Every indication tells us that the oil should have biodegraded,” says Michel Boufadel, chair of Civil and Environmental Engineering in Temple’s College of Engineering and the principal investigator for the grant.
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Photo courtesy Michel Boufadel
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“But what we’ve seen is there are still plenty of places where the oil still exists.”
According to a recent study published in the journal Environmental Science and
Technology, scientists from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), the U.S. Geological Survey and Alaskan agencies found that oil levels in the sands around the sound are much the same as they were when tests were done five years ago. The study says oil has seeped down 4 to 10 inches.
During the next two summers, Boufadel and graduate students will travel to Prince
William Sound for 20 days and 50 days, respectively, to conduct field studies, take samples and try to get an understanding of the motion of the water and effects of the waves along the beaches.
“Our goal is to understand what is happening at the oil-water interface, since that is where the biodegradation of oil typically occurs,” said Boufadel, an expert in oil spill remediation. “We will be examining the biodegradation from both sides of that interface — from inside and outside the oil patches.”
Boufadel said the researchers currently believe that micro-organisms, which would
typically consume the oil, may play a key role in the oil’s lack of biodegradation along the beaches.
Boufadel hypothesizes that the micro-organisms, which live in the water and need other nutrients to be able to consume the oil, may not be getting enough nitrogen, phosphorus or oxygen in order to do that. Or, he adds, a layer or sort of “skin” may have developed around the oil patches, making them impenetrable by the micro-organisms.
Boufadel also believes that environmental factors such as temperature could be inhibiting the micro-orgamisms. “There may be enough nutrients, but the temperature may be so low that these micro-organisms cannot grow fast enough to consume the oil that lingers on these particular beaches,” he said.
As part of the Prince William Sound study, the research team will be using a numerical model developed by Boufadel to account simultaneously for all the factors causing the lack of biodegradation.
Director of the Environmental Hydrology and Hydraulics Laboratory in Temple’s
College of Engineering (www.temple.edu/environment), Boufadel has been funded by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) for numerous research projects involving oil spills, including the development of new testing guidelines that determine the how effective dispersants are in fighting oil spills in certain sea environments. A native of Lebanon, he was asked last summer by the Lebanese government to consult on the largest oil spill ever in the eastern Mediterranean Sea.
In addition to Boufadel and the Temple environmental engineering students, Chiang He, assistant professor of Environmental Engineering at Temple, and researchers from Washington University in St. Louis, NOAA and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency also will be involved in the project.
The Exxon Valdez Oil Spill Trustee Council (www.evostc.state.ak.us) is a partnership
between the State of Alaska and the Federal Government to oversee the restoration of the ecosystem of Prince William Sound that resulted from the largest oil spill in U.S. history.
SOURCE CONTACT: Michel Boufadel, 215/204-7871 or boufadel@temple.edu.
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