ScienceDaily (Apr. 14, 2009) —
Driveways and parking lots may look better with a layer of sealcoat
applied to the pavement, but the water running off the surface into
nearby streams will be carrying more than just oxygen and hydrogen
molecules.
New research conducted at the University of New Hampshire
Stormwater Center (UNHSC) indicates that sealcoat may contribute to
increasingly significant amounts of polyaromatic hydrocarbons entering
waterways from stormwater runoff.
Polyaromatic hydrocarbons, more commonly known as PAHs, are found
in diesel and crude oil and are considered to be carcinogenic.
Although small amounts of PAHs are typically found in the waters
around the New Hampshire Seacoast, the sudden spike in the hydrocarbon
concentrations in water draining from a university parking lot used
for research caused Tom Ballestero, UNH associate professor of civil
engineering, to be concerned about unknown impacts.
"Our society has been sealcoating pavement for decades and there
are things we've never asked about," he says. "Now we're starting to
probe and ask these questions."
Although it is intended to remain on the pavement surface, much of
the sealcoat eventually washes or scrapes off and ends up in nearby
streams and rivers, says Alison Watts, affiliate faculty member at the
UNHSC. The PAHs from the sealcoat attach to organic matter, such as
leaves or sediment, where they may be ingested by organisms or buried
in other sediments.
As part of this N.H. Sea Grant-funded research, one-quarter acre of
a parking lot located near the UNHSC was covered with coal tar-based
sealcoat and one-third acre was covered with asphalt-based sealcoat.
The remainder of the nine-acre lot was left unsealed. On-site
stormwater drains off the parking lot and into a nearby swale. The PAH
concentration was measured in the water and sediments coming from the
sealcoated and unsealed parking lot sections.
Both types of sealcoat led to a surprisingly rapid increase in PAH
concentrations in the initial runoff - up to 5,000 parts per billion
(ppb), significantly higher than the 10 ppb levels released from the
unsealed lot, although concentrations decreased after several
rainstorms. The PAH concentrations in the sediments mirrored these
trends; the concentrations immediately downstream of the coal
tar-sealed lot increased by nearly two orders of magnitude within the
first year.
Unlike other compounds, PAHs do not break down easily and thus
persist in the environment for decades. Even a small amount of PAHs
coming off sealcoated parking lots may overwhelm an aquatic ecological
system already stressed by other contaminants.
Increased PAH concentrations in waterways could be a human health
issue if people are exposed to it regularly. In addition, dust
particles coming from a sealcoated driveway could potentially be
troublesome for children who play on the sealed surface. Ballestero
cautions that it should not be a major source of concern, but
nevertheless he and Watts will be investigating PAH levels in dust
from sealcoat later this year.
"You don't see people falling over from PAHs in sealcoat, it's not
that big of a health issue," Ballestero says. "But it could be a
cumulative exposure problem that gets uglier over time."
Ballestero says he has sensed an interest by the sealcoat industry
to offer more environmentally friendly, less toxic alternatives in the
future. There should be options that allow workers in the industry to
continue to make a living, but without causing additional harm to the
local ecosystems and human health, he notes.
"There are much bigger environmental problems out there than PAHs
from sealcoats, but the bottom line is that it is easily preventable,"
Watts adds. "All you have to do is not apply it to pavement."
The UNH Stormwater Center, dedicated to the protection of water
resources through effective stormwater management, receives continued
funding from the Cooperative Institute for Coastal and Estuarine
Environmental Technology (CICEET) at UNH and the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).