Science Inventory

Logistics Network for Spatio-Temporal Control of Phosphorus Pollution in Water Bodies

Citation:

Hu, Y., A. Sampat, V. Zavala, AND Gerardo J. Ruiz-Mercado. Logistics Network for Spatio-Temporal Control of Phosphorus Pollution in Water Bodies. AIChE Annual Meeting, Orlando, FL, November 10 - 15, 2019.

Impact/Purpose:

Holistic management strategies of organic waste will be required to achieve a more comprehensive and permanent solution for nutrient pollution and reduce the human impact on the environment. This conference presentation abstract describes the first attempt to link optimal organic waste management (nutrient point source emissions) with nutrient pollution and HABs by considering spatio-temporal variations and non-point source emissions. This contribution improves the management of organic waste which has broad-scale implications for the environment in the US, with interest for Regions, states, communities, and the public looking for feasible solutions to address environmental, social, and economic impacts caused by inefficient management of organic waste, nutrient pollution, and HABs.

Description:

Harmful algal blooms (HABs) pose severe health threats due to the release of toxins and the appearance of hypoxia in water bodies. In addition, HABs lead to significant economic losses since they impact tourism, recreational and commercial activities, and property values [1]. Approximately 30% of the lakes from 36 U.S. states report persistent HABs problems [2]. The US EPA reported that the corresponding tourism losses and commercial fishing losses reached one billion and more than ten million dollars per year respectively. It is widely known that nutrient pollution (especially nitrogen and phosphorous) is a key factor in the development of HABs . Nutrient pollution is a complex spatio-temporal and multiscale process that originates from two types of nutrient sources: non-point source and point source. Non-point sources include nutrient release from agricultural lands, natural lands, and stormwater while point sources include nutrient releases from organic waste originated in permitted locations such as livestock facilities. Nutrient pollution and HAB issues have been studied from the perspectives of human health, economic analysis, prediction and monitoring, treatment, and remediation [3,4]. Interestingly, a dimension of the nutrient pollution problem that has not received as much attention is how nutrients interact through the current agricultural supply chain management practices. This is important because the transport of nutrients to water bodies is a spatio-temporal phenomenon that involves multiple scales and that is tightly related to the spatial layout and geography of agricultural lands surrounding the water bodies, to the timing of fertilizer application, and to regional nutrient imbalances. In this work, we combine multiple types of modeling tools to analyze the relationship between supply chain management strategies, nutrient transport, and HAB development. The supply chain component captures balances and transformation of waste, nutrients, and products at multiple locations as well as waste transportation [5]. This supply chain model can achieve coordination among different objectives, which include investment, transportation, and operational costs, economic losses, and environmental impacts caused by HABs. The second component of our framework is a nutrient transport model, which can track the nutrient releases from organic waste and their transport process from the soil to the aquatic systems [6]. The third component is an algal bloom prediction model that relates nutrient concentration and other natural factors (e.g., temperature and sunlight) to algal blooms [7,8]. We apply our framework to a series of real case studies in the Yahara Watershed in the state of Wisconsin (U.S.) to illustrate the model structure and practicability. Specifically, by designing an effective supply chain management that stores, mobilizes, and processes organic waste, it is possible to balance and recycle nutrients more effectively and with this, control the timing of toxic bloom occurrence and identify which locations are best suited to reduce nutrient loading to ambient water. See References in the attached file.

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( PRESENTATION/ SLIDE)
Product Published Date:11/11/2019
Record Last Revised:02/25/2020
OMB Category:Other
Record ID: 348298