Risk assessment is one of 2 main ways that site owners and operators may choose to remediate and manage contaminated sites under B.C.’s contaminated sites regime.
A risk-based approach:
Why is a risk-based approach needed?
Numerical soil and water standards are most often used to determine when substance concentrations have been remediated to acceptable levels. At some sites, removing substances is not possible or practical.
In these cases, the substances may be managed on-site to ensure they do not pose a hazard to human or environmental health.
Using the risk-based approach allows a responsible person to estimate risks associated with leaving substances in place. This information is used to design appropriate risk management solutions to eliminate the risks or reduce them to safe levels.
What is risk assessment?
Risk assessment is a tool that can be used to evaluate and predict the severity of existing and potential future effects from substances at a site.
It can only be used within a site-specific context, which means that every risk assessment is unique to the site for which it was prepared.
Every risk assessment provides the following types of information:
How does risk assessment determine if a health risk exists?
The fundamental goal of risk assessment is to estimate levels of risk and hazard to human and environmental health.
The mere presence of a substance or contaminant at a site does not necessarily constitute a risk.
For a risk to exist, the following 3 basic conditions must be met:
What exposure pathways are considered?
Risk assessment considers all the exposure pathways for existing and potential future receptors on and off-site. A receptor could be any living organism including microbes, birds, humans, fish, wildlife and more.
An exposure pathway is the potential route a substance may take to come in contact with a receptor while the receptor is present at the site and doing activities, such as:
Substances in environmental media such as soil, air, food, surface water, sediment, or groundwater may come into contact with receptors through different routes.
For example, substances in soil may be ingested, inhaled, or absorbed through the skin, or it may accumulate in food, such as crops or livestock grown on-site.
How is the risk estimated?
Risk assessment uses mathematical models to predict the dose (that is, the amount of a substance a receptor receives through any specific exposure pathway). These predicted doses can be added and compared with a dose of the substance that's considered safe.
If the safe dose is not exceeded, it's assumed that there's little risk that exposure to the substance will harm the health of receptors.
The hazard and risk calculated for a site can be expressed in mathematical terms as either a hazard quotient and/or a risk estimate:
How are the risk estimates used?
Hazard and risk estimates calculated for a site can be compared with risk-based standards. If the risk estimates exceed the risk-based standards, the site may need to be managed to reduce estimated impacts to levels equal to, or less than, the standards.
If a site uses risk management solutions to address the hazard and risk, the site is called a risk-managed site. These types of sites require special monitoring and inspection to ensure the remedial solutions used are maintained and effective.
How are ecological risks assessed?
Field studies, such as habitat assessments and biological surveys, as well as laboratory studies provide the foundation for assessing ecological risks.
Information collected from these studies may be used in a detailed ecological risk assessment report to assess the following:
The Guidance for risk assessment page provides risk assessors who are qualified professionals in risk assessment with technical information for conducting risk assessments.
For specific risk assessment questions, contact site@gov.bc.ca.
The information on this web page does not replace the legislative requirements in the EMA or its regulations and it does not list all provisions for contaminated site services.
If there are differences between this information and the Act, Regulation, or Protocols, the Act, Regulation, and Protocols apply.