Article | REF: GE1017 V1

Methodology of health risk assessment for urban gardens

Authors: Rabia BADREDDINE, Camille DUMAT, Philippe BRANCHU, Ronald CHARVET

Publication date: January 10, 2019

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ABSTRACT

In order to sustainably meet the growing demand for urban vegetable gardens, the City of Paris has implemented a project of experimental gardens (POTEX) with the objective of reducing the exposure of users to pollutants. Several management solutions, environmental contexts and exposure routes (ingestion of self-produced vegetables and soil) were tested. The multidisciplinary methodology developed in order to manage the pollutions is presented: historical study, survey of gardening practices, sampling, pretreatment of plants, characterization of soils and plants, bioaccessibility measures and health risk assessment.

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AUTHORS

  • Rabia BADREDDINE: Design and Research Engineer - INERIS (Institut National de l'Environnement industriel et des RISques), Paris, France

  • Camille DUMAT: PR from Toulouse INP, CERTOP laboratory, Ecological Transition Axis, - President, Réseau-Agriville, Toulouse, France

  • Philippe BRANCHU: Engineer - Cerema (Centre d'Études et d'Expertise sur les Risques, l'Environnement, la Mobilité et l'Aménagement), Trappes, France

  • Ronald CHARVET: Engineer - Agence d'Écologie Urbaine, Direction Espaces Verts et de l'Environnement, Mairie de Paris, France

 INTRODUCTION

Several cities in France are promoting the sustainable development of gardening activities in response to growing social demand for urban vegetable gardens (collective or family), and because of the ecosystem services provided by these activities: participation in a food transition towards a more sustainable system (local production, agro-ecological practices, social ties, landscapes) and in the circular economy. . In 2018, there were around a hundred garden sites in Paris, and in Toulouse the number of sites tripled between 2006 and 2016. But available urban space is scarce and frequently polluted especially when they are old and densely populated. However, certain pollutants are persistent in the environment: metallic elements (metals and metalloids), organic compounds including total hydrocarbons (TCHs), polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) and polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs). It is therefore crucial for city managers who make urban vegetable garden sites available to citizens to have a methodology for assessing and managing potential environmental and health risks for users of these sites.

What's more, citizens are generally very attached to the collective or allotment (peri-)urban garden sites where they've been meeting and gardening for years; that's why when pollution is discovered users want to continue their gardening activities and ask the mayor to find solutions.

For example, studies carried out by the Direction régionale et interdépartementale de l'alimentation, de l'agriculture et de la forêt d'Ile-de-France (DRIAAF) in 2008 on the urban gardens of the city of Montreuil showed that the soil and plants were contaminated by metals (lead, cadmium, copper, mercury and zinc), with lead levels...

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KEYWORDS

pollution   |   Urban vegetable gardens   |   State of the environment interpretation   |   Quantitative Health Risk Assessment.


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Health risk assessment methodology for urban gardens