Abstract :
This study investigates the environmental impact of a recent oil spill incident in the Bonny terminal using groundwater media. The objective was to establish the presence of Contaminants of Concern (COC), determine, quantify and model spilled volumeIEEE Transactions on Components, Packaging, and Manufacturing Technology and ascertain potential health risks associated with the spill incident. The COC included Total Petroleum Hydrocarbons (TPH), Polyaromatic Hydrocarbons (PAH), and BTEX compounds. Groundwater was sampled in the vicinity of the spill incidents and further away into the surrounding communities. Groundwater assessment showed that TPH ranges from 9.04 to 20,600 µg/L with a mean value of 2526.90 ± 6392.40 µg/L. Apart from four boreholes, all others had TPH values exceeding the DPR target value of 50 µg/L. PAH was recorded only at three boreholes, with values: 0.13, 1.07, and 0.25 µg/L, respectively. Meanwhile, BTEX compounds had concentration (5910 µg/L) that exceeded the Directorate of Petroleum Resources (DPR) target value of 0.8 µg/L over 7000 times. The BW-3 is most deteriorated in water quality. These contaminated borehole-sampling locations are positioned at the vicinity of the tank farm, at higher hydraulic heads and hence, might not pose much health risk to the surrounding communities. Groundwater movement in the area is towards the Bonny River in the southwestern part of the area. This study, therefore recommends remedial actions be taken immediately to prevent health risks in the tank farm area.
Keyword :
Borehole; Contaminant; Groundwater; Hydrocarbon; Spillage; Tank farm