Silver Emissions and their
Environmental Impacts: A Multilevel
Assessment
Posted on 2007-09-01 - 00:00
A detailed accounting of environmental releases of silver
is presented for the year 1997, based on data from Yale
University's Stocks and Flows (STAF) project and other
sources. The analysis is carried out for 64 countries, eight
regions, and the world. From the chemical composition
and receiving media of these different releases, each emission
category is assigned an environmental impact score in
accordance with the Indiana Relative Chemical Hazard
(IRCH) ranking system. Flows are scaled by impact and land
area to form an overall semiquantitative assessment of
the environmental impact of silver. Of the 64 countries, the
United States has the highest gross emissions for nearly
all flows to the environment. On a regional basis, Asia is the
largest emitter of silver directly to land and water. In
major silver-producing countries, tailings tend to have the
highest environmental impact of any emissions category;
in nonproducing countries, it is dissipation to land (Hong
Kong having the highest impact in this category). Globally,
more than 13 Gg of silver are emitted annually to the
environment, with that in tailings and landfills making up
almost three-fourths of the total. The utility of this method
for evaluating the environmental impact of other metals
is explored.
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Eckelman, Matthew J.; Graedel, T. E. (2016). Silver Emissions and their
Environmental Impacts: A Multilevel
Assessment. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/es062970d