Comparison of the US EPA Waste Minimization Prioritization Tool (WMPT) with Hertwich et al.'s Toxic Equivalency
Potentials (TEPs)
Pennington D.W., Bare J.C.
Systems Analysis Branch,
NRMRL, U.S. EPA, Cincinnati, OH.
A number of scoring and ranking methodologies
have been developed to help prioritize chemicals and emissions in a
variety of application domains. The Waste Minimization Prioritization
Tool (WMPT) was developed by the US EPA to assist in the ranking of
chemicals in terms of their persistence, bioaccumulation and toxicity
(PBT) properties. Similarly, the Environmental Defense Fund (EDF) uses
Toxic Equivalency Potentials (TEPs) to rank chemicals, on a risk per
unit mass release basis, in terms of potential toxicological impacts to
human health. Both approaches consider fate, exposure and toxicity,
albeit at significantly different levels of sophistication. Therefore
the tools are comparable but can yield very different results.
A comparison of the
published
scores from WMPT and EDF is first presented. Differences are associated
with
both the data used and the methodologies. A second comparison, based on
a
consistent data set, is then presented to help evaluate methodological
differences.
Through this detailed analysis it is demonstrated that the persistence,
bioaccumulative and toxicological aspects of each approach can yield
similar insights. However, the WMPT provides a more encompassing
picture but with poor resolution whereas the TEP approach may provide a
basis for greater distinction between scores but at the expense of
comprehensiveness.
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