Technological Innovations for Physical and Chemical Remediation of Oil-contaminated Water and Soil: A Review (Part-II)

Main Article Content

Mohammed Alsakit
Abdelsalam Abugharara
Amer Aborig
Stephen Butt

Abstract

The petroleum industry produces significant amounts of oily wastewater, either through the process of oil production named associated water, through the process of oil refinery, or because of pipeline leakage through oil transportation. Environmentally permissible oily wastewater treatment is a significant problem for the petroleum industry. Nowadays, the focus has been on awareness of the treatment methods for oily wastewater. Therefore, oil-water separation has become a recent obstacle, and it must be explored and resolved by petroleum industries to meet set standards and protect the environment. However, during the last decades of growing urbanization and industrialization worldwide, the consumption of oils and their derivatives has significantly expanded. Due to some factors such as poor management, incomplete combustion, pipeline leakage, and other incidental circumstances, petroleum leaks into water and soil and are nearly unavoidable during the process of petroleum extraction, transportation, processing, and utilization. Since the relative toxicity of petroleum and its products, petroleum pollutants in water and soil can seriously harm the local ecosystem and human health. Therefore, efficient water and soil remediation technologies solutions for oil-contaminated sites are essential for environmental safety and sustainable growth. The current review of part II focuses on the physical and chemical remediation technologies of oil-contaminated soil.

Article Details

How to Cite
Alsakit, M., Abugharara, A., Aborig, A., & Butt, S. (2024). Technological Innovations for Physical and Chemical Remediation of Oil-contaminated Water and Soil: A Review (Part-II). Sebha University Conference Proceedings, 3(2), 76–82. https://doi.org/10.51984/sucp.v3i2.3162
Section
Confrence Proceeding