Tarcrete management in Kuwait's Burgan oilfield

Tarcrete is crude oil contamination that has formed across 175km2 of the Kuwait Burgan Oilfield as a result of the damage caused to production wells during the 1990 Gulf War. Remedial action on tarcrete affected areas is now being planned. The aim of this study is to evaluate the current tarcrete ma...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kirkham, Elizabeth
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/33258/
_version_ 1848794595035447296
author Kirkham, Elizabeth
author_facet Kirkham, Elizabeth
author_sort Kirkham, Elizabeth
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Tarcrete is crude oil contamination that has formed across 175km2 of the Kuwait Burgan Oilfield as a result of the damage caused to production wells during the 1990 Gulf War. Remedial action on tarcrete affected areas is now being planned. The aim of this study is to evaluate the current tarcrete management objectives set as part of the UNCC Claim “Remediation of Areas Damaged by Tarcrete” by determining its effects on soil properties and vegetation establishment in the Kuwait Burgan Oilfield. A ground survey was undertaken to characterize its physical characteristics and develop a standard guideline for describing tarcrete. An intrusive investigation analysed tarcrete and the underlying soil. Soil temperature, moisture and electrical conductivity was monitored to evaluate the effects of tarcrete on these soil conditions. Vegetation cover was surveyed to evaluate potential effects on re-vegetation. Tarcrete occurred primarily as a “mat-like” continuous layer with an average thickness of 1.10+0.49cm, it was hardened and friable. A “gravel-like” fine to medium, very sparse, uneven, hardened, very friable to friable tarcrete type was also present. Chemical analysis detected TPH fraction C21-C35 (0.01% to 0.05%) and PHC fraction >C35-C90 (6% to 7%). SARA testing identified the main component to be polar heterocyclic molecules. This composition is representative of weathered crude oil. Metal concentrations were negligible and no PAH was detected. Contamination to the underlying soil was not detected nor were changes to the soil’s bulk chemical properties. Mean increase in soil temperatures of 4°C and 3°C was measured in areas of high and low tarcrete cover, respectively. Soil moisture showed a median increase of 62% and 58% at 100mm and 200mm depths in high tarcrete cover areas and 23% and 31% at 100mm and 200mm depths in low tarcrete cover areas. Moisture was retained in tarcrete areas. A mean increase in electrical conductivity occurred at high and low cover sites (68% and 19%) and were detected the longest at high tarcrete cover sites. Mean canopy cover at low tarcrete cover sites was 62% compared to 54% at high and no cover sites. This study illustrates tarcrete creates conditions that promote desert plant establishment depending on the ratio of tarmat cover to the percentage of fragmentation. Based on literature reviews and the Study Area conditions, is unlikely that planned remediation activities involving mechanical fragmentation will increase vegetation establishment. Instead, it will be potentially detrimental to the re-established vegetation so it is argued that the current tarcrete management objectives are unnecessary. The proposal to remove remedial intervention on the basis that tarcrete poses ‘no risk’ is recommended. No risk shall be verified via detailed quantitative human health and ecological risk assessments. Manual tarcrete fragmentation based on a fractioning index could enhance re-vegetation. Developing the index would require detailed quantitative measurements of the exposed soil vs covered soil, additional soil moisture and temperature monitoring and vegetation surveys and soil erosion studies.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T19:18:41Z
format Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
id nottingham-33258
institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
institution_category Local University
language English
English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T19:18:41Z
publishDate 2016
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling nottingham-332582025-02-28T13:27:03Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/33258/ Tarcrete management in Kuwait's Burgan oilfield Kirkham, Elizabeth Tarcrete is crude oil contamination that has formed across 175km2 of the Kuwait Burgan Oilfield as a result of the damage caused to production wells during the 1990 Gulf War. Remedial action on tarcrete affected areas is now being planned. The aim of this study is to evaluate the current tarcrete management objectives set as part of the UNCC Claim “Remediation of Areas Damaged by Tarcrete” by determining its effects on soil properties and vegetation establishment in the Kuwait Burgan Oilfield. A ground survey was undertaken to characterize its physical characteristics and develop a standard guideline for describing tarcrete. An intrusive investigation analysed tarcrete and the underlying soil. Soil temperature, moisture and electrical conductivity was monitored to evaluate the effects of tarcrete on these soil conditions. Vegetation cover was surveyed to evaluate potential effects on re-vegetation. Tarcrete occurred primarily as a “mat-like” continuous layer with an average thickness of 1.10+0.49cm, it was hardened and friable. A “gravel-like” fine to medium, very sparse, uneven, hardened, very friable to friable tarcrete type was also present. Chemical analysis detected TPH fraction C21-C35 (0.01% to 0.05%) and PHC fraction >C35-C90 (6% to 7%). SARA testing identified the main component to be polar heterocyclic molecules. This composition is representative of weathered crude oil. Metal concentrations were negligible and no PAH was detected. Contamination to the underlying soil was not detected nor were changes to the soil’s bulk chemical properties. Mean increase in soil temperatures of 4°C and 3°C was measured in areas of high and low tarcrete cover, respectively. Soil moisture showed a median increase of 62% and 58% at 100mm and 200mm depths in high tarcrete cover areas and 23% and 31% at 100mm and 200mm depths in low tarcrete cover areas. Moisture was retained in tarcrete areas. A mean increase in electrical conductivity occurred at high and low cover sites (68% and 19%) and were detected the longest at high tarcrete cover sites. Mean canopy cover at low tarcrete cover sites was 62% compared to 54% at high and no cover sites. This study illustrates tarcrete creates conditions that promote desert plant establishment depending on the ratio of tarmat cover to the percentage of fragmentation. Based on literature reviews and the Study Area conditions, is unlikely that planned remediation activities involving mechanical fragmentation will increase vegetation establishment. Instead, it will be potentially detrimental to the re-established vegetation so it is argued that the current tarcrete management objectives are unnecessary. The proposal to remove remedial intervention on the basis that tarcrete poses ‘no risk’ is recommended. No risk shall be verified via detailed quantitative human health and ecological risk assessments. Manual tarcrete fragmentation based on a fractioning index could enhance re-vegetation. Developing the index would require detailed quantitative measurements of the exposed soil vs covered soil, additional soil moisture and temperature monitoring and vegetation surveys and soil erosion studies. 2016-07-11 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en cc_by_nc https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/33258/1/MRes%20Dissertation%20Kirkham%20FINAL.compressed.pdf application/pdf en cc_by_nc https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/33258/2/MREs%20Dissertation%20Kirkham%20FINAL%20C_copyright%20protected.pdf Kirkham, Elizabeth (2016) Tarcrete management in Kuwait's Burgan oilfield. MRes thesis, University of Nottingham. Kuwait Tarcrete Crude Oil Remediation
spellingShingle Kuwait
Tarcrete
Crude Oil
Remediation
Kirkham, Elizabeth
Tarcrete management in Kuwait's Burgan oilfield
title Tarcrete management in Kuwait's Burgan oilfield
title_full Tarcrete management in Kuwait's Burgan oilfield
title_fullStr Tarcrete management in Kuwait's Burgan oilfield
title_full_unstemmed Tarcrete management in Kuwait's Burgan oilfield
title_short Tarcrete management in Kuwait's Burgan oilfield
title_sort tarcrete management in kuwait's burgan oilfield
topic Kuwait
Tarcrete
Crude Oil
Remediation
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/33258/