Workers in safety gear inspecting spill.

Sustainable Hydrocarbon Management

Components of TPH, or Total Petroleum Hydrocarbons, at first glance appear common and ordinary; however, they are the essential elements of life.

One cannot address hydrocarbons in terms of stand-alone chemical elements, but as aggregates referred to as compounds. They define each other’s functions and complement each other’s applications. They are the sum total of what we refer to as the energy that powers up the developed and developing world.

The Proponent Elements of Hydrocarbons Are

  • Carbon - 84% (Carbon Black, Carbon Disulfide)
  • Hydrogen - 14% (Hydrogen Sulfide, Poly-Aromatic Hydrocarbons PAHs)
  • Sulfur - 1 to 3% (Hydrogen Sulfide, Sulfides, Disulfides, Elemental Sulfur)
  • Nitrogen - less than 1% (basic compounds with amine groups)
  • Oxygen - less than 1% (found in organic compounds such as Carbon Dioxide, Phenols, Ketones, Carboxylic Acids)
  • Metals - less than 1% (Nickel, Iron, Vanadium, Copper, Arsenic)
  • Salts - less than 1% (Sodium Chloride, Magnesium Chloride, Calcium Chloride)
River with reddish water and surrounding trees.
Offshore oil platform with surrounding oil spill.

What’s Wrong With Hydrocarbons?

Not everything is wrong with hydrocarbons. However, their negative effects are felt when they are densely concentrated in a single area of contamination. This is when hydrocarbons tip the pH balance scale. Where the potential of hydrogen swings the homeostatic pendulum to favor either a healthy existence or a toxic environment. The pH level is one of the most important balancing factors of the human body and the ecosystem. It is the measure of acidity and alkalinity on a scale of zero (0) to fourteen (14), with zero being the most acidic and fourteen being the most alkaline. Seven (7) is the demarcation point where the scale could go either way—acidic or alkaline.