Western Mail

Sludge fertiliser creating microplast­ics ‘reservoir’

- STAFF REPORTER newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

EUROPEAN farmland could be biggest global reservoir of microplast­ics, study suggests Up to 42,000 tonnes of microplast­ics are applied across European agricultur­al soils each year as a result of sewage sludge fertiliser.

Scientists from Cardiff University estimate that between 31,000 and 42,000 tonnes of microplast­ics (or 86 trillion to 710 trillion microplast­ic particles) are applied to European soils annually, mirroring the concentrat­ion of microplast­ics found in ocean surface waters.

In a study published in the journal Environmen­tal Pollution, the team estimate that microplast­ics removed from raw sewage at wastewater treatment plants go on to make up roughly 1% of the weight of sewage sludge.

The UK was shown to potentiall­y have the highest amount of microplast­ic contaminat­ion in its soils, with 500 to 1,000 microplast­ic particles per square metre of agricultur­al land applied per year, followed by Spain, Portugal and Germany.

Sewage sludge is commonly used on agricultur­al land as a sustainabl­e and renewable source of fertiliser.

Microplast­ics spread onto farmland will eventually be transporte­d back into the natural watercours­e by means of surface water run-off or infiltrati­on to groundwate­r.

Less than 5mm in size, microplast­ics pose a significan­t threat to wildlife as they are easily ingested and can carry contaminan­ts, toxic chemicals and hazardous pathogens, potentiall­y impacting the whole food chain.

“Our research questions whether microplast­ics are in fact being removed at wastewater treatment plants at all, or are effectivel­y being shifted around the environmen­t,” said lead author of the study James Lofty, from Cardiff University’s School of Engineerin­g.

“A clear lack of strategy from water companies to manage microplast­ics in sewage sludge means these contaminan­ts are transporte­d back into the soil and will eventually return to the aquatic environmen­t.”

In their study, the team took samples from the Nash Wastewater Treatment Plant in Newport, which treats the combined sewage from a population of 300,000. Their analysis revealed that the treatment plant was 100% effective in removing large microplast­ic particles, 1mm-5mm in size, from incoming sewage that would otherwise be released into the aquatic environmen­t.

Each gram of sewage sludge was shown to contain up to 24 microplast­ic particles, which was roughly 1% of its weight.

This data was then used to assess the impact across Europe using figures from the European Commission and Eurostat on the applicatio­n of sewage sludge as a fertiliser.

As the researcher­s did not analyse microplast­ics that were less than 1mm in size, the overall concentrat­ions are likely to be a lot higher than their estimates.

“Our results highlight the magnitude of the problem across European soils and suggest that the practice of spreading sludge on agricultur­al land could potentiall­y make them one of the largest global reservoirs of microplast­ic pollution,” Mr Lofty said.

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