4.7 Article

Development of a qualitative approach to assessing risks associated with the use of treated wastewater in agricultural irrigation

Journal

JOURNAL OF HAZARDOUS MATERIALS
Volume 406, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2020.124286

Keywords

Qualitative risk assessment; Treated wastewater reuse; Chemicals of emerging concern; Agricultural irrigation; Minimum water quality requirements

Funding

  1. European Cooperation in Science and Technology [ES1403]

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The study presents a framework combining data and expert judgement to assess the potential impacts of chemicals of emerging concern on water reuse in agriculture. Guidelines are developed to support the implementation of the framework in soil, where the overall risk assessment is characterized by multiplying allocated scores to obtain a discrete overall score per chemical of emerging concern.
The European Commission's draft regulation for minimum requirements for water reuse in agriculture addresses microbial and basic water quality parameters but does not consider the potential impacts of chemicals of emerging concern (CECs) on human and environmental health. Because insufficient data prevents the quantitative characterisation of risks posed by CECs in treated wastewater (TWW), this paper presents a framework, which combines data and expert judgement to assess likelihood of occurrence and magnitude of impact. An increasing relative scale is applied where numeric values are pre-defined to represent comparative levels of importance. Subsequently, an overall assessment of the level of risk is characterised by multiplying together allocated scores, to obtain a single discrete overall score per CEC. Guidelines to support implementation of the framework as far as soil (the initial receiving compartment and pathway to further protected targets) are developed and applied. The approach is demonstrated through its application to clarithromycin, where results indicate that - under the considered scenario there is limited possibility of its occurrence in soil in a bioavailable form. The role of a qualitative risk assessment approach is considered and the opportunity for its outputs to inform future research agendas described.

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