4.4 Article

Improving our understanding of the environmental persistence of chemicals

Journal

INTEGRATED ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT AND MANAGEMENT
Volume 17, Issue 6, Pages 1123-1135

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ieam.4438

Keywords

Biodegradation; Environmental risk assessment; Persistence; REACH; Screening

Funding

  1. Cefic LRI
  2. Concawe

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Significant progress has been made in understanding the factors influencing the outcome of biodegradation tests for assessing chemical persistence; however, limitations exist, especially for difficult-to-test substances, which can lead to inappropriate conclusions regarding environmental persistence. A workshop in Helsinki provided a platform to disseminate key findings and discuss how new scientific knowledge can improve persistence assessments.
Significant progress has been made in the scientific understanding of factors that influence the outcome of biodegradation tests used to assess the persistence (P) of chemicals. This needs to be evaluated to assess whether recently acquired knowledge could enhance existing regulations and environmental risk assessments. Biodegradation tests have limitations, which are accentuated for difficult-to-test substances, and failure to recognize these can potentially lead to inappropriate conclusions regarding a chemical's environmental persistence. Many of these limitations have been previously recognized and discussed in a series of ECETOC reports and workshops. These were subsequently used to develop a series of research projects designed to address key issues and, where possible, propose methods to mitigate the limitations of current assessments. Here, we report on the output of a Cefic LRI-Concawe Workshop held in Helsinki on September 27, 2018. The objectives of this workshop were to disseminate key findings from recent projects and assess how new scientific knowledge can potentially support and improve assessments under existing regulatory frameworks. The workshop provided a unique opportunity to initiate a process to reexamine the fundamentals of degradation and what current assessment methods can achieve by (1) providing an overview of the key elements and messages coming from recent research initiatives and (2) stimulating discussion regarding how these interrelate and how new findings can be developed to improve persistence assessments. Opportunities to try and improve understanding of factors affecting biodegradation assessments and better understanding of the persistence of chemicals (particularly UVCBs [substances of unknown or variable composition, complex reaction products, or biological materials]) were identified, and the workshop acted as a catalyst for further multistakeholder activities and engagements to take the persistence assessment of chemicals into the 21st century. Integr Environ Assess Manag 2021;00:1-13. (c) 2021 European Petroleum Refiners Association - Concawe Division. Integrated Environmental Assessment and Management published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Society of Environmental Toxicology & Chemistry (SETAC).

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