Institute of Sustainable and Environmental Chemistry, Leuphana University Lüneburg, Universitätsallee 1, 21335 Lüneburg, Germany; International Sustainable Chemistry Collaboration Center (ISC(3)), Research and Education, Leuphana University Lüneburg, Universitätsallee 1, 21335 Lüneburg, Germany.
Environmental Engineering and Science Program, Department of Chemical and Environmental Engineering (DCEE), 705 Engineering Research Center, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH 45221-0012, USA; Nireas-International Water Research Center, University of Cyprus, P.O. Box 20537, 1678, Nicosia, Cyprus.
Sci Total Environ. 2019 Feb 20;652:836-850. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2018.10.219. Epub 2018 Oct 17.
Pharmaceuticals and many other chemicals are an important basis for nearly all sectors including for example, food and agriculture, medicine, plastics, electronics, transport, communication, and many other products used nowadays. This comes along with a tremendous chemicalization of the globe, including ubiquitous presence of products of chemical and pharmaceutical industries in the aquatic environment. Use of these products will increase with population growth and living standard as will the need for clean water. In addition, climate change will exacerbate availability of water in sufficient quantity and quality. Since its implementation, conventional wastewater treatment has increasingly contributed to environmental protection and health of humans. However, with the increasing pollution of water by chemicals, conventional treatment turned out to be insufficient. It was also found that advanced effluent treatment methods such as extended filtration, the sorption to activated charcoal or advanced oxidation methods have their own limitations. These are, for example, increased demand for energy and hazardous chemicals, incomplete or even no removal of pollutants, the generation of unwanted products from parent compounds (transformation products, TPs) of often-unknown chemical structure, fate and toxicity. In many countries, effluent treatment is available only rarely if at all let alone advanced treatment. The past should teach us, that focusing only on technological approaches is not constructive for a sustainable water quality control. Therefore, in addition to conventional and advanced treatment optimization more emphasis on input prevention is urgently needed, including more and better control of what is present in the source water. Measures for input prevention are known for long. The main focus though has always been on the treatment, and measures taken at the source have gained only little attention so far. A more effective and efficient approach, however, would be to avoid pollution at the source, which would in turn allow more targeted treatment to meet treated water quality objectives globally. New developments within green and sustainable chemistry are offering new approaches that allow for input prevention and a more targeted treatment to succeed in pollution elimination in and at the source. To put this into practice, engineers, water scientists and chemists as well as microbiologists and scientists of other related disciplines need to cooperate more extensively than in the past. Applying principles such as the precautionary principle, or keeping water flows separate where possible will add to this. This implies not minimizing the efforts to improve wastewater treatment but to design effluents and chemicals in such a way that treatment systems and water environments can cope successfully with the challenge of micropollutants globally (Kümmerer et al., 2018). This paper therefore presents in its first part some of the limitations of effluent treatment in order to demonstrate the urgent need for minimizing water pollution at the source and, information on why source management is urgently needed to improve water quality and stimulate discussions how to protect water resources on a global level. Some principles of green and sustainable chemistry as well as other approaches, which are part of source management, are presented in the second part in order to stimulate discussion.
药品和许多其他化学物质是几乎所有领域的重要基础,例如食品和农业、医药、塑料、电子、运输、通信以及当今许多其他产品。这伴随着地球的巨大化学化,包括化学和制药工业产品在水生环境中的普遍存在。随着人口增长和生活水平的提高,这些产品的使用将会增加,对清洁水的需求也将会增加。此外,气候变化将加剧水的供应在数量和质量方面的不足。自实施以来,传统的废水处理越来越有助于环境保护和人类健康。然而,随着化学物质对水的污染不断增加,传统的处理方法已显得不足。人们还发现,诸如扩展过滤、活性炭吸附或高级氧化方法等先进的废水处理方法都有其自身的局限性。例如,对能源和危险化学品的需求增加,污染物的不完全甚至无法去除,来自母体化合物(通常未知化学结构的转化产物,TPs)的不需要的产物的产生,以及毒性。在许多国家,即使有废水处理,也很少有甚至没有先进的处理。过去的经验应该告诉我们,仅仅关注技术方法对于可持续的水质控制并不是建设性的。因此,除了优化传统和先进的处理方法外,还迫切需要更加重视投入预防,包括对水源中存在的物质进行更多和更好的控制。投入预防措施已经众所周知很久了。然而,主要重点一直是处理,到目前为止,对源头采取的措施几乎没有得到关注。然而,一个更有效和高效的方法是在源头避免污染,这反过来又可以更有针对性地进行处理,从而在全球范围内实现处理水质量目标。绿色和可持续化学领域的新发展提供了新的方法,这些方法可以成功地实现投入预防和更有针对性的处理,从而在源头消除污染。为了将这些付诸实践,工程师、水科学家和化学家以及微生物学家和其他相关学科的科学家需要比以往更广泛地合作。应用预防原则或尽可能保持水流分离等原则也将为此做出贡献。这意味着不仅要努力改进废水处理,还要设计废水和化学品,以使处理系统和水环能够成功应对全球范围内的微污染物的挑战(Kümmerer 等人,2018 年)。因此,本文第一部分介绍了废水处理的一些局限性,以证明在源头最大限度地减少水污染的迫切需要,以及为什么需要源头管理来改善水质,并激发关于如何在全球范围内保护水资源的讨论。第二部分介绍了绿色和可持续化学的一些原则以及其他一些属于源头管理的方法,以激发讨论。