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Emissions of pharmaceuticals

CWPharma starts screening Baltic Sea region

Published : 24 Sep 2018, 02:54

Updated : 24 Sep 2018, 09:13

  DF Report
Estuary of the river Warnow in Warnemünde, Germany. Press Release Photo by SYKE/Kuangxin Zhou

CWPharma, an EU-funded project, has started screening active pharmaceutical ingredients in six river basin districts to get a better picture of the sources, emissions and environmental concentrations of pharmaceuticals in the Baltic Sea region, said a press release issued by Finnish Environment Institute (SYKE).

“We have already collected samples from six river basins and several wastewater treatment plants in Estonia, Finland, Germany, Latvia, Poland and Sweden. The aim of the screening is to estimate the overall pharmaceutical emissions in the Baltic Sea region,” said project manager Noora Perkola of SYKE.

She said, “We are currently analysing the samples in our laboratories in Helsinki to screen approximately 80 active pharmaceutical ingredients. This is the first time such a wide screening will be made in a systematic way from varying samples and from various countries so that the results are truly comparable and can be used to get a good estimate of the emissions and potential hotspots.”

While pharmaceuticals are useful and sometimes life-saving for humans and domestic animals, they may be harmful for the environment. Helcom’s background report on pharmaceutical concentrations and effects in the Baltic Sea (2016) pointed out many knowledge gaps that exist in the Baltic Sea Region.

The CWPharma project aims to fill in many of those knowledge gaps. For instance, CWPharma will screen emissions from the pharmaceutical industry, hospitals, landfill sites, fish and poultry farms, and municipal wastewater treatment plants.

In addition to the screening of pharmaceuticals, CWPharma will evaluate different emission reduction measures, such as dissemination of environmental data on pharmaceutical products and granting of environmental permits to pharmaceutical plants.

“Some of these measures are highly technical, like the advanced methods for wastewater treatment, but some are low-tech practices that can nevertheless make a big difference. These low-tech practices include, for instance, the take-back and disposal schemes for unused medicines,” Perkola said.

The best existing practices of the partner countries will be shared in order to promote the sustainable management of pharmaceuticals in the Baltic Sea region. For this purpose, the project will produce guidelines on advanced wastewater treatment, recommendations on low-tech practices to control and reduce the emissions, and an overall action plan for the best emission reduction measures.