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Publications

Impact of wastewater treatment plant effluents on CO2 emission of a receiving river

Published:
January 2, 2026
Source:
Science Direct
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This study was conducted to investigate the impact of effluents from wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) on dissolved carbon dynamics in an urban river located in subtropical central China.

Publications

Tackling marine pollution in the blue economy: Synergies between wastewater treatment technologies and governmental policies

Published:
January 1, 2026
Source:
Science Direct
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Marine pollution poses a substantial threat to the sustainability of the blue economy by disrupting ecosystems and coastal livelihoods. This research explores the complex interplay between wastewater treatment technology and governmental policies in mitigating marine contamination.

Publications

Massive wastewater discharge severely impacts a whole eutrophic coastal lagoon ecosystem

Published:
December 1, 2025
Source:
Science Direct
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Coastal lagoons are productive ecosystems threatened by human-driven nutrient over-enrichment, both through runoff and wastewater discharge, ending in increasing eutrophication and dead zones. Water quality monitoring remains key to assess biogeochemistry impacts and changes, but in situ sampling can be limited and sparse.

In the news

Virginia communities push back against sewage sludge on agricultural land as PFAS concerns grow

Published:
November 24, 2025
Source:
Virginia Mercury
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As worry mounts about health risks from exposure to ‘forever chemicals,’ Virginia communities push for testing and limits for biosolids

Publications

Sewers to Seas: exploring pathogens and antimicrobial resistance on microplastics from hospital wastewater to marine environments

Published:
November 20, 2025
Source:
Elsevier
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Study shows that microplastics in the natural environment are colonized by pathogenic & antimicrobial resistant bacteria. Experts call for urgent waste management action & strongly recommend wearing gloves when partaking in beach cleans.

In the news

Hampton Roads Turns 1 Billion Gallons of Sewage into Drinking Water

Published:
November 10, 2025
Source:
Chesapeake Bay Magazine
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Nutrient pollution is one of the biggest threats to the health of the Chesapeake Bay, and urban areas with antiquated wastewater treatment systems are some of the worst offenders. A number of cities are working to improve their sewage systems, and one Virginia metropolitan area has just hit an impressive milestone in their efforts.

In the news

Raw Sewage Sneaking Into West Hawaii’s Coastal Waters Threatens Coral Reefs and Public Health, Scientists Find

Published:
November 5, 2025
Source:
Inside Climate News
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The long-standing use of cesspools in Hawaii makes it harder to keep waste contamination from spreading. A new study identified problem spots.

Publications

Wastewater as a driver of heavy metal pollution in river catchments – A study of possible scenarios

Published:
November 3, 2025
Source:
Science Direct
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Heavy metals can enter rivers i.a. from point sources such as wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) and industrial plants with inadequately-treated wastewater. The present article examines (i) the impact of WWTPs and industrial facilities on the pollution of the Pilica River, (ii) heavy metal loads along its continuum, and (iii) the identification of common pollution patterns in wastewater and river water, and the effect of their physicochemical properties.

In the news
Videos & podcasts

‘We’re talking about poop’: Houston neighborhoods face raw sewage problems, health risks from sewage spills

Published:
November 3, 2025
Source:
Two Houston
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Community organizations struggle to address sewage issues across city

Publications

Catalytic resource recovery for transformation of the wastewater industry

Published:
November 3, 2025
Source:
Nature Water
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Industrial wastewater contains diverse organic and inorganic contaminants, posing substantial challenges in conventional water treatment processes. However, these pollutants can be reclaimed as valuable resources for a circular economy. Catalytic reactions offer a promising solution for the selective conversion of the pollutants into value-added products.

In the news

How excess rains and poor wastewater management send microplastics into city lakes

Published:
October 30, 2025
Source:
Mongabay
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Weather conditions, especially continuous rainfall, drive microplastics into city lakes, a new study reports. Other major pathways include stormwater runoff, wastewater treatment plants, littering zones and laundry facilities.

In the news

Why Billions of Gallons of Raw Sewage Keep Ending up in Philadelphia Waterways

Published:
October 28, 2025
Source:
Inside Climate News
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With a new analysis showing where the pollution is going, environmental advocates call on public officials to do more to stop it.

In the news

Farmers Say Supervisor’s Sewage Efforts Cost Them Their Livelihood

Published:
October 7, 2025
Source:
Voice of San Diego
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For more than two decades, small-scale farmers and community gardeners have grown fresh fruits and vegetables, native plants, flowers and other produce at the Tijuana River Valley Community Garden, a 20-acre complex of publicly owned farmland adjacent to the Tijuana River near the U.S.-Mexico border.

In the news

Some 55 million gallons of sewage are threatening Hawaii’s coral reefs

Published:
September 28, 2025
Source:
The Independant
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Nearly 55 million gallons of sewage are threatening Hawaii’s coral reefs. Much of that pollution enters the ground each day, within just a few hundred yards of the coast and the 410,000 acres of life-supporting reefs that lie beyond it.

In the news

Something in the Water: How Raw Sewage Floods Homes on the Banks of Alewife Brook

Published:
September 18, 2025
Source:
The Harvard Crimson
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Alewife Brook has flooded regularly for decades after heavy rains, sometimes combining with sewage water from the combined sewer system below the brook, leaving residents to wade through the sewage that runs over the sidewalks for days after a storm.

In the news

Bradenton spills 1.7 million gallons of sewage in Manatee River, report says

Published:
September 16, 2025
Source:
Tampa Bay Times
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Bradenton’s wastewater plant recently spilled an estimated 1.7 million gallons of sewage into the Manatee River during an overflow at the plant, a report filed by the city says. It’s the largest spill reported this year at the wastewater plant.

In the news

Revealed: river pollution twice as bad inside national parks as outside them

Published:
September 16, 2025
Source:
The Guardian
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Sewage is pouring into the rivers inside national parks at twice the rate that is occurring outside the protected areas, it can be revealed.

Publications

Phosphorus recovery from sewage sludge: Progress, challenges, policies, and future directions

Published:
September 15, 2025
Source:
Science Direct
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Phosphorus (P) recovery from sewage sludge (SS) offers a sustainable pathway to mitigate global P resource depletion and environmental pollution. This review conceptualizes the recovery process as two interlinked stages: P extraction (release) and P recovery (enrichment).

In the news

32M gallons of wastewater spilled at Hillsborough County treatment plant

Published:
September 10, 2025
Source:
Tampa Bay Times
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Hillsborough County is investigating what caused more than 32 million gallons of wastewater to cascade over the walls of its treatment plant at Falkenburg Road during Labor Day weekend.

Publications

SepticSmart for Tribal Communities

Published:
September 1, 2025
Source:
EPA
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In cooperation with the Indian Health Service (IHS), EPA has developed a tailored version of the original SepticSmart Homeowner's Guide to reflect the unique factors of Tribal communities and homeowners on Tribal lands regarding the proper care of their systems.

In the news

Taking a dip Labor Day weekend? Swimmers face fecal contamination at beaches along US coastline

Published:
August 30, 2025
Source:
AP
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Thousands of Americans will head to beaches for one last summer splash this Labor Day weekend, but taking a dip might be out of the question: Many of the beaches will caution against swimming because of unsafe levels of fecal contamination.

In the news
Case studies

The stench from the polluted Tijuana River is so bad it kept a researcher up all night

Published:
August 28, 2025
Source:
Los Angeles Times
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New research backs up the concerns of people who live near the Tijuana River and have long complained that foul air wafting from the polluted waterway is making them sick — irritating their eyes and noses, making breathing difficult and causing headaches. The study indicates they’re being exposed to high levels of the toxic gas hydrogen sulfide.

Publications

Heavily polluted Tijuana River drives regional air quality crisis

Published:
August 28, 2025
Source:
Science
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Rico et al. showed that surging wastewater flows in the summer of 2024 enhanced water-to-air hydrogen sulfide (H2S) transfer at a turbulent hotspot, leading to nighttime atmospheric H2S peaks thousands of times greater than typical urban levels. This example makes it clear that poor water quality can drastically affect air quality—an observation with important implications for global waterways.

In the news

Sewage Taints Canadian Oysters. Then Americans Eat Them

Published:
August 24, 2025
Source:
Inside Climate News
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Canada is a major oyster supplier to the U.S. Both diners and oystermen are harmed by inaction on pollution.

In the news

“How can this happen?” Fight over sewage sludge on farms intensifies

Published:
August 19, 2025
Source:
The New Lede
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Ryan Dunham heard his eleven-year-old daughter’s scream from his living room. He bolted up the stairs to the bathroom where she was taking a shower and couldn’t believe his eyes. The water flowing from the faucet was brown, and it smelled like “decay, rot and death.”

In the news

Pollution isn’t the only obstacle keeping kids from beaches in San Diego

Published:
August 18, 2025
Source:
Los Angeles Times
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Isaac Santos, 22, remembers growing up with family barbecues at his aunt’s house in Imperial Beach, south of San Diego, and swimming with his cousins. Sure, the ocean was dirty sometimes, but the beaches were open and accessible.

Publications

Urban wastewater treatment plants as resource hubs: evaluating circularity and sustainability of nutrient recovery and water reuse

Published:
August 15, 2025
Source:
Science Direct
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Wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) are evolving from pollution control facilities into resource recovery hubs, aligning with circular economy principles. However, assessing their transition requires robust methodologies that integrate environmental, economic, and circularity dimensions. This study aims to evaluate the sustainability and circularity performance of a WWTP in Cyprus upgraded with additional treatment stages to recover nutrient-rich sludge for fertilizer and treated water for irrigation.

In the news

Tackling Sewer Overflow in the Bronx: Green Solutions for Spuyten Duyvil Creek

Published:
August 8, 2025
Source:
The Riverdale Press
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July dumped more than twice the Bronx’s normal rainfall, overwhelming the borough’s century‑old sewers and flushing untreated wastewater into rivers and creeks.

Publications

A systematic approach towards a zero-waste water treatment: clay-carbon composite adsorbents made from drinking water treatment sludge

Published:
August 2, 2025
Source:
Nature
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Increasingly stringent water quality standards are forcing more water treatment facilities to implement adsorption steps. Activated carbon is efficient but has a high environmental impact due to CO₂ emissions and energy demand. Adsorbents derived from water treatment residuals offer a potential solution. In this study, a novel laboratory rotary furnace was designed to produce clay-carbon composite adsorbents from drinking water treatment residues.

In the news

Raw sewage is making SC beachgoers sick. Local governments need money to stop the spills.

Published:
July 29, 2025
Source:
South Carolina Daily Gazette
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Per Julia Shumway’s recent article, it is great to see bipartisan support to begin addressing the problem of microplastics in our waterways. Here’s another pollution problem plaguing South Carolina beaches that deserves more attention from our congressional leaders: fecal contamination.

In the news

Toxic chemicals are flowing into the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence River — and they’re showing up in drinking water.

Published:
July 23, 2025
Source:
CBC News
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Scientists are seeing a worrying trend in the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence River. Across Canada, invisible and toxic forever chemicals are omnipresent, polluting the soil, air, water and our bodies.

Tools

Scripps Oceanography Researchers Unveil User-Friendly Tool to Alert Beachgoers to Contamination

Published:
July 22, 2025
Source:
UC San Diego Scripps Institution of Oceanography
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Scientists at UC San Diego’s Scripps Institution of Oceanography present a new tool the public can use to understand sewage contamination levels at beaches from Coronado to Playas de Tijuana as well as potential risks of swimmer illness.

In the news

Ofwat to be abolished in ‘reset’ of water industry regulation

Published:
July 21, 2025
Source:
The Guardian
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A new water regulator will replace the powers of Ofwat, the Drinking Water Inspectorate and the Environment Agency to “reset” a sector tarnished by scandals over sewage spills and financial mismanagement, after a major review of the sector.

In the news

How much sewage is spilled near you?

Published:
July 21, 2025
Source:
BBC
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Water companies spilled raw sewage into England's rivers and seas for a record 3.6 million hours in 2024, according to Environment Agency figures. Limited amounts of sewage are allowed to be discharged during periods of excess rain, but environmental groups say the levels pose a threat to wildlife and risk swimmers' health.

In the news

“They’re Making Clean Fuel From Sewage Now”: New Hydrogen Tech Turns Wastewater Into Green Energy With Zero Emissions

Published:
July 20, 2025
Source:
Energy Reporters
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In a groundbreaking development, researchers at RMIT University have unveiled an innovative technique that transforms wastewater into green hydrogen fuel, offering a sustainable solution to both energy production and environmental pollution.

In the news

US wetlands ‘restored’ using treated sewage tainted with forever chemicals

Published:
July 18, 2025
Source:
The Guardian
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Many of the nation’s wetlands are being filled with toxic Pfas “forever chemicals” as wastewater treatment plant effluent tainted with the compounds is increasingly used to restore swampland and other waters. The practice threatens wildlife, food and drinking water sources, environmental advocates warn.

In the news

Could sea air be carrying microplastics from sewage spills?

Published:
July 10, 2025
Source:
Air Quality News
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Researchers have been examining the possibility that wind could be spreading microplastics and nanoplastics (MNP) from sewage spills into the air along coastlines.

In the news
Case studies

Major fine for spill that sent 85,000 gallons of sewage into Lake Tahoe

Published:
July 9, 2025
Source:
SF Gate
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In the aftermath of the sewage spill that began the night of July 18, 2024, the Lahontan Regional Water Quality Control Board conducted an investigation and confirmed that the spill was caused by a subcontractor, hired by Caltrans, who punctured a sewer main near Highway 28 in Carnelian Bay.

In the news

Coastal dwellers at risk of wind-blown microplastics from sewage

Published:
July 9, 2025
Source:
oceanographic
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Researchers at Plymouth Marine Laboratory have now - in light of new research and understanding of the impact of microplastics on human health - called on the UK government for legislation forcing water companies to remove microplastics from their wastewater.

In the news

‘A Trojan horse’: how toxic sewage sludge became a threat to the future of British farming

Published:
July 7, 2025
Source:
The Guardian
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For decades, sewage sludge has been quietly spread across Britain’s farmland, marketed as a nutrient-rich fertiliser. But insiders and scientists warn that hidden within it is a mix of household and industrial chemicals such as Pfas (“forever chemicals”), pharmaceuticals, pesticides, hormone-damaging chemicals and microplastics, threatening the long-term health of the land.

In the news

Cape Town’s sewage treatment isn’t coping: scientists are worried about what the city is telling the public

Published:
July 7, 2025
Source:
The Conversation
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Urban water bodies – rivers, lakes and oceans – are in trouble globally. Large sewage volumes damage the open environment, and new chemicals and pharmaceutical compounds don’t break down on their own. When they are released into the open environment, they build up in living tissues all along the food chain, bringing with them multiple health risks.

Publications

The theoretical role of the wind in aerosolising microplastics and nanoplastics from coastal combined sewer overflows

Published:
July 2, 2025
Source:
Scientific Reports
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Inhaled microplastics and nanoplastics (MNPs) have shown bio-persistence in the body, with concerning implications for human health. Airborne MNPs primarily originate from terrestrial sources, but sea air may contribute when onshore ‘aerosolising’ winds coincide with high concentrations of MNPs in surface waters.

In the news

‘Tastes like water’: how a US facility is recycling sewage to drink

Published:
June 6, 2025
Source:
The Guardian
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A California project can turn sewage into drinking water in less than an hour and could be a blueprint for other water-scarce regions

In the news

Why Are Hawai‘i’s Waters So Laden with Bacteria?

Published:
June 1, 2025
Source:
Surfer
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According to the data, 15 test sites across O‘ahu and Kaua‘i showed harmful bacteria levels that exceeded state health standards more than half of the times they were tested by Surfrider’s volunteer-based water-testing program, Blue Water Task Force (BWTF). Several of those failed to reach safe levels for human contact more than 80% of the time:

Publications
Case studies

Identifying wastewater chemicals in coastal aerosols

Published:
May 28, 2025
Source:
Science Advances
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This airborne pathway highlights a largely overlooked source of atmospheric pollution, emphasizing the need to reassess health risks in coastal regions as global water contamination continues to escalate.

In the news

Pollution from the Tijuana River is ending up in the air near the border, study finds

Published:
May 28, 2025
Source:
Los Angeles Times
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Researchers have found that pollutants in the Tijuana River, which carries raw sewage and industrial waste from Tijuana, are also turning up in the air along the coast near the U.S.-Mexico border.

Publications

Accurate Calculation Method for Urban Domestic Sewage Centralized Collection Rate Based on Water Quality and Quantity Variations

Published:
May 23, 2025
Source:
Science Direct
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Sewage mismanagement is a major contributor to water quality degradation. In 2015, the United Nations introduced Sustainable Development Goal 6.3, which aims to halve the proportion of untreated sewage discharges by 2030. Studies have shown that achieving SDG 6.3 can significantly reduce water pollution. However, rapid urbanization has led to a steady increase in domestic sewage discharges, creating significant challenges for the effective collection and treatment of domestic sewage.

In the news

Sewage Sludge Fertilizer From Maryland? Virginians Say No Thanks.

Published:
May 8, 2025
Source:
NY Times
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In 2023, sewage plants in Maryland started to make a troubling discovery. Harmful “forever chemicals” were contaminating the state’s sewage, much of which is turned into fertilizer and spread on farmland.

In the news

Sewage spill leads to no-contact advisory for Liberty Bay, Keyport shoreline

Published:
May 1, 2025
Source:
Kitsap Sun
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Approximately 15,000 gallons of sewage spilled in the waters of Liberty Bay near Keyport Wednesday, causing the Kitsap Public Health District to issue a one-week no-contact advisory and a shellfish harvesting advisory for three weeks.

In the news

Rural communities were promised millions in disaster funds. Trump is ending it

Published:
May 1, 2025
Source:
NPR
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In DePue, Ill., sewage will keep backing up into people's basements when there's heavy rain. In Rising Sun, Md., a mobile home park that has already flooded six times will remain in harm's way. And in Kamiah, Idaho, houses won't get upgrades that would protect them from wildfires.

In the news
Videos & podcasts

Kauai businesses frustrated with Wailua sewage spill

Published:
May 1, 2025
Source:
Hawaii News Now
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Residents and businesses say they’re frustrated after the Wailua Coco Palms sewer pump station failed last week, sending wastewater through their neighborhood. They said the station has been a problem for years with no permanent fix in sight.

In the news

PFAS in Fertilizer From Sewage Spurs State Control Efforts

Published:
May 1, 2025
Source:
Bloomberg Law
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The stench from the sewage sludge Bob Guenther’s neighbor used to fertilize crops was so strong that a county commissioner called out to look at the property ran to a nearby ditch to vomit.

In the news
Case studies

‘Forever chemicals’ in sludge fertilizer resisted in Virginia, Maryland

Published:
April 30, 2025
Source:
Bay Journal
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The glass of water that Jennifer Campagne draws from her kitchen faucet looks clear and clean. But ever since she had her household well tested and found “forever chemicals” in it, she’s leery of using it, even to make coffee.

In the news

EPA Head Pushes Mexico to Address Tijuana River Sewage in Recent San Diego Visit

Published:
April 29, 2025
Source:
Inside Climate News
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San Diego County communities have lamented public health impacts of sewage pollution in the watershed, which crosses from Mexico into California before flowing into the ocean.

In the news

In booming Central Texas, wastewater is polluting rivers and streams

Published:
April 28, 2025
Source:
The Texas Tribune
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A bill in the Legislature would protect the last 21 pristine watersheds in Texas. But for years, previous attempts have been defeated by powerful homebuilders.

In the news

Sewage leak at Bronx MTA bus depot may be getting into groundwater: records

Published:
April 27, 2025
Source:
NY Daily News
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A sewage leak at a Bronx bus depot is worse than previously reported and possibly leaking into surrounding groundwater, the Daily News has learned.

In the news

EPA chief demands that Mexico stop Tijuana sewage from flowing into California

Published:
April 22, 2025
Source:
Associated Press
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The head of the Environmental Protection Agency said Tuesday that Mexico must stop the flow of billions of gallons of sewage and toxic chemicals from Tijuana that has polluted the Pacific Ocean off neighboring Southern California, closing beaches and sickening Navy SEALs who train in the water.

In the news

Tijuana River Named Second Most Endangered in Nation

Published:
April 17, 2025
Source:
The Coronado Times
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Amid the sound of roosters crowing, horses neighing and the smell of raw sewage at a ranch in the Tijuana River Valley, officials announced today that the Tijuana River has been ranked number two on American Rivers’ list of America’s most endangered rivers of 2025, moving up from number nine last year.

In the news

Over 100 sewage spills reported across CT this year. Officials say it may take decades to remedy.

Published:
April 17, 2025
Source:
Hartford Courant
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So far in 2025, there have been approximately 130 sewage overflows and spills reported across Connecticut, with the largest dumping 300,000 gallons into the Connecticut River, according to state Department of Energy and Environmental Protection data.

In the news

New Surfers Against Sewage report reveals that the UK failed its pollution incident targets

Published:
April 16, 2025
Source:
Oceanographic Magazine
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A new report by Surfers Against Sewage reveals shocking UK-wide sewage discharge figures and unearths the missed targets in England that have led to more than quarter of adults considering not paying their water bill.

In the news

Activist is happy to get a grant, but lingering “terrible odor” from Back River sewage plant leaves her wary

Published:
April 16, 2025
Source:
Baltimore Brew
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Three years ago, Desiree Greaver was on Back River at the sewage plant effluent pipe showing a Brew reporter what you get when you push a stick into the water and bring it back up – brownish-orange foamy glop that “looks like poop and smells like a porta potty.”

In the news

‘I needed heart surgery after swimming in polluted water’: Health warning as sewage spills reach decade-high

Published:
April 16, 2025
Source:
The Independant
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A woman who was left needing heart surgery after developing blood poisoning is one of hundreds to fall ill after swimming in the UK’s polluted waters as sewage spills reached a decade high last year.

In the news
Videos & podcasts

American streams and rivers being choked by sewage, especially in poor communities

Published:
April 15, 2025
Source:
CBS Evening News
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CBS News compared census data with outfall locations and found lower income, minority communities are twice as likely to have sewage dumping into a river or creek. David Schecter reports for "Eye on America."

In the news

Trump Announces ‘Termination’ of ‘Illegal DEI’ Settlement Over Raw Sewage in Poor, Majority-Black Alabama Communities

Published:
April 11, 2025
Source:
Inside Climate News
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The agreement, reached under the Biden Administration, required the state’s Department of Public Health to improve sanitation efforts in Alabama’s Black Belt. It’s unclear what the termination will mean on the ground.

In the news

Campaigners find sewage pollution and E coli in Boat Race water

Published:
April 8, 2025
Source:
The Guardian
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Tests ahead of Sunday’s race revealed E coli levels three times above the threshold for poor bathing water

Publications

Chemical pollution increases more than 100-fold after sewage discharges in south-coast waters

Published:
April 7, 2025
Source:
Brunel University of London
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A worryingly wide range of chemical pollutants has been found by researchers studying two of the UK’s south-coast harbours, raising concerns about the impact on wildlife and the human activities responsible for this contamination.

In the news
Case studies

New method to monitor sewage pollution in rivers

Published:
April 4, 2025
Source:
University of Stirling
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Scientists at the University of Stirling have developed a new method of monitoring the presence of pathogens in rivers polluted by wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs).

In the news

Unanswered questions as EPA confirms debris balls on Sydney beaches likely came from sewage plants

Published:
April 4, 2025
Source:
The Guardian
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Authorities investigating mystery debris balls that recently closed beaches in Sydney and on the south coast have determined they likely originated from Sydney Water’s land-based sewage treatment network, the New South Wales Environment Protection Authority says.

Publications
Case studies

Water Quality Report 2025

Published:
April 1, 2025
Source:
Surfers Against Sewage
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Our latest Water Quality Report reveals that sewage is being dumped into our rivers and seas on a scale that defies belief—and the people who should be stopping it are cashing in instead. While private water companies handed £1.2 billion to shareholders, they also dumped 4.7 million hours of sewage into our waterways in 2024. That’s 592,478 spills in just one year.

In the news

1.4 million gallons of wastewater spilled into Tampa Bay from Clearwater plant

Published:
March 31, 2025
Source:
Tampa Bay Times
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Enough wastewater to fill more than two Olympic swimming pools emptied into northern Tampa Bay Wednesday after a mishap during maintenance at a Clearwater treatment plant. City officials told the Tampa Bay Times they had to divert an estimated 1.4 million gallons of partially treated wastewater into the bay after a settling tank designed to remove solids from water became overloaded.

In the news
Case studies

Record number of illegal sewage spills in Windermere last year

Published:
March 30, 2025
Source:
BBC
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Sewage spilled illegally into England's largest lake on a record number of days last year, an analysis of water company data by campaigners suggests. The analysis, which the BBC had exclusive access to, used United Utilities operational data to establish when the company was discharging sewage into Windermere when it should by law have been treating some of it.

In the news

A Maker of Sewage-Based Fertilizer Leaves Town Amid a Toxic Crisis

Published:
March 28, 2025
Source:
NY Times
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Ranchers in Texas claim livestock was sickened by ‘forever chemicals’ in fertilizer made from sewage sludge. Now Synagro, a Goldman Sachs-backed firm, has lost a deal to manufacture there.

In the news
Case studies

Nearly 4m hours of raw sewage dumped in England’s waters last year

Published:
March 27, 2025
Source:
The Guardian
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Raw sewage was discharged into rivers and coastal waters in England for almost 4m hours last year, with waterways that have the highest environmental protections subjected to days of pollution.

In the news
Case studies

Residue from human waste has long wound up as farm fertilizer. Some neighbors hate it

Published:
March 26, 2025
Source:
Associated Press (AP)
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When Leslie Stewart moved to her home in a rural expanse of Lincoln County outside of Oklahoma City more than 20 years ago, she thought she’d found a slice of heaven. In a town of fewer than 700 people, her son could attend a good school and her acreage offered plenty of room to raise goats and let her dogs run.

In the news
Case studies

This is the next border fight — and it’s a stinker

Published:
March 20, 2025
Source:
Politico
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Trump administration officials have been pressuring Mexican counterparts to reduce the flow of migrants and drugs over the border. Now they’re turning their attention to the flow of something more scatalogical. Sewage.

In the news

A stain on Britain: Sewage contaminates its waterways and seas

Published:
March 15, 2025
Source:
The Japan Times
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Beneath the gloomy seas off southern England, 400 million mussels encrust ropes hanging from buoys dotted over an area the size of the country's biggest airport.

Case studies
In the news

El Paso Is Going to Turn Wastewater Into Drinking Water. Other Cities Will Soon Follow

Published:
March 3, 2025
Source:
Inside Climate News
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El Paso Water broke ground on the first U.S. facility that will treat wastewater for direct re-use in a city water supply, using a four-step process to transform wastewater into clean, potable drinking water.

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United Utilities boss admits water firm ‘isn’t good enough at stopping sewage dumping’

Published:
February 26, 2025
Source:
The Guardian
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England’s most polluting water provider “isn’t good enough” at trying to stop sewage dumping, its boss has admitted to MPs. The chief executive of United Utilities defended her £1.4m pay packet, including a £420k bonus, despite the company behind historic spills in Lake Windermere having been found to have polluted more than any other in 2023.

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Climate Change and Sewage: A Dangerous Combination for Coastal Communities

Published:
January 17, 2025
Source:
The Revelator
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Storm surges and sea-level rise damage sanitation systems and threaten ecosystems and human health. We need to take this risk seriously.

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In a First, the E.P.A. Warns of ‘Forever Chemicals’ in Sludge Fertilizer

Published:
January 14, 2025
Source:
NY Times
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Levels of PFAS in sewage sludge used as fertilizer can pose risks that sometimes exceed safety thresholds “by several orders of magnitude,” the EPA said.

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DC sues federal government over pollution in Anacostia River

Published:
January 10, 2025
Source:
Associated Press
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The District of Columbia on Friday filed a lawsuit against the federal government over pollution in the Anacostia River, arguing it has inflicted “catastrophic harm” on the mostly poor and minority communities living along the urban waterway.

Publications

High organofluorine concentrations in municipal wastewater affect downstream drinking water supplies for millions of Americans

Published:
January 6, 2025
Source:
PNAS
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US municipal wastewater facilities are major per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) sources known to affect drinking water quality. Among eight large wastewater treatment facilities with comparable treatment technologies and sizes to those serving 70% of the US population, we found that the six regulated PFAS in drinking water accounted for <10% of extractable organofluorine (EOF) in wastewater influent and effluent. Most (62 to 75%) of the EOF consisted of commonly prescribed fluorinated pharmaceuticals, and the maximum EOF removal efficiency was <25%. Results from a national wastewater dilution model suggest that wastewater PFAS discharges impair drinking water supplies for >20 million Americans, emphasizing the importance of reducing diverse PFAS sources entering wastewater.

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‘Forever chemicals’ are polluting water in an unexpected way — via prescription drugs

Published:
January 6, 2025
Source:
The Washington Post
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Researchers found that chemicals, including PFAS, from pharmaceuticals are entering into wastewater — which can be used as drinking water during times of drought.

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Border Agency Seeks Solutions With Mexico on Water, Sewage Problems

Published:
January 5, 2025
Source:
Inside Climate News
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On the U.S.-Mexico border, the International Boundary and Water Commission has the unglamorous job of stopping sewage flows and negotiating water disputes. Commissioner Maria-Elena Giner has earned allies in long-standing border conflicts, a job that won’t get any easier under Trump.

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Fighting the ‘Toxic Tide' sewage crisis at the US-Mexico border

Published:
January 2, 2025
Source:
NBC San Diego
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Millions of gallons of water polluted by toxic sewage from Mexico still flows into San Diego County and the Pacific Ocean every day, but additional funding from Congress and increased pressure by local leaders is making a difference. Thousands of people have their fingers crossed. They’re hoping the decades-long sewage crisis along the U.S.-Mexico border will get better in 2025.

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2024: A momentous year in the fight to end Tijuana River Valley sewage pollution

Published:
December 29, 2024
Source:
The San Diego Union-Tribune
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The year was marked by record-breaking weather events, lawsuits, a visit from the CDC and a sudden departure by the county chairperson

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The E.P.A. Promotes Toxic Fertilizer. 3M Told It of Risks Years Ago.

Published:
December 27, 2024
Source:
NY Times
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The agency obtained research from 3M in 2003 revealing that sewage sludge, the raw material for the fertilizer, carried toxic “forever chemicals.”

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The E.P.A. Promotes Toxic Fertilizer. 3M Told It of Risks Years Ago.

Published:
December 27, 2024
Source:
NY Times
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The agency obtained research from 3M in 2003 revealing that sewage sludge, the raw material for the fertilizer, carried toxic “forever chemicals.”

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El Segundo still stinks. Why can’t L.A. fix the problem three years after huge sewage spill?

Published:
December 16, 2024
Source:
LA Times
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On the worst days, Tamara Kcehowski said, she has thrown up when the stench from Los Angeles’ nearby sewage plant overwhelms her El Segundo apartment. She said her dog, Maggie, has even retched alongside her.

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Their Fertilizer Poisons Farmland. Now, They Want Protection From Lawsuits.

Published:
December 6, 2024
Source:
New York Times
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For decades, a little-known company now owned by a Goldman Sachs fund has been making millions of dollars from the unlikely dregs of American life: sewage sludge.

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Texas farmers say sewage-based fertilizer tainted with “forever chemicals” poisoned their land and killed their livestock

Published:
December 2, 2024
Source:
Texas Tribune
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Tony Coleman recognizes the signs all too well. A cow drools strings of saliva. Then it starts to limp, each step slower. Then it grows stiff. Then it’s quick. There’s nothing to be done. The cow dies.

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Colorado researchers are one step closer to taking the ‘forever’ out of forever chemicals

Published:
November 27, 2024
Source:
NPR News, KUNC
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Scientists at CSU have developed a system that uses visible light to decompose PFAS-type molecules. For now, the technique has only been tested in a laboratory environment. Getting it to work in drinking water, wastewater or soil will take more work, but shows promise.

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Sewage pollution affecting Chula Vista, not just border communities. So, city leaders declare local emergency.

Published:
November 13, 2024
Source:
The San Diego Union-Tribune
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The resolution is largely symbolic, calling on the White House, especially with a forthcoming change in administration, and other top government officials to fast-track more spending for solutions. Chula Vista officials are directed to “explore any and all options to improve conditions in the Tijuana River,” the proclamation reads.

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Florida man claims he was paralyzed following alleged sewage spill in Titusville

Published:
November 7, 2024
Source:
Fox 35
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From paddleboarding to paralysis – that’s what happened to a 15-year-old boy in Titusville. The victim is 18 years old now and learning how to walk again. After almost three years of fighting, Rock Timmins and his family had just settled a lawsuit with the City of Titusville.

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The border crisis Trump doesn’t talk about

Published:
November 2, 2024
Source:
Politico
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California Gov. Gavin Newsom visited the U.S.-Mexico border on Monday — but not for the reason you’d expect. The border crisis that drew the Democrat wasn’t immigration, but sewage. For nearly a century, billions of gallons of sewage have been pouring into Southern California from Mexico, making coastal communities near San Diego the victim of a crisis few people know about.

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South Bay International Wastewater Treatment Plant expansion will help minimize cross-border sewage

Published:
October 29, 2024
Source:
CBS 8
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The expansion will double the capacity and along with improvements in Mexico, help minimize the sewage near the U.S.-Mexico border in San Diego.

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Newsom makes first visit to ailing sewage treatment plants along U.S.-Mexico border

Published:
October 28, 2024
Source:
The San Diego Union-Tribune
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Gov. Gavin Newsom on Monday toured wastewater treatment facilities on both sides of the U.S.-Mexico border, marking his first in-person visit to the sites undergoing critical upgrades to reduce rampant sewage polluting Tijuana and south San Diego County communities.

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County Supervisor, IB Mayor, residents push for Superfund designation to help Tijuana sewage crisis

Published:
October 24, 2024
Source:
CBS 8 San Diego
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San Diego County Supervisor Terra Lawson-Remer Thursday submitted a request to the Environmental Protection Agency to look into the Tijuana River Valley for a possible Superfund designation.

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San Diego County plans to go after companies it thinks are behind sewage crisis

Published:
October 22, 2024
Source:
NBC 7 San Diego
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Since October 2018, the United States section of the International Boundary and Water Commission has catalogued more than 200 billion gallons of toxic waste coming into the United States through the Tijuana River Valley