A review on e-waste contamination, toxicity, and sustainable clean-up approaches for its management.
Pankaj KumarSnigdha SinghAmel GacemKrishna Kumar YadavJaved Khan BhuttoMaha Awjan AlreshidiManoj KumarAnand KumarVirendra Kumar YadavSunil SoniRamesh KumarMaytham T QasimMohd TariqMir Waqas AlamPublished in: Toxicology (2024)
Ecosystems and human health are being negatively impacted by the growing problem of electrical waste, especially in developing countries. E-waste poses a significant risk to ecological systems because it can release a variety of hazardous substances into the environment, containing polybrominated diphenyl ethers and heavy metals, brominated flame retardants, polychlorinated dibenzofurans and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, and dioxins. This review article provides a critical assessment of the toxicological consequences of e-waste on ecosystems and human health and data analyses from scientific journals and grey literature on metals, BFRs, PBDEs, PCDFs, and PAHs in several environmental compartments of commercial significance in informal electronic trash recycling. The currently available techniques and tools employed for treating e-waste are sustainable techniques such as bioremediation, chemical leaching, biological leaching, and pyrometallurgy have been also discussed along with the necessity of implementing strong legislation to address the issue of unregulated exports of electronic trash in recycling practices. Despite the ongoing hurdles, implementing environmentally sustainable recycling methods have the potential to address the detrimental impacts of e-waste and foster positive economic development.
Keyphrases
- human health
- heavy metals
- risk assessment
- sewage sludge
- climate change
- health risk assessment
- health risk
- polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons
- municipal solid waste
- life cycle
- primary care
- healthcare
- systematic review
- multiple sclerosis
- randomized controlled trial
- quality improvement
- machine learning
- white matter
- anaerobic digestion