TY - JOUR
T1 - Monitoring litter typology and loading in stormwater
T2 - Implications for waste management and mitigation policies
AU - TRAMOY, Romain
AU - LEDIEU, Lauriane
AU - MBALLO BIAYE, Ibrahima
AU - GASPERI, Johnny
AU - TASSIN, Bruno
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2026 The Authors
PY - 2026/2/1
Y1 - 2026/2/1
N2 - Sewer systems are an overlooked pathway of litter to rivers. We monitored six combined and four separate sewer outlets in France using retention nets over several years to quantify and characterize over 30,000 items > 5 mm, including 91% plastic debris. Total median loading rates were 155 g ha−1 yr−1 (120 g.ha−1.yr−1 for plastics) and 8 g cap−1 yr−1 (6 g cap−1.yr−1 for plastics), consistent with the few previous studies available in stormwater and rivers, although litter typology is different. Combined sewers were dominated by sanitary products like wet wipes and towels (46% of plastic mass), while separate systems were dominated by cigarette butts and food packaging related to on-the-go consumption. Sewer monitoring proved complementary to river monitoring, with fewer unidentified items (∼15%) and clearer source attribution. Management strongly influenced maintenance costs: internal management and incineration by public authorities was far cheaper (800 € per net and per year) than outsourced landfill disposal (16,000 € per net and per year). Despite operational limits of nets, sewer monitoring provides robust data for litter flux models and for evaluating upstream mitigation policies. Expanding such monitoring, supported by sustained funding and international coordination, will afford reliable and homogeneous method for litter loading estimates into rivers and their source identification:an essential step toward an effective plastics treaty.
AB - Sewer systems are an overlooked pathway of litter to rivers. We monitored six combined and four separate sewer outlets in France using retention nets over several years to quantify and characterize over 30,000 items > 5 mm, including 91% plastic debris. Total median loading rates were 155 g ha−1 yr−1 (120 g.ha−1.yr−1 for plastics) and 8 g cap−1 yr−1 (6 g cap−1.yr−1 for plastics), consistent with the few previous studies available in stormwater and rivers, although litter typology is different. Combined sewers were dominated by sanitary products like wet wipes and towels (46% of plastic mass), while separate systems were dominated by cigarette butts and food packaging related to on-the-go consumption. Sewer monitoring proved complementary to river monitoring, with fewer unidentified items (∼15%) and clearer source attribution. Management strongly influenced maintenance costs: internal management and incineration by public authorities was far cheaper (800 € per net and per year) than outsourced landfill disposal (16,000 € per net and per year). Despite operational limits of nets, sewer monitoring provides robust data for litter flux models and for evaluating upstream mitigation policies. Expanding such monitoring, supported by sustained funding and international coordination, will afford reliable and homogeneous method for litter loading estimates into rivers and their source identification:an essential step toward an effective plastics treaty.
KW - Litter characterization
KW - Litter load
KW - Nets
KW - Plastic load
KW - Sewer systems
KW - Wet wipes
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105027633642
U2 - 10.1016/j.wasman.2026.115350
DO - 10.1016/j.wasman.2026.115350
M3 - Article
C2 - 41546909
AN - SCOPUS:105027633642
SN - 0956-053X
VL - 212
JO - Waste Management
JF - Waste Management
M1 - 115350
ER -