0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Environmental Sources Sign in to save

Macro- and microplastics in composts from municipal solid waste industrial composting Plants in Uganda

Waste Management 2025 4 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 48 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Francis Okori, Therese Schwarzböck, Sara Neuburg, Allan John Komakech, Jakob Lederer, Johann Fellner

Summary

Researchers quantified macro- and microplastic contamination in composts from two industrial municipal solid waste composting plants in Uganda, finding substantial plastic contamination resulting from minimal source separation in waste collection, which could transfer plastics to agricultural soils.

Polymers
Body Systems

Organic fertilizer use constitutes one of the main pathways through which (micro)-plastics enter the environment. However, little is known about the extent of plastic contamination in biowaste composts from Sub-Saharan Africa, where municipal biowaste collection involves minimal to no source separation. This study assessed macro- and microplastic contamination in composts from two Clean Development Mechanism composting facilities in Uganda processing mixed municipal solid waste for agricultural use. Finished composts were sampled per Plant at monthly intervals for four months (September 2023 to January 2024), and sieved into different size fractions: >5, 1.18-5, 0.6-1.18, 0.212-0.6, and 0.063-0.212 mm. Microplastics in each fraction (<5 mm) and macroplastics (>5 mm) in composts were analyzed. The results indicated heavy macro- and microplastic contamination in composts from both Plants. Macroplastics (>5 mm) ranged from 0.11 to 4.70 (1.50 ± 1.24) g/kg dry weight in Plant 1 and 0.36-4.93 (1.78 ± 1.27) g/kg dry weight in Plant 2. Total microplastics in composts exceeded all previous literature studies, averaging about 49,000 ± 7,000 and 62,000 ± 6,000 items/kg dry weight, respectively. For both facilities, compost fraction 0.212-0.6 mm showed the highest microplastic contamination, followed by 0.063-0.212, 0.6-1.18, and 1.18-5 mm. Total microplastics in composts depended on facility pile turning, feedstock contamination, and local population density. Polyethylene and polypropylene were the most dominant polymers in macro- and microplastics from composts, with fragments and fibers most dominant microplastic shapes. Estimations of plastic load show that such MSW compost can input into amended soils macroplastics of 2.0-106.7 kg/ha and 2.9×108 - 2.4×109 microplastic items/ha per recommended application.

Sign in to start a discussion.

More Papers Like This

Article Tier 2

Identification and Quantification of Microplastics in Compost: A case of landfills in Uganda

Researchers surveyed compost sites across 8 cities and 5 municipalities in Uganda, finding microplastics at all locations with fibers being the most abundant type (54.98%), indicating that poor waste management practices are driving plastic contamination into compost used in agriculture.

Article Tier 2

Microplastics identification and quantification in the composted Organic Fraction of Municipal Solid Waste

Researchers quantified microplastics in composted organic municipal solid waste from five facilities, finding contamination levels that raise concerns about compost quality and the potential transfer of microplastics to agricultural soils through organic waste recycling.

Article Tier 2

Breakdown of plastic waste into microplastics during an industrial Composting: A case study from a biowaste facility

A study of industrial composting facilities found that plastic waste items introduced into the compost feedstock broke down into microplastics during the composting process, with finished compost containing significant MP concentrations that could contaminate agricultural soils where the compost is applied.

Systematic Review Tier 1

Plastics and other extraneous matter in municipal solid waste compost: A systematic review of sources, occurrence, implications, and fate in amended soils

Researchers reviewed contamination in municipal compost made from household organic waste, finding plastics are the most prevalent pollutant — with some batches containing enough plastic to deposit over 500 kg per hectare of farmland each year. Repeated use of contaminated compost builds up microplastics in soil, threatening soil health and potentially moving plastic particles into crops and food.

Article Tier 2

Microplastic Abundance in the Locally Produced Commercial Compost and the Characteristics

Researchers measured microplastic abundance in locally produced commercial compost, characterizing particle morphology, size, and polymer type. The compost contained measurable microplastic concentrations dominated by polyester fibres and polyethylene fragments, confirming that commercial composting does not eliminate microplastic contamination and may serve as a route for soil plastic input.

Share this paper