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Flood induced buttertub spill reveals riverine plastic transport dynamics
Summary
Researchers used approximately 8 million empty dairy buttertubs accidentally flushed into the Vesdre River during the July 2021 European floods as a natural tracer to study plastic transport dynamics through the Ourthe and Meuse rivers. They found that the flood event provided a unique opportunity to quantify transport distances, retention patterns, and downstream distribution of macrolitter under extreme hydrological conditions.
Abstract During the July 2021 European floods approximately 8 million empty dairy packaging (buttertubs) were flushed from a dairy processing facility in Belgium into the Vesdre river. Some were transported further downstream, into the Ourthe river and eventually the Meuse river. There are many unknowns when it comes to plastic transport in rivers, especially in response to floods. We therefore used this incident as an unique opportunity to study these buttertubs as a tracer for plastic transport dynamics in a riverine environment in response to an extreme flood event. Normally, it is unknown when and where individual plastic items found on riverbanks entered the environment. In this case, however, the ID stamps on the buttercups allowed for them to be traced back to the flooding of the factory. We studied the transport and deposition of these buttertubs in the Dutch Meuse over two years following the flood. We also collected buttertubs at different points in time to investigate their fragmentation and mass loss. Within three weeks of the flood, the buttertubs were transported up to 328 km from the spilling location. Overall, the majority (78%) of buttertubs we found within the first three weeks were deposited within less than 100 km of the point of emission. Over the following two years, the mean transport distance of the found buttertubs moved downstream from 100 km in July/August 2021, to 153 km in July 2023. The buttertubs average transport velocity decreased from 11.7 km/d within the first three weeks, to 0.2 km/d by July 2023. Based on the 89 buttertubs we collected and analyzed in detail over the two years, we did not find a significant mass loss. Of all 89 buttertubs found, 47 showed cracks and only 12 appeared to have pieces missing. This study shows that even during extreme flood events, the majority of spilled plastic litter is retained within a limited distance after being emitted into the river. The findings of this study can be utilized to improve plastic transport modelling, and overall better understand plastic transport in the freshwater environment.