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 Human Health Effects Marine & Wildlife Policy & Risk Remediation Sign in to save

Future coastal water pollution under global change: multi-pollutant modeling

2023 Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Ilaria Micella, Carolien Kroeze, Maryna Strokal

Summary

Researchers describe a global multi-pollutant modeling framework for assessing future coastal water pollution from nutrients, plastics, and chemicals under climate change and urbanization scenarios, arguing that managing multiple pollutants together is essential for achieving clean coastal water goals.

Study Type Environmental

Coastal waters receive multiple pollutants, such as nutrients, plastics, and chemicals. Rivers transport these pollutants often from rural and urban areas to seas. Many pollutants have common sources and cause multiple impacts (e.g., eutrophication and toxicity), decreasing the availability of clean water. Meanwhile, the global change adds to coastal water pollution. For example, cities are expected to expand in size and numbers, increasing future urban pollution. In addition, agriculture may intensify to satisfy the food demand for a growing global population. This intensification may, in turn, increase agricultural pollution in river export to coastal waters. In addition, climate change is expected to result in more floods and droughts. Floods may transport more pollutants from urbanised and agricultural areas to the seas. The effects of global change will likely differ among river basins depending on their characteristics.Existing scenarios, such as the Representative Concentrative Pathways (RCPs) and Shared Socio-economic Pathways (SSPs), address global change challenges. However, these scenarios have yet to be implemented for a global multi-pollutant assessment of coastal waters. In addition, large-scale assessments of coastal water pollution are often for single pollutants, overlooking synergies and trade-offs in pollution control for multiple pollutants. Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 14 (clean marine waterways) may be supported by considering multiple pollutants and sources, yet additional research in the field is needed.Our study aims to better understand the influence of global change on the river export of multiple pollutants to coastal waters by source and sub-basins. To this end, we develop the MARINA-Multi (Model to Assess River Inputs of pollutaNts to the seAs) model for more than 10,000 sub-basins and for nutrients, chemicals, and plastics to estimate future pollution trends. For these pollutants, we consider point (such as sewage systems and open defecation) and diffuse (such as agriculture and improperly managed solid waste on land) sources. Finally, we consider the SGD coastal water quality targets and develop optimistic and pessimistic futures under global change.Our model results show that, in 2010, more than 50% of the population lived in river basins where coastal waters experienced multi-pollution problems. Rivers exported considerable amounts of nutrients, chemicals, and plastics to coastal waters globally, two-thirds reaching the Atlantic and Pacific seas. Diffuse sources contributed by over 70% to nitrogen and macroplastics in global seas. Point sources contributed by 70- 90% to phosphorus and microplastics in global seas. Multi-pollution hotspots are often found in urbanised areas. Global change will alter those pollution hotspots. First, the pollution patterns are expected to shift due to climate change affecting temperature and the water cycle. Second, changes in socioeconomic drivers are expected. Our optimistic scenarios are associated with, for example, the technological progress that enhances waste collection and treatment. The MARINA-Multi model is useful for understanding the sources and spatial variability of the multiple pollutants in rivers and coastal waters under global change. Our model can support decision-makers and water managers in implementing mitigation and adaptation policies to achieve sustainable targets for the marine environment (SDG 14).

Sign in to start a discussion.

More Papers Like This

Article Tier 2

Ten years of MARINA modeling: Multi-pollutant hotspots and their sources under global change

A decade of MARINA water quality modeling identified multi-pollutant hotspots in rivers, lakes, and coastal waters under historical and projected future global change scenarios, highlighting nutrient pollution and microplastics as co-occurring stressors in heavily impacted watersheds.

Article Tier 2

Global multi-pollutant modelling of water quality: scientific challenges and future directions

Researchers argue that tackling global water pollution requires modeling multiple contaminants — microplastics, nutrients, chemicals, and pathogens — simultaneously rather than studying each in isolation. They identify pollution hotspots across Europe, North America, and South Asia where rivers carry dangerous combinations of these pollutants, and call for models that can directly inform policy decisions.

Article Tier 2

Modelling future coastal water pollution: impacts of point sources, socio-economic developments & multiple pollutants

Researchers modeled how urbanization and wastewater discharge will affect coastal water pollution by 2100, looking at nitrogen, phosphorus, microplastics, and triclosan. They found that river exports of all four pollutants from point sources are projected to more than double globally, with Africa and Asia seeing the sharpest increases. The study suggests that wastewater treatment improvements could reduce multi-pollutant issues by 30-38%, but economic growth and city expansion may offset those gains.

Article Tier 2

Causes of coastal waters pollution with nutrients, chemicals and plastics worldwide

Researchers developed a global model to quantify how rivers transport nutrients, chemicals, microplastics, and macroplastics from land sources to coastal waters across more than 10,000 sub-basins. They found that sewage is responsible for 40-95% of phosphorus and microplastics reaching the oceans, while agricultural runoff and mismanaged waste dominate nitrogen and macroplastic pollution. The study reveals that nearly 45% of global land area qualifies as a multi-pollutant hotspot, home to 89% of the world's population.

Article Tier 2

Global multi-pollutant modelling: uncovering new perspectives for river exports of nutrients, plastics, and chemicals

This thesis modeled river exports of nutrients, plastics, and chemicals to coastal waters worldwide using a new multi-pollutant model. Researchers found that diffuse sources contributed over 95% of nitrogen and macroplastic exports, while point sources accounted for about 40% of phosphorus and microplastic exports globally. The study projects that 56-78% of the global population will live near more polluted river basins by 2100, with low-income regions in Africa and South Asia facing the highest multi-pollutant exposure.

Share this paper