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Groundwater Quality Analysis: Assessing the Impact of a Closed Landfill—A Case Study on Physico-Chemical and Microplastic Contaminants
Summary
Researchers investigated groundwater quality around a closed municipal landfill in Poland two decades after closure, measuring 11 physicochemical and 13 microplastic indicators. Persistent contamination was detected including elevated cadmium (0.0211 mg/L), total organic carbon (24.8 mg/L), and PET microplastics, demonstrating long-term legacy pollution from closed landfill sites.
In the context of increasing concern over long-term environmental impacts of closed landfill sites, this study investigates the composition of groundwater and leachate at a municipal waste landfill in southwestern Poland, two decades after its closure. The research, conducted in 2023, aimed to assess groundwater quality using 11 physico-chemical and 13 microplastic indicators. Groundwater and leachate samples were collected seasonally to assess of groundwater quality around landfill, including presence of heavy metals (Cd, Cr6+, Cu, Pb), PAHs and TOC, and microplastics. The results revealed persistent environmental degradation, with elevated concentrations of total organic carbon (24.8 mg/L) and cadmium (0.0211 mg/L), particularly in the second half of the year. Additionally, PET microplastics were detected in correlation with increased precipitation and leachate generation. These findings indicate that pollutants continue to migrate from the waste deposit into the surrounding groundwater, with seasonal patterns amplifying their presence. The study confirms that even decades after closure, municipal landfills can remain significant sources of both chemical and microplastic contamination, underlining the need for long-term monitoring and remediation strategies to protect groundwater resources.