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Taking into account population growth, the need for food has significantly increased. To supply demand, the manufacturing and application of biocides have become increasingly necessary to guarantee crops and preserve them against stronger adverse agents (insects and other organisms). Such chemicals are made to be recalcitrant and toxic. Thus, they need to be properly removed from agricultural and industrial wastewaters so they do not affect human health through food.
Human activities have increased the consumption of organic and recalcitrant compounds such as phenols, VOCs, DDT, PCHs, PAHs, PCBs, POPs, etc., but these substances are proven to be carcinogenic, teratogenic, and mutagenic, besides being persistent in the environment. Commonly, industrial wastewater containing recalcitrant compounds contains other toxic materials that may affect biological treatment, given that advanced oxidation processes have been addressed and shown more suitable results.
Considering a more recent approach, contaminants of emerging concern must be highlighted. Even at small levels, they have shown harmful effects in humans and are capable of disrupting the endocrine system and causing other, as‐yet‐unknown impacts. Such pollutants are persistent in the environment and result from human activities. Hence, the list of these compounds is constantly growing and must be studied in depth.
The industrial sector has to acknowledge the impacts and complexity of its contaminants for humans and the environment. Therefore, suitable treatment methodologies must be developed and addressed. Once such understanding is adopted worldwide, hazardous impacts from these activities will not be a threat but instead can be properly controlled and made harmless.
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