Abstract

Abstract Sewage treatment and sewage sludge (also called biosolids) represent a serious environmental issue that has affected modern society for the past century. In response to this, an increasing number of controls and resulting regulations have been introduced to avoid polluting our rivers and seas with pathogens, oxygen-demanding organic debris, potentially toxic elements (PTEs) and eutrophying nutrients. Over the past few decades, improved technology and more stringent regulations, driven in Europe by the increasingly precautionary European Community (EC) legislation, have worked together to achieve a net decrease of the amount of some of the pollutants, both through treatment of the wastewater and by cutting or forbidding the intake of contaminants at source. The growing importance of cleaning up wastewater before returning it to natural waters has led to (1) a vast increase of the quantity and the quality of the sludge resulting from the treatment of wastewater, with a greater amount of pollutants removed during the treatment process; (2) a greater effort towards the reuse and recycling of the sludge as opposed to disposal (e.g. landfilling, incineration). One of the consequences of this situation is a rising interest in using soils (agricultural or not) to address the latter through various applications. In fact, as the sludge has to be disposed off safely, soils can be used as a system of assimilating, recycling or disposing off the sewage sludge. Science and legislation are trying to provide the safest possible route to accomplish these targets, but the subject is not free from controversy, often causing hot debates between the interested parties. This chapter aims to review the improved standards achieved with sewage sludge, touching in particular the British experience in the field of regulating the disposal and reuse of these materials.

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