Monitoring of pesticides in drinking water: finding the right balance between under- and over-monitoring – experience from the Czech Republic?
Environmental Science: Processes & Impacts Pub Date: 2021-01-07 DOI: 10.1039/D0EM00389A
Abstract
The modern, risk-based approach requires that only those pollutants which are likely to be present in a given water supply should be monitored in drinking water. From this perspective, defining an adequate approach to the monitoring of pesticides in areas with intensive agriculture is currently one of the greatest issues of regulation. This article shows the development and detailed results of pesticide monitoring in drinking water in the Czech Republic (CR). More than 4000 water supply zones serving around a 9.5 million population are routinely monitored, with nearly 250 thousand analyses of over 200 different pesticides and their metabolites being performed every year, with a non-compliance rate of ca. 0.3%. In 2017, pesticides accounted for most derogations in the CR, concerning a total of 64 water supply systems serving more than a 250 thousand population. A representative survey targeting 21 selected chemicals showed that 75% of water supply systems contained up to 11 pesticides per sample. The most commonly found were metabolites of the herbicides used to protect oilseed rape, maize, and sugar beet: acetochlor ESA, alachlor ESA, metazachlor OA, and chloridazon-desphenyl. The health risk assessment did not reveal any risks from these chemicals, even at the highest levels detected or in the most abundant mixtures, to the most vulnerable population (infants). Nevertheless, the increased presence of pesticides undermines the public's trust in drinking water safety.
Recommended Literature
- [1] Evolution of cellulose into flexible conductive green electronics: a smart strategy to fabricate sustainable electrodes for supercapacitors Tengfei Yu,Yuehan Wu,Wei Li,Bin LiRSC Adv., 2014,4, 34134-34143 10.1039/C4RA07017H
- [2] Enabling shape memory and healable effects in a conjugated polymer by incorporating siloxane via dynamic imine bond? Yaling Zhang,Chunhui Dai,Shiwei Zhou,Bin LiuChem. Commun., 2018,54, 10092-10095 10.1039/C8CC05410J
- [3] Esterase-responsive polymeric prodrug-based tumor targeting nanoparticles for improved anti-tumor performance against colon cancer? Gang Pan,Yi-jie Bao,Jie Xu,Tao Liu,Cheng Liu,Yan-yan Qiu,Xiao-jing Shi,Hui Yu,Ting-ting Jia,Xia Yuan,Ze-ting Yuan,Yi-jun CaoRSC Adv., 2016,6, 42109-42119 10.1039/C6RA05236C
- [4] Excellent electrochemical performance of LiFe0.4Mn0.6PO4 microspheres produced using a double carbon coating process? Yong Ping Huang,Tao Tao,Zheng Chen,Wei Han,Ying Wu,Chunjiang Kuang,Shaoxiong Zhou,Ying ChenJ. Mater. Chem. A, 2014,2, 18831-18837 10.1039/C4TA03994G
- [5] Emergence of cationic polyamine dendrimersomes: design, stimuli sensitivity and potential biomedical applications Partha Laskar,Christine DufèsNanoscale Adv., 2021,3, 6007-6026 10.1039/D1NA00536G
- [6] Enantiocontrolled construction of sistodiolynne, an unusual polyketide from the wood-decay fungus Sistrema raduloides Chem. Commun., 1997, 767-768 10.1039/A700186J
- [7] Dissociation of large gaseous serine clusters produces abundant protonated serine octamer Jacob S. Jordan,Evan R. WilliamsAnalyst, 2021,146, 2617-2625 10.1039/D1AN00273B
- [8] Emerging investigator series: heterogeneous reactions of sulfur dioxide on mineral dust nanoparticles: from single component to mixed components? Tao Wang,Yangyang Liu,Yue Deng,Hongbo Fu,Jianmin ChenEnviron. Sci.: Nano, 2018,5, 1821-1833 10.1039/C8EN00376A
- [9] Establishment and implications of a characterization method for magnetic nanoparticle using cell tracking velocimetry and magnetic susceptibility modified solutions Huading Zhang,Lee R. Moore,Maciej Zborowski,P. Stephen Williams,Shlomo Margel,Jeffrey J. ChalmersAnalyst, 2005,130, 514-527 10.1039/B412723D
- [10] Excited state potential energy surfaces and their interactions in FeIVO active sites Shaun D. Wong,Edward I. SolomonDalton Trans., 2014,43, 17567-17577 10.1039/C4DT01366B
Journal Name:Environmental Science: Processes & Impacts
research_products
-
CAS no.: 89640-58-4