An Analytical Review of Different Approaches to Wastewater Discharge Standards with Particular Emphasis on Nutrients

Environ Manage. 2020 Oct;66(4):694-708. doi: 10.1007/s00267-020-01344-y. Epub 2020 Aug 12.

Abstract

Despite the implementation of strict legal standards concerning nutrient loads within wastewater discharges in all European Union (EU) Member States it was not possible to achieve good ecological and chemical water status by 2015 in all EU countries. The main reasons for this situation are the imperfections of the legislation tools regarding the standardization of wastewater quality and the methodology of determining the conditions for wastewater introduction into receivers. The study aims to review and analyze the currently existing in various countries legal regulations setting the standards for wastewater discharged into receivers, which were intended for surface water protection and eutrophication mitigation. Besides the EU effluent standards, the regional and national regulations in chosen EU Member States (e.g., Germany, Sweden, and Denmark) have been reviewed. Moreover, the Helsinki Commission recommendations for signatory countries within the Baltic Sea catchment and the approaches for wastewater quality standardization in non-EU countries (e.g., Russia, Belarus, Switzerland, China, USA, Canada, and Dubai) were assessed. The analysis of the reviewed legal regulations allowed to diversify the methodological approaches for setting effluent quality standards in different regions and countries and to assess the effectiveness of existing legal tools in the field of eutrophication mitigation with the consideration of the environmental and economic reasonability. The results suggest that the receiver-oriented policies used among others in Switzerland and China are the most reasonable in terms of eutrophication mitigation.

Keywords: Effluent quality standards; Eutrophication; Legal regulations; Wastewater discharge; Water policy.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Canada
  • China
  • Germany
  • Nutrients*
  • Reference Standards
  • Russia
  • Sweden
  • Wastewater*

Substances

  • Waste Water