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Abstract
Household hazardous waste (HHW) includes waste from a number of household products
such as paint, garden pesticides, pharmaceuticals, photographic chemicals, certain
detergents, personal care products, fluorescent tubes, waste oil, heavy metal-containing
batteries, wood treated with dangerous substances, waste electronic and electrical
equipment and discarded CFC-containing equipment. Data on the amounts of HHW discarded
are very limited and are hampered by insufficient definitions of what constitutes
HHW. Consequently, the risks associated with the disposal of HHW to landfill have
not been fully elucidated. This work has focused on the assessment of data concerning
the presence of hazardous chemicals in leachates as evidence of the disposal of HHW
in municipal landfills. Evidence is sought from a number of sources on the occurrence
in landfill leachates of hazardous components (heavy metals and xenobiotic organic
compounds [XOC]) from household products and the possible disposal-to-emissions pathways
occurring within landfills. This review demonstrates that a broad range of xenobiotic
compounds occurring in leachate can be linked to HHW but further work is required
to assess whether such compounds pose a risk to the environment and human health as
a result of leakage/seepage or through treatment and discharge.