Tracking tiny plastic troublemakers in medicine factory water
Wed May 13 2026
Every day, factories that make pills, syrups, and pills send millions of litres of wastewater down the drain. Scientists now worry that that water carries hidden guests: microscopic plastic bits. These bits can slip through the usual cleaning steps and end up in rivers, soil, and even the food chain. Researchers peeked inside five such factories to see how well their filters work. They counted plastic particles in the dirty water that enters the plant and in the cleaner water that leaves it. On average, every litre of incoming water held between 720 and 920 tiny plastics, while the outgoing water still carried 170 to 490. Factories managed to trap roughly half of the particles, but the rest escaped.
The plastics came in different colours, shapes, and sizes, though most were white flakes between 100 and 500 millionths of a metre wide. When they checked what these bits were made of, polyethylene topped the list—common in packaging films and bottle caps. Under microscopes and stress tests, the plastics looked like they had cracked from bigger pieces after years of exposure to changing acidity and salt levels. A quick risk check suggests the left-over plastics could still harm fish and tiny water creatures. The study hints that stronger filters or smarter wastewater tricks might be needed before this water heads back to nature.
https://localnews.ai/article/tracking-tiny-plastic-troublemakers-in-medicine-factory-water-2e6c454f
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