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Integrated Chemical and Hazard Assessment of Plastic Pellets from the Toconao Spill (Galicia, Spain) Indicates Potential for Environmental Harm

Abstract

Plastic pellet spills are a major source of microplastic pollution, and pellets are found on beaches worldwide. However, the potential environmental impacts of these spills remain poorly understood. In December 2023, approximately 25,000 kg of polyethylene pellets containing high concentrations of the additive Tinuvin UV-622 were spilled during a shipping accident off the northern coast of Portugal. Pellets collected from an affected beach located in Galicia, Spain, along with solvent extracts and aqueous leachates, were subjected to both target and nontarget chemical analyses and tested in a battery of toxicity assays including a green microalga (Raphidocelis subcapitata), a marine copepod (Apocyclops royi), a fish model (Danio rerio), and a human cell line. Chemical screening identified on the order of 50 chemical substances in addition to Tinuvin UV-622, including a range of known plastic additives and nonintentionally added substances (NIAS). Toxicity assays revealed significant growth inhibition and stress-induced cell aggregation in R. subcapitata and acute toxicity causing immobilization in copepods, which could have potential implications in the environment via the disruption of primary producers and food web dynamics. In contrast, zebrafish embryos showed no significant developmental effects, while human cells exhibited modest, time-dependent reductions in viability. Our findings underscore the complex chemical burden associated with pellet spills and stress the need for policies and regulations to prevent them, reinforcing the importance of applying the precautionary principle in managing the environmental risks linked to plastic pellet production, transport, and accidental release.

Category

Academic article

Language

English

Author(s)

  • Carmen Morales-Caselles
  • Andy Booth
  • Juan Baztan
  • Line Marie Berget
  • Eric Carmona
  • Natàlia Corcoll
  • Hubert Dirven
  • Montserrat Filella
  • Daniela Gómez-Martínez
  • Dorte Herzke
  • Hege Hjertholm
  • Annika Jahnke
  • Per Meyer Jepsen
  • Azora König Kardgar
  • Claudia Lorenz
  • Neema Negi
  • Elisa Rojo-Nieto
  • Igor Snapkov
  • Lisbet Sørensen
  • Kristian Syberg
  • Hideshige Takada
  • Andrew Turner
  • Bethanie Carney-Almroth

Affiliation

  • SINTEF Ocean / Climate and Environment
  • Roskilde University
  • University of Gothenburg
  • University of Versailles Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines
  • University of Cádiz
  • University of Plymouth
  • University of Geneva
  • RWTH Aachen University
  • Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research - UFZ
  • The Leibniz Institute for Tropospheric Research
  • Norwegian University of Science and Technology
  • Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology
  • NILU
  • Norwegian Institute of Public Health

Date

19.02.2026

Year

2026

Published in

Environmental Science and Technology

ISSN

0013-936X

Volume

60

Issue

8

Page(s)

6696 - 6706

View this publication at Norwegian Research Information Repository