The study analysed the potential impact on the environment of the enormous amounts of common surfactants used day in and day out by consumers all over the world.
"We humans use several million tons of surfactants a year on a global scale. It amounts to billions of kilos, so these are substances that you really don't want to release into the environment unless you're thoroughly familiar with them," said senior researcher Hans Sanderson, Department of Environmental Science, Aarhus University, who is one of the authors of the report.
Although the studies are based in North America, they nevertheless apply on a global scale because they are more or less identical all over the world, researchers said.
The work sums up more than 250 scientific studies spanning forty to fifty years, at an overall cost of approximately USD 30 million.
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"The substances are made so that they degrade rapidly and thus don't pose a risk to the environment. I can't think of any other substances released into the environment in such large amounts via everyday use by all of us.
"It's the most commonly used substances of all that go directly into the wastewater, so it's important to keep track of them and ensure that there are no unpleasant surprises in the treatment plants or in the environment," Sanderson added.