“…The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic caused by a novel severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2) has led to a significant paradigm shift on the existing precaution towards handling and exposure to different environmental materials such as water, air, and soil ( Cao et al, 2021 , Shao et al, 2021 , Anand et al, 2022 ). The prevalence of the SARS-CoV-2 or its genetic material in the environmental materials, especially wastewater samples collected from treatment plants and air samples from the built environment have been well documented in many countries, including the USA ( Nemudryi et al, 2020 , Peccia et al, 2020 , Sherchan et al, 2020 , Palmer et al, 2021 ), Spain ( Randazzo et al, 2020 , Balboa et al, 2021 ), Turkey ( Kocamemi et al, 2020a , Kocamemi et al, 2020b ), Netherlands ( Medema et al, 2020 ), Saudi Arabia ( Hong et al, 2021 ), Australia ( Ahmed et al, 2020 ), Japan ( Haramoto et al, 2020 , Hata et al, 2021 ), Iran ( Gholipour et al, 2021 , Tanhaei et al, 2021 ), Czech Republic ( Mlejnkova et al, 2020 ), India ( Chakraborty et al, 2021 , Kumar et al, 2021a ), France ( Trottier et al, 2020 , Wurtzer et al, 2021 ), United Arab Emirate (Hasan et al, 2020), Germany ( Westhaus et al, 2021 ), Israel ( Abu Ali et al, 2021 ), and Italy (La Rosa et al, 2020; Rimoldi et al, 2020 ). Similarly, some treated effluents have also been reported to contain the SARS-CoV-2 RNA ( Ampuero et al, 2020 , Abu Ali et al, 2021 , Bhattarai et al, 2021 , Carrillo-Reyes et al, 2021 , Graham et al, 2021 ).…”