“…Based on our results and experience with the ecotoxicity testing of wastes (red mud, fly ash, waste-derived biochars, transformer oil-contaminated soil and groundwater, soil contaminated with mazout, Zn, Cd, Pb contaminated soils and mine wastes, groundwater contaminated with chlorinated aliphatic hydrocarbons, etc.) [ 44 , 58 , [90] , [91] , [92] , [93] , [94] , [95] ] and considering the reported, diverse challenges (inhomogeneity, phase-separation, extreme pH, precipitation of contaminants due to pH adjustment) [ 41 , 89 ] that often arise during the testing of complex waste samples of varying physico-chemical characteristics, in our opinion, the use of a routine ecotoxicity characterisation approach of wastes should not be proposed in terms of the strict restrictions on the applied test methods. Instead, the use of a set of generally sensitive, high-throughput and time- and cost-effective ecotoxicity methods could be more straightforward and efficient, with specific recommendations for the most appropriate assays to test a particular waste sample.…”