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WASHINGTON,
DC, December 11, 2000 (ENS) - Toxic chemicals are contaminating
groundwater on every inhabited continent, endangering the world's
most valuable supplies of freshwater, reports a new study from the
Worldwatch Institute. This first global survey of groundwater pollution
shows that a toxic brew of pesticides, nitrogen fertilizers, industrial
chemicals and heavy metals is fouling groundwater everywhere. "Groundwater
contamination is an irreversible act that will deprive future generations
of one of life's basic resources," said Payal Sampat, author of
"Deep Trouble: The Hidden Threat of Groundwater Pollution." Sampat's report details a flood of polluted waters: * In the late
1990s, India's Central Pollution Control Board found that groundwater
was unfit for drinking in all 22 major industrial zones it surveyed. * In the northern
Chinese provinces of Beijing, Tianjin, Hebei, and Shandong, nitrate
concentrations in groundwater exceeded the health guideline in more
than half of the locations studied in 1995. Waste disposal
sites, like the Lowry Landfill in Denver, Colorado, can leak liquid
wastes into groundwater, as seen in this photo from the 1970s. (Two
photos courtesy U.S. Environmental Protection Agency) Nearly one
third of all humanity relies almost exclusively on groundwater for
drinking, including the residents of some of the largest cities
in the developing world, such as Jakarta, Dhaka, Lima and Mexico
City. Almost 99 percent of the rural U.S. population, and 80 percent
of India's villagers, depend on groundwater for drinking. As rivers and
lakes are dammed, dried up, or polluted, and as food demand grows
in the next 50 years, farmers will become increasingly dependent
on groundwater for irrigation, Sampat predicts. Groundwater contamination is widespread in industrialized countries like the United States: * Since 1943,
billions of gallons of radioactive wastes have been dumped into
soils and aquifers in Washington state by the Department of Energy's
Hanford Nuclear Reservation. Some of this waste has a half-life
of 250,000 years. "One of the most disturbing aspects of the problem is that groundwater pollution is essentially permanent," said Sampat. Underground injection wells, like this one in Florida, are often used to pump contaminants underground for disposal (Photo courtesy University of Southern Florida) Water recycles very slowly underground, too slowly to flush out or dilute toxic chemicals. Water that enters an aquifer remains there for an average of 1,400 years, compared to only 16 days for rivers. Thus Londoners,
for example, may be drinking water that fell as rain as long ago
as the last ice age. The U.S. National Research Council estimates that the costs of cleaning up the known 300,000 to 400,000 heavily contaminated sites where groundwater is polluted could be as high as U.S. $1 trillion over the next 30 years alone. "Patchwork, end of pipe solutions are simply not enough," said Sampat. "To preserve this valuable resource, we need to make systematic changes in the way we grow our food, manufacture goods and dispose of waste." In California's Sacramento Valley, water pumped from underground aquifers is used for everything from agricultural irrigation to drinking water. The report proposes retooling industrial agriculture to reduce farm runoff, a leading source of groundwater pollution. The EPA estimates that cutting agricultural pollution could eliminate the need for at least U.S. $15 billion worth of additional advanced water treatment facilities. Farmers from Indonesia to Kenya are learning how to use less chemicals while boosting yields. Since 1998, all the farmers in China's Yunnan Province have eliminated their use of fungicides, while doubling rice yields, by planting more diverse varieties of the grain. Water utilities in Germany now pay farmers to switch to organic operations because it costs less than removing farm chemicals from water supplies. Companies also need to take greater responsibility for their toxic discharges. Sixty percent of the most hazardous liquid waste in the United States - 34 billion liters (about nine billion gallons) per year of solvents, heavy metals and radioactive materials - is injected directly into deep groundwater via thousands of "injection wells." Although the
EPA requires that these effluents be injected below the deepest
source of drinking water, some have entered underground water supplies
in Florida, Texas, Ohio and Oklahoma. At Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in the U.S., researchers are testing a solar detoxification process that can clean groundwater of a range of contaminants, including solvents, pesticides, wood preservatives, dyes and fuels. Such waste exchanges help an industrial park in Kalundborg, Denmark, to keep more than 1.3 million tons of effluent out of landfills and septic systems each year, the report notes. Manufacturers
can also switch to less toxic alternatives. In Sweden, where chlorinated
solvents are being entirely phased out by the end of 2000, some
firms already report economic savings from switching to water based
solvents derived from biochemical sources such as citrus fruits,
corn, soybeans, and lactic acid. CHLORINE Summary: Health concerns of chlorine exposure include, but are not limited to: possible increased risk of miscarriage, birth defects, rectal and bladder cancer, respiratory complaints, corrosion of the teeth, inflammation of the mucous membranes of the nose, and increased susceptibility to tuberculosis. There is an alarming lack of comprehensive test data. Note: To test for chlorine, use an ordinary pool test kit. |
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