Title: POLLUTION: WATER AND SOIL
1POLLUTION WATER AND SOIL
Monika Taing, Michelle Cameron, Jacqueline
Fisher, Alex Leversedge, Julia Friske
2Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) and Water
-
- The World Water Development Report (WWDR) has
outlined how the achievement of 7 of 8 the MDGs
are related to the accessibility of safe and
sufficient water
3Goal 2 Achieve Universal Primary Education
- TARGET By 2015, ensure that all boys and
girls complete a full course of primary schooling
- Approximately 113 million school-age children do
not attend school - Water factors may play a role in school
absenteeism - For example, the need to collect domestic water
keeps many children (especially young girls)
from attending school
4Goal 3 Promote Gender Equality and Empower Women
- TARGET Eliminate gender disparity in primary and
secondary education preferably by 2005, and at
all levels by 2015 - Of all those who are illiterate, ? are women
- Girls absent from school due to collecting
- domestic water
5How is it for women and children?
- Focus of water projects is technology more than
social issues - Husbands have control ? determine
arrangements with respect to water collection - Women must face very tough conditions
6So What?
- Social issues must become focus
- Donors or project develops must ensure that
expectations and responsibilities of both sides
are clearly stated and understood
7Goal 7 Ensure Environmental Sustainability
- TARGET By 2015, reduce half the proportion of
people without sustainable access to safe
drinking water and basic sanitation - 1 billion people lack access to safe drinking
water - 2.4 billion people lack access to adequate
sanitation
8Tracking Progress of MDG Goals
- Access to Safe Drinking Water
- World is on track
- But access not improved everywhere ? sub-Saharan
Africa - Basic Sanitation
- If trends continue, we will miss the target
- We are headed in the right direction
- Most serious problem for sub-Saharan Africa and
South Asia
9Challenges
- Who is responsible?
- Water is now a human right
- So what?
- Financial assistance
- Acknowledging problem publicly
- Advocacy
10Water in Canada
- Over 360 chemical compounds have been
identified in the Great Lakes - Health Problems related to water pollution are
estimated to cost Canadians 300 million per
year - Seepage
- Runoff
11Causes of Impaired Water Quality
-
- Agricultural Runoff
- Industrial Pollution
- Household Pollution
12Types of Pollution
- Persistent Non-persistent
- Pesticides Sewage
- Landfill components Fertilizers
- Petroleum
- PCBs Physical
- Dioxins Garbage
- Polyaromatic hydrocarbons Thermal
- Radioactive materials
- Heavy metal
13How is Water Quality Measured?
- Field Samples
- Water
- Suspended materials
- Bottom sediment
- Laboratory
- Physical, chemical, and microbiological analyses
- Biological testing
14What can you do?
- - Dont dump hazardous products
- - Use non-toxic household products
- - Dont misuse the sewage system
- - Recycle and dispose of trash properly
- - Avoid using pesticides and fertilizers in
gardens - Attend and participate in public hearings and
advisory boards
15GROUNDWATER
16What is groundwater?
- Found everywhere, usually found within 100meters
from the surface - Aquifers are water-bearing permeable rocks or
unconsolidated material that holds a significant
amount of water, which is easily retrieved by the
construction of wells
17What is groundwater?
- Groundwater structure includes the following
- Water table - the area in which all the spaces
are filled with water - Above the water table is the unsaturated zone
- Water found in the soil is called soil moisture
- Everything below is the saturated zone
(groundwater)
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19Hydrologic cycle
- Groundwater does not just stay in the ground
- It is part of the hydrologic cycle which includes
evaporation, condensation and precipitation - There are recharge and discharge areas
- Residence time is an important factor,
groundwater can reside anywhere from 2 to 10,000
years before resurfacing
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21What can be found in groundwater?
- Pure water is not naturally found in the
environment - However, groundwater provides almost all of
earths fresh water supply - Water quality is assessed by measuring milligrams
per liter (mg/L) - Dissolved particles can be anywhere from 25mg/L
to 300,000mg/L in groundwater - Depends on the flow rate and aid of aquifers
- This provides groundwater with disease-free
microorganisms
22How does contamination occur?
- Groundwater is often purer than surface water
because it has less dissolved materials - Contamination often occurs from an origin but
once in groundwater, it is spreads far from the
originating area - Contaminants come from two types of sources
- point sources (landfills, leaking septic tanks,
accidental spills) - non-point sources (farmland pesticides and
fertilizers)
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24Contamination prevention
- Effective groundwater practices from the
government - Constant monitoring of industries
- Good practices from citizens
- Since cleanup is very difficult if not almost
impossible to completely clean up, preventative
measures are very important so that the situation
never arises where we have to clean ground water
up
25What you can do
- Food for thought Where does the water go from
your household? - 75 of Canadians for example are serviced by the
municipal sewer system however the sewage
treatment place is not always 100 percent
effective - Avoid using hazardous household products (toxic,
corrosive, flammable, reactive) do you need it?
- Try using organic household products
- Avoid using pesticides in your garden
- Locate your local hazardous waste disposal
facility - Get involved in environmental issues!
26Hinkley, California
CASE STUDY 1
27Chromium 6 Hexavalent Chromium
- Small town of Hinkley, California
- Pacific Gas Electric dumped million gallons of
chromium 6 into unlined ponds for decades - December 7, 1987 company announced they found
levels of chromium 6 - Deceived citizens
- Symptoms included chronic headache, chronic
nosebleeds, rashes, tumors, cancer, and death
28Quick background on chromium
- Chromium in 0.05mg/L is said to be harmless
(maximum amount) - for example in Canadian waters, it is usually
0.024mg/L - Chromium 3 (trivalent chromium) is a less toxic,
natural occurring substance - When it is introduced to raw water, during
chlorination, it may be oxidized to chromium 6
(hexavalent chromium) - Hexavalent chromium is used for metal production
(such as chrome alloy) and corrosion inhibitors - Chromium 6 is not naturally found in the
environment but its presence is due to industrial
and domestic production
29What did the company do?
- told them it was beneficial, but to avoid
drinking it, every other use was safe including
bathing in it - stated chlorine kills the contaminants
- hired doctors and toxicologists who stated the
resident were completely healthy - When other doctors, provided by the law firm were
asked to test the family, they had a high and
dangerous amount of chromium in their system - Again, this has been occurring for generations
without the residents awareness
30What could have been done?
- monitoring the waste and finding a more
appropriate way of disposing it - heavy metals are difficult to treat
- 90 of the less toxic chromium (3) can be removed
via ferric sulphate and lime softening - ferric sulphate can also be used for chromium 6
by reducing it to its chromium 3 state - chlorine unfortunately oxidizes any chromium 3 to
chromium 6 - exposure of chromium 6 is carcinogenic and
mutagenic
31Walkerton, Ontario
CASE STUDY 2
32Events of Walkerton, Ontario
- May 18th 2000 first symptoms widespread illness
bloody diarrhea and throbbing cramps - Escherichia coli O157H7
- Campylobacter jejuni
- Cause manure entering well 5
- Stan Koebel, manager of the Walkerton Public
Utilities Commission, concealed results from a
microbiological samples - 7 people died while the rest were airlifted to
London, Ontario hospital
33Prevention methods
- Responsilibilities
- Role of the Ministry of the Environment oversee
distribution, treatment and mentoring practices
for safe water - Role of PUC
- Role of Health Unit
- Better implementation of policies
- The Approval Program
- The Inspections Program
34What can you do to help?
- increase awareness and training in these areas
(clearly Stan Koebel and his staff lacked the
knowledge and importance of chlorine in water) - Education and awareness (be active)
- boiling water can be a habit when using wells
(microorganisms are often killed successfully
this way)
35Quick Facts
- Contaminated water and poor sanitation cause 30
000 deaths daily worldwide - Diarrhea-related diseases in developing countries
- 80 of infectious diseases in developing
countries are water-related - 1.2 billion people worldwide lack clean water
- Only 10 of industrial pollutants in the United
States is disposed of in an environmentally
responsible manner
36Water and Sanitation is one of the primary
drivers of public health. I often refer to it as
Health 101, which means that once we can secure
access to clean water and to adequate sanitation
facilities for all people, irrespective of the
difference in their living conditions, a huge
battle against all kinds of diseases will be
won. Dr. LEE Jong-wook, Director-General, World
Health Organization.
37ENGINEERS WITHOUT BORDERS
- For the 800 million people who go hungry each
day and the 1 billion who lack access to clean
water, poverty is an absence of opportunity. - Technology can drive change
- Sustainable development
- Raising awareness
38WATERAID
- Worlds leading water and sanitation NGO
- Vision of a world where everyone has access to
safe water - Campaign locally and internationally to change
policy and practice
39How can you help?
- Donate to NGOs
- Learn more about what is being done
- Organize events to raise awareness in your
community - Write to local newspapers about the crisis
- Use your skills to join and contribute to
organizations such as EWB, DWB, and SWB - Workplace campaigns
- High school and University Outreach
40Play Your Part
- On March 2, 2006, thousands of volunteers carried
buckets of water on their heads through the
streets of Toronto to demonstrate the plight of
women in developing countries who walk many
kilometers daily for water