Title: Pollution
1Pollution
Definition The introduction into the
environment, by people, of substances or energy
liable to cause harm to living creatures or
ecological systems.
SOURCE CNN
2Pollution
How did pollution begin?
- More sophisticated lifestyles.
- Growing needs of people.
- Accelerated rates of human and economic
- activities.
3Pollution
Pollution
Air
Water
Land
Noise Pollution production of
unwanted sounds that are annoying, distracting
or damaging to ones hearing.
4Air Pollution
5What is air pollution?
- contamination of the air by noxious gases and
minute particles of solid and liquid matter
(particulates) in concentrations that have
undesirable effect on living being.
6- Modernization and progress have led to air
getting more and more polluted over the years.
Industries, vehicles, increase in the population,
and urbanization are some of the major factors
responsible for air pollution. The following
industries are among those that emit a great deal
of pollutants into the air thermal power plants,
cement, steel, refineries, petro-chemicals, and
mines.
7PRIMARY AND SECONDARY POLLUTANT
- PRIMARY POLLUTAN
- Those emitted directly into air
- SECONDARY POLLUTANT
- produced through reactions between primary
pollutants and natural atmospheric compound
8Pollutants of air Particulate pollutants
- are solids or liquids with size lt 100
microns that remain suspended in the
atmosphere. Dust Fumes Smoke Mist
Fog Bacteria Gaseous - Toxic and
poisonous e.g. CO, chlorine, NH3, H2S, SO2,
NO2, CO2.
9Major PollutantsOzone Transient
damage Permanent damage -accelerated aging
of the lung Carbon monoxide - heart disease
- lung diseases - central nervous
system ? response to external stimuli
(symptoms similar of flu) - Normal
individual during strenuous work
10Sources of Outside Air Pollution
- Combustion of gasoline and other hydrocarbon
fuels in cars, trucks, and airplanes - Burning of fossil fuels (oil, coal, and dinosaur
bones) - Insecticides
- Herbicides
- Everyday radioactive fallouts
- Dust from fertilizers
- Mining operations,Livestock feedlots
- Festives like diwali
11Sources of Indoor pollution
- Efficient insulation
- Bacteria
- Molds and mildews
- Viruses
- animal dander and cat saliva
- plants
- house dust
- Mites
- Cockroaches
- pollen
12Air PollutionHow Grievous? ?
13Around 30-40 of cases of asthma and 20-30 of
all respiratory diseases may be linked to air
pollution
14- increased acute respiratory diseases - lowered
lung function in children - increased sickness
rates - increases in mortality
15Effects on the environment
- Acid rain
- Ozone depletion
- Global warming
- In human population- respiratory problems,
allergies, strengthens lugs, and a risk for
cancer
16Acid rain
- contains high levels of sulfuric or nitric acids
- contaminate drinking water and vegetation
- damage aquatic life
- erode buildings
- Alters the chemical equilibrium of some soils
17Howstuffworks.com
18Were pretty well off, dont you think?
UNOs report on global pollution
19Control of air pollution
20Society
- Industries
- Legislation
- guidelines for siting of industries
- emission standards for industries
- development of pollution prevention technologies
- Vehicular pollution
- stringent emission norms
- cleaner fuel quality
21And so..
- "WHO would like to provide its 191 Member States
with irrefutable evidence that air pollution
causes disproportionately heavy burden of
disease" Dr Michael Repacholi WHO
Coordinator, Occupational and Environmental
Health
22Laws
- Various laws has been established to curb the
menace of air pollution - - Policy statement for Abatement of
Pollution, 1992. - - National Conservation Strategy Policy
statement on environment development,1992. - -Air (Prevention control of
pollution)Act, 1981 - -Air (Prevention control of pollution )
Act,1981
23Laws continued.
- -The government is trying to
- remove the use of leaded petrol,
- a major cause of air pollution.
- - the industrial acts are
- implemented to control the
- harmful emission of gases.
- - the natural management team is is
hardcore work to minimise the effect of various
natural disaster like forest fire, volcanic
erruption that are causes of airr pollution.
24Strategies
- Air Quality Management Plan
- Development of new technology- electric cars,
cleaner fuels, low nitrogen oxide boilers and
water healers, zero polluting paints, less
polluting BBQ lighter fluids - Use of natural gas
- Carpooling
- Follow the laws enacted
25Recipe for Pollution Success!
- Please do not carpool the more cars on the
roads, the better (whod want to save gas and
money anyway?) - Do not have regular smog checks for your car
- Message to factories do not filter your smoke
stacks- we love the sight of smoke billowing in
the sky - Do not recycle!
- Remember this can be done anywhere. Pollution is
not limited to where you live. Whatever you do
affects everything
26What is noise pollution?Any unwanted sound that
penetrates the environment is noise pollution.In
general noise pollution refers to any noise
irritating to one's ear which comes from an
external source.
27Sources of noise pollution
- Street traffic
- Rail roads
- Airplanes
- Constructions
- Consumer products9
28Level of tolerance
- Normal level of tolerance is 80dbA.
- Sound level below and above this is considered to
be as noise pollution.
29Effects of noise pollution
- There are about 25000 hair cells in our ear which
create wave in our ear, responding to different
levels of frequencies. - With increasing levels of sound the cells get
destroyed decreasing our ability to hear the high
frequency sound.
30Be cautious from today
- Irreversible hearing loss.
- Blood pressure rise of 5 to 10 mmHg on 8 hrs of
exposure to even 70 db of sound level. - Hearing loss begins at 80- 90 dbA. 140 dbA is
painful and 180 dbA can even kill a person. - Amplified rock music is 120 dbA.
- Most of the electronic vehicles and motors are
above 80 dbA level. - High noise levels may interfere with the natural
cycles of animals, including feeding behavior,
breeding rituals and migration paths.
31Symptoms of occupational hearing loss
- Feeling of fullness in the ear.
- Sounds may seem muffled.
- Cannot hear high frequency sounds.
- Ringing in the ears while listening to the high
frequency sounds. - Loud noise for a long period of time, or sudden
burst of sound can cause occupational hearing
loss. - Hearing that does not return after an acute noise
injury is called a permanent threshold shift.
32Actions taken and to be taken
- There are a variety of effective strategies for
mitigating adverse sound levels - use of noise barriers.
- limitation of vehicle speeds
- alteration of roadway surface texture.
- limitation of heavy duty vehicles
- use of traffic controls that smooth vehicle flow
to reduce braking and acceleration, innovative
tire design and other
33Legistation
- Noise Regulation Rules under the Environment
(Protection) Act of 1986. - Features
- Industrial- 75db
- Commercial- 65 db
- Residential zones- 55 db
- Zones of silence
- No public address system after 1000 pm and
before 0600 am.
34What can I do to make a difference??
- Persuade
- Taking the help of police.
- Observe car free day on 22nd of September.
- Creating awareness about the ill effects of noise
pollution. - Promising oneself not to be the part of pollution
creator.
35References-
- www.edugreen.teri.res.in/explore/air
- http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Air_pollution
- www.controlairpollution.com
- Environmental studies by R. Rajgopalan
- www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/airpollution
36THANK YOU
- Prakash Kumar Jha (29)
- Praveen Kumar (31)
- Ram Krushna Panda (35)
- Ranjan Mishra (36)