Pollution: Types and Impact on Health, E-Waste and Bioremediation |
- Pollution is the deterioration of the environment due to the addition of harmful materials (pollutants) to it.
- Pollutants can be natural ex- volcanic ash OR Anthropogenic such as CO2 emission from the burning of fossil fuels.
- They can also be biodegradable or non-biodegradable based on their disposal and Primary or secondary based on their formation.
- Types of Pollution: Air Pollution, Water Pollution, Radioactive pollution, Soil & Plastic pollution, etc.
AIR POLLUTION
- Air pollution is the degradation of air quality due to the contamination of pollutants.
- It was the 4th leading risk factor for early death worldwide in 2019 (State of Global Air Report 2020).
- Industries (51%), Vehicles (27%), and Crop burning (17%) are the largest contributors to Air pollution.
Types of air pollutants: | Primary pollutants – Enter the atmosphere directly from their source. E.g. – CO2. |
Secondary pollutants -Forms from a chemical reaction of primary pollutants. Ex: Ozone (O3), Acid rain. | |
Indoor air pollution (IAP) – The poor air quality within and around buildings is called IAP. It is caused by burning solid fuel such as firewood, dung for cooking. | |
Outdoor (ambient) air pollution – originates from natural and anthropogenic sources. EX – bushfires, volcanoes, Automobile emission, etc. |
FOG |
|
SMOG |
|
SULFUROUS SMOG (London smog) |
|
PHOTOCHEMICAL SMOG |
|
BLACK CARBON |
|
PARTICULATE MATTER (PM) |
|
Pollution: Acid Rain
- Normal rain has a pH of about 5.6 when pH falls below this; it is called Acid rain (pH 4.2 to 4.4).
- Acid rain results when Sulfur Dioxide (SO2) & Nitrogen Oxides (NOX) react with water, oxygen & other chemicals to form Sulfuric & Nitric acids.
- NOx + SO2 + Moisture + other chemicals à Acid Rain (HNO3 + H2SO4)
- Effects: Harms microorganisms in the soil + inhibit the activity of nitrogen fixation bacteria + soil acidification + ocean acidification + affects the growth of plants + food chain + kill aquatic animals + corrosion of metals & weathering of stone buildings & statues.
Common Air Pollutants and Their Effects
Pollutant | Sources | Effects |
Particulate matter (PM) | Vehicles, power plants, construction activities, oil refinery,
railway yard, industries, etc. |
Cardiovascular diseases, reduces visibility (haze) |
Nitrogen dioxide (NO2) | Emissions from combustion processes | Can aggravate respiratory diseases, acid rain, Hazy weather |
Sulfur dioxide (SO2) | Burning of fossil fuels, power plants, metals processing and smelting facilities, vehicles | Affects respiratory system & functions of the lungs. causes irritation of the eyes, chronic bronchitis, Acid rain |
Ozone (O3) | Results from photochemical reactions b/w NOx & VOCs in presence of sunlight. | Affect the lungs, the respiratory tract, and the eyes, lung cancer |
POLLUTION: FLY ASH
- Fly ash is a fine powder that is a by product of burning pulverized coal in electric power generating plants.
- Indian coal is of low grade with more ash content (30-45 %) compared to imported coal.
- MAIN COMPOSITION OF FLY ASH: Silicon dioxide (SiO2), Aluminum oxide (Al2O3) & Calcium oxide (CaO).
- MINOR CONSTITUENTS: Arsenic, Beryllium, Boron, Cadmium, Chromium, Hexavalent Chromium, Cobalt, Lead, Manganese, Mercury, Molybdenum, Selenium, Strontium, Thallium, Vanadium, & Unburnt Carbon.
- NEGATIVE EFFECTS OF FLY ASH: It contains acidic, toxic, & radioactive matter + Carcinogenic & damages nervous system + causing cognitive defects, developmental delays, and other respiratory diseases.
Utilization of Fly Ash: |
|
THE AIR (Prevention & Control of Pollution) ACT 1981
- It was enacted to prevent, control & abate air pollution.
- Under this Act, all industries operating within designated air pollution control areas must obtain a permit from the State Boards.
- The states are required to prescribe emission standards for industry & automobiles.
- It expanded the authority of the CPCB to include Air Pollution under it.
- The 1987 amendment introduced a citizen’s suit provision into the Air Act & extended the Act to include Noise pollution.
BS Norms |
|
NATIONAL AIR QUALITY INDEX (NAQI)
- CPCB launched AQI in 2014 under the Swachh Bharat Abhiyan to disseminate information on air quality in an easily understandable form for the general public.
- It transforms complex air quality data of 8 pollutants into a single number, nomenclature, and color.
- AQI has six categories of air quality:
- Eight pollutants: Particulate Matter (PM10), Particulate Matter (PM2.5), Nitrogen Dioxide (NO2), Sulphur Dioxide (SO2), Carbon Monoxide (CO), Ozone (O3), Ammonia (NH3), and Lead (Pb).
NATIONAL AMBIENT AIR QUALITY STANDARDS (NAAQS)
- Notified by CPCB (under powers given to it by Air Act, 1981) in 2009.
- It covers 12 pollutants: Sulphur Dioxide, Nitrogen Dioxide, PM10, PM5, Ozone, Lead, Carbon Monoxide, Ammonia, Benzene, Benzo Pyrene, Arsenic, Nickel.
AIR QUALITY EARLY WARNING SYSTEM
- An initiative of the Ministry of Earth Sciences and Environment (MoES).
- Objective: To predict extreme air pollution events over the Delhi region & give alerts to take necessary steps as per the Graded Response Action Plan (GRAP).
- It uses data of stubble burning incidents from the past 15 years to predict and help authorities to act in advance.
- It is developed by the Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology, Pune.
GRADED RESPONSE ACTION PLAN (GRAP)
- It is a set of stratified actions to enforce in the NCR if the pollution level reaches a certain specified limit.
- It was formulated by the Environment Pollution (Prevention & Control) Authority (EPCA) on the advice of the Supreme Court in 2016.
- Objective: To specify actions required to control air pollution, when the air quality moves from ‘Poor’ to ‘Very Poor’ on AQI.
- GRAP works only as an emergency measure, not throughout the year.
- These measures were earlier implemented in Delhi only. However recently GRAP has been extended to the NCR towns also.
CENTRAL POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD (CPCB) OF INDIA
- The CPCB is a statutory organization established under the Water (Prevention and Control of Pollution) Act, 1974.
- It is also entrusted with the powers & functions under the Air (prevention and control of pollution) Act,
- It works under the Ministry of Environment, Forest & Climate Change (MoEF&CC).
- Important functions: To prevent, control & abate water & air pollution in the country + To provide technical services to the MoEF&CC under the provisions of the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986 + Collect, compile & publish technical and statistical data relating to water and air pollution.
POLLUTION: LOW-EMISSION (GREEN) CRACKERS
- These are produced using less harmful raw materials & have additives which reduce emissions by suppressing dust.
- Developed by CSIR-NEERI
- Names of these crackers are: “Safe Water Releaser (SWAS)”, “Safe Minimal Aluminum (SAFAL)” & “SAFE THERMITE CRACKER (STAR)”.
- Firecrackers are regulated by PESO.
- PESO (Petroleum & Explosives Safety Organisation) is an office under the Department for Promotion of Industry & Internal Trade, Ministry of Commerce and Industries.
ENVIRONMENT POLLUTION CONTROL AUTHORITY (EPCA)
- EPCA is a Supreme Court mandated statutory body.
- Notified by the Environment Ministry in 1998 under Environment Protection Act, 1986.
- Objective: to protect and improve the environmental quality & pollution control in the NCR-National Capital Region (Delhi).
- Enforces Graded Response Action Plan (GRAP) in NCR as per the pollution levels.
- EPCA has the power to take action suo-moto.
AIR POLLUTION IN DELHI
- Air quality in Delhi is the worst of any major city in the world – WHO
Causes of air pollution: |
|
Measures taken to tackle: |
|
Hydrogen- Compressed Natural Gas (HCNG)
HCNG is a hydrogen-enriched Compressed Natural Gas (CNG).
Benefits: |
|
Concerns: |
|
TORREFACTION: is a thermal process to convert biomass into a coal-like material, which has better fuel characteristics than the original biomass. Torrefied biomass is more brittle, making grinding easier & less energy-intensive. |
HAPPY SEEDER: is a tractor-mounted machine that cuts & lifts rice straw, sows wheat into the bare soil, and deposits the straw over the sown area as mulch. |
THE GREAT GREEN WALL OF ARAVALLI
- It will be a 1,400km long & 5km wide green belt from Gujarat to the Delhi-Haryana border.
- The ‘Green wall’ idea was mooted in the COP14 of UNCCD, India in 2019.
- It intends to restrict land degradation & the eastward march of the Thar Desert.
- Also, it will act as a barrier for dust coming from the deserts in western India and Pakistan.
NATION CLEAR AIR PROGRAMME (NCAP)
- It was launched by the MoEF&CC in 2019
- It is the first-ever effort by India to frame a national framework for air quality management with a time-bound reduction
- Objective: to reduce particulate matter (PM) pollution by 20-30% in at least 102 nonattainment cities by2024 with 2017 as the base year.
- Non-attainment cities: These are those that have fallen short of the NAAQS for over five years.
NITROGEN POLLUTION
- Nitrogen becomes a pollutant when it escapes into the environment & reacts with other organic compounds.
- Sources: Agriculture, fossil fuel burning sewage etc.,
- Impacts: global warming, acid rain and eutrophication etc.,
- UNEP’s Colombo Declaration: Aims to halve Nitrogen waste by 2030
- Joint initiative of UNEP, the International Nitrogen Initiative & Global Environmental Facility
NOTABLE DISASTERS
CHEMICAL DISASTERS |
|
|
|
NUCLEAR DISASTERS |
|
WATER POLLUTION
- Water pollution is the contamination of water bodies, usually as a result of human activities.
- Point pollution sources, where the source is a well-defined location.
- Non-point pollution sources, which are spread over larger areas.
- Causes: Agricultural sources, Sewage water, Industrial effluents, Thermal Pollution, Oil-spills, ships & other economic activities.
- Effects: Decline on Dissolved oxygen, Increase in BOD, Death of Aquatic species, Eutrophication etc.
DISSOLVED OXYGEN (DO) | BIOLOGICAL OXYGEN DEMAND (BOD) | CHEMICAL OXYGEN DEMAND (COD) |
|
|
|
POLLUTION: EUTROPHICATION
- It indicates excessive plant and algal growth due to the increased availability of nutrients (Nitrates & Phosphates) in water bodies.
- It occurs naturally but human activities such as fertilizers, industrial wastewater, sewage disposal accelerate it.
Consequences |
|
Tubifex worms or sludge worm: These pose a significant risk for trophic transfer & Biomagnification of microplastics up the aquatic food chain. They can survive in heavily polluted areas where almost no other species can endure. It is an indicator species for polluted water. |
POLLUTION: BIOMAGNIFICATION
- It is the process where toxic substances move up the food chain and become more concentrated at each level. Ex: DDT
- It adversely affects human and marine life. It can also destroy Coral Reefs.
- It can disrupt the food chain.
POLLUTION: OCEAN ACIDIFICATION
- Ocean acidification is the reduction in the pH of seawater due to excessive absorption of CO2 by the oceans.
- Effects: Loss of Coral reefs, marine biodiversity, disruption in food chain etc.
DISEASES ASSOCIATED WITH WATER POLLUTION
Disease | Potential sources / cause& their effects |
Minamata | Neurological disease caused by severe mercury poisoning. |
Blue Baby Syndrome | It is a bluish discoloration of infants’ skin because of poorly oxygenated blood due to Nitrate contamination in water. |
Itai-Itai | Cadmium pollution causes lung and liver cancer. |
Skeletal Fluorosis | Fluoride contamination causes teeth deformity, hardening of bones and joint pains. |
Trachoma | An infectious eye disease caused by unclean water |
THERMAL POLLUTION
- Thermal pollution is the degradation of water quality by any process that changes ambient water temperature.
- CAUSES / SOURCES OF THERMAL POLLUTION: Industries & Nuclear power plants + Deforestation + Soil erosion + Urban runoff + Natural causes like volcanoes + Hot springs + Bio-medical wastes + Domestic sewage
- EFFECTS NEGATIVE EFFECTS ON HUMAN, WILDLIFE & MARINE LIFE: Increase in toxin levels in water + Decrease in DO (Dissolved Oxygen) Levels + Disrupts the stability of the food chain + Affects reproductive process + Species migration & Loss of biodiversity.
- CONTROL MEASURES: Could be reused for Biological applications such as soil warming, Fish culture etc.
SOIL POLLUTION
Soil pollution is the deterioration in quality & fertility of soil due to the presence of toxic pollutants.
CAUSES: Natural + Anthropogenic | EFFECTS |
|
|
Soil Contaminants and Their Effects On Health & Environment
SUBSTANCE | POTENTIAL SOURCES & THEIR EFFECTS |
Lead (Pb) |
|
Mercury (Hg) |
|
Arsenic (As) |
|
Herbicides /Insecticide |
|
Nickel |
|
NOISE POLLUTION
It is an unwanted or excessive sound that can have adverse effects on human health, wildlife, and the environment.
Effects of Noise Pollution |
|
Control measures |
|
RADIOACTIVE POLLUTION
- Radioactive pollution is the result of the release of radioactive substances into the environment.
- Radioactive substances are those which can emit high energy particles like alpha, beta & gamma rays.
- These substances are highly unstable & are continuously emitting these particles to gain some stability.
- It is not a constant or regular phenomenon & hence the duration and frequency of pollution vary with time & conditions.
Causes / Sources of Radioactive Pollution |
|
Effects |
|
LIGHT POLLUTION
- Light pollution is excessive, misdirected, or obtrusive artificial (usually outdoor) light.
- Consequences: it washes out starlight in the night sky, interferes with astronomical research, disrupts ecosystems, has adverse health effects and wastes energy.
SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT
- Solid waste consists of Municipal Solid Waste (MSW), e-waste & Biomedical wastes.
- Solid Waste Management involves a collective activity involving segregation, collection, transportation, re-processing, recycling & disposal of various types of wastes.
E-WASTE
- E-waste is any electrical or electronic equipment that’s been discarded.
- India’s first e-waste clinic – at Bhopal.
E-waste sources | Constituents | Health effects |
PCBs, glass panels, and Computer monitors | Lead | Damage nervous systems, & kidney
Impair child’s brain development |
Resistors & Semiconductors | Cadmium | Accumulates in kidney, liver
Causes neural damage |
Relays and switches, &PCBs | Mercury | Damages brain
Respiratory & skin disorders |
Galvanized steel plates & decorator or hardener | Chromium | Causes Bronchitis |
Cabling, Computer & housing | Plastics & PVC | Burning produces Dioxin that causes reproductive & developmental problems |
Electronic equipments & circuit boards | Brominated flame-retardants | Disrupt endocrine systems |
Front panels of CRTs | Barium, Phosphorus & Heavy metals | Muscle weakness & damages heart, liver |
Copper wires, PCB tracks. | Copper | Stomach cramps, nausea, liver damage |
NickelCadmium batteries | Nickel | Skin Allergy
asthma |
Lithium-ion battery | Lithium | Li can pass into breast milk & may harm a nursing baby
may cause lung edema |
Motherboards | Beryllium | Carcinogenic
Beryllium |
E-Waste (Management) Rules, 2016
- Notified by the Ministry of Environment, Forest & Climate Change
- The new e-waste rules included CFL & other Mercury-containing lamps, as well as other such equipment.
- For the first time, the rules brought the producers under Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR), along with targets.
- Producers can have a separate Producer Responsibility Organisation (PRO) & ensure the collection & disposal of E-waste in an environmentally sound manner.
- Deposit Refund Scheme has been introduced, wherein the producer charges an additional amount as a deposit at the time of sale and returns it to the consumer along with interest when equipment is returned.
- The role of State Governments has been also introduced to ensure the safety, health & skill development of the workers involved in dismantling & recycling operations.
- Bulk consumers have to file annual returns. It prescribes a waste collection target of 30% waste generated for the first 2 years and progressively going up to 70% in the 7th year from rule notified.
- Provision of penalty for violation of rules.
- Urban Local Bodies has been assigned the duty to collect & channelize the orphan products to authorized dismantlers or recyclers.
PLASTICS POLLUTION
- It is the harmful accumulation of synthetic plastic products in the environment.
- India aims to eliminate single-use plastic by 2022.
- UNEP’s 2018-World Environment Day’s theme: ‘Beat Plastic Pollution’.
- Causes / Sources of Plastic Pollution: Households + Industrial use + Bio-medical wastes + Agriculture + Fishing and marine economic activities.
- Effects: Upsets the food chain + Contributes to Air, Soil as well as Water pollution.
MICRO-PLASTICS
|
THE GLOBAL TOURISM PLASTICS INITIATIVE
- The Initiative is led by UNEP & the World Tourism Organization, in collaboration with the Ellen MacArthur Foundation.
- Aims to address the root causes of plastic pollution.
- Developed within the framework of the ‘One Planet Sustainable Tourism Programme’.
- It enables businesses, governments, & other tourism stakeholders to make a set of concrete & actionable commitments by 2025.
OZONE POLLUTION:
- Ozone can be good or bad, depending on where it is found. It is a secondary pollutant.
- Stratospheric ozone is good ozone that protects the earth from UV radiation.
- Ground-level ozone, which is bad ozone, is a colorless & highly irritating gas that forms just above the earth’s surface (lower troposphere).
Harmful effects:
|
|
GOTHENBURG PROTOCOL, 1999
- Aims to Abate Acidification, Eutrophication & Ground-level Ozone.
- Also known as the Multi-effect protocol, was adopted by the countries of UNECE (United Nations Economic Commission for Europe).
- The protocol sets national emission ceilings for 2010 up to 2020 for four pollutants: Sulphur dioxide, Nitrogen oxides (Nox), volatile organic compounds (VOCs) & Ammonia (NH3).
- The protocol also is a part of the convention on Long Range Transboundary Air Pollution.
BIOREMEDIATION
Bioremediation is the process of using organisms to neutralize or remove contamination from waste.
TYPES OF BIOREMEDIATION | |
---|---|
In-situ Bioremediation |
Here contaminated waste is treated right at its point of origin.
In-situ bioremediation techniques:
|
Ex-situ-Bioremediation: |
Contaminated waste is removed & transported to a processing site for treatment.
Ex situ bioremediation techniques:
|
Advantages Of Bioremediation: |
|
Disadvantages Of Bioremediation: |
|
Also Read: Biodiversity Conservation in India: Protected Areas, Biosphere Reserve, National Park |