Envisci Activity
Envisci Activity
BSCE-2A
I. SHORT INTRODUCTION
Water pollution can be defined as the contamination of a stream, river, lake, ocean or
any other stretch of water, depleting water quality and making it toxic for the environment
and humans.
1. GROUNDWATER POLLUTION
Groundwater comes from below the Earth’s surface, found in stores called
aquifers. A key source of water pollution that ends up in groundwater resources
comes from agriculture. Fertilizers and pesticides applied to farmland are easily
absorbed into the ground, or they can be transported as runoff during rainfall.
Surface water refers to all bodies of water above the Earth’s surface, such as
oceans, lakes, and rivers. Any hazardous substance that comes into contact with
surface water is called surface water pollution.
3. SUSPENDED MATTER
Waste such as plastics, rubber, and other man-made materials that are
improperly disposed of and cannot be broken down easily in water is called
particulate or suspended matter.
4. OIL SPILLAGE
Water can be polluted from accidental oil spills, transportation, runoff, and
intentionally dumping. Oil spillage can have devastating effects on water
environments, and they are extremely difficult to remove; just one liter of oil can
pollute one million liters of water.
5. MICROBIOLOGICAL POLLUTION
Chemicals are the most common type of water pollution, and many industries
use chemicals that can end up in water systems. These chemicals can be anything
from metals and solvents in industrial operations, fertilizers and pesticides in the
agricultural industry to chemicals used in pest control companies. When the chemicals
enter the soil and water systems, it has negative impacts on humans, livestock, and
fish that utilize these environments.
7. THERMAL POLLUTION
8. OXYGEN-DEPLETION POLLUTION
IV. SOURCES
• Wastewater and sewage
Untreated sewage and wastewater has been a leading cause of water pollution
for millennia. In the U.S. alone, over 1 trillion gallons of untreated wastewater is
dumped into lakes, rivers and oceans each year. In developing countries, the problem
is exacerbated. According to UNESCO, upwards of 80% of the sewage from
developing countries is returned to the environment untreated.
In urban and industrial areas of developed countries, stormwater runoff that
contains oily pollutants is a major problem. Outdated or undersized wastewater
treatment facilities also contribute to water pollution problems.
V. EFFECTS IN ENVIRONMENT
• Destruction of biodiversity. Water pollution depletes aquatic ecosystems and triggers
unbridled proliferation of phytoplankton in lakes.
• Contamination of the food chain. Fishing in polluted waters and the use of waste
water for livestock farming and agriculture can introduce toxins into foods which are
harmful to our health when eaten.
• Lack of potable water. The UN says that billions of people around the world have no
access to clean water to drink or sanitation, particularly in rural areas.
• Disease. The WHO estimates that about 2 billion people have no option but to drink
water contaminated by excrement, exposing them to diseases such as cholera,
hepatitis A and dysentery.
• Infant mortality. According to the UN, diarrhoeal diseases linked to lack of hygiene
cause the death of about 1,000 children a day worldwide.
This Act makes provisions in order to regulate, restrict and/or prohibit the
importation, manufacture, processing, sale, distribution, use and disposal of chemical
substances and mixtures presenting risk and/or injury to human and animal health or
to the environment; it provides for the prohibition of entry and transit.
VIII. RECOMMENDATION.