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Air

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Air Human beings need quality air for health and well-being. Air composition Air is a mixture of nitrogen, oxygen CO2 and some inert gases. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Air


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Air
  • Human beings need quality air for health and
    well-being.

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Air composition
  • Air is a mixture of nitrogen, oxygen CO2 and
    some inert gases.
  • It also consists of water vapours of varying
    quantity.
  • Air also contains numerous harmful substances
    natural pollutants such as dust and volcanic ash,
    and pollutants that are by-products of human
    activity.

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Atmosphere
  • The atmosphere consists of layers of air 
    covering the Earth. Plants and animals rely on
    the gases in the atmosphere.
  • Plants need CO2 for the process of
    photosynthesis and release oxygen as a result.
  • Animals -- including human beings -- need oxygen
    to live and release CO2 as they exhale.
  • The CO2 is then taken up again by plants,
    forming a cycle of life in the biosphere.

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  • In the modern world, however, industrial
    activity, the burning of fossil fuels, waste
    treatment, intensive agriculture and many other
    economic activities lead to air pollution.
  • Air pollution is harmful to humans, as well as to
    plants, animals and their natural habitats.
  • It even brings about changes in the Earth's
    climate.

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  • It was long believed that air pollutants, once
    released, were diluted to negligible
    concentrations in the atmosphere.
  • Measurements have shown this belief to be flawed,
    if not misleading.High concentrations of
    primary pollutants can occur within and around
    emission areas.
  • Nearly all large particles are deposited
    locally.
  • Local weather is an important factor in
    determining short-term pollution levels.
  • However, local emissions may have regional and
    global implications.
  • For example, CFCs emitted at the surface are
    responsible for ozone layer depletion that occurs
    at an altitude of 20-30 kilometres in the
    stratosphere. 

9
Ambient air pollutants
  • Chemical compounds present in the atmosphere
    are considered ambient air pollutants when they
    occur in unnaturally high concentrations and have
    the potential to cause harm to the environment
    and human health.The traditional air pollutants
    include SO2, NOx, CO, lead, particulate matter
    (PM) and VOCs.

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  • Hazardous air pollutants include
  • metals and metalloids, such as cadmium, mercury
    and arsenic
  • respirable mineral fibres, such as asbestos and
    glass micro-fibres
  • inorganic gases, such as fluorides, chlorine,
    cyanide and phosgene and
  • organic compounds, such as aldehydes, aromatic
    and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, and
    dioxins.

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Efectos en la salud de contaminates del aire
  •  Ozone cause pulmonary damage, nose and throat
    irritation and headaches
  • Fine particles and heavy metals cause irritation
    and damage to respiratory functions and can
    possess mutagenic and carcinogenic properties
  • VOC have wide-ranging impacts, from olfactory
    irritations to mutagenic and carcinogenic effects
    (benzene).

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  • CO affects tissue oxygenation.
  • NOxcause acid rain.,have respiratory effects and
    inhibit plant growth
  • SO2 exacerbates respiratory pathology and causes
    acid rain.
  • Exposure to dioxins increases the risk of cancer.
  • Scientists believe that dioxins hinder the immune
    system and alter the concentration of
    reproductive hormones.

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Tipos de contaminación aerea
  • Summer smog When the sun shines, the gases
    exhausted from cars (such as NOx and VOCs)
    combine to form ozone. Although the Earth needs
    ozone in the upper atmosphere, its effects at low
    altitudes are extremely harmful more than 100
    million people are affected in Europe alone.

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Winter smog
  • Winter smog is created when pollutants are
    trapped by a mass of cold air hovering over a
    city, causing them to build up (especially SO2,
    NOx and particles).
  • The worst pollution tends to occur in urban
    environments, where two of every three Europeans
    live today.Severe winter smog episodes
    frequently create health hazards in parts of
    Central and Eastern Europe in the densely
    populated areas of, for example, the Czech
    Republic, eastern Germany and Poland
  • Combustion processes, including residential
    heating, power production and industry, are the
    main sources of pollution.

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Urban air pollution
  • Urban areas are growing worldwide, as are their
    air-pollution levels.Europe, for example, is a
    highly urbanised continent, with more than 70
    percent of its inhabitants living in urban areas.
    Traffic, combustion and industrial production
    lead to airborne emissions with elevated
    concentrations of pollutants.
  • This pollution gives rise to a range of problems
    such as health risks, accelerated deterioration
    of building materials, damage to historical
    monuments and harm to vegetation within and
    around cities.

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Air pollution from transport
  • Smog occurrences and long-term average
    concentrations of harmful compounds such as lead,
    benzene, particulate matter and benzopyrene are
    significantly increased by road-transport
    emissions. Road transport also contributes more
    than half of NOx emissions and 35 percent of VOC
    emissions.
  • Diesel-engine vehicles also produce very fine
    particulate matter, which is extremely harmful to
    human health. A significant air pollution
    problem in Scandinavian countries results from
    the use of studded tyres in winter.
  • These tyres wear down the surfaces of roads and
    produce grit, which becomes suspended in the air.

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Air pollution from industry
  • Air pollution is also caused by industry.
  • The level of impact of the emission source
    depends on the height of the smokestack and the
    prevailing wind direction.
  • Primary pollutants with longer residence times
    include acidifying compounds (such as SO2, NOx
    and ammonia) and aerosol-bound pollutants (such
    as dust, heavy metals and persistent organic
    pollutants).
  • "Hot spot" air pollution is a term used to
    describe high, short-term pollution
    concentrations.
  • Populations near pollution sources are at risk
    of exposure.
  • Hot spot pollution includes urban streets with
    busy traffic and the impact of industrial stacks
    in cities.

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Regional air pollution
  • Pollutants originating from sulphur and nitrogen
    oxides, as well as ammonia emissions, can be
    transported long distances downwind and deposited
    onto natural surfaces.
  • Severe problems (such as the acidification and
    contamination of soils and surface water) can
    result, which dramatically affect the diversity
    and conditions of ecosystems, including forests
    and crops.
  • Fish dieback is a serious problem in regions
    susceptible to freshwater acidification  .
  • The highest deposition levels in Europe are found
    in the highly populated and industrialised zones
    between Poland and the UK.

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Global air pollution
  • The build-up of long-life pollutant compounds
    alters the atmosphere's composition, chemistry
    and dynamics.
  • It also leads to possible climatic changes and
    the depletion of the shield protecting against
    solar UV-radiation provided by the stratospheric
    ozone layer  .
  • Europe's contribution to most man-made emissions
    of greenhouse gases and ozone-depleting compounds
    is disproportionately large in relation to its
    geographical area and population size.

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  • WaterWater is a unique component of our planet.
    It is also a commodity to manage and sell, and is
    the object of many controversial economic
    interests and complex social interrelations.

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  • Water propertiesWater is at once simple and
    complex. A water molecule is made up of only
    three atoms two hydrogen and one oxygen. The
    configuration of this building block, however,
    produces a molecule with almost magical
    properties.

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  • Some physical and chemical propertiesWater
    molecules are attached to each other, creating
    hydrogen bonds.
  • These strong bonds determine almost every
    physical characteristic of water and many of its
    chemical properties.

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  • Water is the only substance present in nature in
    three forms solid, liquid and gaseous.Pure
    water at sea level boils at 100 degrees Celsius
    and freezes at 0 degrees.
  • At higher elevations, where atmospheric pressure
    is lower, water's boiling temperature is lower.
  • This effect explains why it takes longer to boil
    an egg at higher altitudes.

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  • Dissolving a substance in water lowers the
    water's freezing point, which is why people
    spread salt on streets in winter to prevent ice
    formation.Water is called the universal
    solvent.
  • It can dissolve more substances than any other
    solvent.
  • There is hardly a substance known that has not
    been identified as soluble in the Earth's waters.

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  • Water molecules, as well as binding to each
    other, bind to many other substances, such as
    glass, cotton, plant tissue and soil.
  • This is called adhesion.

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Importance to life
  • Nearly all substances become heavier and thicker
    when converted from a liquid to a solid state.
  • Water, however, increases in volume and becomes
    lighter when it turns into ice.
  • This property is of vital importance for
    sustaining life in basins during winter.A drop
    of rainwater falling through the air dissolves
    atmospheric gases.
  • When rain reaches the Earth, it affects the
    quality of the land, lakes and rivers.

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  • Water can store huge quantities of energy, which
    can turn oceans, seas and lakes into giant heat
    reservoirs.
  • This particular property influences climates in
    areas situated near water basins.
  • It is also due to its energy-retaining quality
    that water is widely used for cooling and
    transferring heat in thermal and chemical
    processes.

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  • Water-surface tension is a measure of its
    surface-film strength.
  • The attraction between water molecules creates a
    strong film, which among other liquids is
    surpassed only by mercury.
  • This surface tension permits water to hold up
    substances heavier and denser than itself.
  • Some aquatic insects, such as the water spider,
    rely on surface tension to walk on water.

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  • Water surface tension is essential for the
    transfer of energy from wind that creates waves.
  • Waves are necessary for rapid oxygen diffusion in
    lakes and seas.

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  • In a thin glass capillary, for example, when
    molecules at the edge reach for and adhere to the
    molecules of glass just above them, they tow
    other water molecules at the same time.
  • The water surface, in turn, pulls the entire body
    of water upward until the downward force of
    gravity is too great to be overcome.
  • This process is called "capillary action," and
    it allows a sponge to be used to soak up spilled
    water.
  • Without this property, the nutrients needed by
    plants and trees would remain in the soil.

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  • A large percentage of our blood is water.
  • People must exchange about two litres of water
    per day in order to regulate their body
    temperature.Places where water is preserved on
    land are called water basins.
  • Water can be found in rivers, lakes, pools,
    animals, plant stems and under the ground.

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Water in motion
  • Water is constantly moving between the Earth and
    the atmosphere.
  • The sun and wind evaporate water from soil, plant
    leaves and animals, and from the surfaces of
    rivers, lakes and oceans.

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  • This process changes water to a gaseous form
    called water vapour.
  • Water vapour condenses under certain conditions
    and falls back to earth as rain or snow.
  • Precipitation that ultimately reaches streams and
    rivers, often transporting other material with
    it, is known as runoff.

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  • Rain fills up rivers and lakes.
  • Rivers flow into the oceans.
  • Some precipitation penetrates the ground and
    forms groundwater.
  • In this way water circulates constantly from the
    earth to the atmosphere and back again, in what
    is called the hydrological cycle  .

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  • The hydrological cycleTranspirationWater
    vapour is also emitted from plant leaves by a
    process called transpiration.
  • Every day an actively growing plant transpires
    5-10 times as much water as it can hold.

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  • CondensationAs water vapour rises, it cools and
    eventually condenses, usually on tiny particles
    of dust in the air. When it condenses it becomes
    a liquid again or turns directly into a solid
    (ice, hail or snow). These water particles then
    collect and form clouds.

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  • Water tableThe water table is the level to
    which water rises in an open well.

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  • EvaporationAs water is heated by the sun, its
    surface molecules become sufficiently energised
    to break free of the force binding them together.
  • They then evaporate and rise into the atmosphere
    as invisible vapour

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  • PercolationSome precipitation and melted snow
    moves down through the soil, percolates and
    infiltrates through cracks and pores in soil and
    rocks until it reaches the water table, where it
    becomes groundwater.

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  • GroundwaterSubterranean water is held in cracks
    and pores.
  • Depending on the geology, groundwater can flow to
    support streams.
  • It can also be tapped by wells.
  • Some groundwater is extremely old and may have
    been under the Earth for thousands of years

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  • RunoffExcessive rain or melting snow can
    produce overland flow to creeks and ditches.
  • Runoff is the visible flow of water into rivers,
    creeks and lakes as the water stored in basins
    drains out.

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  • PrecipitationPrecipitation, in the form of
    rain, snow and hail, comes from clouds.
  • Propelled by air currents, clouds move around the
    world.
  • When rising over mountain ranges, they cool,
    becoming so saturated with water that it begins
    to fall as rain, snow or hail, depending on the
    temperature of the surrounding air.

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  • Water qualityImpact on human health and food
  • The contamination of drinking water and food
    with microbiological agents can cause a variety
    of communicable diseases, such as hepatitis A,
    salmonellosis or shigellosis.

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  • In Europe, microbiological contamination of
    bathing water results in over two million cases
    of gastrointestinal diseases annually.
  • Nitrate concentrations of groundwater in several
    areas across Europe with intensive agriculture
    were found to exceed guideline levels.
  • These levels were established to protect infants
    from serious, life-threatening diseases (for
    example, ethaemoglobinemia).

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  • Concentrations of arsenic found in water can also
    lead to health problems such as skin cancer.
    Impact on plants and animals
  • The lack of sufficient oxygen (due to organic
    waste pollution or the presence of nitrates and
    phosphates in water) can cause the death of fish
    and other forms of aquatic life.

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  • Chemicals such as inorganic and organic
    compounds, oil, gasoline and pesticides harm fish
    and other aquatic life and depress crop yields.
  • Sediment (insoluble particles of soil suspended
    in water) clouds water, inhibits photosynthesis
    and destroys the aquatic food chain.

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Water resources
  • Surface water and groundwater are important
    elements of the Earth's hydrological cycle.
  • Surface water includes rivers, lakes and
    glaciers.
  • Groundwater remains one of the least-studied and
    most difficult water resources to determine.

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  • Surface waterIn Europe, annual runoff is
    greatest in western Norway.
  • Considerably less is seen in parts of Spain,
    central Hungary, eastern Romania and the southern
    part of Russia.

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  • The differences in river flow regimes are
    apparent in Western Europe (where flows are at a
    minimum in summer and late autumn), mountain-fed
    catchments (where flows are greatest in summer),
    and Eastern and Northern Europe (where most
    runoff occurs during the spring-melt period).
  • Many European river flow regimes are heavily
    affected by human activities such as water
    abstraction and damming

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  • GroundwaterNatural groundwater resources are
    stored in aquifers, which are permeable rock
    formations, or in unconsolidated deposits (sands,
    silts or gravels). The main characteristics of
    groundwater systems are invisible and
    relatively inaccessible locations low flow
    rates long residence times and slow
    reactions to changes on the surface.

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  • Groundwater plays a number of important economic
    and ecological roles, as well as being an
    essential element of human health.
  • Groundwater systems are normally very stable, in
    both quantity and quality.
  • However, the effects of pollution and
    overexploitation could lead to drastic changes,
    with the period of recovery lasting centuries.

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  • Surface water is the main source for water
    abstraction in Europe about 70 percent of the
    total abstraction on average.
  • However, there is significant variation among
    European countries  .

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  • European water resourcesOverall, there is no
    water shortage problem in Europe.
  • However, the amount of water available for
    sustained consumption is very unevenly
    distributed across the continent.
  • There are extreme variations that range from less
    than 100 cubic metres per capita per year in
    Malta to more than 630,000 cubic meters per
    capita per year in Iceland.

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  • Many European countries are heavily dependent on
    external contributions of water through
    transboundary rivers to meet their demands.
  • Countries located downstream of large rivers
    (Moldova, Romania, Hungary, Luxembourg and The
    Netherlands) receive more than 75 percent of
    their flows from other countries, which could
    result in a dispute over transboundary water
    pollution or the disposal of water resources.

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Impacto humano
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  • Human impact on waterWater is used for
    agricultural purposes (irrigation), by industry
    (production of goods, and as a cooling and
    heating agent) and for domestic purposes
    (drinking, personal hygiene, washing, recreation,
    etc.).

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  • In Europe as a whole, 53 percent of transported
    surface water and groundwater is used by
    industry.
  • Twenty-six percent of it is used for agriculture
    and only 19 percent for domestic purposes.
  • There is large variability in water abstraction
    among various economic sectors of European
    countries  .

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  • Water pollutionThere are several classes of
    common water pollutants.Disease-causing agents
    (pathogens)
  • These include bacteria, viruses, protozoa, and
    parasitic worms that enter water from domestic
    sewage and untreated human and animal wastes.
  • Every day about 14,000 people, half of them
    children, die due to this type of water pollution
    worldwide.

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  • Oxygen-demanding waste
  • This term refers to organic waste matter
    requiring aerobic decomposition by bacteria.
  • Large populations of bacteria supported by the
    presence of these wastes degrade water quality by
    depleting it of dissolved oxygen.
  • This process can cause the death of fish and
    other forms of oxygen-consuming aquatic life.

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  • Water-soluble inorganic chemicals
  • These are acids, salts and compounds of toxic
    metals such as mercury and lead.
  • High levels of these chemicals can make water
    unfit to drink, harm fish and other aquatic life,
    depress crop yields and accelerate the corrosion
    of machinery that uses water. Industry is the
    main source of water-soluble inorganic chemicals.

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  • Inorganic plant nutrientsThese are water-soluble
    nitrates and phosphates that can cause excessive
    growth of algae and other aquatic plants.
  • As these plants decay they deplete the water of
    dissolved oxygen, which fish need to
    survive.People who drink water with excessive
    levels of nitrates suffer a reduction in the
    oxygen-carrying capacity of their blood.
  • Agriculture is the main source of such pollution.

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  • Organic chemicalsOrganic chemicals include oil,
    gasoline, plastics, pesticides, cleaning
    solvents, detergents and many other chemicals.
  • They threaten human health and harm fish and
    other aquatic life.The main sources of such
    water pollution are transport, industry, urban
    activities and household cleaning.

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  • Sediment (suspended matter)
  • Insoluble particles of soil and other solids
    become suspended in water, mostly when soil is
    eroded from the land.
  • By weight, this is by far the biggest water
    pollutant.
  • Sediment clouds water, inhibits photosynthesis
    and destroys the aquatic food chain.

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  • Water can be the subject of
  • radioactive pollution (caused by water-soluble,
    radioactive isotopes),
  • thermal pollution (after using water to cool down
    industrial and power plants) or
  • genetic pollution (caused by accidental
    introduction of non-native species such as
    mussels and phytoplankton).

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  • Sources of water pollutionWastewater treatment
    facilities themselves, if operating incorrectly,
    can cause water pollution.

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  • Sources of water pollutionAgricultural
    activities such as the dispersion of pesticides,
    fertilisers and other chemical products cause
    significant air and water pollution

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  • Sources of water pollutionBridge construction
    and riverbank corrections can cause changes in
    river flows and groundwater levels.

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  • Sources of water pollutionPetroleum-product and
    chemical spills destroy aquatic ecosystems.

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  • Sources of water pollutionMany towns do not
    posses wastewater treatment facilities.
  • Direct wastewater discharges into rivers destroy
    aquatic ecosystems.

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  • Sources of water pollutionRivers are often
    polluted by sewage and land runoffs

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  • Sources of water pollutionDumping garbage into
    a body of water decreases its quality and
    destroys aquatic ecosystems.

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  • Sources of water pollutionLarge animal
    concentrations in intensive pig and poultry farms
    release a great deal of waste.
  • Discharging this waste into a river without
    proper treatment can cause death to aquatic flora
    and fauna and affect human health.

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  • Wastewater management In rural and suburban
    areas, sewage from homes is usually discharged
    into a septic tank.
  • To avoid groundwater pollution, septic tanks must
    be cleaned out every three to four years by a
    specialised company.

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  • In urban areas, most waterborne wastes from
    homes, businesses, factories and storm runoff
    flow through a network of sewer pipes to
    wastewater treatment plants.
  • Some cities have separate lines for storm water
    runoff.When sewage reaches a treatment plant 
    it may undergo as many as three levels of
    purification.

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  • Treatment plantSecondary sewage
    treatmentSecondary sewage treatment is a
    biological process in which aerobic bacteria are
    used to remove up to 90 percent of biodegradable,
    oxygen-demanding organic waste.

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  • Sewage is usually pumped into a large tank and
    mixed for several hours with bacteria-rich sludge
    and oxygenating air bubbles to facilitate the
    degradation of microorganisms.
  • The water then goes to a sedimentation tank,
    where most of the suspended solids and
    microorganisms settle out as sludge.

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  • The sludge produced from primary and secondary
    treatment is broken down by anaerobic digestion
    and then incinerated, dumped in a landfill or
    applied to land as fertiliser.Even after
    secondary treatment, however, wastewater still
    contains some oxygen-demanding wastes, suspended
    solids, 70 percent of its phosphorus (mostly as
    phosphates), some nitrates and a number of toxic
    metal compounds.

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  • Water a conflict of interestsIt is said that
    in the 19th century wars were waged over metals,
    in the 20th century over petrol, and if there is
    a war in the 21st century, it will definitely be
    over sources of drinking water. There are 214
    rivers and lakes on the planet that belong to two
    or more countries - 66 of these are shared by
    four or more nations. Conflicts often result

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  • The NileAn Egyptian leader once threatened that
    abuse of the Nile River was a declaration of war.
    The waters of the longest river in the world run
    through Tanzania, Rwanda, Zaire, Uganda,
    Ethiopia, Sudan and Egypt.When Ethiopia
    declared in 1990 that it intended to build a huge
    reservoir on the river, the Egyptian government
    reacted negatively.
  • At Egypt's request, Ethiopia was not granted a
    loan to construct the dam, and the project
    failed.

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  • The Ganges RiverA water conflict over the Ganges
    River has transpired between India and Bangladesh
    for 25 years.
  • A huge amount of its water is being diverted by
    India's government to meet the needs of giant
    cities such as Calcutta.
  • In October 1995 more than 40 million people in
    Bangladesh were dying of hunger and thirst
    because India had diverted this water to irrigate
    its agricultural lands.

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  • The Danube River The Danube River passes through
    nine European countries.
  • Water pollution caused by one country often
    affects neighbouring environments as much as its
    own.

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  • In February 2000 a large quantity of cyanide was
    released from a gold mine in Romania, causing the
    mass death of fish in two Hungarian rivers
    flowing into the Danube.
  • Experts declared the five-kilometre carpet of
    dead fish floating on the river the greatest
    ecological disaster in the area since the
    Chernobyl nuclear accident in 1986.
  • Images of the river's casualties being hauled
    away by train drew international attention.
  • The pollution also affected countries downriver
    from the spill.

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  • Water crisis hits homeIn Central and Eastern
    Europe (CEE), the need to address water problems
    is as urgent as anywhere else in the world.
  • Broadly speaking, the region's problems include
    pollution and water quality deterioration, water
    resource issues and institutional and financial
    concerns.

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  • Water problems in CEEEcosystems in CEE are at
    risk due to land conversion, changes in
    hydrological regimes, pollution by inadequately
    controlled agricultural discharges and the low
    level of wastewater collection and treatment.
  • Water quality improvement and pollution control,
    including protection of surface and groundwater
    and the marine environment of the Baltic and
    Black seas, are urgent tasks for the region.
  • Rehabilitation of degraded areas, such as old
    military camps and industrial sites, is also
    essential for preserving the region's water
    resources.

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  • Another group of problems for the region involves
    coping with floods and droughts and satisfying
    water demands.
  • Flood management is a constant concern in
    Poland, Lithuania and all countries located in
    the Danube River basin. But high water is a
    problem all over the region.

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  • Ironically, long-term droughts are a problem in
    the same areas that are plagued by flooding.
  • The total loss of water from plant transpiration
    and evaporation from the ground, known as
    "evapotranspiration," is high in several parts of
    the Danube Basin, and may exceed the total volume
    of precipitation.
  • One example of a drought caused by
    evapotranspiration in CEE can be observed along
    the Tisza River, where the streams in the
    catchment area are low.
  • In the Baltics, the annual runoff from the
    Vistula and Odra basins in dry years may be about
    50 percent less than the mean annual value.

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  • Water management in CEEThe institutional
    arrangements for managing water in CEE are too
    complicated, not transparent and not financially
    self-supporting, according to Janusz Kindler and
    Laszlo Somlyody, who contributed to the 2000
    series of reports entitled Water for the 21st
    Century Vision to Action.
  • The principles of river basin management are
    well known across the region, and some countries
    even have river basin agencies.
  • But those agencies are often not well
    incorporated into the overall government
    structure, according to Kindler and Somlyody.

109
  • The situation is expected to improve as the
    countries of the region seek to align themselves
    with the European Union's Water Framework
    Directive.
  • The directive offers a clear mechanism for reform
    of institutions dealing with water management.

110
  • Because rivers in the region pass through many
    countries, flood control along them requires
    international solutions.
  • In August 2002, Hungarian Prime Minister Peter
    Medgyessy took steps toward achieving such a
    solution.
  • He launched an initiative for regional
    cooperation in addressing floods among countries
    located in the Danube, Odra and Elbe river
    basins.

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  • Paying for better managementAchieving alignment
    with EU regulations on water will be costly.
    Investment needs in the area of water supply and
    water sanitation are enormous in both the rural
    and urban areas of CEE.
  • Kindler and Somlyody estimate that the
    investment required to meet EU directives ranges
    between USD 500 and 1,000 per capita in the
    countries of the region.
  • This is obviously a huge sum when compared to the
    average, per-capita, gross domestic product of
    CEE countries.

112
  • Finding means for financing the work that is
    needed, and using subsidies efficiently, are
    therefore essential for countries seeking to
    accede to the EU.
  • Developing the economies in this region could
    also make it easier for these countries to pay
    for improvements in their water infrastructure.
  • And CEE countries will have to build their
    capacity to handle certain types of work,
    including integrated water resources management,
    environmental economics and wastewater
    management.

113
  • One important international effort that affects
    CEE directly is the EU Water Initiative, a
    strategic partnership between the EU, Africa and
    12 countries from Eastern Europe, the Caucasus
    and Central Asia.
  • The aim of this initiative is to create a higher
    efficiency of water-related development by
    providing a platform to coordinate and streamline
    activities.
  • The EU, which says it is the largest donor in the
    field of water with an average of EUR 1.4 billion
    a year, has announced that it wants to serve as a
    major driving force to meet goals set at the
    World Summit on Sustainable Development in
    Johannesburg in relation to water.

114
  • CEE countries are increasingly playing a role in
    international water initiatives.
  • Along with these various international efforts,
    these countries are addressing water issues as
    they work toward compliance with the EU Water
    Framework Directive, which will reshape water
    protection and water management in the region.
    The Bulletin, December 2002

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Agua y la gente
116
  • Water and peopleThe Earth is called the Blue
    Planet because of the proliferation of water, yet
    only 0.6 percent of it is fit for drinking.Only
    3 percent of the water we use serves an essential
    human need. The remainder could be controlled and
    decreased.

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  • People are now realising that excessive and
    unnecessary water use and increased pollution of
    drinking water sources will lead to catastrophe.
    Since we all use water, we are all responsible
    for saving it. The two basic principles behind
    maintaining water resources are conserve and
    protect

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  • Conserve and protectScientists claim that when
    modern technologies are applied, household water
    consumption is reduced by one-third, agricultural
    by one-half and industrial by 90 percent!
  • Click on the pictures to find out what needs to
    be done.

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  • Conserve and protectRepair water pipes to
    minimise water lost in transport.

129
  • Conserve and protectImplement the drop-method
    of agricultural irrigation to increase water-use
    efficiency by minimising evaporation losses.

130
  • Conserve and protectIntroduce the circular mode
    of industrial water supply.

131
  • Conserve and protectImpose an environmental
    taxation on water that would cover all delivery,
    management and purification costs.

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  • Conserve and protectBuild purification systems
    for wastewater everywhere.
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