Pollution.
Publié le 11/05/2013
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One of the greatest challenges caused by air pollution is global warming, an increase in Earth’s temperature due to the buildup of certain atmospheric gases such ascarbon dioxide.
With the heavy use of fossil fuels in the 20th century, atmospheric concentrations of carbon dioxide have risen dramatically.
Carbon dioxide and othergases, known as greenhouse gases, reduce the escape of heat from the planet without blocking radiation coming from the Sun.
Because of this greenhouse effect,average global temperatures are expected to rise 1.4 to 5.8 Celsius degrees (2.5 to 10.4 Fahrenheit degrees) by the year 2100.
Although this trend appears to be asmall change, the increase would make the Earth warmer than it has been in the last 125,000 years, possibly changing climate patterns, affecting crop production,disrupting wildlife distributions, and raising the sea level.
Air pollution can also damage the upper atmospheric region known as the stratosphere.
Excessive production of chlorine-containing compounds such aschlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) (compounds formerly used in refrigerators, air conditioners, and in the manufacture of polystyrene products) has depleted the stratosphericozone layer, creating a hole above Antarctica that lasts for several weeks each year.
As a result, exposure to the Sun’s harmful rays has damaged aquatic andterrestrial wildlife and threatens human health in high-latitude regions of the northern and southern hemispheres.
B Water Pollution
The demand for fresh water rises continuously as the world’s population grows.
From 1940 to 1990 withdrawals of fresh water from rivers, lakes, reservoirs, and othersources increased fourfold.
Of the water consumed in the United States in 1995, 39 percent was used for irrigation, 39 percent was used for electric power generation,and 12 percent was used for other utilities; industry and mining used 7 percent, and the rest was used for agricultural livestock and commercial purposes.
Sewage, industrial wastes, and agricultural chemicals such as fertilizers and pesticides are the main causes of water pollution.
The U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency(EPA) reports that about 37 percent of the country’s lakes and estuaries, and 36 percent of its rivers, are too polluted for basic uses such as fishing or swimming duringall or part of the year.
In developing nations, more than 95 percent of urban sewage is discharged untreated into rivers and bays, creating a major human healthhazard.
Water runoff, a nonpoint source of pollution, carries fertilizing chemicals such as phosphates and nitrates from agricultural fields and yards into lakes, streams, andrivers.
These combine with the phosphates and nitrates from sewage to speed the growth of algae, a type of plantlike organism.
The water body may then becomechoked with decaying algae, which severely depletes the oxygen supply.
This process, called eutrophication, can cause the death of fish and other aquatic life.Agricultural runoff may be to blame for the growth of a toxic form of algae called Pfiesteria piscicida, which was responsible for killing large amounts of fish in bodies of water from the Delaware Bay to the Gulf of Mexico in the late 1990s.
Runoff also carries toxic pesticides and urban and industrial wastes into lakes and streams.
Erosion, the wearing away of topsoil by wind and rain, also contributes to water pollution.
Soil and silt (a fine sediment) washed from logged hillsides, plowed fields, orconstruction sites, can clog waterways and kill aquatic vegetation.
Even small amounts of silt can eliminate desirable fish species.
For example, when logging removesthe protective plant cover from hillsides, rain may wash soil and silt into streams, covering the gravel beds that trout or salmon use for spawning.
The marine fisheries supported by ocean ecosystems are an essential source of protein, particularly for people in developing countries.
Yet pollution in coastal bays,estuaries, and wetlands threatens fish stocks already depleted by overfishing.
In 1989, 260,000 barrels of oil spilled from the oil tanker Exxon Valdez into Alaska’s Prince William Sound, a pristine and rich fishing ground.
In 1999 there were 8,539 reported spills in and around U.S.
waters, involving 4.4 billion liters (1.2 billiongallons) of oil.
C Soil Pollution
Soil is a mixture of mineral, plant, and animal materials that forms during a long process that may take thousands of years.
It is necessary for most plant growth and isessential for all agricultural production.
Soil pollution is a buildup of toxic chemical compounds, salts, pathogens (disease-causing organisms), or radioactive materialsthat can affect plant and animal life.
Unhealthy soil management methods have seriously degraded soil quality, caused soil pollution, and enhanced erosion.
Treating the soil with chemical fertilizers,pesticides, and fungicides interferes with the natural processes occurring within the soil and destroys useful organisms such as bacteria, fungi, and othermicroorganisms.
For instance, strawberry farmers in California fumigate the soil with methyl bromide to destroy organisms that may harm young strawberry plants.
Thisprocess indiscriminately kills even beneficial microorganisms and leaves the soil sterile and dependent upon fertilizer to support plant growth.
This results in heavyfertilizer use and increases polluted runoff into lakes and streams.
Improper irrigation practices in areas with poorly drained soil may result in salt deposits that inhibit plant growth and may lead to crop failure.
In 2000 BC, the ancient Sumerian cities of the southern Tigris-Euphrates Valley in Mesopotamia depended on thriving agriculture.
By 1500 BC, these cities had collapsed largely because of crop failure due to high soil salinity.
The same soil pollution problem exists today in the Indus Valley in Pakistan, the Nile Valley in Egypt, and the Imperial Valley in California.
D Solid Waste
Solid wastes are unwanted solid materials such as garbage, paper, plastics and other synthetic materials, metals, and wood.
Billions of tons of solid waste are thrownout annually.
The United States alone produces about 200 million metric tons of municipal solid waste each year ( see Solid Waste Disposal).
A typical American generates an average of 2 kg (4 lb) of solid waste each day.
Cities in economically developed countries produce far more solid waste per capita than those in developingcountries.
Moreover, waste from developed countries typically contains a high percentage of synthetic materials that take longer to decompose than the primarilybiodegradable waste materials of developing countries.
Areas where wastes are buried, called landfills, are the cheapest and most common disposal method for solid wastes worldwide.
But landfills quickly become overfilledand may contaminate air, soil, and water.
Incineration, or burning, of waste reduces the volume of solid waste but produces dense ashen wastes (some of whichbecome airborne) that often contain dangerous concentrations of hazardous materials such as heavy metals and toxic compounds.
Composting, using natural biologicalprocesses to speed the decomposition of organic wastes, is an effective strategy for dealing with organic garbage and produces a material that can be used as a naturalfertilizer.
Recycling, extracting and reusing certain waste materials, has become an important part of municipal solid waste strategies in developed countries.
Accordingto the EPA, more than one-fourth of the municipal solid waste produced in the United States is now recycled or composted.
Recycling also plays a significant, informalrole in solid waste management for many Asian countries, such as India, where organized waste-pickers comb streets and dumps for items such as plastics, which theyuse or resell.
Expanding recycling programs worldwide can help reduce solid waste pollution, but the key to solving severe solid waste problems lies in reducing the amount of wastegenerated.
Waste prevention, or source reduction, such as altering the way products are designed or manufactured to make them easier to reuse, reduces the highcosts associated with environmental pollution..
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