Evs Project
Evs Project
Evs Project
TO SEWAGE
Sr No CONTENT PAGE
NO.
1 Introduction 3
2 What are the causes of water pollution? 3-5
3 Categories of water pollution 5-6
4 What type of water is being impact? 6
5 What are the effects of water pollution? 7-8
6 What can you do to prevent water pollution? 8-9
7 Conclusion 9-10
8 Reference 11
INTRODUCTION
Where does human waste mingle with household chemicals, personal hygiene products,
pharmaceuticals, and everything else that goes down the drains in American homes and
businesses?
In sewers.
And what can you get when rain, pesticides, fertilizers, automotive chemicals, and trash run off
the streets and down the gutters into those very same sewers? Sewage backing up into people’s
basements. Sewage spilling onto streets and parks. Sewage pouring into rivers and streams.
Each year, more than 860 billion gallons of this vile brew escapes sewer systems across the
country. That’s enough to flood all of Pennsylvania ankle-deep. It’s enough for every American
to take one bath each week for an entire year.
After bursting out of a pipe or manhole cover, this foul slurry pollutes the nearest body of water.
Downstream, some of it may be pumped out, treated, and piped into more homes and businesses.
From there, it goes back into a sewer system, and the cycle resumes.
This widespread problem of water pollution is jeopardizing our health. Unsafe water kills more
people each year than war and all other forms of violence combined. Meanwhile, our drinkable
water sources are finite: Less than 1 percent of the earth’s freshwater is actually accessible to
us. Without action, the challenges will only increase by 2050, when global demand for
freshwater is expected to be one-third greater than it is now.
Credit:
Aurora Photos/Alamy
Used water is wastewater. It comes from our sinks, showers, and toilets (think sewage) and
from commercial, industrial, and agricultural activities (think metals, solvents, and toxic
sludge). The term also includes stormwater runoff, which occurs when rainfall carries road
salts, oil, grease, chemicals, and debris from impermeable surfaces into our waterways
More than 80 percent of the world’s wastewater flows back into the environment without being
treated or reused, according to the United Nations; in some least-developed countries, the figure
tops 95 percent. In the United States, wastewater treatment facilities process about 34 billion
gallons of wastewater per day. These facilities reduce the amount of pollutants such as
pathogens, phosphorus, and nitrogen in sewage, as well as heavy metals and toxic chemicals in
industrial waste, before discharging the treated waters back into waterways. That’s when all
goes well. But according to EPA estimates, our nation’s aging and easily overwhelmed sewage
treatment systems also release more than 850 billion gallons of untreated wastewater each year.
Oil pollution
Big spills may dominate headlines, but consumers account for the vast majority of oil pollution
in our seas, including oil and gasoline that drips from millions of cars and trucks every day.
Moreover, nearly half of the estimated 1 million tons of oil that makes its way into marine
environments each year comes not from tanker spills but from land-based sources such as
factories, farms, and cities. At sea, tanker spills account for about 10 percent of the oil in waters
around the world, while regular operations of the shipping industry—through
both legal and illegal discharges—contribute about one-third. Oil is also naturally released from
under the ocean floor through fractures known as seeps.
Radioactive substances
Radioactive waste is any pollution that emits radiation beyond what is naturally released by the
environment. It’s generated by uranium mining, nuclear power plants, and the production and
testing of military weapons, as well as by universities and hospitals that use radioactive
materials for research and medicine. Radioactive waste can persist in the environment for
thousands of years, making disposal a major challenge. Consider the decommissioned Hanford
nuclear weapons production site in Washington, where the cleanup of 56 million gallons of
radioactive waste is expected to cost more than $100 billion and last through 2060. Accidentally
released or improperly disposed of contaminants threaten groundwater, surface water, and
marine resources.
To address pollution and protect water we need to understand where the pollution is coming
from (point source or nonpoint source) and the type of water body its impacting (groundwater,
surface water, or ocean water).
When contamination originates from a single source, it’s called point source pollution.
Examples include wastewater (also called effluent) discharged legally or illegally by a
manufacturer, oil refinery, or wastewater treatment facility, as well as contamination from
leaking septic systems, chemical and oil spills, and illegal dumping. The EPA regulates point
source pollution by establishing limits on what can be discharged by a facility directly into a
body of water. While point source pollution originates from a specific place, it can affect miles
of waterways and ocean.
Nonpoint source
Nonpoint source pollution is contamination derived from diffuse sources. These may include
agricultural or stormwater runoff or debris blown into waterways from land. Nonpoint source
pollution is the leading cause of water pollution in U.S. waters, but it’s difficult to regulate,
since there’s no single, identifiable culprit.
Transboundary
It goes without saying that water pollution can’t be contained by a line on a map.
Transboundary pollution is the result of contaminated water from one country spilling into the
waters of another. Contamination can result from a disaster—like an oil spill—or the slow,
downriver creep of industrial, agricultural, or municipal discharge.
Groundwater pollution
When rain falls and seeps deep into the earth, filling the cracks, crevices, and porous spaces of
an aquifer (basically an underground storehouse of water), it becomes groundwater—one of our
least visible but most important natural resources. Nearly 40 percent of Americans rely on
groundwater, pumped to the earth’s surface, for drinking water. For some folks in rural areas,
it’s their only freshwater source. Groundwater gets polluted when contaminants—from
pesticides and fertilizers to waste leached from landfills and septic systems—make their way
into an aquifer, rendering it unsafe for human use. Ridding groundwater of contaminants can be
difficult to impossible, as well as costly. Once polluted, an aquifer may be unusable for decades,
or even thousands of years. Groundwater can also spread contamination far from the original
polluting source as it seeps into streams, lakes, and oceans.
Covering about 70 percent of the earth, surface water is what fills our oceans, lakes, rivers, and
all those other blue bits on the world map. Surface water from freshwater sources (that is, from
sources other than the ocean) accounts for more than 60 percent of the water delivered to
American homes. But a significant pool of that water is in peril. According to the most recent
surveys on national water quality from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, nearly half
of our rivers and streams and more than one-third of our lakes are polluted and unfit for
swimming, fishing, and drinking. Nutrient pollution, which includes nitrates and phosphates, is
the leading type of contamination in these freshwater sources. While plants and animals need
these nutrients to grow, they have become a major pollutant due to farm waste and fertilizer
runoff. Municipal and industrial waste discharges contribute their fair share of toxins as well.
There’s also all the random junk that industry and individuals dump directly into waterways.
On human health
To put it bluntly: Water pollution kills. In fact, it caused 1.8 million deaths in 2015, according
to a study published in The Lancet. Contaminated water can also make you ill. Every year,
unsafe water sickens about 1 billion people. And low-income communities are
disproportionately at risk because their homes are often closest to the most polluting industries.
Waterborne pathogens, in the form of disease-causing bacteria and viruses from human and
animal waste, are a major cause of illness from contaminated drinking water. Diseases spread
by unsafe water include cholera, giardia, and typhoid. Even in wealthy nations, accidental or
illegal releases from sewage treatment facilities, as well as runoff from farms and urban areas,
contribute harmful pathogens to waterways. Thousands of people across the United States are
sickened every year by Legionnaires’ disease (a severe form of pneumonia contracted from
water sources like cooling towers and piped water), with cases cropping up from California’s
Disneyland to Manhattan’s Upper East Side.
A woman using bottled water to
wash her three-week-old son at
their home in Flint, Michigan
Credit:
Even swimming can pose a risk. Every year, 3.5 million Americans contract health issues such
as skin rashes, pinkeye, respiratory infections, and hepatitis from sewage-laden coastal waters,
according to EPA estimates.
On the environment
In order to thrive, healthy ecosystems rely on a complex web of animals, plants, bacteria, and
fungi—all of which interact, directly or indirectly, with each other. Harm to any of these
organisms can create a chain effect, imperiling entire aquatic environments.
When water pollution causes an algal bloom in a lake or marine environment, the proliferation
of newly introduced nutrients stimulates plant and algae growth, which in turn reduces oxygen
levels in the water. This dearth of oxygen, known as eutrophication, suffocates plants and
animals and can create “dead zones,” where waters are essentially devoid of life. In certain
cases, these harmful algal blooms can also produce neurotoxins that affect wildlife, from whales
to sea turtles.
Chemicals and heavy metals from industrial and municipal wastewater contaminate waterways
as well. These contaminants are toxic to aquatic life—most often reducing an organism’s life
span and ability to reproduce—and make their way up the food chain as predator eats prey.
That’s how tuna and other big fish accumulate high quantities of toxins, such as mercury.
Marine ecosystems are also threatened by marine debris, which can strangle, suffocate, and
starve animals. Much of this solid debris, such as plastic bags and soda cans, gets swept into
sewers and storm drains and eventually out to sea, turning our oceans into trash soup and
sometimes consolidating to form floating garbage patches. Discarded fishing gear and other
types of debris are responsible for harming more than 200 different species of marine life.
Meanwhile, ocean acidification is making it tougher for shellfish and coral to survive. Though
they absorb about a quarter of the carbon pollution created each year by burning fossil fuels,
oceans are becoming more acidic. This process makes it harder for shellfish and other species to
build shells and may impact the nervous systems of sharks, clownfish, and other marine life.
We’re all accountable to some degree for today’s water pollution problem. Fortunately, there
are some simple ways you can prevent water contamination or at least limit your contribution to
it:
Learn about the unique qualities of water where you live. Where does your water come
from? Is the wastewater from your home treated? Where does stormwater flow to? Is
your area in a drought? Start building a picture of the situation so you can discover
where your actions will have the most impact—and see if your neighbors would be
interested in joining in!
Reduce your plastic consumption and reuse or recycle plastic when you can.
Properly dispose of chemical cleaners, oils, and nonbiodegradable items to keep them
from going down the drain.
Maintain your car so it doesn’t leak oil, antifreeze, or coolant.
If you have a yard, consider landscaping that reduces runoff and avoid applying
pesticides and herbicides.
Don’t flush your old medications! Dispose of them in the trash to prevent them from
entering local waterways.
Be mindful of anything you pour into storm sewers, since that waste often won’t be
treated before being released into local waterways. If you notice a storm sewer blocked
by litter, clean it up to keep that trash out of the water. (You’ll also help prevent
troublesome street floods in a heavy storm.)
If you have a pup, be sure to pick up its poop.
One of the most effective ways to stand up for our waters is to speak out in support of the Clean
Water Act, which has helped hold polluters accountable for five decades—despite attempts by
destructive industries to gut its authority. But we also need regulations that keep pace with
modern-day challenges, including microplastics, PFAS, pharmaceuticals, and other
contaminants our wastewater treatment plants weren’t built to handle, not to mention polluted
water that’s dumped untreated.
Tell the federal government, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, and your local elected
officials that you support water protections and investments in infrastructure, like wastewater
treatment, lead-pipe removal programs, and stormwater-abating green infrastructure. Also, learn
how you and those around you can get involved in the policymaking process . Our public
waterways serve every one of us. We should all have a say in how they’re protected.
CONCLUSION
CONCLUSION. Water pollution stems from many sources and causes, only a few of which are
discussed here. Rivers and streams demonstrate some capacity to recover from the effects of
certain pollutants, but lakes, bays, ponds, sluggish rivers, and oceans have little resistance to the
effects of water pollution.
In a nutshell, every kind of pollution leaves a huge negative impact on our environment, human
lives, animals etc. We, as responsible citizens, must take steps towards a better tomorrow. We
must join hands to take various initiatives and fight against this problem.
Freshwater is a finite and limited resource on Earth and, increasingly, much of it is polluted, by
both pathogenic microbes and chemical contaminants. Human demand for freshwater is
increasing; in particular, water is required to irrigate crops to feed the rapidly expanding human
population.
Water is most important necessity of life for all the living beings on the earth. Without water no
one can exist even for a day. We also know that there is very less percentage of clean water
means drinking water available on the earth. So, we should not waste clean water and save it for
future generations.
Our natural environment makes human life possible, and our cultural environment helps define
who we are. It is therefore essential that our population and economic growth are
environmentally sustainable.
REFERENCES
https://studybuff.com/what-is-conclusion-of-water-pollution/
https://www.nrdc.org/stories/water-pollution-everything-you-need-know#causes