Impacts of River Pollution
Impacts of River Pollution
Impacts of River Pollution
The capital of Bangladesh, Dhaka, is situated on the bank of the river Buriganga. The water
of Buriganga is polluted by industrial waste and capital sewage which cause her to become
biologically dead.
Tannery waste is mainly contaminating the river. Around 20,000 cubic meters of untreated
highly toxic liquid waste flow in to the Buriganga through canals on a recent repor of the
Department of Environment (DoP). These tanneries are mainly situated in Hazaribag few
kilometres away from capital. Due to over pollution of surface water, ground water of
Hazaribug is getting polluted. The contamination of Buriganga is threatenning the existence
of three other rivers Turag, Balu & Shitalakhya.
Several environmental processes are involved with the Buriganga. Its pollution is harming
the surrounding agricultural and aquatic environment. The deteriorating condition of the
river is also having an impact on the people living in its banks and depending on it for a
living. The pressures on the river and their state and impacts are tabulated in the table
below:
Industrial discharge and sewage disposal into Buriganga river are the two most polluting
sources of water pollution. The pollution is mostly due to wastewater discharge from the
tannery industries in the Hazaribagh area and Tejgaon chemical and paper mills into the
river. Pollutants from these industries are categorized into three parts:
Bio-degradable organic waste; non bio-degradable inorganic waste and toxic waste.
Disposal of such untreated industrial waste is gradually destroying aquatic environments of
the river and this in turn is affecting people’s health. Millions of cubic metres of toxic waste
from the Hazaribagh tanneries and thousands of other industries, topped with a huge
volume of untreated sewage from the city, now remain almost stagnant within the river
water. The situation is set to continue until a new flow of
water rushes in from the upstream.
The fetid smell of the river water has made it unsuitable for drinking and other purposes. As
a result there is a shortage of water source. People living along the river are the worst
victims of the pollution.
The river water is no longer healthy to drink. Analysis of surface water shows that the level
of dissolved oxygen in the river water is too low or sometimes non-existent as the toxic
effluents are discharged into the river. The toxic quotient of the river exceeds tolerable
limits in the months of January and February. The seasonal variation of water quality in the
Buriganga is linked with seasonal variation of water flow and the operation of the tanneries.
The seasonality of flow in the watercourses from the river constitutes a significant
constraint to its ability to dilute and disperse effluent discharged into it. So as already
mentioned, the pollutants sometimes stay for a long time in the same place in the river in
concentrated form unless water from upstream does not flush them away thus harming the
overall water quality.
The river water hardly satisfies the quality parameter set by the Environmental Quality
Standards (EQS) thus showing the unsuitability of the water to be used for irrigation,
bathing, and washing of household items. The tube wells for drinking water is also
inappropriate to use due to groundwater pollution. Concentration of dissolved heavy metals
such as chromium and iron in the groundwater is forcing the inhabitants to rely on
expensive alternative water supply.
The scenario is even bleaker in the villages along the river, in the upstream of the Buriganga.
Hundreds of thousands of families living in Zinzira, Kholamora, Kamrangirchar, Jhaochar,
Modhyerchar, Wasspur, Basila and Looterchar face a severe water crisis for at least six
months a year. Dependent on the river for generations, this population has been cut off
from using the river water. They are now forced to travel miles to get water for their daily
chores. However, the slum inhabitants in the tanneries have to use the water from
Buriganga for bathing, washing and sometimes drinking. Nobody knows how much harm
and potential carcinogen diseases will occur to them. They are already the victims of several
water bred diseases like dysentery, diarrhoea, cholera, shigella food poisoning.
Owing to the direct disposal of city and industrial sewage into Buriganga, faecal pollution
has become prominent. Diseases like cholera and diarrhoea are transmitted by faecal
contamination of water. People living in slums around the city use these contaminated
water for all recreational purpose and this results in spreading of water-borne and skin
diseases.
The pollutants are stagnant in the river since the waterflow is low in the river except during
monsoons. This stagnancy accelerates the population of mosquitoes and thus expedite the
spread of vector borne diseases like malaria, dengue hemoragic fever and filariasis.