11) POLLUTION
Pollution is an unwelcome concentration of substances that are
beyond the environment's capacity to handle. These substances are
detrimental to people and other living things.
In an undisturbed ecosystem, all substances are processed through
an intricate network of biogeochemical cycles, such as the
nitrogen and carbon cycles. During these cycles, substances are
taken up by plants, move through the food chain to larger and
more complex organisms, and when the latter die, are decomposed
(broken down) into simpler forms to be used again when they are
taken up by plants. Biodegradable substances are those that can
be broken down by the environment's biological systems. Pollution
occurs when the environment becomes overloaded beyond the
capacity of these normal processing systems.
Examples include:
* An excess of normally helpful substances, such as the
nutrients nitrogen and phosphorus.
* An excess of substances that are harmless, and perhaps even
necessary in tiny amounts, but toxic in concentration. Copper,
for example, is necessary in small amounts for healthy plant
growth, but becomes a pollutant if it occurs in greater
quantities.
* Synthetic (human made) compounds that are poisonous in the
environment, often even in trace amounts, such as DDT, dioxin,
PCBs and organochlorines (see Enviro Facts "Toxic waste" and
"Poison, farmers and wildlife").
* Substances that, in any amount, are not biodegradable, such
as plastics and highly persistent chemicals like DDT and other
organochlorines.
Some pollutants kill living organisms outright, other sub-lethal
pollutants do not kill, but may cause long-term biological
damage, interfere with organisms' reproductive cycle, or make
them more vulnerable to disease.
TYPES OF POLLUTION
Pollutants can be grouped according to the main ecosystem which
they affect. One pollutant often affects more than one ecosystem.
AIR
Sulphur dioxide produced through the burning of coal, causes acid
rain and respiratory problems.
Nitrogen oxides and volatile hydrocarbons from vehicle emissions,
combine to form photochemical smog which causes respiratory
problems.
Carbon monoxide from vehicle emissions, restricts oxygen uptake,
causes drowsiness, headaches, death.
Carbon dioxide produced during the burning of coal enhances
global warming.
CFCs used and aerosols, refrigeration, airconditioning and foam-
blowing industries destroys the ozone layer.
Methane from feedlots and rubbish dumps enhances global warming.
Noise from industry and traffic affects hearing and is stressful.
FRESH WATER
Sewage contains pathogens which cause typhoid, cholera and
gastroenteritis if there is inadequate sanitation. Nutrients in
sewage cause eutrophication.
Fertilizers used in agriculture cause eutrophication.
Silt build up in freshwater ecosystems, caused by inappropriate
agriculture, smothers aquatic organisms.
Pesticides used in agriculture and by the health services are
toxic and interfere with breeding of mammals and birds.
Toxic metals which are produced by industry are health and life
threatening.
MARINE
Sewage released into marine systems due to inadequate sanitation
will cause the diseases mentioned above.
Fertilizers used in agriculture cause eutrophication.
Oil spills from tankers smother marine plants and animals.
Plastics in the sea causes the death of marine animals.
Pesticides used in agriculture and by the health services also
causes the death of sea life.
LAND
Solid waste is classified as hazardous (radioactive, pesticides,
medical, poisons) which is health and life threatening;
or non-hazardous (domestic, urban, mining, industrial, scrap
metal.) which is unsightly and disposal takes up much space.
DEALING WITH POLLUTION
In the past, most approaches to handling pollution could be
summed up by the phrase `dilution is the solution to pollution'.
However, pollution levels have increased so much in amount and
toxicity that this approach is no longer acceptable. An
alternative approach is source reduction, i.e. a reduction in the
amount of pollution where produced.
Point source pollution: Pollutants are produced from a stationary
location, e.g. industrial plants, mines, and municipal sewage
works.
Non-point source pollution: This pollution cannot be traced to
a specific spot, and is far more difficult to monitor and
control. Common examples are veld fires, motor vehicle emissions,
fertilizer runoff, sediment from construction and erosion,
plastic packaging, and gases from aerosol cans. Some non-point
sources can be addressed by laws, such as banning CFCs
(chlorofluorocarbons), or requiring car manufactures to install
emission controls.
Polluter-must-pay principle: This means that a polluter should
bear the costs of avoiding pollution, or remedying its effects.
This principle is difficult to apply when the source of pollution
cannot be identified, as is often the case with atmospheric
pollution. The principle can be usefully applied following a
pollution disaster, such as an oil spill from a tanker. However,
the consumer often pays for such pollution costs. For example,
Eskom estimates that the fitting of scrubbers (see Enviro Facts
"Energy and environment") on the chimneys of their power stations
will increase the cost of electricity by 30%.
The polluter-must-pay-principle is implemented in Europe and
North America, and is increasingly applied in South Africa.
MOVEMENT OF POLLUTION
Pollution does not stay in one place but is moved around the
world by air and water, as well as by living organisms. Even in
Antarctica, birds and marine mammals show traces of pollutants
such as DDT and PCBs. Some pollution is deliberately moved
abroad. Companies restricted by pollution control regulations at
home, sometimes move their plants to other less restrictive
countries, as was the case with the plant involved in the Bhopal
chemical disaster. Or while remaining at home, they may sell
products abroad, that are classed in their own countries as too
dangerous for sale, such as banned pesticides. In some cases
hazardous waste may also be shipped abroad, generally from
industrialised countries to developing countries willing to
accept such waste for a fee, despite the hazards (see Enviro
Facts "Toxic Waste"). When such pollutants turn up again in the
originating country, as when food is imported that contains
banned pesticides, the process is said to be completing the
'circle of poison'.
WHAT YOU CAN DO
* Avoid the creation of waste (see Enviro Facts "War on waste").
* Find out all you can about pollution and protest loudly when
you see it happening.
* Report air pollution to the Chief Air Pollution Control
Officer (CAPCO), Department of Health.
* Report freshwater pollution to the Department of Water
Affairs. Report marine pollution to Department of Environment
Affairs and Tourism, Sea Fisheries Research Institute.
* Report land (solid waste) pollution to the Department of Water
Affairs.
FURTHER READING
REPORT OF THE THREE COMMITTEES OF THE PRESIDENT'S COUNCIL ON A
NATIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT SYSTEM.
Government Printer, Cape Town, 1991.
ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT IN SOUTH AFRICA.
R. Fuggle and M. Rabie. Juta, Cape Town, 1992.
HAZARDOUS WASTE IN SOUTH AFRICA. VOL. 1-5, AND SUMMARY.
R. Noble (ed). Department of Environment Affairs and CSIR, 1992.
SOUTH AFRICAN ENVIRONMENTS INTO THE 21ST CENTURY.
B. Huntley, R. Siegfried and C. Sunter. Human and Rousseau
Tafelberg, Cape Town, 1989.
BACK TO EARTH.
J. Clarke. Southern Books, Johannesburg, 1991.
GOING GREEN: PEOPLE, POLITICS AND THE ENVIRONMENT IN SOUTH
AFRICA.
J. Cock and E. Koch (eds). Oxford University Press, Cape Town,
1991.
All books are available from Russel Friedman Books, PO Box 73
Halfway House 1685. Tel. 011-70022300/1.
Eskom's environmental education brochures. Available from Eskom,
address below.
Enviro facts "Acid rain", "Energy and environment", "Energy
options", "Ozone", "Global warming", "Precious water", "Toxic
waste", "Marine pollution", "War on waste".
USEFUL CONTACTS
Department of Environment Affairs and Tourism.
P/Bag X447, Pretoria, 0001. Tel. 012-310 3425
Department of Health.
P/Bag X828, Pretoria, 0001. Tel. 012-312 0000
Department of Environment Affairs and Tourism: Sea Fisheries
Research Institute.
P/Bag X2, Rogge Bay, 8012. Tel.021-402 3911.
Department of Water Affairs and Forestry.
P/Bag X313, Pretoria 0001. Tel. 012-2999111.
Eskom, Environmental Marketing.
PO Box 1091, Johannesburg, 2000. Tel. 011-800 3398.
Institute of Waste Management.
National Office, P.O. Box 1378, Pinegowrie, 2123. Tel.
011-7891101.
South African Institute of Ecologists.
PO Box 37618, Valyland, Fish Hoek, 7975. Tel. 021-6864419.
Water Institute of South Africa.
PO Box 1948, Parklands, 2121. Tel. 011-7284303.
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