Friday, April 19, 2024

Non-stop river pollution threatens water security

World Environment Day
Non-stop river pollution threatens water security
Laws, rules, HC directives go in vain
Rashad Ahamad
No pragmatic step is yet to be taken to protect the four rivers surrounding Dhaka even after declaring them ecologically critical 13 years ago.
In September 2009, the Department of Environment declared the four rivers Ecologically Critical Areas under Section 5 of the Bangladesh Environment Conservation Act. There are total 13 ECAs in Bangladesh.
The government formulated the Ecologically Critical Areas (ECA) Management Rules 2016 for implementing the act, including restoring and protecting the ecology of the endangered ECAs.
As inaction by the government agencies concerned drags on, the pollution of the Buriganga, the Turag, the Balu and the Sitalakhya has been intensifying, risking the water security of some 20 million people of the capital city of Bangladesh, the world’s largest delta, said green activists.
Environment minister Shahab Uddin, however, said that the environment department was struggling to protect the rivers with its limited manpower, but, he added, its efforts cannot succeed without cooperation of other ministries.
National River Conservation Commission chair Manjur Ahmed Choudhury said that he did not see any pragmatic step taken by the DoE as the agency did not even form a committee to work out a plan of action to restore the ecology of the rivers, a measure mandatory according to the 2016 rules.
Manjur said that not only the four rivers around the capital but most of the rivers across the riverine country were now in a critical condition due to pollution and grabbing.
On the occasion of World Environment Day today, a coalition of environment advocacy organisations has arranged a mass bathing in the Buriganga to press the demand for ensuring fresh water in the river by checking all sorts of pollution so that people can use the river water without any harm caused to them.
The government and various NGOs have also chalked out numerous programmes marking the day.
The UN Environment Programme has set the theme for this year’s World Environment Day as Only One Earth: Living Sustainably in Harmony with Nature. We need to save this world, save all kinds of animals, plant more trees.
NRCC chair Manjur Ahmed at an event on the day at the National Press Club in the capital on Saturday said that the water of the rivers around Dhaka became toxic because of pollution.
‘If anyone falls in these rivers in March and April they will die not for the inability to swim but for the toxicity of the water,’ he added.
The river water has become a death threat for people, he further said.
Green activists and researchers blamed the Dhaka WASA as the top responsible agency for the pollution caused mainly by industrial and municipal wastes.
DoE officials, quoting lab test reports, said that the water quality of the four rivers had been remaining so bad for eight months between October and May for years that aquatic life could not survive in them.
According to a lab report, the Buriganga water’s biochemical oxygen demand, or BOD, stood at between 15 and 20 and dissolved oxygen, or DO, at zero while the BOD standard is below six and the DO value should be more than 5 in any surface water body.
Dhaka WASA managing director Taqsem A Khan said that the agency was diverting its water intake point to the Meghna and the Padma as the Sitalakhya and Buriganga water was now not treatable due to the extreme pollution.
The water pollution in the Buriganga and the Sitalakhya, he said, is so acute that their water cannot be treated for several months in the dry season.
As the water of the rivers is no more treatable, the lone water supplying agency will collect water from the Padma, 33 km away from the city, and the Meghna, 22 km away, he said.
Bangladesh Poribesh Andolon executive vice-president Abdul Motin criticised the Dhaka WASA plan as he blamed that the agency itself was polluting the rivers.
‘It is a ridiculous plan of the Dhaka WASA to collect water from the Padma and the Meghna instead of stopping the water pollution in the nearby rivers,’ he said.
Institute of Water Modelling executive director Abu Saleh Khan said that the water security of the people living in the capital city and some other parts of the country is gradually becoming more and more challenging due to unabated pollution.
‘We are fortunate as we have vast water, but we are very unfortunate as we cannot protect water from pollution,’ he said.
He cautioned that if the water pollution was not stopped water security would be at risk not only in Dhaka but across the entire country.
Donors, he noted, are now worried about investing even in the Meghna water treatment plant due to pollution.
Industrial units are dumping untreated effluents in the rivers to save money even though they have treatment plants, Abu Saleh resented.
Environment minister Shahab Uddin admitted that some factories were involved in this practice, adding that the DoE has limited manpower for monitoring the factories regularly and for bringing the errant industries to book.
‘We are working to bring the effluent treatment plants under an online monitoring system,’ he said.
A research published on the ScienceDirect website in February 2021stated that more than 7,000 industrial units in Hazaribagh, Tejgaon and Dhaka-Narayanganj-Demra areas discharged some 60,000 cubic metres of toxic waste-water into the four rivers every day.
The unavailability of treatable surface water is also prompting the Dhaka WASA to dig deeper for water, risking both the quantity and quality of ground water as the acquirer continues to decline.
Taqsem admitted that Dhaka WASA collected 20 per cent of the total sewage generated in Dhaka but denied the responsibility for the rest.
‘Households will manage their waste by themselves as the Dhaka WASA does not collect any bills from them for the purpose,’ he explained.
However, he said that five sewage treatment plants were under construction according to the Dhaka WASA sewage master plan.
Once the plants start operating by 2030 no sewerage will fall into the rivers, he said.
NRCC chair Manjur also said that the NRCC was working with the Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology to develop a model of water treatment that would release clean water into the rivers after treating polluted water in canals.
Thereafter, the government had taken some steps but except relocating the tanneries from Hazaribagh to Savar in 2017 and demarcating rivers no othersteps were implemented fully.
BAPA general secretary Sharif Jamil said that the tanneries were now polluting the Dhaleshwari River in Savar, upstream of the Buriganga.
The government in 2009 also formed the high-powered National Taskforce to Protect Rivers and the National River Protection Commission for saving not only the four rivers but all rivers of the country. The taskforce is now almost inactive.
The High Court in July 2019 declared all rivers as living entities, observing that the country will survive if the rivers are protected.
Green activists said that even after having many laws and HC directives the government was not sincere in saving the rivers of the country.
‘Without political commitment, river pollution and encroachment cannot be stopped,’ said MA Abdul Matin, a former BAPA president.

Article originally published on New Age

Related News

Stakeholders on St. Martin’s demand stringent action against plastic pollution

Environment Desk : dhakamirror.com Stakeholders have stressed that raising awareness alone is not enough to tackle plastic pollution on the country’s only coral island, Saint Martins, and are advocating for restrictions on plastic use and penalties for non-compliance. At a panel discussion entitled “Plastic Free St Martins” on Wednesday, they called for strict limits on ... Read more

Amazon deforestation down by a third in 2023, says Brazilian government

Environment Desk : dhakamirror.com Deforestation in Brazil’s Amazon fell by 33.6% in the first six months of President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva’s term compared with the same period in 2022, the government says. Its suggests the rainforest shrank by 2,649 sq km this January-June, down from 3,988 sq km in those six months last ... Read more

Half of world’s largest lakes, reservoirs losing water, Study finds

News Desk : dhakamirror.com More than half of the world’s largest lakes and reservoirs have lost significant amounts of water over the last three decades, according to a new study, which pins the blame largely on climate change, intensifying concerns about water for agriculture, hydropower and human consumption. According to a team of international researchers, ... Read more

Waterways disappear as rivers die

World River Day today Rashad Ahamad Inland waterways, once the prime mode of transportation in Bangladesh, have declined fast as many rivers, canals, and other water bodies have disappeared in riverine Bangladesh over the past decades. Due to geographical location, inland waterways were the main mode of transportation in Bangladesh, a country part of the ... Read more

Chattogram city produces 249 tonnes of plastic waste every day

Will generate 428 tonnes by 2052 News Desk : dhakamirror.com Chattogram city produces 249 tonnes of plastic waste every single day — 56 percent of which remains uncollected and littered in the environment, according to a new study. “Of the plastic waste, the most are sachets, single-use utensils, and personal care items, ” the study ... Read more

Air pollution takes 3 years off life in Bangladesh

Impact on life expectancy in Bangladesh worse than in India, Pakistan, Bhutan Mohammad Al-Masum Molla Air pollution cuts the average life expectancy of a person in Bangladesh by almost three years, said a global report. It is higher than in India, Pakistan, Bhutan, and Afghanistan. Nepal, with air pollution-linked life expectancy loss of 3.05 years, ... Read more

Rain at the summit of Greenland for the first time on record

Something extraordinary happened recently. On August 14, 2021, it rained at the highest point on the Greenland Ice Sheet for several hours — the first rainfall event in recorded history, and air temperatures remained above freezing for about nine hours. The record-breaking rain is the latest in a string of warning signs about how climate ... Read more

Emissions of CO2 driving rapid oceans ‘acid trip’

The world’s oceans are becoming acidic at an “unprecedented rate” and may be souring more rapidly than at any time in the past 300 million years. In their strongest statement yet on this issue, scientists say acidification could increase by 170% by 2100. They say that some 30% of ocean species are unlikely to survive ... Read more

Warming trees limit warming – a little

Warmer temperature prompts trees to release aerosols which in turn stimulate cloud formation. And that can help to cool the temperature, at least modestly. Trees may provide the Earth with a little shade from global warming – indirectly. European and Canadian researchers report that they have found what engineers like to call a negative feedback ... Read more

Evaluating services of forest

Biodiversity contributes considerably to economy and environment Dr. M. A. BASHAR In developing countries, the necessity of publicising services of forests is severely lacking. This sector must be given attention with special emphasis. The country like Bangladesh has to be very serious in all respects to understand and exercise the services offered by the forests. We ... Read more

What the outcome yields for Bangladesh?

Doha Climate Conference What the outcome yields for Bangladesh? Md. Mahfujur Rahman Thirty-seven industrialized countries had been accused of releasing Greenhouse gases in Kyoto Protocol under United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC). Signatory members to the UNFCCC have been meeting annually in Conference of the Parties (COP) to assess progress in dealing with ... Read more

Down with the hills!

Probir Kumar Sarker Though Bangladesh is prominently a plain land, its Chittagong, Cox’s Bazar, Rangamati, Khagrachhari, Bandarban and Sylhet have hilly areas with forests and rich biodiversity. These areas are full of natural resources fulfilling needs of the people and other living species. But at present, the destruction of hills in every area has become ... Read more

A prerequisite for sustainable development

Natural Resource Governance A prerequisite for sustainable development Rukshana Sultana The constitution of Bangladesh — article 143– illustrates that all natural resources on land and underground minerals and other things of value underlying the ocean within the territorial waters, or the ocean over the continental shelf of Bangladesh, are the properties of Bangladesh. In general, ... Read more

Contemplating mitigation measures

Global Warming Contemplating mitigation measures Md. Atikur Rahman All things that make up the environment are interrelated. The way in which people, animals and plants are related to each other and to their surrounding is known as ecology. The ecosystem is a complex web that links animals, plants and every other life form in the ... Read more

Save Savar from further degradation

Probir Kumar Sarker Over the recent years, Savar is experiencing immense pressure of new industrial, commercial and residential establishments. But most of these have already been done or are underway indiscriminately haphazardly, and by violating the environmental laws and ignoring overall public convenience, not to speak of the care for future growth. It has been a ... Read more

Save Sonadia, save Sundarbans

Sourav Mahmud Sonadia Island is one of the biodiversity hotspot of Bangladesh. In 1995, the Government of Bangladesh included a provision for the declaration of Ecologically Critical Area (ECA) in the Bangladesh Environment Conservation Act. Twelve sites are classified as ECAs and guidelines exist to control further damage to these areas. Sonadia is considered ecologically ... Read more

Ramsar Convention: Our obligation

Dr. M.A. Bashar It is learnt from newspapers very recently that in the Sundarbans area three large constructions will take place which are very dangerous and detrimental to normal functioning of the mangrove forest ecosystem. It means that the interactions between biotic and abiotic factors will be seriously hampered in the ecosystems conservation. The projects ... Read more

Legal response to loss and damage

Climate Change Legal response to loss and damage Hafijul Islam Khan The adverse impacts of climate change have continued to devastate the lives and livelihoods of millions of people and inflict large economic losses. According to the Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, there has been a global increase in weather ... Read more

Corals of St.Martin’s at stake

Global Warming and Over-Exploitation Corals of St.Martin’s at stake Dr. Anisuzzaman Khan Honey comb corals around Saint Martin’s island are under stress due to coral bleaching. While the COP 17 — UN climate convention — was being held in Durban of South Africa, a Nature Watch Team (NWT) of Ekattor Television watched that a noticeable ... Read more

Environment: Future farmers hold key

GLOBAL food demand will double by 2050, according to a new projection, and the farming techniques used to meet that unprecedented demand will significantly determine how severe the impact is on the environment,  researchers say. The study researchers warn that meeting the demand for food will clear more land, increase nitrogen use and significantly add ... Read more