๐ฑ Chapter 05 ยท Topic 03 ยท Environmental Pollution
Soil Pollution โ Pesticides, Land Degradation & Remediation
Causes of soil pollution, pesticides, heavy metals, desertification, land degradation, and soil remediation techniques โ complete UPSC & PSC notes.
๐ฑ What is Soil Pollution?
Soil pollution is the presence of toxic chemicals, heavy metals, or other harmful substances in soil at concentrations that are harmful to living organisms and disrupt normal soil functions.
๐ฑ Causes of Soil Pollution
| Cause | Pollutants | Effects |
|---|---|---|
| Pesticides & herbicides | DDT, BHC, organochlorines, organophosphates | Bioaccumulation, kills soil organisms, groundwater contamination |
| Excess fertilisers | Nitrates, phosphates | Soil acidification, nitrate leaching to groundwater |
| Industrial waste | Heavy metals (Pb, Cd, Hg, Cr, As), acids, solvents | Toxic to plants and soil organisms, enters food chain |
| Mining | Heavy metals, acid mine drainage, tailings | Destroys soil structure, heavy metal contamination |
| Solid waste dumping | Plastics, e-waste, organic waste | Leachate contaminates soil and groundwater |
| Acid rain | HโSOโ, HNOโ | Acidifies soil, leaches nutrients, releases toxic aluminium |
| Sewage sludge | Pathogens, heavy metals | Pathogen contamination, heavy metal buildup |
๐ฑ Pesticides โ Key Facts
- Organochlorines (DDT, BHC, Aldrin, Dieldrin) โ persistent; bioaccumulate; banned in many countries; regulated under Stockholm Convention
- Organophosphates (Malathion, Parathion) โ less persistent; more acutely toxic; inhibit acetylcholinesterase enzyme
- Carbamates โ similar to organophosphates; less persistent
- Pyrethroids โ synthetic version of natural pyrethrin; less persistent; toxic to fish
- DDT was banned in India in 1989 for agricultural use (still used for malaria control)
- Silent Spring (1962) โ book by Rachel Carson that exposed the dangers of DDT and launched the modern environmental movement
โญ Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring: Published in 1962, this book documented how DDT and other pesticides were killing birds (hence “silent spring” โ no birdsong). It led to the ban of DDT in the USA (1972) and is credited with launching the modern environmental movement. It directly influenced the creation of the US EPA and the Stockholm Conference (1972).
๐ฑ Land Degradation in India
- India has approximately 120 million hectares of degraded land (about 36% of total land area)
- Types of land degradation:
- Soil erosion โ by water (most common) and wind; removes topsoil
- Waterlogging โ excess water in soil; common in canal-irrigated areas
- Salinisation โ salt accumulation in soil due to improper irrigation; makes soil infertile
- Alkalisation โ increase in soil pH; common in arid regions
- Desertification โ degradation of dryland ecosystems
- States most affected: Rajasthan, Gujarat, Maharashtra, Jharkhand, Odisha
๐ฑ Desertification
- Desertification = land degradation in arid, semi-arid, and dry sub-humid areas due to human activities and climate change
- India has ~30% of land under desertification/land degradation
- Causes: overgrazing, deforestation, unsustainable agriculture, climate change, over-extraction of groundwater
- Thar Desert โ India’s largest desert; spreading eastward (desertification)
- UNCCD (UN Convention to Combat Desertification) โ 1994; India is a party
- India’s commitment: restore 26 million hectares of degraded land by 2030 (Land Degradation Neutrality target)
๐ฑ Soil Remediation Techniques
| Technique | Method | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Phytoremediation | Plants absorb/degrade/immobilise pollutants | Heavy metals, organic pollutants; e.g., sunflower absorbs lead, cadmium |
| Bioremediation | Microorganisms (bacteria, fungi) degrade pollutants | Organic pollutants, oil spills; e.g., oil-eating bacteria |
| Soil washing | Washing contaminated soil with water/chemical solvents | Heavy metals, organic contaminants |
| Incineration | Burning contaminated soil at high temperatures | Organic pollutants; destroys them completely |
| Stabilisation/Solidification | Mixing with cement/lime to immobilise pollutants | Heavy metals; prevents leaching |
| Electrokinetic remediation | Electric current moves pollutants to electrodes for removal | Heavy metals in fine-grained soils |
| Mycoremediation | Fungi (mushrooms) degrade pollutants | Organic pollutants, petroleum products |
๐ Phytoremediation Types: Phytoextraction (plants absorb metals โ used after Chernobyl); Phytodegradation (plants break down organics); Phytostabilisation (plants immobilise pollutants); Rhizofiltration (roots absorb from water). Sunflower was used at Chernobyl to absorb radioactive caesium and strontium.
๐ฑ Solid Waste Management
- India generates ~62 million tonnes of municipal solid waste (MSW) per year
- Only ~20% is processed; rest goes to open dumps or landfills
- Hierarchy of waste management (3R + 2R): Reduce โ Reuse โ Recycle โ Recover โ Dispose
- Solid Waste Management Rules 2016 โ segregation at source (wet/dry/hazardous); EPR for producers
- Swachh Bharat Mission โ launched 2014; aims for open defecation free India; solid waste management
- Landfill โ engineered disposal site; lined to prevent leachate; produces landfill gas (methane)
- Composting โ biological decomposition of organic waste; produces manure
- Waste-to-Energy (WtE) โ burning waste to generate electricity; controversial due to air pollution
โ Revision Checklist โ Soil Pollution
โ
Organochlorines (DDT, BHC) = persistent = bioaccumulate = banned = Stockholm Convention
โ DDT banned in India 1989 for agriculture; still used for malaria control
โ Silent Spring (1962) = Rachel Carson = exposed DDT dangers = launched environmental movement
โ India = ~120 million hectares degraded land = ~36% of total land
โ Salinisation = salt accumulation = improper irrigation = infertile soil
โ Desertification = dryland degradation = India ~30% land affected
โ UNCCD = 1994 = UN Convention to Combat Desertification
โ India target = restore 26 million hectares by 2030 (LDN target)
โ Phytoremediation = plants absorb pollutants; sunflower absorbs heavy metals
โ Bioremediation = microorganisms degrade pollutants; oil-eating bacteria
โ Mycoremediation = fungi degrade pollutants
โ India generates ~62 million tonnes MSW per year; only ~20% processed
โ SWM Rules 2016 = segregation at source = wet/dry/hazardous
โ Swachh Bharat Mission = 2014 = solid waste management + ODF India
โ DDT banned in India 1989 for agriculture; still used for malaria control
โ Silent Spring (1962) = Rachel Carson = exposed DDT dangers = launched environmental movement
โ India = ~120 million hectares degraded land = ~36% of total land
โ Salinisation = salt accumulation = improper irrigation = infertile soil
โ Desertification = dryland degradation = India ~30% land affected
โ UNCCD = 1994 = UN Convention to Combat Desertification
โ India target = restore 26 million hectares by 2030 (LDN target)
โ Phytoremediation = plants absorb pollutants; sunflower absorbs heavy metals
โ Bioremediation = microorganisms degrade pollutants; oil-eating bacteria
โ Mycoremediation = fungi degrade pollutants
โ India generates ~62 million tonnes MSW per year; only ~20% processed
โ SWM Rules 2016 = segregation at source = wet/dry/hazardous
โ Swachh Bharat Mission = 2014 = solid waste management + ODF India