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Water Pollution




๐Ÿ’ง Chapter 05 ยท Topic 02 ยท Environmental Pollution

Water Pollution โ€” BOD, Eutrophication & Ganga

BOD, COD, dissolved oxygen, eutrophication, thermal pollution, heavy metal diseases, Ganga pollution and Namami Gange โ€” complete UPSC & PSC notes.

๐Ÿ’ง Key Water Quality Parameters

ParameterFull FormWhat it MeasuresKey Values
BODBiochemical Oxygen DemandOxygen needed by microbes to decompose organic matter (5 days, 20ยฐC)Clean water <5 mg/L; Sewage 200โ€“300 mg/L
CODChemical Oxygen DemandTotal oxygen needed to oxidise all chemical substances (biodegradable + non-biodegradable)Always higher than BOD
DODissolved OxygenActual oxygen dissolved in water; essential for aquatic lifeHealthy >6 mg/L; Fish die <4 mg/L
โญ Exam Tip: Higher BOD = more polluted water. Higher DO = cleaner water. BOD and DO are inversely related โ€” as organic pollution increases, microbes consume DO, reducing it. This is the basis of the Oxygen Sag Curve โ€” DO drops downstream of a pollution source, then recovers.

๐Ÿ’ง Eutrophication

  • Eutrophication = enrichment of water body with nutrients (mainly nitrogen and phosphorus), leading to excessive algal growth
  • Process: Nutrient input โ†’ algal bloom โ†’ algae block sunlight โ†’ submerged plants die โ†’ algae die โ†’ bacterial decomposition consumes all DO โ†’ fish and aquatic life die โ†’ “dead zone”
  • Cultural eutrophication โ€” caused by human activities (agricultural runoff, sewage discharge)
  • Natural eutrophication โ€” slow, natural process over thousands of years
  • Affected water bodies in India: Chilika Lake, Dal Lake, Hussain Sagar, Powai Lake
๐Ÿ“Œ Algal Bloom: Rapid growth of algae on water surface. Some algal blooms are toxic (Harmful Algal Blooms โ€” HABs) โ€” produce toxins that kill fish and are dangerous to humans. Blue-green algae (cyanobacteria) blooms are common in eutrophic water bodies.

๐Ÿ’ง Sources of Water Pollution

SourcePollutantsEffects
Industrial effluentsHeavy metals (Hg, Pb, Cd, As), acids, dyes, cyanideBioaccumulation, cancer, neurological damage
Agricultural runoffPesticides, fertilisers (N, P), herbicidesEutrophication, groundwater contamination, blue baby syndrome
Domestic sewagePathogens, organic matter, detergentsWaterborne diseases, high BOD, eutrophication
MiningAcid mine drainage, heavy metals, sedimentAcidification, heavy metal contamination
Thermal pollutionHot water from power plantsReduces DO, disrupts breeding, kills aquatic life
Oil spillsPetroleum hydrocarbonsKills seabirds, fish; coats marine organisms
Radioactive wasteRadioactive isotopesCancer, genetic mutations in aquatic organisms

๐Ÿ’ง Heavy Metal Pollution โ€” Key Diseases

MetalDiseaseLocationSourceEffects
Mercury (Hg)Minamata diseaseMinamata, Japan (1950s)Chemical factory dischargeNeurological damage, paralysis, death
Cadmium (Cd)Itai-Itai diseaseToyama, Japan (1950s)Mining waste in rice fieldsBone pain, kidney damage, fractures
Arsenic (As)ArsenicosisWest Bengal, BangladeshGroundwater contaminationSkin lesions, cancer, keratosis
Lead (Pb)Lead poisoningWorldwideOld pipes, batteries, paintNeurological damage, especially in children
Fluoride (F)FluorosisRajasthan, AP, TelanganaGroundwaterDental and skeletal fluorosis
Nitrates (NOโ‚ƒ)Blue Baby SyndromeAgricultural areasFertiliser runoffMethaemoglobinaemia in infants

๐Ÿ’ง Biomagnification & Bioaccumulation

  • Bioaccumulation โ€” gradual accumulation of a toxic substance in a single organism over its lifetime
  • Biomagnification โ€” progressive increase in concentration of a toxin at each successive trophic level in a food chain
  • Classic example โ€” DDT: Water (0.000003 ppm) โ†’ Plankton (0.04 ppm) โ†’ Small fish (0.5 ppm) โ†’ Large fish (2 ppm) โ†’ Birds (25 ppm)
  • DDT caused eggshell thinning in birds (bald eagle, peregrine falcon) โ†’ population crashes
  • Persistent pollutants that biomagnify: DDT, PCBs, mercury, dioxins, furans
  • These are also called POPs (Persistent Organic Pollutants) โ€” regulated by Stockholm Convention

๐Ÿ’ง Ganga Pollution

  • Ganga is the most polluted river in India; flows through 11 states; 500 million people depend on it
  • Receives untreated sewage from 100+ cities; only ~30% of sewage is treated
  • Major pollutants: untreated sewage (largest contributor), industrial effluents (tanneries in Kanpur โ€” chromium), religious offerings, cremation ash
  • Kanpur tanneries discharge chromium โ€” a toxic heavy metal
  • Ganga declared National River in 2008
  • Ganga Action Plan (GAP) โ€” launched 1985; largely unsuccessful
  • Namami Gange Programme โ€” launched 2014; โ‚น20,000 crore; implementing agency: NMCG (National Mission for Clean Ganga)
  • Key components of Namami Gange: sewage treatment plants, industrial effluent treatment, ghats development, afforestation, biodiversity conservation
โญ Ganga Dolphins: The Gangetic River Dolphin (Platanista gangetica) is India’s National Aquatic Animal. It is critically endangered due to Ganga pollution, dams, and fishing nets. It is blind and navigates by echolocation. Project Dolphin was launched in 2020.

๐Ÿ’ง Thermal Pollution

  • Discharge of heated water from thermal and nuclear power plants into water bodies
  • Warm water holds less dissolved oxygen โ†’ stresses aquatic organisms
  • Accelerates metabolism of aquatic organisms โ†’ disrupts breeding cycles
  • Makes water bodies more susceptible to algal blooms
  • Solutions: cooling towers, cooling ponds, spray ponds to reduce temperature before discharge

๐Ÿ’ง Water Pollution Control

  • Water (Prevention and Control of Pollution) Act 1974 โ€” establishes CPCB and SPCBs; sets water quality standards
  • Sewage Treatment Plants (STPs) โ€” treat domestic sewage before discharge
  • Effluent Treatment Plants (ETPs) โ€” treat industrial effluents
  • Zero Liquid Discharge (ZLD) โ€” industries must treat and reuse all wastewater; no discharge
  • Constructed wetlands โ€” natural treatment of wastewater using plants and microorganisms
  • Jal Jeevan Mission โ€” safe drinking water to all rural households by 2024

โœ… Revision Checklist โ€” Water Pollution

โœ… BOD = oxygen needed by microbes = higher BOD = more polluted; clean water <5 mg/L
โœ… DO = dissolved oxygen = healthy water >6 mg/L; fish die <4 mg/L
โœ… Eutrophication = excess N + P โ†’ algal bloom โ†’ DO depletion โ†’ fish die
โœ… Minamata disease = mercury poisoning (Japan); Itai-Itai = cadmium (Japan)
โœ… Arsenicosis = arsenic in groundwater = West Bengal + Bangladesh
โœ… Fluorosis = excess fluoride = dental + skeletal damage = Rajasthan, AP, Telangana
โœ… Blue Baby Syndrome = excess nitrates = methaemoglobinaemia in infants
โœ… Biomagnification = toxin concentration increases up food chain
โœ… DDT = classic biomagnification example = eggshell thinning in birds
โœ… Ganga = National River (2008) = most polluted river in India
โœ… Namami Gange = 2014 = โ‚น20,000 crore = NMCG implementing agency
โœ… Gangetic Dolphin = National Aquatic Animal = blind = echolocation
โœ… Thermal pollution = hot water from power plants = reduces DO
โœ… Water Act 1974 = establishes CPCB + SPCBs
โœ… ZLD = Zero Liquid Discharge = no industrial wastewater discharge