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WATER WORLD
Thirsty megacities poisoning rural groundwater
by Staff Writers
Paris (AFP) Sept 27, 2016


Flint's water getting cleaner -- but not yet safe
Chicago (AFP) Sept 28, 2016 - New tests show water quality improving in Flint, the Midwestern US city hit by a massive lead contamination scandal, officials said Wednesday, but it is not yet cleared of the toxin.

It has been more than two years since lead from aging pipes first began to leach into the drinking water of the hard-scrabble city, when officials switched the water source to a more corrosive one as a cost saving effort.

Michigan Governor Rick Snyder told a press conference that 95 percent of recent tests of the most problematic areas showed lead levels considered safe under federal guidelines. But he stopped short of declaring Flint's water safe to drink without lead filters, and would not offer a timeline of when it would be.

"Frankly, without filters, I don't think anyone in the US should trust water from a lead pipe," said Marc Edwards, a professor of environmental engineering at Virginia Tech university, who is assisting Michigan with the Flint response.

"This is a national lesson that we are learning and we have to think about," he said.

Snyder on Wednesday urged federal lawmakers to send long-delayed aid money to the embattled city.

"I highly encourage the federal government to move forward and to get the aid done for Flint," said the Republican governor.

Aid for the city has become a major bone of contention as the US Congress wrangles over a federal government funding bill, with lawmakers scrambling to stave off a shutdown at week's end.

Lawmakers settled on a compromise Wednesday, that would allocate $170 million for infrastructure funds for cities with water contamination.

State officials want to replace all the lead pipes in Flint and in Michigan, but that process could take years. City residents have complained about the slow pace of the recovery, and filed several lawsuits.

Officials in Michigan had initially denied that there was a problem with Flint's water. Those denials lead to a criminal investigation, and charges against nine current and former state employees.

For its part, the state has sued two consulting firms -- a French and a Texas company -- accusing them of negligence and fraud. Veolia North America and Lockwood, Andrews & Newnam of Texas have responded by saying their suggestions and concerns were ignored by the state.

A massive drawdown of water beneath delta-based megacities across the world may be pulling surface pollution deeper into the ground, risking contamination and health problems for local populations, a new study said Tuesday.

Research led by Holly Michael of the University of Delaware in the United States used the example of Bangladesh's capital Dhaka to show how unsustainable water use was exacerbating arsenic pollution.

Water consumption in greater Dhaka, home to some 18 million people, is lowering the local water table by more than three metres per year in some areas.

Slaking the capital's thirst is driving down shallow water contaminated with arsenic -- known to cause a host of deadly health problems.

Using a new method for calculating water flows, the researchers showed that deep sources of clean water outside the capital could be polluted "within a decade," said the study, published in Nature Communications.

Previously, scientists had said it would take up to a century for contaminants such as arsenic to infiltrate deep groundwater at least 150 metres below the surface.

"In highly populated deltas and river basins worldwide, water resources are stressed and surface pollution is widespread," said the study.

"Pumping to supply water to megacities in these regions -- even in the water-rich system of the Bengal Basin -- threatens the safety of regional groundwater resources by inducing fast transport of contaminants to depth, even in areas tens of kilometres outside city limits."

Bangladesh's arsenic problem dates back the 1970s, when the government drilled several million shallow tube wells to provide villagers with water free of bacteria and viruses.

- Water level down 60 metres -

What officials did not realise at the time was that the soil was heavily laced with naturally-occurring arsenic.

This led to digging ever deeper wells to reach untainted water.

But now these newer sources are also threatened.

"Little attention has been given to the potentially catastrophic impacts these hydrological alterations can have on the water resources" of rural and semi-rural areas where water treatment may not be possible, said the study.

Arsenic poisoning in rural Bangladesh's groundwater has been a known health hazard for at least two decades, and is blamed for the death of more than 40,000 people every year.

Chronic exposure to the grey-white mineral is linked to cancers of the liver, kidney and bladder, as well as heart disease.

Michael and colleagues used regional data to devise a new way to analyse water flows in natural aquifers, natural interconnected layers of rock that accumulate rainfall and river water.

Over the last half century, the water table under the capital has declined by about 60 metres.

Nearly half a billion people live in 50 deltas around the globe, most of them concentrated in megacities.

The availability and status of surface water supply will be aggravated by climate change and rapid population growth, the researchers note.


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