ARSENIC POISONING - ENVIRONMENT

News: Climate change-driven sea-level rise could increase arsenic poisoning in Bangladesh: Study

 

What's in the news?

       Sea-level rise driven by climate change could significantly release arsenic — a cancer-causing agent — into Bangladesh’s drinking well water, according to a new study.

 

Key takeaways:

       This could affect roughly 97 percent of Bangladesh’s population consuming well water.

       Approximately 49 percent of the area’s drinking well water is contaminated with arsenic concentrations exceeding 10 micrograms per litre limit by the World Health Organization.

       Exposure to arsenic is already increasing the rates of death and disease from skin, bladder, liver and lung cancers and vascular disease in the country.

       India, too, suffers from a high burden, with Bihar showing an upsurge in cases affected by arsenic poisoning.

 

Arsenic Poisoning:

       It occurs in both inorganic and organic forms.

       Arsenic occurs naturally in the environment and can be released into water through natural activities such as hydrothermal action & dissolution of rocks.

       Inorganic Arsenic compounds (such as those found in water) are highly toxic while organic Arsenic compounds (such as those found in seafood) are less harmful to health.

       Shift from surface water and shallow open well sources to deep tube wells in Arsenic affected areas has also led to Arsenic contamination in some States.

       Arsenic leaching may also occur from industrial sources or Arsenic-containing insecticides, herbicides, or rodenticides.

 

Arsenic into Groundwater:

       During weathering of rocks and minerals followed by subsequent leaching and runoff.

       It can also be introduced into soil and groundwater from anthropogenic sources.

       Where there are sulfide mineral deposits and sedimentary deposits deriving from volcanic rocks, the concentrations can be significantly elevated.

       Natural low-temperature biomethylation and reduction of arsines also release arsenic into the atmosphere.

 

 

Affected Areas:

       Most severely affected areas are located in the Ganges-Brahmaputra delta region.

       West Bengal, Bihar, Jharkhand, Uttar Pradesh, and Assam are particularly impacted.

       The contamination is primarily found in groundwater sources, which many communities rely on for drinking water.

 

Permissible Limits:

       The World Health Organization’s provisional guideline value for arsenic in drinking water is 0.01 mg/l (10 μg/l).

       The permissible limit of arsenic in India in the absence of an alternative source is 0.05 mg/l (50 μg/l).

 

Arsenic Poisoning Effects:

       Arsenic Poisoning leads to adverse health effects through inhibition of essential enzymes, which ultimately leads to death from multi-system organ failure.

       Long-term exposure to arsenic from drinking-water and food can cause cancer and skin lesions.

       It has also been associated with cardiovascular disease and diabetes.

       In utero and early childhood exposure has been linked to negative impacts on cognitive development and increased deaths in young adults.