5.5 POLLUTION CASE STUDIES
A case study of groundwater pollution in
India
An example of groundwater pollution caused
by excessive extraction is that fluoride contami-
nation. Fluorisis is not a localized problem. It has
spread across 19 states and across a variety of
ecological regions ranging from the Thar desert,
the Gangetic plains and the Deccan plateau.
Each of these regions are distinct in terms of
rainfall, soil type, groundwater recharge regime,
climatic conditions and hydrology. High fluoride
concentration in groundwater is a natural phe-
nomenon in several countries such as China, Sri
Lanka, West Indies, Spain, Holland, Italy and
Mexico. Experts claim that a fluoride belt
stretches across the Middle East across Pakistan
and India and then into Southeast Asia and the
South of China. According to a report of the
Rajiv Gandhi National Drinking Water mission,
the bedrock of the Indian peninsula consists of
a number of fluoride bearing minerals. When
the bedrock weathers the fluoride leaches into
water and the soil. Although the Indian penin-
sular bedrock has always been the same, this
problem has only surfaced during the last three
decades. This is related to the over extraction of
groundwater which has resulted in the tapping
of aquifers with high fluoride concentrations.
The beginnings of this phenomenon can be
traced back to the 1970s and the 1980s when
there was massive state investment in rural
water development for irrigation as well as for
drinking. Encouraged by state subsidies on die-
sel and electricity, people invested in diesel and
submersible pumps in a bid to extract ground-
water through borewells. This policy aggravated
the fluoride problem.
Fluoride mainly enters the human body through
drinking water where 96 to 99 percent of it
combines with the bones as it has an affinity for
calcium phosphate in the bones. Excess intake
of fluoride can lead to dental fluorosis, skeletal
fluorosis or non-skeletal fluorosis. Dental fluo-
rosis is characterized by discoloured, blackened,
mottled or chalky white teeth. Skeletal fluorosis
leads to severe and permanent bone and joint
deformities. Non-skeletal fluorosis leads to
gastro-intestinal problems and neurological dis-
orders. Fluoride can damage the foetus and
adversely affect the IQ of children.
Once fluoride is detected in water, the only so-
lution is to deflouridate it. Various technologies
are available for this process. However the type
of technology to be selected depends upon the
fluoride levels in the water and the volume of
water to be deflouridated. None of the Indian
technologies are however fool-proof.
Deflouridation plants and household water treat-
ment kits are stop-gap solutions.
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