Niger-Delta Named Among The World’s 10 Most Polluted Places in the World! [PHOTOS]
According to the report, the World Health Organization (the public
health arm of the United Nations) has estimated that 23 percent of
deaths in the developing world can be attributed to environmental
factors like pollution. Besides cancer, exposure to toxic chemicals can
cause acute and chronic poisoning, cognitive impairment, organ damage
and respiratory problems, the report said, adding that children are most
vulnerable to these impacts.
Researchers said the 10 sites were chosen based on the severity of
their health risk and prioritized by their value as examples of
different kinds of pollution threats around world.
Here are the 10 sites listed in the report, in alphabetical order:
Agbogbloshie, Ghana:
This dumpsite in the Ghanaian capital Accra is the second largest e-waste
processing area in West Africa. When sheathed cables from electronics
like microwaves and computers are burned to recover the copper material
inside, metals can particulate in the smoke and get left behind in the
soil. An estimated 40,000 people are affected by the pollution threat.
Chernobyl, Ukraine:
The world's worst nuclear disaster
at Chernobyl in 1986 released 100 times more radiation than the atom
bombs dropped over Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Skin lesions, respiratory
ailments, infertility and birth defects affected people in contaminated
areas in Belarus, Russia and Ukraine for years and the accident has been
linked to more than 4,000 cases of thyroid cancer. Pollution from
Chernobyl is estimated to have affected some 10 million people.
Citarum River, Indonesia:
More than 500,000 people are
directly affected, and up to 5 million people are indirectly impacted,
by chemical pollution in the Citarum River Basin in West Java. Lead,
aluminum, manganese and iron concentrations in the river are several
times higher than world averages because of pollution from industrial
and domestic sources.
Dzershinsk, Russia:
A major site of chemical
manufacturing in Russia, Dzershinsk has high levels of pollutants like
dioxins and phenol in the groundwater. Residents suffer from diseases
and cancers of the eyes, lungs and kidneys and life expectancy in the
city is just 47 for women and just 42 for men.
Hazaribagh, Bangladesh:
Tanneries using old, outdated
and inefficient processing methods to make leather dump 22,000 cubic
liters of toxic waste each day into the city's main river, impacting
more than 160,000 people. This waste includes the cancer-causing chemical hexavalent chromium.
Kabwe, Zambia:
Decades of unregulated lead mining in
this African city have caused serious health problems for residents of
Kabwe, where more than 300,000 people are thought to be affected by
pollution. In 2006, children's blood lead levels in Kabwe were found to exceed the recommended levels by five to 10 times.
Kalimantan, Indonesia:
On the island of Borneo, Kalimantan and the surrounding areas have become contaminated with mercury
because of small-scale gold mining, impacting some 225,000 people.
Miners in the region use mercury in the gold extraction process,
resulting in mercury emissions during the amalgamation and smelting
processes.
Matanza Riachuelo, Argentina:
More than 15,000
industries are thought to be releasing a variety of pollutants into the
Matanza River, which passes through Buenos Aires and empties into the
Rio de la Plata. Contaminants include zinc, lead, copper,
nickel and total chromium (a term that includes two forms of chromium),
making the drinking water near the Matanza-Riachuelo river basin
seriously unsafe, threating more than 20,000 people who live in the
area.
Niger River Delta, Nigeria:
An unknown number of
people are impacted by the voracious petroleum industry in this densely
populated part of Africa, where there were nearly 7,000 incidents
involving oil spills between 1976 and 2001. The report said that about 2
million barrels of oil were being extracted from the delta every day as
of last year.
Norilsk, Russia:
Norilsk is an industrial city in
Siberian Russia, where each year, nearly 500 tons each of copper and
nickel oxides and 2 million tons of sulfur dioxide are released into the
air. Life expectancy for factory workers in Norilsk is 10 years below
the Russian average.
livescience!
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