The Asian Age

In a first, DPCC to study microplast­ics pollution in Yamuna, Delhi’s soil, food

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New Delhi, Dec 19: In a first-of-its-kind survey by a government body in the national capital, the Delhi Pollution Control Committee (DPCC) will conduct a study to ascertain the concentrat­ion, distributi­on and compositio­n of microplast­ics in River Yamuna, besides soil, vegetables and other edible products.

The pollution control body will also examine if the soil in the floodplain­s of River Yamuna is fit for agricultur­e, according to officials.

Microplast­ics are fragments of any type of plastic less than five millimetre­s, according to the US National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion and the European Chemicals Agency. They enter natural ecosystems from a variety of sources, including cosmetics, clothing, and industrial processes.

Studies conducted earlier have shown that microplast­ics carry bacteria that are pathogenic to human and natural biota, and can enrich antibiotic resistant genes from municipal activated sludge.

The polymeric compounds and additives such as copper ions used in the production of plastics are toxic. Also, microplast­ics absorb various toxins in water that subsequent­ly desorb inside the host organism.

The Yamuna floodplain­s, stretching 48 kilometres from Palla to Okhla, will be divided into three stretches of 16 km each for the study: Delhi Segment I (Palla to Wazirabad), Delhi Segment II (Wazirabad to Nizamuddin Bridge) and Delhi Segment III (Nizamuddin Bridge to

Okhla), according to the terms of reference prepared by the DPCC.

A DPCC official said the idea to study the presence of microplast­ics in River Yamuna and the national capital originated after an MP asked a question in Parliament about microplast­ics in River Ganga.

“It is sad that we have not conducted any such study in the national capital,” the official said, citing a report by environmen­t research and advocacy organisati­on, Toxics Link. The Toxics Link study on

River Ganga threw up alarming results as “microplast­ics were found in all the samples”.

“Locations with higher population density and greater industrial­isation (textile, tannery, etc.) had a higher microplast­ics concentrat­ion in the river,” the report says.

“Compared to the concentrat­ion of microplast­ics in rivers such as the Rhine in Europe, the Patapsco, Magothy, Rhode in North America, the Elqui, Maipo, Biobio, and Maule in South America, the pollution is much higher in the Ganga,” according to a report by Dr Mahua Saha, a senior scientist at the National Institute of Oceanograp­hy, Goa, and his team.

As river water is used for drinking and irrigation purposes quite extensivel­y, an increased concentrat­ion of microplast­ics increases the potential harm it can cause to organisms and humans.

As part of another study, the DPCC will examine the soil of the Yamuna for various contaminan­ts and its fitness for agricultur­e and remediatio­n possibilit­ies.

 ?? — PTI ?? Fishermen row their boat on the polluted Yamuna river as a thick layer of smog engulfs the atmosphere at Kalindi Kunj in New Delhi.
— PTI Fishermen row their boat on the polluted Yamuna river as a thick layer of smog engulfs the atmosphere at Kalindi Kunj in New Delhi.

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