Dirty water use puts billion people at risk
rome — Untreated wastewater from cities is used to irrigate 50 per cent more farmland worldwide than previously thought, leaving some 885 million people exposed to the risk of diseases, including diarrhoea and cholera, a study said on Wednesday.
Crops covering almost 36 million hectares – an area roughly the size of Germany — are irrigated with water from rivers and lakes used by cities within 40 kilometres upstream to discharge sewage, according to an international team of researchers.
About 80 per cent of these crops — 29 million hectares — are in countries with very limited wastewater treatment, such as China, India, Pakistan, Mexico and Iran, according to the paper published in the journal Environmental Research Letters.
The study was the first to use remote sensing and geographic information systems (GIS) for its data analysis, improving on earlier estimates based on case studies and guesswork, researchers said.
Untreated wastewater, even when diluted, poses health risks for both farmers and consumers, said Pay Drechsel, one of the authors.
“In wastewater we have a lot of faecal contaminants from excrement,” Drechsel, a scientist at the International Water Management Institute (IWMI), told the Thomson Reuters Foundation by phone.
Farm workers can get skin infections from contact with contaminated water, while consumers are at risk of contracting worms, diarrhoea and even cholera from vegetables eaten raw, he said.
Pollution from human and animal waste affects nearly one in three rivers in Latin America, Asia and Africa, and some 3.4 million people die each year from diseases associated with pathogens in water, according to the United Nations. “As long as investment in wastewater treatment lags far behind population growth, large numbers of consumers eating raw produce will face heightened threats to food safety,” said the study’s lead author Anne Thebo, of the University of California, Berkeley. —