Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

WATER POLLUTION SAPS GLOBAL GROWTH: WB

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WASHINGTON: Poor water quality saps one-third of potential economic growth in the most heavily polluted areas, according to a new global analysis by the World Bank. “Deteriorat­ing water quality is stalling economic growth, worsening health conditions, reducing food production, and exacerbati­ng poverty in many countries,” WB group president said.

GDP GROWTH FALLS BY 0.82 PERCENTAGE POINTS IN REGIONS DOWNSTREAM OF HEAVILY POLLUTED RIVERS, SAYS REPORT

WASHINGTON: Poor water quality saps one-third of potential economic growth in the most heavily polluted areas, according to a new global analysis by the World Bank that underscore­s how crucial clean water is to productivi­ty.

“Deteriorat­ing water quality is stalling economic growth, worsening health conditions, reducing food production, and exacerbati­ng poverty in many countries,” World Bank group president David Malpass said in a statement released with the report on Tuesday.

POISONING THE WELL

Gross domestic product (GDP) growth falls by 0.82 percentage points in regions downstream of heavily polluted rivers, comneeded pared with an 2.33% average rate, according to the report. In middle-income countries, the impact is even larger, with almost half of growth lost, and in high-income nations, GDP declines 0.34 percentage points.

Bank researcher­s based conclusion­s on three major types of water quality data: Monitoring stations or collected samples, satellite data, and computer-generated data built from machine learning models. They also emphasised that better data is to shed light on the issue.

“Global water quality monitoring is severely lacking,” the researcher­s wrote.

Data automatica­lly captured by satellite eliminates reliance on river or lake monitoring stations, and also benefits from being tamper-proof, preventing vested interests from modifying results. Such readings also show variations across lakes or rivers rather than quality at a single point which may be misleading, the researcher­s wrote.

The report recommends policy solutions such as better informatio­n gathering including with blockchain technology, greater prevention efforts, and more investment in protecting water resources.

The report said bacteria, sewage, chemicals and plastics can reduce oxygen in water and increase toxicity. In particular, increased nitrogen levels in water can impact growth and mental developmen­t among children and reduce future adult earnings by as much as 2% compared with those who weren’t exposed.

Nitrogen typically enters water supplies when applied as fertiliser in agricultur­e. That can raise farm productivi­ty, but nitrates can damage the environmen­t when they accumulate in ground water and there’s run off entering rivers, lakes and oceans.

High salinity also contribute­s to poor water quality, driven by more intense droughts, storm surges and rising water extraction. That in turn depresses agricultur­al yields by an amount that could feed 170 million people, or about the population of Bangladesh, according to the report.

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