Worst Pollution Problems In The World: 2008 Anything

Worst Pollution Problems In The World: 2008 By   [87 more lists]

A list of the world's worst pollution problems as reported in 2008. World pollution issues. From radioactive waste, untreated sewage to air pollution, this list includes the world's pollution crises. All of these problems severely damage our environment. This Global Pollution Problems list can be sorted by any column. Source: the Blacksmith Institute, 2008.

 
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Rank   Name Category
  1. 1

    Artisanal Gold Mining

    Artisanal mining uses rudimentary methods to extract and process minerals and metals on a small scale. Artisanal miners frequently use toxic materials, including mercury, in their attempts to recover metals and gems. These toxic materials can be released into the environment, posing large health risks to the miners, their families and surrounding communities.
  2. 2

    Contaminated Surface Water

    Every human needs about 20 liters of freshwater a day for basic survival and an additional 50 to 150 liters for basic household use. With growing populations and an overall increase in living standards, not only is the demand for freshwater pushing limits, but increasing pollution from urban, industrial and agricultural sources is making available resources either unusable or dangerous to health.
  3. 3
    Book
    Indoor Air Pollution (IAP) describes the adverse ambient air conditions inside households, schools, places of work, and other indoor spaces. IAP can be caused by a range of sources, including stoves, smoking and machinery. Most IAP occurs in the developing world.
  4. 4

    Industrial Mining Activities

    Waste rock from industrial mining often generates acid drainage when air and water come into contact with metal sulfide minerals, and the resulting sulfuric acid solutions contaminate surface water bodies and groundwater.
  5. 5
    Book
    Groundwater is a very important source of freshwater, making up 97 percent of the world's accessible freshwater reserves. In addition, about two billion urban and rural people depend on groundwater for everyday needs. Obviously, the contamination of this water source, mostly through human activities, has far-reaching consequences.
  6. 6

    Metals Smelting and Processing

    Some metals smelting and processing facilities are known to emit high quantities of air pollutants such as hydrogen fluoride, sulfur dioxide, oxides of nitrogen, offensive and noxious smoke fumes, vapors, gases, and other toxins. A variety of heavy metals: lead, arsenic, chromium, cadmium, nickel, copper, and zinc are also released by the facilities.
  7. 7

    Radioactive Waste and Uranium Mining

    There are two kinds of radioactive waste: high level and low level. The former comes from "spent" fuel from a nuclear reactor. The latter includes material that has only a small decay activity or has become contaminated with, or activated by, nuclear materials. Both kinds of waste are extremely dangerous and hard to dispose of.
  8. 8

    Untreated Sewage

    Untreated sewage poses a major risk to human health since it contains waterborne pathogens that can cause serious illness. Untreated sewage also destroys aquatic ecosystems, and therby threatens human livelihoods, when the associated biological oxygen demand and nutrient loading deplete oxygen in the water to levels too low to sustain animal and plant life.
  9. 9
    Book
    The health impacts caused by outdoor air pollution have been widely recognized by both national governments and multilateral development organizations as a threat to urban populations, especially in developing countries. The World Health Organization estimates that 865,000 deaths per year can be directly attributed to outdoor air pollution.
  10. 10

    Used Lead Acid Battery Recycling

    The most common example of a lead acid battery is a car battery. When these batteries can no longer hold a charge, they have to be disposed of, but scavenging them and opening them up to extract the lead has become a cottage industry in the developing world. The lead is valuable, but it also puts everyone near it at severe risk for lead poisoning.

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