Basics of Environmental Science

(Rick Simeone) #1
94 / Basics of Environmental Science

principal source of pollution was the German Ruhr? Fortunately, such transnational issues can now
be resolved within the European Union, where mechanisms exist to ensure that the costs of
antipollution measures are shared equitably.
Regulations are necessary, but accidents cannot be prevented by legislation and they can cause serious
harm. On 1 November 1986, there was a fire at a warehouse near Basel owned by the chemical
company Sandoz. Water used to fight the fire washed an estimated 30 tonnes of chemicals into the
Rhine, including mercury and organophosphorus compounds and a red dye, rhodamine, that allowed
the progress of the pollutants to be observed. The accident was exacerbated by a smaller spillage of
herbicide on the preceding day from a Ciba-Geigy plant, also at Basel. By 12 November pollution
was severe between Basel and Mainz, the river being declared ‘biologically dead’ for 300 km
downstream from Basel, and by the time the affected water reached the Netherlands its mercury
content, of 0.22 μg litre-1, was three times the usual level. Drinking water had to be brought by road
to supply several cities. Despite the severity of the incident, however, the river had almost recovered
one year later (MASON, 1991, pp. 2–3). Switzerland is not a member of the EU, but its government
accepted responsibility for the 1986 pollution incident and promised to consider bringing its
antipollution regulations into line with those of the EU (ALLABY, 1987).
Water is a so-called ‘renewable’ resource. After it has been used it returns to the hydrologic cycle
and in time it will be used again. It is also abundant globally and the oceans are so vast that their
capacity for absorbing, diluting, and detoxifying pollutants is immense. Despite this, the provision
of wholesome fresh water and the hygienic disposal of liquid wastes in the impoverished semi-arid
regions of the world is woefully inadequate. It is there that fetching water for ordinary domestic use

Figure 3.3 The Rhine basin, draining land in six countries

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