Duttagupta Srimanti, Bhanja Soumendra N, Dutta Avishek, Sarkar Soumyajit, Chakraborty Madhumita, Ghosh Ashok, Mondal Debapriya, Mukherjee Abhijit
Graduate School of Public Health, San Diego State University, San Diego, CA 92182, USA.
Interdisciplinary Centre for Water Research, Indian Institute of Science Bangalore, Karnataka 560012, India.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2021 Mar 10;18(6):2832. doi: 10.3390/ijerph18062832.
The 2020 COVID-19 pandemic has not only resulted in immense loss of human life, but it also rampaged across the global economy and socio-cultural structure. Worldwide, countries imposed stringent mass quarantine and lockdowns to curb the transmission of the pathogen. While the efficacy of such lockdown is debatable, several reports suggest that the reduced human activities provided an inadvertent benefit by briefly improving air and water quality. India observed a 68-days long, nation-wide, stringent lockdown between 24 March and 31 May 2020. Here, we delineate the impact of the lockdown on groundwater and river sourced drinking water sustainability in the arsenic polluted Ganges river basin of India, which is regarded as one of the largest and most polluted river basins in the world. Using groundwater arsenic measurements from drinking water wells and water quality data from river monitoring stations, we have studied ~700 km stretches of the middle and lower reaches of the As (arsenic)-polluted parts of the river for pre-lockdown (January-March 2020), syn-lockdown (April-May), and post-lockdown periods (June-July). We provide the extent of As pollution-free groundwater vis-à-vis river water and examine alleviation from lockdown as an opportunity for sustainable drinking water sources. The overall decrease of biochemical oxygen demand (BOD) and chemical oxygen demand (COD) concentrations and increase of pH suggests a general improvement in Ganges water quality during the lockdown in contrast to pre-and-post lockdown periods, potentially caused by reduced effluent. We also demonstrate that land use (agricultural/industrial) and land cover (urban-periurban/rural) in the vicinity of the river reaches seems to have a strong influence on river pollutants. The observations provide a cautious optimistic scenario for potentially developing sustainable drinking water sources in the arsenic-affected Ganges river basin in the future by using these observations as the basis of proper scientifically prudent, spatially adaptive strategies, and technological interventions.
2020年的新冠疫情不仅导致了巨大的人员伤亡,还对全球经济和社会文化结构造成了冲击。在全球范围内,各国实施了严格的大规模隔离和封锁措施,以遏制病原体的传播。尽管这种封锁的效果存在争议,但一些报告表明,人类活动的减少意外地带来了空气质量和水质短期改善的好处。印度在2020年3月24日至5月31日期间实施了长达68天的全国性严格封锁。在此,我们描述了封锁对印度恒河砷污染流域地下水和河流源饮用水可持续性的影响,该流域被认为是世界上最大且污染最严重的流域之一。利用饮用水井的地下水砷测量数据和河流监测站的水质数据,我们研究了河流砷污染中下游约700公里长的河段在封锁前(2020年1月至3月)、封锁期间(4月至5月)和封锁后(6月至7月)的情况。我们给出了相对于河水而言无砷污染地下水的范围,并探讨了将封锁带来的缓解作为可持续饮用水源的契机。与封锁前和封锁后时期相比,生化需氧量(BOD)和化学需氧量(COD)浓度的总体下降以及pH值的升高表明,封锁期间恒河水质普遍改善,这可能是由于废水排放减少所致。我们还表明,河段附近的土地利用(农业/工业)和土地覆盖(城市-城郊/农村)似乎对河流污染物有很大影响。这些观测结果为未来在受砷影响的恒河流域潜在地开发可持续饮用水源提供了一个谨慎乐观的情景,可将这些观测结果作为制定科学审慎、空间适应性策略和技术干预措施的基础。