1. POLLUTION OF PERIYAR
INTRODUCTION
Kerala in South India is known worldwide as 'God's own country'
because of the breathtakingly scenic and prosperous nature.
The backwaters are unique in the world, a network of lakes, canals and
deltas of forty-four rivers that drain into the Arabian Sea. The
backwaters of Kerela are a self- supporting eco-system teeming with
2. aquatic life. The largest backwater stretch in Kerela is the Vembanad
Lake, which flows through three districts and opens out into the sea at
the Kochi Port.
Nobody seems to know, that only 15 Km away from Cochin, the “Queen
of the Arabian Sea ”, there is Eloor Island, home to Kerala’s largest
industrial cluster.
Eloor, an island of 11.21 sq/km, on the Periyar River is home to more
than 247 chemical industries, including the only DDT-producing facility
in India. Most of these units have been here for the last fifty years and
use extremely obsolete and polluting technologies.
EFFECTS
Toxic pollution from heavy metals to chemicals and radioactivity is
found in air, soil and in the Periyar River, which spreads the
contamination to the Vembanad Lake, Cochin and to the Arabian Sea.
This leads to a large-scale devastation of aquatic life in the backwaters,
the agricultural land and it is also affecting the health of the population
in the area.
The soil, water bodies and the wetlands in and around Eloor have been
contaminated with heavy metals like zinc, lead, cadmium, chromium
and persistent organic pollutants like DDT. Gas emissions let into the air
include acid mists, ammonia and chlorine.
There is no pollution free area on Eloor Island, not only there is no clean
air to breathe, but there is also no access to safe drinking water.
The inhabitants of the area suffer all kinds of maladies due to the
contamination of the land, air and water by these cocktail of poisons.
3. There is an overwhelming increase in most types of systemic disease,
the organs affected are the neoplasm blood and the blood forming
organs, the endocrine, nutritional and metabolic systems, mental and
behavioural problems due to the affection of the nervous system and
many more. Every organ in the body seems affected.
There is also another business, which causes serious and far- reaching
repercussions on the ecosystem of the Periyar River, the longest river in
the state, and it’s backwater.
The illegal and indiscriminate sand mining from the river basin cause
destruction of the ecological niche and habitat of various biotic forms,
stagnation and trapping of saline water in the regions of mining due to
the artificial deepening of the river basin. Flooding during monsoon
became a threat for the villages near the riverbanks and also to the
population of the entire state.
In fact, the Indian Rare Earths Plant on Eloor, a Central Government of
India Undertaking under the administrative control of the Department of
Atomic Energy (DAE), is storing radioactive waste, an estimated 20,000
tonnes of thorium, in six buildings on the riverbank of the Periyar.
The first of these buildings is only two meters away from the river and
once used as a garage, it was converted into a storage place without
safety measures. Actually the building has a one meter crack on the wall
facing the river. The other storage buildings are within 100 meters from
the Periyar River.
Once the fishery resources from this region were of major means for
income for thousands of families belonging to this area. The heavy
industrialization and the consequent effluent discharge made this part of
the river almost lifeless or dead. Nowadays the river has become a
sewage canal carrying a myriad of hazardous and toxic industry-borne
pollutants.
At present, backwater fishing in this region is gradually vanishing; the
different types of gears and crafts like the pitoresque Chinese nets,
which were operating in this area have almost disappeared. Thousands
of people are deprived of their conventional labourhood. Poor fishermen
have no other choice than continue to fish in toxic water to survive.
The fishermen who can afford the legal and financial difficulties try to
4. succeed in deep-sea fishing. But the situation is still difficult because of
the over exploitation of marine wealth and the Free Trade Agreement
(FTA) signed between India and Thailand. Since it became effective in
January 2007, the fish sector in Kerala is experiencing a deep crisis
because of the low prices competition in the export and the inland
market
CAUSES
INDUSTRIAL POLLUTION
Lot of industrial wastes discharged into water are mixtures
of chemicals, which are difficult to clean up. Increase of the
heavy metals in industrial waste water that drains into
rivers has resulted in severe river pollution. Some industrial
wastes are so toxic that if they are not immediately and
strictly controlled then it will become very expensive later
to deal with. Some industries try to cut the costs of safety
measures by illegally dumping chemicals at places where
they think they will not be caught. These dumped wastes
then runs off into river alongwith rain water
5. AGRICULTURAL POLLUTION
The extensive uses of chemicals in the form of fertilizers and
pesticides in agriculture have left the water bodies contami-
nated with heavy metals. Such heavy metals enter human
body through the food we eat, and many of them cause
health problems such as cancer. When waste in the form of
chemicals or liquid manure enter rivers, the amount of
oxygen in the water reduces. Without sufficient oxygen no
life form can survive in a water body. It also permanently
changes the nature of river. Another serious contaminant
from agriculture is nitrate apart from heavy metals. Nitrate
is found in agricultural chemicals. The water running off
from agricultural fields brings nitrate into rivers. We also
intake nitrate through our drinking water when sourced
from the river. Some experts believe that high levels of
nitrate in drinking water may pose a serious threat to health.
OIL POLLUTION
Careless people can also pollute rivers and harm wildlife by
pouring things like used car oil and paint into drains. If oil
6. enters a slow-moving river it forms a rainbow-coloured film
over the entire surface preventing oxygen from entering the
water. As mentioned above, without oxygen the river is
biologically dead.
REMEDIES
Controlling river pollution is in our own interest. As citizens
of India we have constitutional duty to protect our environ-
ment. Similarly, the government also has a duty to protect
the environment for the welfare of its citizens. There are
many ways we can protect the river from pollution. Some
immediate ways to control pollution are:
• Industries should install machineries to remove con-
taminants from their effluents and wastewater. One way
to do so is installation of Effluent Treatment Plant (ETP).
This way we can control pollution at the source itself.
• The towns and cities should also have facilities to clean
the sewage effluent. All towns and cities must have
Sewage Treatment Plants (STPs) that clean up the
sewage.
• Farmers should give up chemicals and pesticides in
farming and should instead adopt organic methods of
farming thus reducing chemical pollution of rivers.
• We should stop our religious practices that pollute river
Water
HOW SHOULD I CONTRIBUTE TO MAKE THE
RIVERS CLEAN
As pointed out above, it is our duty to protect our
7. environment. An individual effort may not be sufficient to
clean our rivers, but when all of us contribute towards this
goal it becomes a big effort. Thus it can help in cleaning up
our rivers. There are many ways you can contribute towards
a clean river in your locality:
• Promoting communities participation in local river
cleaning up
• Organizing awareness programs and meetings on the
river pollution and its threats
• Distribution of literature on the causes and ill effects of
river pollution
• Talking to our family and friends for spreading aware-
ness on the importance of good water quality and clean
rivers.