The document discusses various types of marine pollution including plastic debris, oil pollution, eutrophication, acidification, thermal pollution, radioactive pollution, and underwater noise pollution. It outlines the sources, impacts and solutions for each type of pollution. The sources discussed include land-based sources like agricultural and municipal runoff, ocean dumping, oil spills, and deep sea mining. The impacts covered are effects on marine life, human health, marine activities, and water quality. Solutions proposed are prevention through regulations, cleanup methods like bioremediation, skimming, burning, and reducing plastic and radioactive waste through various recycling and disposal methods.
This slide contents
* What is Water Pollution?
* Types and sources of Water Pollution
* Water Pollutants
* Population and Water needs
* The Effects Of Water Pollution
* Solutions to Water Pollution
* Preventive Measures for Water Pollution
This PPT contains definition, types, signs, source and effects of water pollution. Prevention of water pollution and some data of water pollution of world. It contains pictures so high school grade student can also go through this PPT. Although It is for Bachelor's level.
Water pollution and its effect on animal healthSameer Sankhe
This ppt is related to Water pollution and It's effect on Animal health, preventive measures to be implemented, with information about various types of water pollution in the environment.
Marine pollution in sri lanka
A presentation Done by the 1st Year Students (Group 4) of the Department of Forestry and Environmental Sciences, University of Sri Jayewardenepura for the Environmental Chemistry Assignment..
Marine pollution, its impact on marine life and remedial measures against wat...MD. JAKIR HOSEN
Ocean is a source of valuable resources. It impacts a lot on the whole environment of the earth. So a perfect use is very necessary for the ocean. This slide is very effective about marine pollution and its remedial measures.
This slide contents
* What is Water Pollution?
* Types and sources of Water Pollution
* Water Pollutants
* Population and Water needs
* The Effects Of Water Pollution
* Solutions to Water Pollution
* Preventive Measures for Water Pollution
This PPT contains definition, types, signs, source and effects of water pollution. Prevention of water pollution and some data of water pollution of world. It contains pictures so high school grade student can also go through this PPT. Although It is for Bachelor's level.
Water pollution and its effect on animal healthSameer Sankhe
This ppt is related to Water pollution and It's effect on Animal health, preventive measures to be implemented, with information about various types of water pollution in the environment.
Marine pollution in sri lanka
A presentation Done by the 1st Year Students (Group 4) of the Department of Forestry and Environmental Sciences, University of Sri Jayewardenepura for the Environmental Chemistry Assignment..
Marine pollution, its impact on marine life and remedial measures against wat...MD. JAKIR HOSEN
Ocean is a source of valuable resources. It impacts a lot on the whole environment of the earth. So a perfect use is very necessary for the ocean. This slide is very effective about marine pollution and its remedial measures.
In this PPT you will learn about Marine Pollution. Kindly Go through the PPT.
Contents:-
Marine Pollution / Ocean Pollution
Causes of Marine / Ocean Pollution
Effects of ocean pollution
Global Initiatives
International conventions
Greenpeace
How to prevent Ocean pollution?
The oceans cover over 70% of the globe. Its health, wellbeing of humanity and the living environment that sustains us all are inextricably linked. Yet neglect of ocean acidification, climate change, polluting activities and over-exploitation of marine resources have made oceans, one of the earth’s most threatened ecosystems.
Marine pollution, also known as ocean pollution, is the spreading of harmful substances such as oil, plastic, industrial and agricultural waste and chemical particles into the ocean.
Sustainable development (WATER POLLUTION)Abdul Qayum
Safe water and adequate sanitation are indispensable for healthy ecosystems, reducing poverty, and achieving inclusive growth, social well and being and sustainable livelihoods.
Water pollution presentation for nerds like you who do not leave their room for hours.
You deserve divine punishment, ediot
We should eat more chicken. And more potato based snacks.
1. Under the guidance of
Dr. P.M. Munnoli
Professor
DEPARTMENT OF CIVIL ENGINEERING
PRESENTED BY:
DIBYAJYOTI SARMA 2SD11CV020
8th Semester B.E., Civil Academic Year: 2014-2015
1
MARINE POLLUTION
2. INTRODUCTION:
• From a distance it’s very clear that our is a blue planet .But as
we move closer we see very quickly the surface of our oceans,
seas , strewn with marine debris .
• Debris of all shapes ,sizes and colors widely distributed in the
surface and around the coastal shores.
• Even penetrates our deepest ocean’s , hundreds and
thousands of meter below to the ocean floor.
• Affecting the very nature of the planet by destroying its
fundamental component that is “marine life”
• It covers almost 3/4th of our planet and we depend on it for
our very life.
3. Definition:
• The introduction by man, directly, or indirectly, of substances
or energy to the marine environment
• Resulting in deleterious effects such as: hazards to human
health, hindrance to marine activities, impairment of the
quality of seawater for various uses and reduction of
amenities.
4. Literature Review
• Selman mindy(2007) studied eutrophication ,water quality
trading and hypoxia and its effects on aquatic life.
• Janice Podsadam,(19th June ,2001)collected , studied and
evaluated the effect of disposal of plastic debris .
• Andrew Farmar ,Routledge , (1997) Has analyses the nature of
pollution on fresh water system and managing Radioactive
substances. and its impact on the environment.
5. General Impacts:
• Impacts on living resources
• Hazards to human health
• Hindrance to marine activities
• Impairment of quality of seawater
• Reduction of amenities
• Loss of aesthetic beauty
• Impacts on the sensitive habitats
6. Sources of pollution
• Land Based sources
1: Agricultural Run-off
2: Municipal and Industrial waste .
Ocean Based sources
1: Oceanic Dumping
2: Oil spills by cargo ships
3: Deep Ocean Mining
7. Types of pollution:
Acidification:
• Ocean are normally a carbon sink , absorbing carbon dioxide
from the atmosphere.
• Because of the level of increasing in the carbon dioxide in the
atmosphere ,the ocean’s are becoming more acidic.
• Rise in the ocean temperature and
Due to acidification capacity of the ocean
carbon sink is gradually started to get
weaker and weaker day by day.
Island with the fringing reefs
In the Maldives .
8. Eutrophication:
• Natural or human caused nitrates and phosphates enters the
system(such as untreated sewage and fertilizers from
agriculture run-off) increased nutrients causes surface plant
and algae growth.
• It can result in an increase in the ecosystem's primary
productivity (excessive plant growth and decay), and further
effects including lack of oxygen and severe reductions in water
quality, fish, and other animal populations.
• Rapid growth of and decay consume oxygen , especially at the
lower depths fish and shellfish die.
• Water becomes cloudy Lakes turn green, yellow or red in
color.
9. PME Receiving body Water Quality Standards : From Red sea
and Arabian sea Industrial Regions.
Source: Presidency of meteorology and environment(PME) Saudi Arabia(06-07)
10. DischargeParameters (mean for 2006-2007)
Soucres: (PME) General Environmental Law and Rules for Implementation (2006-2007).
11. Plastic Debris:
• 80 percent of marine debris consisting of plastic -The mass of
plastic in the oceans may be as high as one hundred million
metric tons.
• Plastic which are not recycled accounted over 60 percent of
the total marine debris are present in the ocean either in the
form of micro or macro plastic.
• 76 percent of the wildlife present in the ocean encounters
plastic either as a barrier or as a mislead for food material.
• Aquatic life is totally threatened through entanglement
,suffocation and ingestions.
12. • Plastic debris ,when bulky or tangled ,its difficult to pass and may
become permanently lodged in the digestive tracts of these
animals ,blocking the passage of food and causing death through
starvation or infections.
• Toxic additives in the plastic leach out when exposed in water.
• Waterborne hydrophobic pollutants collected and magnify on the
surface of the plastic debris. Thus making plastic much more
dangerous in water then in land.
• Hydrophobic contaminants are also known to bio accumulate in
fatty tissues ,biomagnifying up the food-chain and putting
pressures on apex predators.
EFFECTS:
13. Oil Pollution:
• Oil pollution is mostly used to describe marine oil spills, where
oil is released into the ocean or coastal waters.
• Oil spills are due to the following:
• crude oil from tankers
• offshore platforms
• drilling rigs and wells
• spills of refined petroleum products
(such as gasoline, diesel)
• spill of any oily refuse or waste oil
16. Fate
• When oil is spilled on sea it spreads over the surface to form a
thin film – called oil slick.
• Light oil spreads faster than heavy wax oil
• Low molecular weight fractions evaporate
• Water soluble components dissolve
• Non-water soluble components emulsify and forms a viscous
mass – “chocolate mousse”
• Heavy residue from tar balls.
TAR BALLS
Chocolate mousse
17. Impacts:
• Effects – Impairment of marine life
• Plankton, esp. neuston at highest risk – exposed to water
soluble components leaching from oil
• Fixed vegetation –Sea grass beds– killed or flowering inhibited
• In Mangroves – lenticels clogged with oil oxygen level in
sediments drops – death
• Sea birds –buoyancy and thermal insulation lost.
• Commercial damaged.
• Mortality of fish eggs and reduction in catch.
• Death of fish eggs and larvae.
• Tourism – becomes nuisance – avoided by beach goers – loss
of revenue.
• Loss of sensitive marine habitats – loss of flora and fauna.
18. Thermal Pollution
Thermal pollution is the degradation of water quality by any
process that changes ambient water temperature
Sources :
• Industrial wastewater
• Power plant discharges
• Desalination plant discharges
• Urban runoff
19. Thermal pollution
• Thermal Shock: Aquatic life adapted to a certain water
temperature, and can go into a shock if the temperature
changes.
• Oxygen dissolves in the water decreases
• Increase in the rate of photosynthesis ,which means increase
in the rate of plant growth.
• Increase in the metabolic rate of the fishes ,which increases
their need for oxygen.
• Biotic Effects: Change in the environment may also results in
migration of birds and fishes and other organisms to more
suitable environment. As a result one may has the problem of
compromising the old food chain and new environment,
hence it effects the Biodiversity of that area.
Effects:
20. Radioactive pollution
• Radioactive wastes are usually by-products of nuclear power
generation and other applications of research and medicine.
• Radioactive waste is hazardous to human health
• Pollution due to radioactive wastes – Radioactive pollution
Sources:
• Weapons testing – Testing of nuclear weapons – when
exploded underwater release fission products and isotopes
• Liquid wastes – Discharge from the cooling water of nuclear
reactors
• Solid wastes – Dumping of radioactive wastes in Sea (now no
longer practiced).
21. Radioactive Pollution
Impacts
Highly lethal - Even low doses causes fatal damage
Possibility of bioaccumulation – especially in algae and bivalves
eg. Porphyra near a nuclear power plant location
had 10 times more caesium-137 than in the
surrounding waters
22. Under –Water noise Pollution
• Marine life can be susceptible to noise or the sound pollution
from sources such as passing ships, oil exploration seismic
surveys, and naval low-frequency active sonar.
• Between 1950 and 1975, ambient noise in the ocean
increased by abo, the noise from shipping, seismic surveys,
and military activity is creating a totally different environment
than existed even 50 years ago.
• That high level of noise is bound to have a hard, sweeping
impact on life in the sea .
24. Solutions to marine pollution
There are two methods mainly:
1) Correction - Costly and time Intensive
2) Prevention –Requires attitude changes.
Since the damaged till now has been very viral and brutal and
may be the damage is irreversible and everlasting. Still a lots of
thing can be prevented and saved, because this is not the end.
How to protect marine life?
25. Solution to marine pollution
Oil Spill Solution :
Oil spills are mainly from land based (industrial wastewater) and from
oil carrying cargo in the ocean.
There are many types of cleaning methods used for spills, including:
• Bioremediation: using microorganisms or biological agents to break
down or remove oil
• Dredging: some oils are actually denser than water, and would sink.
These would require cleaning below the surface of the impacted
water.
• Skimming: can be effective areas where the water is calm.
• Dispersion: materials such as some detergents can disperse oil into
smaller clusters that may be easier to remove than larger areas.
However, the detergents can sink deeper into the water
than oil does, so it may cause harm deeper in the water while reducing
negative environmental impact on the surface.
• Burning: controlled burning can often eliminate a large proportion of
oil in water, but of course requires great care to avoid having the fire
spread. The burning oil can also cause air pollution.
26. Solution to marine Pollution
Plastic Debris Solution:
We dump 8 million tons of plastic into the ocean each year.
27. Solution to marine Pollution
• The most effective way to stop plastic pollution in our oceans
is to make sure it never reaches the water in the first place.
• Instead throwing them anywhere it can be managed into land
fills ,which occupies less spaces .
• Recycling of plastic through environmentally sound manner:
1) Primary : recycling involves processing of a waste/scrap into a
product with characteristics similar to those of original product.
2) Secondary: recycling involves processing of waste/scrap
plastics into materials that have characteristics different from
those of original plastics product.
3) Tertiary : recycling involves the production of basic chemicals
and fuels from plastics waste/scrap as part of the municipal
waste stream or as a segregated waste.
4)Quaternary : Recycling by process of burning or incineration.
28. Solution to Marine Pollution.
The steps involving recycling :
1) Selection: The recyclers / reprocessors have to select the
waste / scrap which are suitable for recycling /reprocessing.
2) Segregation: The plastics waste shall be segregated as per the
Codes 1-7 mentioned in the BIS guidelines (IS:14534:1998).
3) Processing: After selection and segregation of the pre-
consumer waste (factory waste) shall be directly recycled. The
post consumer waste (used plastic waste) shall be washed,
shredded, agglomerated, extruded and granulated .
• Polymer coated Bitumen Road: The coating of plastics over
aggregate improves Impact, Los Angels Abrasion and Crushing
Value with the increase in the percentage of plastics. The
extracted bitumen showed the near value to the marshal
stability thus the entire road was having good skid resistance
and texture values and improves the binding strength.
29. Solution to marine Pollution
• Plastic waste disposal using plasma pyrolysis.
• Conservation of plastic waste into liquid fuels.
30. Solution To Marine Pollution
• Bio-degradable Plastic : The environmentally degradable
polyolefin films are defined as those materials that contain
degradation process of polyolefin article (bag/film/sheet)
under conditions of composting.
•
Bio-degradable Plastic Bottles.
31. Solution to Marine Pollution.
Radioactive Pollution:
• The radioactive pollution can be controlled by number of
ways. It includes the stoppage of leakage from the radioactive
materials including the nuclear reactors, industries and
laboratories.
• The disposal of radioactive material must be safe and secure.
They must be stored in the safe places and must be changed
into harmless form.
• The wastes with a very low radiation must be put into the
sewage.
• The nuclear power plants must follow all the safe instructions.
The protective garments must be worn by the workers who
work in the nuclear plants.
• The natural radiation must be at the permissible limits and
they must not cross it.
32. Control Measures
• Prevention of marine pollution from ships- Protocol 1978,
(MARPOL 73/78) regulations should be followed and familiar
with the emergency procedure.
• Japan’s Marine Pollution ACT 1976 for marine Disaster. –
Regulations must be applied to all kind of oils, hazardous liquid
substances in bulk ,harmful substances in packaged form
sewerage and water generated on ships. Regulations must be
applied to the construction and equipment ships.
• Prevention of marine pollution by wastes: International
conventions on oil pollution preparedness .,responses ,co-
operations was adopted in 1990. which stated that protections
of sea –birds and fishes and other sea living organisms ,sea
should be cleaned and drifted.
33. Acts and regulations:
1. Marine Pollution Control Act,1974,1987,1994.
2. Hazardous waste handling and management act,1989.
3. Marpol 73/78
4. Japan’s Marine Pollution ,act1976 for marine Disaster.
5. Prevention of marine pollution by wastes act,1990.
6. Oil Pollution Act ,1990.
7. Water Pollution Control Act And Litter Act,1977.
35. Conclusions
CONCLUSION:
Discussing ocean pollution brings up a diffuse, complex series of
issues. Nevertheless, some pollution problems can and have been
successfully addressed. Since the network of oceans on this planet is
interconnected, the pollution issue will only truly be solved by
consistent improvement in areas across the globe. Knowing that the
growing human population has intensified the problem of ocean
pollution, it is clear that we each need to get involved in contributing
to the solution. It will require a high degree of participation and
collaboration at the individual, family, community, industry, and
government levels. Efforts at all of these levels become more effective
with elevated public awareness about pollution sources and impacts.
Just by reading about ocean pollution, you become better equipped to
prevent it. Once you are aware of the problem, participation in local
volunteer organization is a great way to start taking action. You can
help communicate ocean pollution issues to your friends and family,
and also encourage legislators to enact regulations that address ocean
pollution. Continued public support is vital for research, monitoring,
and further development of pollution reduction strategies and
technologies.
36. References:
• Podsadam, Janice (19 June 2001). "Lost Sea Cargo: Beach
Bounty or Junk?". National Geographic News. Retrieved 8 April
2008.
• Selman, Mindy (2007) Eutrophication: An Overview of Status,
Trends, Policies, and Strategies. World Resources Institute .
• Farmer, Andrew (1997). Managing Environmental Pollution.
Psychology Press. ISBN 0415145155.
• http://www.cmc-ocean.org
• Wikipedia.org/wiki/marine_pollution.html