Tag Archives: water pollution

Bahrain: Residents cry foul over pipe burst

Residents of Manama, are complaining of an unbearable smell due to a burst sewerage water pipe for the last three days. 

They say the area is so full of the foul-smelling water that many of residents have no choice but to plod across it to reach their homes or even enter shops. 

One resident claimed several complaints to the authorities had gone unanswered.

“When we complain to the Electricity and Water Authority (EWA), they tell us to go to the Works Ministry, and when we go there, they say go to the EWA,” said Saji Abraham. 

“Some people have come and had a look and told us they will fix the leak, but nothing seems to be happening.”

A Works Ministry official said they were aware of the problem and were trying to fix it as soon as possible. “We will have it fixed possibly in the next two days,” he said.

Source: Gulf Daily news, 11 January 2011

Egypt, Qalyubia: village water system replaced after typhoid outbreak

The government has completed the construction of a new water system in Al-Baradah village, after contaminated drinking water had led to an outbreak of typhoid.

At the same time, a committee formed by the public prosecutor, cleared the contractor of the pipes of charges of polluting the water in the old water system. A committee statement explained that it is “practically impossible for the contractor to pump sewage water inside the pipes.”

It added that if that were the case, the central water pipe as well as the water pipes in all the surrounding villages would have also been contaminated.

The report further indicated that the contamination could have resulted from connecting the water pipes to an old water network, without purifying the water, adding that it could have also been the result of illegal house connections.

In related news, the prosecution office ordered the detainment of some officials in Al-Baradah village for four days pending investigations. The detainees include chairman of Al-Baradah’s local council Ibrahim Abdel Moemen, Salah Eddin Al-Seman, in charge of the village’s resources, Sayed Madbouly and Salam Al-Sayed, in charge of the village’s water pipes.

When typhoid erupted, Adly Hussein, governor of Qaliubiya, accused the contractor of polluting the drinking water in the pipes. Around 311 people in Al-Baradah were infected with typhoid two months before, but all have recovered since.

Source: Yasmine Saleh / Daily News Egypt, 09 Sep 2009

Egypt: 40 per cent drink unsafe water

The lack of clean water is one of Egypt’s most urgent problems, a Dutch newspaper reports. Corruption, pollution and wastage are to blame, it says.

When the inhabitants of the small town of Al-Barada (pop. 50,000) in Qalyubia Governorate, north of Cairo, finally got piped drinking water two months ago, it was cause for celebration. Until they discovered that sewage was polluting the water and a thousand people contracted typhoid.

Now Al-Barada again must rely on water tankers. According to lawyer Gamal Yehi, who is representing the interests of the inhabitants, what has happened is a typical result of the corruption that is endemic in the whole of Egypt. Good plans are poorly implemented with inferior materials by unreliable contractors and an incompetent government.

Al-Barada’s groundwater is polluted because the drains, which are supposed to transport wastewater to the river Nile, are blocked with waste.

Every year 550 million cubic metres (m³) of industrial wastewater, 2.5 billion m³ of agricultural wastewater and an unknown amount of sewage flow into the Nile.

Nearly 40 per cent of Egyptians has unsafe water. As a direct result, 17,000 children die every year from diarrhoea and kidney failure rates are among the highest in the world.

At 900 m³ per capita per year, Egypt is below the water poverty line of 1,000 m³ per capita year. And, according to World Bank findings, that figure is expected to fall to “670 cubic metres by 2017 unless policies are implemented to sustainably manage growing demand.”

Egypt’s dependence on the Nile has often lead to tensions with its downstream neighbours. In 1999, the ‘Nile Basin Initiative’ was established among the Nile riparian states to promote cooperative development of the river. Negotiations remain difficult and have recently been stalled for 6 months.

Despite the water crisis, Egyptians continue to waste water. According to the World Bank this is because water tariffs are too low. UN-appointed expert Catarina de Albuquerque reported that the “tariff for drinking water in Egypt is considered one of the lowest tariffs in the world, with over 92 percent of households spending less than 1 percent of their household budget on water and sanitation”.

Inefficient irrigation systems are the reason why most water, 85 per cent, is used by the agricultural sector. Still this is not enough as unequal distribution forces many farmers to use untreated wastewater to grow their crops. In the beginning of August 2009, the minister of Agriculture announced that all fruit and vegetables irrigated with sewage have to be destroyed.

Source: Alexander Weissink, NRC Handelsblad [in Dutch, subscriber-only access], 12 Aug 2009

Iraq: Halliburton delivers US troops dangerous water

New Inspector General report finds that Halliburton delivered contaminated water to US bases in Iraq
[The Real News] Tuesday March 11th, 2008

Read transcript

Senator Byron Dorgan held a press conference in the US Senate to discuss a recent report by the inspector general, a report that found that US contractors had been delivering contaminated water to US troops in Iraq. The report cited KBR, a subsidiary of Halliburton.

See also AP: Water makes US troops in Iraq sick