Pollution of Ghana’s water bodies ... CSIR predicts water crisis in 2030

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Pollution of Ghana’s water bodies ... CSIR predicts water crisis in 2030

No respect for water.

Dr Ampofo said many of the country’s water sources had been heavily polluted over the years with rubbish, chemicals used in mining such as mercury and inorganic fertilizer used for agriculture, because Ghanaians did not respect water and had taken it for granted.

But he cautioned that the combined effect of the increase in temperature, evaporation and the pollution of the country’s water sources were plunging the country into severe water crisis that would make Ghana a Sahelian country.

Citing examples of water bodies that were now extinct or were no more potable, he said “the Odaw River is now dead and not suitable for anything,” adding that global warming had resulted in a global rise in temperature of one per cent.

“In Ghana we can get about 5 per cent increase in temperature in some areas, so areas are beginning to dry up,” Dr Ampofo said. He stated that the rate at which the Densu River was drying up had also increased this year, just as the WRI had predicted before 1996.

He said “buffer zones are being abused with people now farming on river beds when they recede, therefore increasing the dryness and evaporation”. 

Attached link

http://www.csir.org.gh/index.php/component/k2/item/414-pollution-of-ghana-s-water-bodies-csir-predicts-water-crisis-in-2030

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