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Environmental Chemistry Lecture 1

Environmental Chemistry studies the sources, reactions, transport, effects, and fates of chemical species in various environments and the impact of human activities on them. It categorizes pollution into global, regional, and local types, with pollutants classified as persistent or non-persistent based on their environmental impact. The document also discusses the importance of environmental regulations and the need for pollution prevention to ensure environmental security.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
33 views37 pages

Environmental Chemistry Lecture 1

Environmental Chemistry studies the sources, reactions, transport, effects, and fates of chemical species in various environments and the impact of human activities on them. It categorizes pollution into global, regional, and local types, with pollutants classified as persistent or non-persistent based on their environmental impact. The document also discusses the importance of environmental regulations and the need for pollution prevention to ensure environmental security.

Uploaded by

kanyengaevylin
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Environmental Chemistry

ENV32201

Patricia Namate
Environmental Chemistry
Environmental Chemistry
 How do natural processes change chemistry of the
environment?

 How do human made chemicals get into the environment?

 How do such chemicals affect living organisms?


Natural processes

Natural fires

Plants produce phytochemicals

Volcanoes
Man-made processes

Mining Burning Fuels


Environmental Chemistry
Defined as the study of the sources,
reactions, transport, effects, and fates of
chemical species in water, soil, air, and living
environments and as well as the effects of
human activities on these environments.
Environmental Segments
Atmosphere
 Layer of gases that
surrounds the earth

 Major components
are N2, O2

 Minor Components
include Ar, CO2, H2O
Atmosphere
 Protects life by absorbing harmful solar radiation
(ultra-violet rays)

 Warming the surface through heat retention


(green house effect)

 Reducing temperature extremes between day


and night

 Sources of CO2, N2, O2


Hydrosphere
 Oceans, lakes, rivers, streams, polar ice caps and
glaciers, etc
Lithosphere
Outer mantel of solid
earth

Mineral occurring in
earth crust and soil

Soil-most important
component
Biosphere
Realm of living
organism and
their interaction
with environment

Directly linked
with energy flow
water chemistry
Environmental Pollution
 An undesirable change
in the physical,
chemical or biological
characteristics of air,
water, soil, or food that
can adversely affect the
health, survival, or
activities of humans or
other living organisms.
Some Definitions
 Pollution - introduction of chemicals, particulate
matter or biological materials that can cause harm
or discomfort to humans or other living things
 Pollutant – a substance which is present in a
concentration greater than its natural
concentration as a result of human activity or
unnatural activity and has a detrimental effect on
the environment
 Contaminant – a substance which is present at a
concentration greater than its natural
concentration and is not at a concentration to
cause detrimental effect on the environment
Global, regional and local pollutants
Global, regional and local pollutants
 The damage caused by a local pollutant is experienced near
the source- e.g non-biodegrable plastics

 The damage caused by a regional pollutant is experienced at


a greater distance from the source e.g SO2 from coal
emissions is believed to cause acid rain

 When pollution affects within a country its local, when it


affects two or more countries, its regional, when it affects
continents, its global
Pollutants
Non-persistent Persistent
• A substance that can cause • Compounds that are resistant
damage to organisms when to environmental
added in excessive amounts degradations through various
to the environment but is processes
decomposed /degraded by
natural communities and
removed from the
environment quickly e.g
malathion
Pollutants
Non-persistent Persistent
 Domestic sewage • Remain in the environment for
years unchanged
 Discarded vegetables
• Takes decades or more to
decompose
 Feacal matter, blood, urine • May be toxic
etc • E.g DDT (dichloro-diphenyl-
trichloroethane), Pb, Hg
 Non persistent pollutants
may be biodegradable • Damages are often irreversible
persistent pollutant
Some are classified as persistent
organic pollutants (POPs)
 Resistant to photolytic ,
biological and chemical
degradation
 POPs are often haloginated
and characterized by low
water solubility, leading to
their bioaccumulation in fatty
tissues
 They are semi-volatile
Receptor
 An element affected by pollutant

 Human being-receptor for smog

 Wild birds and animals-receptor for plastics


Sink
Longer term reservoir in which a substance is
essentially immobilized.
Such a repository may be natural or human-
made.
The oceans and ocean sediments are a sink
for many of the dissolved species present in
freshwater
Categories of Pollution
 Air pollution

 Water pollution Population

 Soil pollution
Production

Pollution
Risk and Hazard
• Hazard – something that can cause injury, disease, economic
loss, or environmental damage e.g chemical exposure

 Risk – the probability that something undesirable will result


from deliberate or accidental exposure to a hazard
Major types of hazards
 Biological
 Chemical
 Physical
 Cultural
 Lifestyle
Risk Assessment
 Process of gathering data and making assumptions to estimate
short- and long-term harmful effects on human health or the
environment from exposure to hazards associated with the
use of a particular product or technology (occurence)
Biological Hazards
 In terms of death rates, the most serious infectious diseases
are:
 flu
 AIDS
 diarrhea, and
 malaria.

with most of these deaths occurring in


developing countries
Pathways for Infectious Disease in
Humans
Chemical Hazards
 growing concern about chemicals that can cause cancer and
disrupt the human immune, nervous, and endocrine
systems…..
 Any synthetic or natural chemical can be harmful if ingested
in a large enough quantity.

 Many health scientists call for much greater emphasis on


pollution prevention to reduce our exposure to potentially
harmful chemicals.
Determining Chemical Safety
 Toxicology
 Dose
 Relevance of genetic makeup
 Multiple chemical sensitivity (MCS
How Do We Perceive Risks and How
Can We Avoid the Worst of Them?
 we can reduce the major risks we face by becoming
informed, thinking critically about risks, and making careful
choices.
Fact!!!!!
 Preventing pollution is
more effective and
less costly than
cleaning up pollution.
Complimentary approach to contain
pollution
Environmental Regulations Authorities
in Malawi
 Environmental Affairs Department
 Water Affairs Department
 Forestry Department
 Various Ministry Departments
 Malawi Bureau of Standards
 Non-governmental organisations
 Politicians
International Regulations,
Conventions and Programmes
 World Health Organisation (Health)
 Stockholm Convention (Persistent Organic Pollutants)
 Basel Convention (Transboundary movement ofhazardous
waste and their disposal)
 SADC Protocol 2010 (Regional initiative to phase out use of
PCBs by 2010)
 Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons
(Chemical weapons)
National regulations formulation
 Mandates
 Stakeholder consultation
 Identifying benchmarks (International, regional, local)
 Setting the priorities (Environment, Safety and Interests)
 Adaptation – basis
 Drafting
 Regulation
 Monitoring
 Enforcing the regulations
During formulation of regulations
 Setting regulations is not
the end of the story,
enforcing is continuous,
participatory approach is
the way to go
Importance of Environmental
Security
 As important as military and economic security

 Depletion of the natural capital leads to instability

 Poverty, injustice, and inequality can result from


environmental insecurity leading to terrorism and
violence

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