Arsenic in Water a Risk to 140 Million People
UK: August 30, 2007
LONDON - Naturally-occurring arsenic in drinking water poses a growing
global health risk as large numbers of people unknowingly consume unsafe
levels of the chemical element, researchers said on Wednesday.
The problem is bigger than scientists had thought and affects nearly 140
million people in more than 70 countries, according to new research
presented at the annual Royal Geographical Society meeting in London.
Arsenic can cause lung disease and cancers, even long after people stop
drinking contaminated water, said Peter Ravenscroft, a researcher at the
University of Cambridge.
"What is new is the extent of arsenic pollution is much bigger than people
realised," Ravenscroft said in a telephone interview.
"There is a very important connection between arsenic in water and arsenic
in food, especially where people grow irrigated corps."
World Health Organisation guidelines set a safe limit of 10 parts per
billion of arsenic in water supplies but tens of millions of people in the
world drink unsafe water above that level, researchers said.
At present, Bangladesh is the worst-affected country. There, hundreds of
thousands or people are likely to die from arsenic poisoning, the
researchers said.
Arsenic has also been found in the water in developed countries and
industrial activities such as mining can also lead to contamination.
Rising awareness has led to increased testing that has revealed more
widespread arsenic in drinking water but other researchers said even more
must be done to address the problem.
"Most countries have some water sources with dangerous levels of arsenic,
but only now are we beginning to recognise the magnitude of the problem,"
Allan Smith, a researcher at the University of California, Berkeley and
adviser to the WHO on arsenic, said in a statement.
Story by Michael Kahn
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
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