(Picture Source:Sogou)
The pollution of the Indus River is becoming more and more serious, and the waste offsets the country's gross national product (GDP) by 4 percentage points, and the ecological environment of many rivers is destroyed, and the air pollution is becoming more and more serious. Fifty-seven percent of New Delhi's municipal waste ended up flowing into the Yamuna River, which more than doubled in pollution from 1993 to 2005. In addition, due to serious pollution, the Ganges puffer fish is on the verge of extinction. According to the Indian Center for Science and Environment, 75% to 80% of the pollution in the Yamuna River is caused by domestic sewage, coupled with industrial and domestic waste discharged into the river, sewage produced by New Delhi residents every day. As much as 3 billion liters. The center believes that the crux of the pollution caused by the Indus stream is the discharge of sewage into the river without treatment. The levels of bacteria in excreta in the river are 3000 times higher than those thought to be safe, according to scientists from the Ganges.
With the rapid development of science and technology, many developing countries, in order to get rid of poverty as soon as possible, blindly develop the industry, and even at the expense of the natural environment. The Internet users who have been to India should be no stranger to the Ganges. The Ganges are the source of the Indian civilization and are considered to be the mother's river by the Indians. This is the river that the Indian is regarded as a source of life and has been seriously polluted at the expense of India's development. Industrial waste and people live in the Ganges, where people wash and bathe in the Ganges, and the superstitious Indian Indians will return the body to the Ganges after the death, so that they can also honor the world after death. So the harmful bacteria in the Ganges are very serious. The mark, which led to the destruction of the ecosystem, and the massive reproduction of the catfish. But if you are to think that the Ganges in India are the most dirty rivers in the world, there is a great mistake, and a river called the Yamuna River is more dirty than the Ganges, and the porpoise in the river is already extinct. The surface of the river is covered with snow-like white substances, all of which are industrial waste. Even so, the locals had to be baptized in it, even in the river.
Yamuna is the longest tributary of the Ganges, rising from the Yamunastri Glacier on the southwest slope of Bendeljee Mountain in northwest India and meeting the West Source Tunes River below Gelsia. Continue south, for the Punjab plain and the Ganges plain boundary river, east and west sides have the irrigation canal network, leads the Yamuna river water irrigation. Below Gernal turned southeast, below Agrad, the body of the river winds up, and Allahabad converges into the Ganges. Important tributaries are the Chanbar River and the Beitwa River. All the year round, there is water, seasonal fluctuations, easy flood and drought, river banks towering.
The New Delhi municipal government unveiled a pollution control plan for the Yamuna River in May, planning to build intercepted waterways and lead sewage to the treatment plant, the report said. Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has also called on scientists and engineers to redesign flush toilets to solve the problem of sewage discharge. Xi Jinping, president of the people's Republic of China, once said: "Jinshan Silver Mountain is not as green as Green Water Green Mountain." It is also hoped that the Indian Government will fully recognize this, strengthen environmental governance and return a beautiful Indus River in the world.
It is well known that the industrial waste water contains a lot of toxic elements, especially the content of ammonia, so much of the foam is covered on the river's surface. The generation of the foam led to the lack of oxygen in the water, so that most of the fish and plants had no way to survive, and it seemed to be dead and lifeless. In an effort to clean that holy river, the government spent 200 million pound of treatment, but with little effect, all of the river's pollutants come from New Delhi, with about 18 blow-off pipelines each year to discharge 227 million cubic metres of sewage to the sub-river. The river is the source of water for the local villagers, and they do not Do not use the water in this river to wash and cook. Although a multi-step sterilization and sterilization process has been carried out prior to use, there are more or less residual harmful substances in it. Many tourists see the extent to which the river is polluted, and can't imagine what happens when the local villagers drink.