TABLE OF CONTENTS
CHAPTER ONE
Introduction
Background to Study
Statement of the Research Problems
Aim and Objectives
Justification of Study.
Scope of Study
The Study Area
Contribution to Knowledge
CHAPTER TWO
LITERATURE REVIEW
The Federal
Environmental Protection Agency
The National
Policy On Environment
Establishment
Of Environmental Monitoring Programmes
The National
Environmental Reference Laboratory
Water
Resources Management
Strategies
under the National Policy on Environment
Industrial
Water Pollution Control Programme
Industrial
Effluent Standards
Governmental
Input through Setting Up Of Regulatory Bodies And Regulations In Nigeria
Pollution in Nigeria
Oil Spill in the
Delta Regions
Rural Industries
and Water Pollution in China
Institutional
Framework
CHAPTER THREE
RESEARCH METHODOLOGY
Sources of Data
Samples Frame and Sample Size
Sampling Procedure and Techniques
Method of Data Analysis
CHAPTER FOUR
Data Analysis
and Interpretation
Sources of Industrial Effluents
Pharmaceutical Industry
Soap and Detergent Industry
Paper Mill Industry
Textile
Mill Industry
Brewery Industry
Industrial effluent gotten for
sachet water producing industry
CHAPTER FIVE
SUMMARY, CONCLUSION AND RECOMMENDATIONS
Conclusion
Recommendation
Reference
CHAPTER ONE
1.0 INTRODUCTION
1.1 BACKGROUND TO STUDY
Water pollution
is a major problem in the global context, and it has been suggested that is the
leading worldwide cause of deaths and diseases (World Resources 1998). The
growth of the major industrial cities also caused water pollution. All
too often, rivers that pass through urban areas became a receptacle for human
waste products, both domestic and industrial. Sewage, as in most cities, was
washed out into the streets where it found its way to the rivers with
disastrous consequences. In the first half of the 18th century, both London and
Paris, the largest cities in Europe with respectively 1 and 2.4 million
inhabitants by 1850, experienced a series of recurring epidemics of cholera and
typhoid. In 1832 over 20,000 Parisians died in a cholera outbreak; London
experienced similar outbreaks. This was caused by increasing amounts of sewage
dumped into the Seine and Thames rivers.
Beyond synthetic pollution, freshwater is also the
end point for biological waste, in the form of human sewage, animal excrement,
and rainwater runoff flavored by nutrient-rich fertilizers from yards and
farms. These nutrients find their way through river systems into seas,
sometimes creating coastal ocean zones void of oxygen and therefore aquatic life—and making the connection between
land and sea painfully obvious. The discharge of industrial effluent into water
bodies is one of the main causes of environmental pollution and this effect can
be seen to have a hazardous and harmful effect on human health. Water Pollution also affects plants and organisms living in these bodies
of water; and, in almost all cases the effect is damaging not only to individual
species and populations, but also to the natural biological communities
(Fewtrell and Colford, 2004).
This effect
also leads to degradation in many cities especially in developing countries as
many industries lack liquid and solid waste regulations and proper disposal
facilities, including for harmful waste. Such waste may be infectious, toxic or
radioactive.
Pollution can be
seen as a contributing factor in influencing environmental health. Pollution is therefore said to be the introduction of contaminants
into a natural environment that causes instability, disorder, harm or
discomfort to the ecosystem i.e. physical systems or
living organisms. Pollution can take the form of chemical substances
or energy, such as noise, heat or light. Pollution
is often classed as point source
or nonpoint source
pollution. Chemicals can enter waterways from a point
source or a nonpoint source. Point source pollution is due to discharges from a
single source, such as an industrial site. Nonpoint source pollution involves
many small sources that combine to cause significant pollution. For instance,
the movement of rain or irrigation water over land picks up pollutants such as
fertilizers, herbicides, and insecticides and carries them into rivers, lakes,
reservoirs, coastal waters, or groundwater. From this analysis, it is
only logical to define what a pollutant is.
As technology improves, scientists are able to
detect more pollutants, and at smaller concentrations, in Earth’s
freshwater bodies. Containing traces of contaminants ranging from birth control
pills and sunscreen to pesticides and petroleum, our planet's lakes, rivers,
streams, and groundwater are often a chemical cocktail. A pollutant can be defined
as a waste material that pollutes air, water or soil.
Pollutants, the elements of pollution, can be either foreign
substances/energies or naturally occurring contaminants. It can be characterized by chemical nature,
concentration and persistence. Different kinds of pollutants affect human
beings unknowingly because the chronic effects are not dramatic compared to the
acute menaces. The effects of water pollution are not only devastating to
people but also to animals, fish, and birds. Polluted water is unsuitable for
drinking, recreation, agriculture, and industry. It diminishes the aesthetic
quality of lakes and rivers. More seriously, contaminated water destroys
aquatic life and reduces its reproductive ability. Eventually, it is a hazard
to human health. Nobody can escape the effects of water pollution.
Industry clustered in urban and semi-urban areas
surrounded by densely populated low income localities continues to pollute the
environment with impurity. Chemical pollution of
surface water can create health risks, because such waterways are often used
directly as drinking water sources or connected with shallow wells used for
drinking water. In addition, waterways have important roles for washing and
cleaning, for fishing and fish farming, and for recreation. Another major
source of drinking water is groundwater, which often has low concentrations of
pathogens because the water is filtered during its transit through underground
layers of sand, clay, or rocks. However, toxic chemicals such as arsenic and
fluoride can be dissolved from the soil or rock layers into groundwater. Direct
contamination can also occur from badly designed hazardous waste sites or from
industrial sites. In the United States in the 1980s, the government set in
motion the Superfund Program, a major investigation and cleanup program to deal
with such sites (U.S. Environmental Protection Agency 2000).
Industrial pollution is pollution which can
be directly linked with industry, in contrast to other pollution sources. This
form of pollution is one of the leading causes of pollution worldwide; in
the United States, for example, the Environmental Protective Agency estimates
that up to 50% of the nation's pollution is caused by industry. There are a
number of forms of industrial pollution. One of the most common is water
pollution, caused by dumping of industrial waste into waterways, or improper
containment of waste, which causes leakage into groundwater and waterways. In
developing countries, 70 percent of industrial wastes are dumped untreated into
waters, polluting the usable water supply.
On average, 99 million pounds (45 million
kilograms) of fertilizers and chemicals are used each year Industrial pollution can also impact air quality, and it
can enter the soil, causing widespread environmental problems. Because of
its size and scope, industrial pollution is a serious environmental problem for
the entire planet, especially in nations which are rapidly industrializing, like
Nigeria. It arises from lack of control of pollutant industries. Industrial pollution hurts the environment in a range of
ways because Pollutants can kill animals and plants, imbalance ecosystems, degrade air quality radically,
damage buildings, and generally degrade quality of life. Factory workers in
areas with uncontrolled industrial pollution are especially vulnerable. A
growing awareness of factory pollution and its consequences has led to tighter
restrictions on pollution all over the world, with nations recognizing that
they have an obligation to protect themselves and their neighbors from
pollution. It is in this stride, that several agencies have been set up all
over the world for mitigating or reducing to the barest minimum, environmental
pollution. However, industrial pollution also highlights a growing issue: the
desire of developing nations to achieve first world standards of living and
production.
Ideally, the
siting of industries should achieve a balance between socio-economic and
environmental consideration. In Nigeria, the siting of industries is determined
by various criteria, some of which are environmentally unacceptable and pose
serious threats to public health (WHO/UNEP, 1997). Therefore, the need to
control this.
This proposal
gives an overview on environmental assessment of industrial water pollution and
control as it effects industry.
1.2 STATEMENT OF
THE RESEARCH PROBLEMS
The statement of the research problem basically includes
how the area has been affected by pollution and what has happened over the
years concerning pollution as regards standards and enforcement.
This is mainly due to:
- Lack of public
authorities to take measures appropriate to their functions;
- Lack of proper
implementation strategy and directives as regards laws relating to this;
- Lack of economic
viable treatment technologies;
- Lack of effective
monitoring control by regulatory bodies
- Inefficacy by the
regulatory body for proper identification and registration of industries which
may be due to inadequacy of proper collation of data
- Lack of awareness by
the general public and industry owners.
1.3 AIM AND OBJECTIVES
Aim
The study
attempts to examine the environmental assessment of industrial pollution in
Ikeja and to evolve recommendations aimed at ameliorating the situation.
Objectives
The objectives
of this study include:
- To understand what
laws say about sitting in industries and environmental protection and if they
are being abided by.
- To identify the laws
guarding against water pollution from industries and if they are being abided
by.
- To identify the
implementation strategies used by public authorities in effecting laws.
- To understand the
effect these pollutants could have on the environment as a whole.
- To identify the amount
of pollutants being disposed into water sources.
- To identify proper
disposal of industrial waste.
1.4 JUSTIFICATION
OF STUDY.
This issue must be tackled because the common chemical
pollutants harmful to human health found in ground water due to industrial
discharges are chlorides, nitrates, heavy metals, and organic matter. The
common health problems caused by ground water pollution include miscarriage low
birth weight, birth defects and premature infant death. Adults and children
suffer from skin problems, eye irritation and neurological problems like
dizziness, seizures, fainting, etc. Surface water streams are also affected by industrial
effluents and organics. Most of the treated industrial effluents are
disinfected with chlorine which reach the receiving bodies and react with
organic compound to form chlorinated organic. The presence of this compound in
the water can cause cancer.
1.5 SCOPE OF
STUDY
The attention is to be focused on industrial pollution in
Ikeja, an in depth examination and analysis of the environmental assessment.
Attempt is made in this study to deal with its effect on the environment and
the people. The study will be limited in scope because attention will be
focused on water pollution as its reference point.
1.6 THE STUDY
AREA
The study area is Ikeja Lagos Nigeria is one of the most
popular places within the State. Lagos state has the largest population
density of the four most industrialized states in Nigeria (Lagos, Rivers, Kano
and Kaduna). It is also the state with the greatest concentration of
industries, with well over seven thousand medium and large-scale industrial
establishments. It is claimed that about 70-80% of the manufacturing facilities
operating within the medium and large-scale industries are located there in.
The major industrial estates in Lagos are: Ikeja, Agidingbi, Amuwo Odofin
(industrial), Apapa, Gbagada, Iganmu, Ijora, Ilupeju, Matori, Ogba, Oregun,
Oshodi/Isolo/Ilasamaja, Surulere (light industrial) and Yaba (Arikawe, 2002;
Akinsanya, 2003; Ogungbuyi and Osho, 2005).
Legend has it that, Ikeja was founded by an Awori (A Yoruba tribe in south west
Nigeria) hunter with first name Akeja, after whom the area is named. To this
day, many of Ikeja’s residents are of Awori descent
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