In India, High Levels Of Uranium, Used For Nuclear Plants, In Water
Dangerously high uranium levels – three to four times the World Health Organization’s 15 microgram per litre limit and higher even than the government’s limit of 30 micrograms per litre – have been recorded in drinking water sources across at least six Chhattisgarh districts, significantly increasing the risk of cancers and pulmonary conditions, as well as skin and kidney diseases, in these areas. In 2017 the WHO suggested uranium in drinking water should not exceed 15 micrograms per litre, but acknowledged “there are uncertainties (if) concentrations above this would be of concern”. The global health body also said some countries – like India – had doubled that permissible limit. In June a Bhabha Atomic Research Centre study suggested even 60 micrograms per litre is safe However, tests of drinking water samples from Chhattisgarh’s Durg, Rajnandgaon, Kanker, Bemetara, Balod, and Kawardha found uranium levels in excess of 100 micrograms per litre; one sample from a village in Balod had as much 130 micrograms per litre and another from Kanker had 106 micrograms per litre. Across the six districts the average reading was 86 to 105 micrograms of uranium per litre. “There is no other source of water in the village… one day we came to … Continue reading In India, High Levels Of Uranium, Used For Nuclear Plants, In Water
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