Water pollution is one of the major
environmental issues that have created a need for an “island civilization.”
Although this problem exists throughout the majority of the planet, it is
prevalent primarily within underdeveloped and developing countries such as
Nigeria. In America and other developed countries, the water is virtually vacant
of waterborne diseases (NRDC 1). However, within the aforementioned developing
and underdeveloped countries, approximately five million people – six thousand
of whom are children – die every day due to the condition of the water (1).
In Nigeria, one in every three people
lack access to clean water (PSI 15). This means that people of all ages, including
children, are subject to the copious bacteria inhabiting the filthy water. In fact,
diarrhea caused from one of the bacteria is the second most frequent cause of
death in children below the age of five (15).
It is not just the health of the
human population that is affected by poor water quality. When the water is not
properly sanitized, it affects waterways, wildlife, and global warming as well (NRDC 2).
Additionally, according to researchers at the Natural Resources Defense
Council, the deficit of safe drinking water creates a rise in “population
problems,” which are “Drying up water supplies and instigating conflict over
scarce resources” (2).
Water is a part of everyone’s daily
lives. Water is used for cooking, bathing, swimming, and drinking. Since water directly
affects so many aspects of life, it is obvious why the need for clean water is
so crucial. When the water is contaminated, it can cause illness and, quite
frequently, death. This creates a loss of billions of dollars every year. In
fact, the United Nations made an estimate that the world would save over seven
billion dollars in health care expenses if the amount of people without
sanitized drinking water was reduced by half (NRDC 4).
With the need for safe water being so
drastically unfilled, Fredrick Nash’s proposal of an “Island civilization,”
which was an attempt to provide a solution to all of the world’s environmental
issues, seems to be more reasonable. There are many issues that need to be
addressed, and seem to only be getting ignored. If these problems, especially
water pollution, continue to be neglected, the ending results may be, and
likely will be, absolutely horrendous.
Citations:
Bringing Safe Water to the World. Natural Resource Defense Council. N.p., n.d. Web. 21 Aug
2012.
<http://www.nrdc.org/international/safewater.asp>.
Nigeria. PSI Healthy lives. Measurable results.. Population Services International, n.d. Web.
Nigeria. PSI Healthy lives. Measurable results.. Population Services International, n.d. Web.
21 Aug 2012.
<http://www.psi.org/nigeria>.
(I'm not sure why, but I can't get the urls to stay on the same line as the date.)
(I'm not sure why, but I can't get the urls to stay on the same line as the date.)
Amanda,
ReplyDeleteI completely agree with your choice of water as being a problem calling for an Island Civilization. Water is the most important ingredient to life and the fact that some people do not have acess to clean water is hard to imagine. We are lucky to be growing up in a place where fresh water is so readily available. I agree with you that this does call for the need of an island civilization. It's a shame how humans can continue to ignore such a drastic issue such as clean water for underprivileged areas.