Skip to main content
NTv Online

Bangladesh

Bangladesh
  • Accident
  • Crime
  • Environment
  • Government
  • Law
  • More
  • Politics
  • Society
  • Bangla Version
  • Archive
  • Bangladesh
  • World
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Business
  • Comment
  • Education
  • Life
  • Health
  • Art & Culture
  • Election
  • বাংলা
  • Bangladesh
  • World
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Business
  • Comment
  • Education
  • Life
  • Health
  • Art & Culture
  • Election
  • বাংলা
  • Bangla Version
  • Archive
Follow
  • Bangladesh
AFP
29 August, 2016, 23:02
Update: 29 August, 2016, 23:16
More News
BBTEA holds Iftar and Dua Mahfil
Doctor Dekhao: An award-wining online doctor-patient platform
Modele Group distributes relief among Manikganj river erosion affected people
How Suraiya penned success with her feet
Tougher movement if gazette not issued by April: Quota protesters

60% of key S Asian water basin not usable: study

AFP
29 August, 2016, 23:02
Update: 29 August, 2016, 23:16
This photo taken on 18 March 2015 shows industrial chemicals being dumped into Shitalakhya river in Narayangong, some 20 km from Dhaka. Photo: AFP

Paris, France: Sixty percent of the groundwater in a river basin supporting more than 750 million people in Pakistan, India, Nepal and Bangladesh is not drinkable or usable for irrigation, researchers said Monday.

The biggest threat to groundwater in the Indo-Gangetic Basin, named after the Indus and Ganges rivers, is not depletion but contamination, they reported in the journal Nature Geoscience.

‘The two main concerns are salinity and arsenic,’ the authors of the study wrote.

Up to a depth of 200 metres (650 feet), some 23 percent of the groundwater stored in the basin is too salty, and about 37 percent ‘is affected by arsenic at toxic concentrations,’ they said.

The Indo-Gangetic basin accounts for about a quarter of the global extraction of groundwater—freshwater which is stored underground in crevices and spaces in soil or rock, fed by rivers and rainfall.

Fifteen-to-twenty million wells extract water from the basin every year amid growing concerns about depletion.

The new study—based on local records of groundwater levels and quality from 2000 to 2012 — found that the water table was in fact stable or rising across about 70 percent of the aquifer.

It was found to be falling in the other 30 percent, mainly near highly populated areas.

Groundwater can become salty through natural and manmade causes, including inefficient farmland irrigation and poor drainage.

Arsenic, too, is naturally present, but levels are exacerbated by use of fertilisers and mining.

Arsenic poisoning of drinking water is a major problem in the region.

Most Read
  1. Mosaddak Ali, two others discharged in money laundering case
  2. Over 1000 people killed, 400 lost eyesight in student movement: Health Adviser
  3. Help Jannat to beat cancer
  4. Mastermind’s finance event to knock the city
  5. Authorities urged to consult on vape ban proposal
  6. No condition for IMF loan to Bangladesh: PM tells Parliament
Most Read
  1. Mosaddak Ali, two others discharged in money laundering case
  2. Over 1000 people killed, 400 lost eyesight in student movement: Health Adviser
  3. Help Jannat to beat cancer
  4. Mastermind’s finance event to knock the city
  5. Authorities urged to consult on vape ban proposal
  6. No condition for IMF loan to Bangladesh: PM tells Parliament

Follow Us

Alhaj Mohammad Mosaddak Ali

Chairman & Managing Director

NTV Online, BSEC Building (Level-8), 102 Kazi Nazrul Islam Avenue, Karwan Bazar, Dhaka-1215 Telephone: +880255012281 up to 5, Fax: +880255012286 up to 7

Browse by Category

  • About NTV
  • NTV Programmes
  • Advertisement
  • Web Mail
  • NTV FTV
  • Satellite Downlink
  • Europe Subscription
  • USA Subscription
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Contact

Our Newsletter

To stay on top of the ever-changing world of business, subscribe now to our newsletters.

* We hate spam as much as you do

Alhaj Mohammad Mosaddak Ali

Chairman & Managing Director

NTV Online, BSEC Building (Level-8), 102 Kazi Nazrul Islam Avenue, Karwan Bazar, Dhaka-1215 Telephone: +880255012281 up to 5, Fax: +880255012286 up to 7

Reproduction of any content, news or article published on this website is strictly prohibited. All rights reserved