Desalination pours more toxic brine into the ocean than previously thought
Technology meant to help solve the world's growing water shortage is producing a salty environmental dilemma.
Desalination facilities, which extract drinkable water from the ocean, discharge around 142 billion liters of extremely salty water called brine back into the environment every day, a study finds. That waste product of the desalination process can kill marine life and detrimentally alter the planet's oceans, researchers report January 14 in Science of the Total Environment.
"On the one hand, we are trying to provide populations — particularly in dry areas — with the needed amount of good quality water. But at the same time, we are also adding an environmental concern to the process," says study coauthor Manzoor Qadir, an environmental scientist at the United Nations University Institute for Water, Environment and Health in Hamilton, Canada.
I would take some salt, but it probably contains microplastics.
The state of desalination and brine production: A global outlook (DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2018.12.076) (DX)
(Score: 2) by Phoenix666 on Sunday January 20 2019, @06:05PM
Agreed. This story drops the ball on many basic points. It reminds me once more of the story that sobbing friends were emailing each other a couple years ago about how fukushima was poisoning the pacific. I replied with some quick math showing how a thousand fukushimas could leak into the pacific from japan and seattle would barely feel it, that body of water is so huge.
Washington DC delenda est.