News Release

Drinking water in Gaza Strip contaminated with high levels of nitrate

Manure and wastewater are polluting the water and endangering infant health

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Helmholtz Association

Dry Sludge Produced From Gaza Wastewater Treatment Plant

image: Dry sludge produced from Gaza Wastewater Treatment Plant, May 2007. There are no treatment facilities for sludge in Gaza and it is just exposed to dry in the sun before disposing to the solid waste dumping sites. The sludge was sampled to be analyzed in the laboratories of Heidelberg University, Germany. The results of the analysis could help researchers and decision makers to use the sludge in agriculture. view more 

Credit: Environment and Information Center at Gaza Governorate, Gaza

This release is available in German.

Gaza/Leipzig. Palestinian and German scientists have recommended to the authorities in the Gaza Strip that they take immediate measures to combat excessive nitrate levels in the drinking water. 90 per cent of their water samples were found to contain nitrate concentrations that were between two and eight times higher than the limit recommended by the World Health Organization (WHO), say the researchers from the University of Heidelberg and the Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research (UFZ) writing in the specialist journal Science of the Total Environment. Over the long term they recommend that the best protection would be provided by quality management for groundwater resources. Groundwater is the only source of drinking water for the majority of people living in the Gaza Strip. In babies younger than six months, nitrate can lead to methaemoglobinaemia, to diarrhoea and to acidosis. The WHO therefore recommends keeping nitrate levels to 50 milligrams per litre or less. According to unpublished research, half of the 640 infants tested were already showing signs of methaemoglobinaemia. The new Palestinian-German study confirms earlier water analyses and is the first study to pinpoint a source of the contamination. With the help of isotope analyses, the researchers were able to demonstrate that the nitrate pollution can be traced back to manure used in farming and to wastewater.

With over 2600 people per square kilometre, the Gaza Strip is one of the most densely populated areas on earth. Because of their isolation, the inhabitants of this area between the Mediterranean, Egypt and Israel are reliant on being self-sufficient. The fields are mostly fertilized with chicken and cow dung. Artificial fertilizers account for only around a quarter of the fertilizer used. Because of the area's geology and the semi-arid climate, it is fairly easy for impurities to seep down from the surface into the aquifier system. Organic fertilizers and wastewater are the main causes of the nitrate contamination in the groundwater, followed by sewage sludge and artificial fertilizers. This was revealed by the isotope ratios of nitrogen (15N/14N) and oxygen (18O/16O) in the nitrate. Isotopes are variations of the same chemical element that have a different number of neutrons in their nuclei. 18O and 15N are stable, i.e. non-radioactive, isotopes that are heavier than "normal" oxygen (16O) or nitrogen (14N) and can therefore be measured using a mass spectrometer. "The lower 15N nitrogen isotope values in the sewage sludge indicate that the nitrate in the Gaza groundwater comes primarily from manure used as fertilizer," explains Dr Karsten Osenbrück of the UFZ. Between 2001 and 2007 the scientists took water samples from 115 municipal wells and 50 private wells on seven occasions. They measured nitrate concentrations of between 31 and 452 milligrams per litre. Only 10 of the 115 municipal wells examined were found to have a nitrate level below the WHO guideline value. The situation with the private wells was equally serious: apart from three, all the wells were found to have nitrate levels that were between five and seven times higher than the WHO recommendations.
Tilo Arnhold

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http://www.ufz.de/index.php?en=17112

Publication:
Basem Shomar, Karsten Osenbrück, Alfred Yahya:
Elevated nitrate levels in the groundwater of the Gaza Strip: Distribution and sources.
SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT 398 (2008) 164-174
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2008.02.054
This research was funded by the Federal Ministry of Education and Research,BMBF, Germany.

Further information from:
Dr Karsten Osenbrück
Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research (UFZ)
Phone: +49-345-558-5207
http://www.ufz.de/index.php?de=697
and
Dr Basem Shomar
University of Heidelberg
Phone: +49-6221-546 009
http://www.rzuser.uni-heidelberg.de/~i02/muelhome/basem.htm

or
Tilo Arnhold (UFZ-Pressestelle)
Phone: +49-341-235-1269
Email: presse@ufz.de

At the Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research (UFZ) scientists research the causes and consequences of far-reaching environmental changes. They study water resources, biological diversity, the consequences of climate change and adaptation possibilities, environmental and biotechnologies, bio energy, the behaviour of chemicals in the environment and their effect on health, as well as modelling and social science issues. Their guiding research principle is supporting the sustainable use of natural resources and helping to secure these basic requirements of life over the long term under the influence of global change. The UFZ employs 900 people at its sites in Leipzig, Halle and Magdeburg. It is funded by the German government and by the states of Saxony and Saxony-Anhalt.

The Helmholtz Association helps solve major, pressing challenges facing society, science and the economy with top scientific achievements in six research areas: Energy, Earth and Environment, Health, Key Technologies, Structure of Matter, Transport and Space. With 25,700 employees in 15 research centres and an annual budget of around EUR 2.3 billion, the Helmholtz Association is Germany's largest scientific organisation. Its work follows in the tradition of the great natural scientist Hermann von Helmholtz (1821-1894).


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