World Building Prompt #284
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World Building Prompt #284

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Dark Waters (2019)
A corporate defense attorney takes on an environmental lawsuit against a chemical company that exposes a lengthy history of pollution.
An exceptional film about corporate greed, deceitful practices and how powerful companies can get away with dodgy practices. I highly recommend that people watch this film..it's a scary watch and it's something that affects pretty much everyone. Can't say more without spoiling it.
Don't be blind. Your behavior and acts means a lot 💚🌱🐼
National Pollution Control Day / 2 December
World Building Prompt #212

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MICROALGAE BASED SUSTAINABLE BIOREMEDIATION OF CONTAMINATED WATER: RECENT TOOL TO RESURRECT POLLUTED RIVER | UTTAR PRADESH JOURNAL OF ZOOLOGY
Nature has bestowed upon us a variety of benefits. It is also true that human irresponsibility has resulted in significant environmental damage. Pollution is an example of such irresponsibility. The beauty of nature, on the other hand, has dealt with every act of irresponsibility. The process of "bioremediation" is nothing more than a natural cure that recycles pollutants and renders them harmless and beneficial to some extent. It has been discovered to be one of the most effective strategies for cleaning up dirty river water and protecting the ecosystem. Bioremediation entails the degradation, elimination, restriction, and reclamation of several chemical and physical dangerous elements from the environment using all-inclusive microorganisms. The main concept of bioremediation is the disintegration as well as the transmutation of pollutants such as heavy metals. Algae, for example, has been discovered to be a game changer in the bioremediation process. Bioremediation techniques include bioaugmentation, biostimulation, biofilters, bioreactors, biopharming, bioventing, composting, and land farming. Each bioremediation method has its own set of benefits and drawbacks. Above all, reviving a dirty river using bioremediation will result in much less contaminated, safe, and ship-shape waterways. Please see the link :- http://mbimph.com/index.php/UPJOZ/article/view/2659
January 16, 2021 | “Top 19 Most Polluted Rivers in the World in 2020”
I was reading about the Ganges River, which is “a river of northern India and Bangladesh, which rises in the Himalayas and flows some 2,700 km (1,678 miles) southeast to the Bay of Bengal, where it forms the world’s largest delta” (source). Another thing about the Ganges River is that parts of it are very, very polluted, and the photographs of these polluted parts are ... unsettling and disturbing.
If the Ganges River ranks number 1 in the most-polluted-rivers-in-the-world list, what are the other rivers? This question led me to the article titled “Top 19 Most Polluted Rivers in the World in 2020” by Conserve Energy Future. Unhonourable mentions include the Citarum River in Indonesia, the Yellow River in China, and the Sarno River in Italy. Number 12 on the list is the Nile River.
It is recommended to not swim in (stagnant parts of) the Nile River. Otherwise, you might get schistosomiasis, “an acute and chronic parasitic disease caused by blood flukes (trematode worms) of the genus Schistosoma” (source).
The whole list is very depressing. And it’s not just about cleaning up the rivers, whatever that may entail. It requires a restructuring of ... of processes, of regulations, of sensitivity, of attention, of resources, of mentalities? And I don’t mean for those places only. A lot of the pollution is industrial. Demand (i.e., consumers) makes up half of the supply-and-demand model. Imagine x product creates y pollution; consider, then: Do you need this product? Must you buy this product?
[Screenshot of a webpage from www.conserve-energy-future.com/]
It's our business.
Let Priya Malik put words to the most prominent problem of this time.