DEAR READERS: With warmer air carrying more moisture, the frequency, duration and volume of rainfall events are escalating in many parts of the world. Consequently, municipal sewage processing facilities become overwhelmed with stormwater. This, in turn, results in unprocessed sewage, with fecal bacteria and other potential pathogens, being discharged into lakes, rivers and coastal zones. This can be lethal to aquatic life as well as to people.
In 2024, in the U.K., there was a 60% increase in cases of sewage discharge caused by poor maintenance of wastewater/sewage management infrastructure, according to the country's Environment Agency. In communities around the world, after streets have flooded with the sewage-and-rainwater mix, residents are still at risk from the residual contaminated dust during dry periods.
This global issue is compounded by poorly controlled runoff from agricultural fertilizers, pesticides and farmed animal waste, putting human health and aquatic life at risk.
While the invention of the flush toilet was heralded as an advance of civilization, it meant the end of the recycling and composting of human waste as a valuable fertilizer, and created the need for effective waste management and sewage treatment facilities. Now often combined with industrial waste, recycling solids from such facilities for agricultural purposes has led to the contamination of farmlands with "forever" chemicals and other toxic materials.
There are costly solutions, such as improving infrastructure to reduce the quantity of runoff of untreated water from treatment plants by excavating more holding lagoons. But until the climate crisis is fully addressed, this problem of anthropogenic water pollution is never going to go away.
BATTLE TO PROTECT WILDLIFE AND HABITATS
Please see the following post from the Center for Biological Diversity:
“On (July 15), we sued to force the Trump administration to release public records on a proposed rollback of federal protections for marine wildlife habitat -- including any political or industry influences involved. The proposal would revoke the longstanding definition of 'harm' under the Endangered Species Act, eliminating habitat protections even though habitat destruction is a key extinction driver. Threats to marine species’ homes run the gamut -- from warming ocean waters to offshore oil drilling to massive ships speeding through whales’ breeding grounds. ...
“And (earlier in July), the CBD sued the U.S. Office of Management and Budget to find out which environmental rules have been targeted by Trump’s so-called Department of Government Efficiency.
“We need full transparency on each and every attempt to greenlight more pollution, bulldoze public lands, and drive species extinct.”
DR. FOX HERE: Adding insult to injury, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Atlas 15 project, which would help alert and prepare communities for extreme rainfall, has been suspended by the Trump administration. Also, blatant evidence of executive empathy-deficit disorder is in the news with the dismantling of USAID. As just one example, 500 tons of high-energy biscuits -- enough to feed about 1.5 million children for a week -- have deteriorated in storage in Dubai and will be burned because of cuts to U.S. foreign-aid distribution programs.
The Department of Government Efficiency has all but dismantled several federal agencies -- including veterinary divisions vital for the health of livestock abroad -- and suspended thousands of dedicated staff. This is all in the name of eliminating “waste, fraud and abuse,” which seem most evident in the executive branch of government.
(Send all mail to animaldocfox@gmail.com or to Dr. Michael Fox in care of Andrews McMeel Syndication, 1130 Walnut St., Kansas City, MO 64106. The volume of mail received prohibits personal replies, but questions and comments of general interest will be discussed in future columns.
Visit Dr. Fox’s website at DrFoxOneHealth.com.)