Environmental and Public Health Crisis: District Pollution Report-2026

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April 15, 2026

Environmental and Public Health Crisis: District Pollution Report-2026

This report highlights the persistent and worsening pollution of waterbodies and air in the district, identifying it as a district-wide challenge that transcends individual political constituencies.

The Water Crisis: Lifelines Under Threat:

The district relies on three primary water sources that have undergone severe degradation:

  • The Cauvery River: Flows for 84 km through the district.
  • The Bhavani River: Flows for nearly 70 km.
  • The Kalingarayan Canal: Stretches for 90.5 km.

Sources of Contamination:

  • Industrial Effluents: Untreated waste, particularly from textile units, is discharged throughout the day. Pollution of the Bhavani begins as early as Sathyamangalam.
  • Untreated Sewage: An estimated 55 million litres of sewage flows into the river and canal networks daily.
  • Tributary Pollution: Canals like Pichaikaran Pallam, Sunnambu Odai, and Perumpallam act as carriers for waste, draining directly into the major rivers.
  • Solid Waste: Dumping of plastic, discarded clothes, and poultry waste has turned rivers into “carriers of waste.”

Air quality is deteriorating due to failures in solid waste management:

  • Open Dumping: Continued disposal of waste in vacant lands and waterbodies despite existing systems.
  • Waste Burning: The burning of plastic and household waste, particularly in rural panchayats like Pudur, contributes significantly to air pollution.

 Public Health Impact:

The correlation between environmental degradation and health is becoming increasingly evident:

  • Cancer Incidence: In April 2023, the State government identified a higher incidence of cancer in the district, attributed to water contamination.
  • Water-Borne & Respiratory Issues: Frequent reports of skin ailments, gastrointestinal infections, and respiratory problems, especially among children and the elderly.
  • Corporation Water Shift: Due to high contamination within city limits, the Corporation must now draw water from Uratchikottai (24 km away) to ensure safety.

Downstream and Agricultural Consequences:

The crisis is not localized; it affects the entire ecosystem:

  • Irrigation: Contaminated water affects crop health and soil quality for farmers downstream.
  • Livestock: Animals depending on these water sources face health risks.
  • Drinking Schemes: Combined water supply schemes remain under threat due to poor raw water quality.

Challenges in Governance and Civic Responsibility:

  • Infrastructure Delays: Sewage treatment plants (STPs) announced in 2024 by the Corporation have yet to commence.
  • Enforcement Gap: Residents allege inadequate inspections and a lack of strict action against polluting industrial units.
  • Lack of Civic Sense: Public dumping of waste into open spaces and rivers continues to neutralize government efforts.

The Path Forward:

To prevent the crisis from deepening, the report suggests:

  1. Time-Bound Action: Immediate commencement and completion of proposed STPs.
  2. Stricter Enforcement: Zero-tolerance policy for untreated industrial discharge.
  3. Public Cooperation: Community-led initiatives to stop plastic burning and river dumping.
  4. Coordinated Management: Addressing pollution as a district-wide environmental challenge rather than a localized civic issue.

 


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