Sludge Watch ==> Could the Ecoli Outbreak be Linked to Irrigation Practices?
Maureen Reilly
maureen.reilly at sympatico.ca
Wed Oct 25 13:47:37 EDT 2006
Sludgewatch Admin:
Best to pull up the link...that way the helpful links in this story are
accessible.
http://www.newmediaexplorer.org/chris/2006/10/12/could_the_e_coli_outbreak_be_linked_to_irrigation_practices.htm#
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2629
October 12, 2006
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Could the E. coli Outbreak be Linked to Irrigation Practices?
Categories
Health through Nutrition
Practical Health
The Nature of Government
"Project which, in short, mixes 66% tertiary level treated sewage effluent
with 33% potable water. This was done under the auspices of the Monterey
County Water Resource Agency and cost $78 million."
Could the continued introduction of such practices be why the sudden need
for FDA to Approve Viral Adulteration Of Our Food Supply?
Chris Gupta
--------------------------
"Armed with the knowledge below, is it possible the tainted flesh of
California produce in the Salinas Valley is a result of the poor decision to
use recycled wastewater effluent to irrigate the nation's food supply? I
will be thinking twice before serving my children leafy greens grown in
California. Be sure to check your own community's irrigation practices
before
you buy - Catherine Rott"
------------------------------
Could the E. coli Outbreak be Linked to Irrigation Practices?
By Kathryn Price
www.operationinformation.com
10-11-2006
We have watched the evening news as story after story of incidents related
to the E. coli outbreak is told. Many are ill while others die after
consuming tainted leafy greens.
What is E. coli? According to the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency,
Escherichia coli, a.k.a. E. coli, is "a subgroup of fecal coliform bacteria
that is present in the intestinal tracts and feces of warm-blooded animals.
It is used as an indicator of the potential presence of pathogens. There are
many different strains of E. coli that are classified into more than 170
serogroups. Although most strains of E. coli are harmless and live in the
intestines of healthy humans and animals, the E. coli O157:H7 strain
produces a powerful toxin and can cause severe illness."
Here is what is known. According to the San Francisco Chronicle, September
18, 2006, "
federal authorities announced they will investigate farms in
Salinas Valley seeking evidence of what caused the outbreak." [i]
The article goes on to quote Dr. David Acheson of the FDA saying, "Acheson,
who called the outbreak one of the larger E. coli outbreaks ever reported,
extended indefinitely the federal recommendation not to eat any fresh
spinach or products that contain or are packaged with spinach that have a
sell-by date of Aug. 17 through Oct. 1.
The recommendation has brought the spinach harvest to a standstill in the
Salinas Valley, according to Joe Pezzini, chairman of the Central California
Grower-Shipper Association and vice president of operations at Ocean Mist
Farms in Castroville. Ocean Mist doesn't supply spinach to Natural Selection
Foods, one of the first producers tied to the outbreak, but Pezzini said the
government warning affected all growers
. Acheson said all the farms that
agents will visit today in connection with the outbreak are in the Salinas
Valley , which produces much of the nation's lettuce and spinach.
Authorities are continuing to investigate whether other companies and brands
are involved."
Frank Pecarich, a retired Soil Scientist in Ventura, California writes
Monterey County, California "implemented what is called the Castroville
Seawater Intrusion Project which, in short, mixes 66% tertiary level treated
sewage effluent with 33% potable water. This was done under the auspices of
the Monterey County Water Resource Agency and cost $78 million.
In brief, this project supplies 13,000 acre/feet of treated sewage effluent
wastewater annually to approximately 12, 000 acres of cropland through 46
miles of pipeline to irrigate agricultural fields overlying the seawater
intruded aquifer. The crops that are irrigated include spinach and lettuce."
[ii]
According to the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations
(FAO), the "Monterey Wastewater Reclamation Study for Agriculture (MWRSA)
was a 10 year, US $7.2 million field-scale project designed to evaluate the
safety and feasibility of irrigating food crops (many eaten raw) with
reclaimed municipal wastewater (Sheikh et al. 1990). Demonstration fields at
Castroville in the lower Salinas Valley, California were used to study
full-scale farm practices using reclaimed municipal wastewater. Two 5
hectare experimental plots provided large amounts of data on crop response
which were subjected to statistical analysis. On one plot artichokes were
grown, while on the other a succession of broccoli, cauliflower, lettuce and
celery was raised over a 5-year period starting in late 1980." [iii]
Here are a few definitions to learn:
Potable Water: Water that is safe for human consumption.
Municipal Wastewater: Discharge of effluent from wastewater treatment plants
which receive wastewater from households, commercial establishments, and
industries. Combined sewer/separate storm overflows are included in this
category.
Effluent: Liquid waste, often from a factory or sewer. This is a term that
is often used to refer to the urine and manure that is pumped into or out of
a lagoon.
Reclaimed Water: Wastewater (sewage) that has been treated and purified for
reuse, rather than discharged into a body of water. It is frequently used to
irrigate golf courses and parks, fill decorative fountains, and fight fires.
It can also be used to irrigate crops, as long as they will be peeled or
boiled before human consumption.
Pathogenic: Capable of causing disease; harmful; any disease-causing agent.
According to the last definition, food irrigated with reclaimed water should
not be eaten raw. It appears the U.S. citizen is the laboratory rat.
In January 2002, the Carlsbad Municipal Water District was quoted as saying,
"One of the wisest uses of water is to give it a second chance to use it
again after it is flushed down the drain at our homes and businesses. This
process is called recycling wastewater, or water recycling. It's a lot like
cleaning and reusing your clothes when they get dirty." [iv]
Carlsbad Municipal Water District is wrong. It is nothing like cleaning and
reusing your clothes since your clothing does not usually have urine, feces,
oil, gas, road kill and other contaminants found on them. Also, we do not
ingest our clothing as we do the produce irrigated with recycled wastewater
opening the door for plant tissue to harbor harmful, and potentially lethal,
organisms.
Why would we use potentially harmful methods of irrigation for our nations
food supply? According to the USDA, Agricultural Research Service's (ARS)
Research Project: Groundwater Recharge and Wastewater Irrigation to Protect
Crops and Groundwater, a 2005 Annual Report, it is stated that, "Water
demands in the western US currently exceed available supplies. Population
growth and water shortages will increase the need to use treated wastewater
effluent for irrigation, particularly in areas where fresh water resources
are limited. The use of recycled water for municipal and crop irrigation
will reduce groundwater pumping, which currently provides 37% of water for
agricultural use and is the largest user of groundwater nationwide." [v]
Perhaps population explosions in the west are a direct result of the current
illegal alien issue; another topic for another time. Nevertheless, this
problem could be corrected if so desired by the powers that be.
Who are the most vulnerable of getting E. coli? According to the EPA
website, "Children under the age of five, the elderly, and people whose
health is weakened ( i.e., people who have long-term illnesses such as
cancer or AIDS) are at greater risk of severe illness." [vi]
The most shocking realization during the gathering of information regarding
this topic is how much the USDA understood was at risk. The USDA ARS 2005
Annual Report goes on to say, "Using present technologies, municipal
wastewater treatment may not completely disinfect recycled irrigation
waters, allowing pathogenic microbial populations to re-grow in water
storage and transmission systems. As a result, recycled water used for
agricultural and municipal irrigation can contain enough pathogenic
organisms to threaten human health once released into the environment.
Moreover, little is known about the long-term environmental fate of
synthetic organic compounds, including pharmaceutically active chemicals and
disinfection byproducts, contained in recycled wastewater. Overall, the
environmental and public health impacts of irrigation with reclaimed sewage
effluent and the potential degradation of underlying groundwater are largely
unknown."
Some of the USDA ARS objectives found in the same report include:
Objective 1: Develop methods for improved environmental detection of
contaminants and pathogens using field studies in areas with a history of
wastewater application.
Objective 2: Determine the environmental fate and transport of contaminants
and pathogens using focused studies in agricultural fields, municipal
irrigated areas (golf courses, parks), and/or groundwater recharge areas
with a long history of municipal wastewater application.
Objective 3: Examine novel methods to control bacterial growth and chemical
transport in conveyance systems using laboratory reactor studies, to aid in
development of management strategies to minimize environmental impacts of
using treated effluent for irrigation. This research directly addresses the
national and global problem of food safety in agricultural areas that have
been irrigated with sewage effluent or with effluent contaminated water. The
research also addresses issues of water conservation and integrated water
management through water reuse. These issues now occur or are emerging in
many parts of the US and the rest of the world wherever there is
insufficient water to meet competing demands for municipal, industrial, and
agricultural irrigation. All objectives fall under National Program 201,
Water Quality and Management. By addressing water conservation and
integrated water management through water reuse, Objectives 1 and 2 fall
under Problem Area 2.5 (Waste Water Reuse), Goal 2.5.3 (Waste Water
Standards). Objective 3 addresses Problem Area 2.3 (Water Conservation
Management), Goal 2.3.1 (Water Conservation Technologies)."
The most damning evidence against the USDA ARS is their admittance of
possible harmful effects of using recycled wastewater to irrigate our
produce. Section 5 of the report says, "Microbiological work in the earlier
projects included a laboratory study to assess the survival and re-growth
potential of bacteria present in tertiary-treated effluent as it passed
through a model distribution system. The results demonstrated that
population numbers of indicator bacterial organisms increased by three to
four orders of magnitude over the 11-day length of the experiment. This
research established that although the reclaimed water met EPA standards for
irrigation at the treatment plant, there is great potential for bacterial
re-growth during transport that could place the water out of compliance at
the point of intended use. This work illustrated the critical need to
understand the environmental fate of microorganisms and the potential for
bacterial re-growth in reclaimed water used for crop irrigation so that
future problems of food and groundwater contamination via wastewater
irrigation can be prevented."
It appears the USDA does not know what the long term effects will be using
recycled wastewater on crops or humans who consume their harvests making all
of us who shop in our local grocery store their guinea pig.
[i] San Francisco Chronicle, Spinach probe of Salinas Valley
Feds tracking cause of E. coli outbreak
[ii] California Progress Report and http://www.bapd.org/n7652.html
[iii] FAO Corporate Document Repository
[iv] EcoISP, California Drinking Water Protected by Wastewater Recycling
[v] USDA Agricultural Research Service, Groundwater Recharge and Wastewater
Irrigation to Protect Crops and Groundwater
[vi] US Environmental Protection Agency, E. coli 0157:H7 in drinking water
-- US EPA
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