Quoting specialists, Centre for Science and Environment (CSE) said that since most of the e-waste recycling in Moradabad was illegal and no safety standards were being followed. Both dismantling and recycling methods are crude as a result of which 40-50 per cent of metals are left unextracted and cause contamination.
CSE found zinc levels 15 times more than standards while copper levels were found to be five times higher in the five different soil samples near river Ramganga, an important tributary of Ganga.
"A soil sample collected one kilometre from the river was found to have zinc levels 15 times more than the USEPA standards while copper levels were five times higher. Chromium level in a soil sample collected from the riverbed was twice the Canadian standard while cadmium was 1.3 times," it said.
The results were similar for the water samples taken from Ramganga where mercury levels were eight times higher than the Indian standard.
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"With such huge amounts of e-waste being dumped in the city, structural mechanisms are needed to deal with the problem," CSE's Deputy director general Chandra Bhushan said.
Quoting specialists, the study said that the soil and water of Moradabad contain heavy metals which are dangerous to the environment and can cause serious ailments, including cancer.
High levels of mercury and arsenic can lead to chronic poisoning as well, it said.
CSE suggested promoting Moradabad as a brass hub and as an e-waste dismantling centre which will ensure business that the becomes legal and working conditions are made safer.