Human arsenic exposure risk via crop consumption and global trade from groundwater-irrigated areas

While drinking water is known to create significant health risk in arsenic hazard areas, the role of exposure to arsenic through food intake is less well understood, including the impact of food trade. Using the best available datasets on crop production, irrigation, groundwater arsenic hazard, and...

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Autores principales: Alam, Mohammad Faiz, Villholth, Karen G., Podgorski, J.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: IOP Publishing 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/117860
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author Alam, Mohammad Faiz
Villholth, Karen G.
Podgorski, J.
author_browse Alam, Mohammad Faiz
Podgorski, J.
Villholth, Karen G.
author_facet Alam, Mohammad Faiz
Villholth, Karen G.
Podgorski, J.
author_sort Alam, Mohammad Faiz
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description While drinking water is known to create significant health risk in arsenic hazard areas, the role of exposure to arsenic through food intake is less well understood, including the impact of food trade. Using the best available datasets on crop production, irrigation, groundwater arsenic hazard, and international crop trade flows, we estimate that globally 17.2% of irrigated harvested area (or 45.2 million hectares) of 42 main crops are grown in arsenic hazard areas, contributing 19.7% of total irrigated crop production, or 418 million metric tons (MMT) per year of these crops by mass. Two-thirds of this area is dedicated to the major staple crops of rice, wheat, and maize (RWM) and produces 158 MMT per year of RWM, which is 8.0% of the total RWM production and 18% of irrigated production. More than 25% of RWM consumed in the South Asian countries of India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh, where both arsenic hazard and degree of groundwater irrigation are high, originate from arsenic hazard areas. Exposure to arsenic risk from crops also comes from international trade, with 10.6% of rice, 2.4% of wheat, and 4.1% of maize trade flows coming from production in hazard areas. Trade plays a critical role in redistributing risk, with the greatest exposure risk borne by countries with a high dependence on food imports, particularly in the Middle East and small island nations for which all arsenic risk in crops is imported. Intensifying climate variability and population growth may increase reliance on groundwater irrigation, including in arsenic hazard areas. Results show that RWM harvested area could increase by 54.1 million hectares (179% increase over current risk area), predominantly in South and Southeast Asia. This calls for the need to better understand the relative risk of arsenic exposure through food intake, considering the influence of growing trade and increased groundwater reliance for crop production.
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spelling CGSpace1178602025-10-14T15:09:09Z Human arsenic exposure risk via crop consumption and global trade from groundwater-irrigated areas Alam, Mohammad Faiz Villholth, Karen G. Podgorski, J. arsenic exposure health hazards groundwater irrigation irrigated sites crop production rice wheat maize datasets While drinking water is known to create significant health risk in arsenic hazard areas, the role of exposure to arsenic through food intake is less well understood, including the impact of food trade. Using the best available datasets on crop production, irrigation, groundwater arsenic hazard, and international crop trade flows, we estimate that globally 17.2% of irrigated harvested area (or 45.2 million hectares) of 42 main crops are grown in arsenic hazard areas, contributing 19.7% of total irrigated crop production, or 418 million metric tons (MMT) per year of these crops by mass. Two-thirds of this area is dedicated to the major staple crops of rice, wheat, and maize (RWM) and produces 158 MMT per year of RWM, which is 8.0% of the total RWM production and 18% of irrigated production. More than 25% of RWM consumed in the South Asian countries of India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh, where both arsenic hazard and degree of groundwater irrigation are high, originate from arsenic hazard areas. Exposure to arsenic risk from crops also comes from international trade, with 10.6% of rice, 2.4% of wheat, and 4.1% of maize trade flows coming from production in hazard areas. Trade plays a critical role in redistributing risk, with the greatest exposure risk borne by countries with a high dependence on food imports, particularly in the Middle East and small island nations for which all arsenic risk in crops is imported. Intensifying climate variability and population growth may increase reliance on groundwater irrigation, including in arsenic hazard areas. Results show that RWM harvested area could increase by 54.1 million hectares (179% increase over current risk area), predominantly in South and Southeast Asia. This calls for the need to better understand the relative risk of arsenic exposure through food intake, considering the influence of growing trade and increased groundwater reliance for crop production. 2021-12-01 2022-01-31T23:47:12Z 2022-01-31T23:47:12Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/117860 en Open Access IOP Publishing Alam, Mohammad F.; Villholth, Karen G.; Podgorski, J. 2021. Human arsenic exposure risk via crop consumption and global trade from groundwater-irrigated areas. Environmental Research Letters, 16(12):124013. [doi: https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/ac34bb]
spellingShingle arsenic
exposure
health hazards
groundwater irrigation
irrigated sites
crop production
rice
wheat
maize
datasets
Alam, Mohammad Faiz
Villholth, Karen G.
Podgorski, J.
Human arsenic exposure risk via crop consumption and global trade from groundwater-irrigated areas
title Human arsenic exposure risk via crop consumption and global trade from groundwater-irrigated areas
title_full Human arsenic exposure risk via crop consumption and global trade from groundwater-irrigated areas
title_fullStr Human arsenic exposure risk via crop consumption and global trade from groundwater-irrigated areas
title_full_unstemmed Human arsenic exposure risk via crop consumption and global trade from groundwater-irrigated areas
title_short Human arsenic exposure risk via crop consumption and global trade from groundwater-irrigated areas
title_sort human arsenic exposure risk via crop consumption and global trade from groundwater irrigated areas
topic arsenic
exposure
health hazards
groundwater irrigation
irrigated sites
crop production
rice
wheat
maize
datasets
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/117860
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AT villholthkareng humanarsenicexposureriskviacropconsumptionandglobaltradefromgroundwaterirrigatedareas
AT podgorskij humanarsenicexposureriskviacropconsumptionandglobaltradefromgroundwaterirrigatedareas