Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumRio's Olympics-Ready! Expert Compares City's Sewage System With Late Medieval London Or Paris
Rivulets of waste crisscross the labyrinth of alleyways that serve as 5-year-old Kaike de Oliveira Benjamin's playground, forming dark, fetid puddles and gurgling streams of refuse and trash. It's little better inside the tiny, one-room apartment he shares with his mother, two little brothers and infestations of roaches and rats. When it rains, the basement apartment floods ankle-deep with a mixture of rainwater and sewage, and drinking water often comes out of the tap looking and smelling contaminated.
Rio de Janeiro's lack of basic sanitation is in the headlines because Olympic athletes will compete in polluted waters during next year's games, but it's hardly news in areas like the Rocinha slum, where contact with untreated waste is an everyday reality for the Benjamins and tens of thousands of other families. The consequences are not fleeting. They reverberate for decades, dooming many children exposed to this filth to lives stunted by illness. One public health expert calls the sewage system in Rio largely "medieval," comparable with London or Paris in the 14th or 15th century.
And it's not just Rio. Fewer than half of households nationwide are hooked up to sewage mains, meaning that much of the waste generated by about 100 million people runs through open-air ditches that bisect neighborhoods like Kaike's across this continent-sized nation, befouling streams and rivers that in turn contaminate lakes and lagoons, beaches and bays. From Kaike's slum a sprawling hillside warren of concrete and brittle brick dwellings waste flows directly from white plastic pipes sticking out of shacks and washes downstream, partially draining into the basin that ends up in the Olympic lagoon.
An independent study commissioned by The Associated Press revealed alarmingly high levels of viruses and, sometimes, bacteria from human sewage in all the city's Olympic waterways. A risk assessment based on the AP data found athletes who ingest three teaspoons of water have a 99 percent chance of being infected by a virus, raising alarm among some elite sailors, rowers, canoers, marathon swimmers and triathletes.
EDIT
http://abcnews.go.com/Sports/wireStory/olympics-sewage-blights-vast-swaths-rio-33647837
Nay
(12,051 posts)checking done before selection? Aren't prospective host cities inspected for basic sanitation, etc., before they are selected?
hunter
(38,310 posts)A test of both your physical prowess and the effectiveness of your immune system.
MisterP
(23,730 posts)Paris and London were doing the best with what they had ...