Ecological problems in uzbekistan



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ECOLOGICAL PROBLEMS IN UZBEKISTAN


ECOLOGICAL PROBLEMS IN UZBEKISTAN
In today's developing world, progress takes place every day in the field of science and technology. Of course, technical development makes our life easier, but we need to think about how we achieve all this. After exhausting natural reserves for the sake of satisfying human needs, we inflict great damage on nature, as a result of which there are various ecological problems that affect not only a certain region or state, but the whole world. Each state in accordance with economic development and geographical location has its own environmental problems. Unfortunately, the Republic of Uzbekistan is not an exception. Today, independent Uzbekistan is a large industrial and agrarian state with further development of machine building, energy, chemical, food industry and transport complexes, which will come to the fore. The development of production negatively affects the social-ecological situation in the republic. Protection of nature and environmental problems facing the Republic, the following: Problems of nature protection in Angren-Almalyk Chirchik, Fergana-Margilan, Navoi and other areas where large regional industrial complexes are located. The socio-ecological situation in these regions is not very good. Since the various gases and waste generated in industrial centers lead to a deterioration in the state of the environment. Environmental problems in the agro-industrial complex. Another problem is the pollution of industrial wastewater from pesticides and mineral fertilizers. Protection and reproduction of flora and fauna, expansion of the network of reserves and national parks [4]. Currently, most production processes use open technological cycles associated with the release of solid particles and waste gases into the atmosphere, the chemical composition and concentration of which are determined by the features of production. Sources of industrial dust are technological processes, such as grinding, grinding, sieving, etc. [1, p.210]. Because of these emissions, various diseases such as iodine deficiency in the body, bronchial asthma and other oncological diseases occur. For the prevention of the above diseases, special medical centers are being opened for workers who work in dangerous departments of the enterprise are paid additional wages for harm to their health. The main negative effects of air pollution in urban areas: ‒ Reduction of solar ultraviolet radiation to 30 %, decrease in the duration of sunshine to 15 %; ‒ increase in comparison with the background of gaseous impurities by a factor of 5–25 in the condensation nuclei of water vapor molecules by a factor of 10 or more, the total mass of dust is 10 times or more; ‒ increase in comparison with the background of aerosol impurities by 100–1000 times; ‒ increase in cloud and fog 30 %, fogs in winter — by 200 %; ‒ the temperature of the daily minimum is 1.0–9.0 ° C higher; ‒ wind speed: the annual average is 20–30 % less, strong gusts — 10–20 % less, sewers — 5–10 % more; ‒ the content of toxic heavy metals and carcinogenic substances in aerosols of technogenic landscapes of urbanized areas is increased by an average of 4–5 times with background; ‒ increased risk of diseases of the population with diseases, the nature of which depends on the type of pollutant (allergy, respiratory diseases, cardiovascular system, etc.); ‒ increased wear of materials of structures, structures, monuments of architecture due to the impact of various types of chemical, physical and chemical and microbiological corrosion; ‒ reduction of areas covered by vegetation, diseases of trees; ‒ local climate change, biochemical circuits of the main components of the atmosphere (water, nitrogen, sulfur, carbon), an increase in the number of rains, the predominance of acid precipitation; ‒ long-term consequences associated with genetic changes. [2, p.131] In addition to air pollution in Uzbekistan, there is another ecological problem that affects the whole of Central Asia — this is the tragedy of the Aral Sea. Over the past decades, the water level in the sea has greatly decreased. By now, the Aral Sea has almost completely disappeared as a result of human economic activity. In the coastal areas of the Aral Sea, atmospheric precipitation decreased several times. Their average value is 150–200 mm with a significant unevenness in the seasons. High evaporability noted (up to 1700 mm per year) with a decrease in air humidity by 10 % [3, p.55]. As you know, President of the Republic of Uzbekistan Sh.M.Mirziev delivered a speech at the 72nd UN Assembly, where he raised the issue of the Aral Sea: «Uzbekistan supports the draft conventions on the use of water resources in the Amudarya and Syrdarya river basins developed by the UN Regional Center for Preventive diplomacy. I would again like to draw your attention to one of the most acute environmental problems of our time — the Aral catastrophe.... Overcoming the consequences of the desiccation of the sea requires today the active consolidation of international efforts. We support the implementation in full of this year's special UN program to provide effective assistance to the population affected by the Aral Sea crisis» [5]. The salvation or annihilation of this world is only in our hands. After all, for as much as a thousand years, we have used many resources of nature. But what was given in response? The destruction of the ozone layer, depletion of natural resources, global warming, the disappearance of many species of animal and plant life — that's what we give to nature! And this is only the beginning. Let's save our Earth together!
The physical environment of Uzbekistan is diverse, ranging from the flat, desert topography that comprises almost 80% of the country's territory to mountain peaks in the east reaching about 4,500 metres (14,800 ft) above sea level.[1] The southeastern portion of Uzbekistan is characterized by the foothills of the Tian Shan mountains, which rise higher in neighboring Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan and form a natural border between Central Asia and China.[1] The vast Qizilqum (Turkic for "red sand"—Russian spelling Kyzyl Kum) Desert, shared with southern Kazakhstan, dominates the northern lowland portion of Uzbekistan.[1] The most fertile part of Uzbekistan, the Fergana Valley, is an area of about 21,440 square kilometres (8,280 sq mi) directly east of the Qizilqum and surrounded by mountain ranges to the north, south, and east.[1] The western end of the valley is defined by the course of the Syr Darya, which runs across the northeastern sector of Uzbekistan from southern Kazakhstan into the Qizilqum.[1] Although the Fergana Valley receives just 100 to 300 millimetres (3.9 to 11.8 in) of rainfall per year, only small patches of desert remain in the center and along ridges on the periphery of the valley.[1]
Water resources, which are unevenly distributed, are in short supply in most of Uzbekistan.[1] The vast plains that occupy two-thirds of Uzbekistan's territory have little water, and there are few lakes.[1] The two largest rivers feeding Uzbekistan are the Amu Darya and the Syr Darya, which originate in the mountains of Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan, respectively.[1] These rivers form the two main river basins of Central Asia; they are used primarily for irrigation, and several artificial canals have been built to expand the supply of arable land in the Fergana Valley and elsewhere.[1] During the Soviet Era, a plan was devised in which Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan provided water from these two rivers to Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan in summer, and these three countries provided Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan with oil and gas during the winter in return.[citation needed] However, this system dissolved after the collapse of the USSR, and a new resource-sharing plan has yet to be put in place.[citation needed] According to the International Crisis Group, this situation could lead to irreparable regional destabilization if it is not resolved.[2] A shallow lake, Sarygamysh Lake, sits on the border with Turkmenistan.[citation needed]
Another important feature of Uzbekistan's physical environment is the significant seismic activity that dominates much of the country.[1] Indeed, much of Uzbekistan's capital city, Tashkent, was destroyed in a major earthquake in 1966, and other earthquakes have caused significant damage before and since the Tashkent disaster.[1] The mountain areas are especially prone to earthquakes.[1]
Despite Uzbekistan's rich and varied natural environment, decades of environmental neglect in the Soviet Union have combined with skewed economic policies in the Soviet south to make Uzbekistan one of the gravest of the CIS's many environmental crises.[1] The heavy use of agrochemicals, diversion of huge amounts of irrigation water from the two rivers that feed the region, and the chronic lack of water treatment plants are among the factors that have caused health and environmental problems on an enormous scale.[1]
Environmental devastation in Uzbekistan is best exemplified by the catastrophe of the Aral Sea.[1] Because of diversion of the Amu Darya and Syr Darya for cotton cultivation and other purposes, what once was the world's fourth largest inland sea has shrunk in the past thirty years to only about one-third of its 1960 volume and less than half its 1960 geographical size.[1] The desiccation and salinization of the lake have caused extensive storms of salt and dust from the sea's dried bottom, wreaking havoc on the region's agriculture and ecosystems and on the population's health.[1] Desertification has led to the large-scale loss of plant and animal life, loss of arable land, changed climatic conditions, depleted yields on the cultivated land that remains, and destruction of historical and cultural monuments.[1] Every year, many tons of salts reportedly are carried as far as 800 kilometers away.[1] Regional experts assert that salt and dust storms from the Aral Sea have raised the level of particulate matter in the Earth's atmosphere by more than 5%, seriously affecting global climate change.


References: Kovalenko L.I, Rodionova G.M, Chumakova Z. V., Zrelova L. V. Fundamentals of Ecology and Environmental Protection: Textbook / Ed. A. P. Arzamastseva. — Moscow: Publishing House «Medicine», 2008. Manankov A. V. Geoecology. Industrial ecology. Tomsk publishing house TGAU, 2010. Velichko M.V, Efimov V.V, Imanov G.M Economics and noosphere. Scientific and methodological bases of state management of social and economic development in the conditions of globalization. Noospheric (ethical-ecological) approach. — St. Petersburg: ANO VPO «Smolny Institute of the Russian Academy of Education, Department of Psychology, Acmeology, Noo-Spheriology and Pedagogy», IFES Publishing, 2012.
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