orthumherland Strait MARCH 20, 1970 WATER POLLUTION IS THE PRUBLEM To get an idea of how bad pollution is in Prince Edward Island we spoke to Dr. Ian MacQuarrie of the Biology Department. He informed us that water pollution is the greatest cause for concern on the Island, as com- pared to soil and air pollution which are not press- ing. More than half of Island- streams are present- 1y unfit for shellfish collection because of pollution or siltation, he noted. According to MacQuarrie, the reason that peo- ple are not pressing for an improvement in the qual- ity of life on the Island, is not because they are not concerned but because theyxare not aware, because background information is not readily available. In, criticizing the PE‘l news media, he suggest— ed that only sensational news is reported (such as the Nova Scotia “Arrow” incident) and people don’t know :how it all affects them and What they can do about it. Howover, he said that not a lot of back- ground information is necessary — “You need an expert to design a sewage facility but you don’t need an expert to tell you if you need one or not”. He mentioned a proposal of roughly a million dollars by an engineering firm to clean up Char- lottetown harbour, and that “experts” are going to have to make a government decision on what will be done because the community representatives on the Water Authority are not well enough informed to make a competent decision. MacQuarrie felt that the people of the area should decide what use they want made of the harbor, as just eliminating the smell would be much easier and much less costly than making it safe for swimming, for instance. He also felt that a general information program as well'as a. school program in ecology would pre- vent such mistakes as the» method of construction of the North River and Hillsborough bridges (which, although apparently economical at the times have proved detrimental to the ecology of their rivers) through ignorance. NICE WORK ONTARIO (CUP) — Domtar Limited, a chem- ical company recently fined $1,000 for pollution of Lake Superior by dumping effluents into streams and rivers, has been awarded a $484,000 “forgive- able loan” by the Ontario Development Corporation. The OD'C awards the loans periodically in amounts of more than $50,000 to deserving large Industries, as part of a to encourage pri- yate enterprise and foreign investment in the prov- lnoe. _ Companies are not required to repay the loans If they can prove they made no profit from the money. ' I A The loan to Domtar will go toward the con- S'tl‘uction of another chemical [plant as Cornwall, Ontario. Domtar is affiliated through its director with the Argus Corporation, Standard Broadcasting, .a'S‘SBY-Ferguson and subsidiaries, Avco Corpora “on, Hollinger Mines, Canada Cement, Wabasso TOWels, W.I. Molasses 00., Prudential Life Insur- We, Sun Life Assurance, United Aircraft, Hawker- ld'eb’» Dominion Stores, Simpson’s Sears, Claude ‘ 9°11. Gillette, Noranda Mines, Canada Permanent Trust, the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce, Royal Bank of Canada, Bank of Montreal, Toronto minion Bank and other firms. A CADRE SUPPLEMENT: POLLUTION I CONSERVATION 5-1 ’ PHOSPHATES By MARK BONO‘KOSKI Pollution is one of the dirtiest words around. A major cause is, ironically enough, a cleaning compound—phosphate. Maybe that will take a little Cheer out of washing and force people to take a little Action. The gurgle people hear as their dirty wash- wate-r runs down their drains is being drowned out by an even greater rumble in Parliament. Joe Greene, who’s leading the battle against pollution, has a war going with what he terms the “strange- fe-male species” who buy the highest phosphate de- tergent because ‘it gets the “old man’s clothes whiter.” Basically, the phosphate problem arises from “old age” or, in more scientific terms, the eutro- phication of the Great Lakes. Our natural waters are growing old. Ingredients such as phosphates and nitrogen are flowing into the waters and are serving as fartilizer for the aquatic plants called algae. is aging process occurs naturally, but over vast periods of time; Canada’s unpolluted nor- thernvlakes are still infants in the process. But, man-made additions of nutrients to waters can speed up the aging process by thousands of years. This is what happened to the already dead Lake Erie and the other dying Great Lakes. Unnatural additions of phosphorous to the lakes result in gian population explosions of algae. When this algae dies, its decaying process robs the lake of oxygen, killing fish and the other animal life the lake supports. When it will not longer support animal life the lake is dead. Washed ashore, the decaying algae also fouls beaches in unsightly, stinking masses, making the lake unfit for swimming or recreation. The phosphate problem is nothing new. Twelve years ago, the internationally known ecologist La. mong Cole had already reco‘gnized the difficulty in cycling phosphorus through nature. In the Scien- tific American he wrote the following. “Phosphorus is an element essential to all life, but it is quite rare on the earth (about 0.1 percent of the mass of earth). Unfortunately, it is not cycled by nature and is most likely the critical limiting resource for the functioning of the ecosphere (earth’s total en. vironment system.) “We must learn to reclaim and recycle it, not to use it once and dump it.” Phosphates, however, have a number of actions that are invaluable. They hold dirt in suspension and make the water wetter and thus able to pene— trate fabrics easier. They boost the cleaning power of other ingredients and emulsify the greasy fats. Able to see the effect of detergents on the fam- ily wash and home cleaning, and being constantly bombarded by television commercials extolling their value, it is easy to see why most homemakers are sold on them. This is the crux of the matter. De- tergents take the hard work out of cleaning. Few people, however, are aware that the phosphate per- centage varies with almost every detergent. Some cleaners with a soap base contain just a. little, and probably, safe amount, yet do an excellent job. The clean image of detergent commercials took a serious knock on February 5th when radio and TV personality Arthur Godfrey announced he would! do no more commercials for Axion, a laundry pro- duct, unless its manufacturer, Colgate-Palmolive ‘ Ltd, all-owed him to say on the air that it pollutes the water. He stated that the company told him that it was an enzyme and that enzymes do not pollute. He then discovered it contained more phos- phates than any other detergent. “How can I preach ecology and sell this stuff?” Godfrey asked. Lever Brothers Ltd. sells Lux, a laundry soap product almost free of phosphates —- certainly low enough to be harmless. The same company sells seven detergents containing certainly an almost sig- nificant percentage of phosphate; these include All, Omo, Surf, and Breeze. Proctor and Gamble Ltd. sells Ivory Snow, again a safe soapabased laundry product and the laundry detergents Cheer, Tide, Oxydol, Duz, and Bold, which are phosphate based. There is lots of choice. Choose a phosphate and you are literally hanging yourself. The Tide has turned. Washing can still be a Breeze. If people continue to be true to phosphate detergents they will soon find themselves With no water to wash in,