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pollutants

Pollutants are substances or energy released into the environment that can cause harm or discomfort. They may be solids, liquids, gases, or forms of energy such as heat or noise, and they can originate from intentional releases or accidents and natural processes. Pollutants are often categorized by the environment they affect and whether they are primary pollutants or form secondary pollutants through environmental reactions. Common categories include air, water, and soil pollutants.

Air pollutants include particulate matter, sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxides, carbon monoxide, and ground-level ozone. They arise

Water pollutants include nutrients such as nitrogen and phosphorus, heavy metals, pesticides, organic compounds, and plastics.

Impacts depend on concentration, exposure duration, and sensitivity of organisms. They can affect health, harm ecosystems,

Monitoring and regulation aim to limit exposure and environmental damage. Agencies establish air and water quality

Mitigation strategies include reducing emissions at the source, treating polluted water and soil, and adopting cleaner

from
burning
fossil
fuels,
industry,
and
transport,
with
natural
sources
such
as
wildfires
also
contributing.
Exposure
affects
respiratory
and
cardiovascular
health
and
can
influence
climate.
They
reach
water
bodies
via
runoff,
wastewater,
leaching,
and
industrial
discharges.
Soils
accumulate
heavy
metals,
pesticides,
hydrocarbons,
and
salts
from
mining,
farming,
and
waste.
and
alter
chemical
cycles.
Some
pollutants
persist
and
bioaccumulate.
standards,
permit
discharges,
and
require
controls.
Environmental
monitoring
networks
measure
pollutant
levels
to
assess
trends
and
inform
policy
decisions.
technologies.
Public
awareness
and
international
cooperation
also
address
transboundary
pollution.