DANISH DATA ON ENVIRONMENTALLY HAZARDOUS SUBSTANCES IN MARINE WATERS REPORTER TO OSPAR


Environmental Panorama
International
September of 2009


18 September 2009 - The illustration demonstrates how environmentally hazardous substances are dispersed and transformed in the marine environment. The blue arrows indicate transport of the substances, and the back arrows transformation processes.

The Danish National Environmental Research Institute (NERI), Aarhus University has published a status of the occurrence of environmentally hazardous and radioactive materials and substances in Danish waters. The status, which forms part of Denmark’s reporting to the OSPAR convention on the protection of the North Atlantic, including the North Sea and the Kattegat, is based on data collected via the national monitoring programmes up to and including 2005.

Thousands of substances – also naturally occurring substances - are classified as environmentally hazardous, but the Danish monitoring programme especially follows the occurrence and development of heavy metals, PAHs, chlorinated compounds such as PCB, DDT and dioxin as well as newer substances such as brominated flame retardants. The occurrence of TBT (tributyltin) is also followed, a substance used until 2003 as an antifouling agent on the hulls of boats and ships.

According to senior researcher Ingela Dahllöf, chief editor of the status report, precisely with regard to TBT there has a positive trend has been identified in recent years.

’We are measuring decreasing levels of this extremely toxic substance in the marine environment. Reporting from the national monitoring program NOVANA later this year will also demonstrate this positive trend,’ explains Ingela Dahllöf.

She adds that that since collection of the data reported to OSPAR the current monitoring has been supplemented with additional ’biological effect measurements’ or ‘biomarkers’, where the effects of the environmentally hazardous substances on organisms in the marine environment, such as fish and mussels, are investigated.

‘This report can be regarded as a summary and a good introduction to the environmentally hazardous substances in the marine environment,' she concludes.

Contact: Senior researcher Ingela Dahllöf
Hazardous and Radioactive Substances in Danish Marine Waters. Status and Temporal Trends. Editors: Ingela Dahllöf and Jesper H. Andersen. 2009. National Environmental Research Institute, Aarhus University. 116 pp.

 
 

Source: Danish Ministry of the Environment
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