Title: European Critical Loads of Cadmium, Lead and Mercury and their Exceedances 
Resource Type: document --> technical publication --> journal article 
Country: International organisation- network or project 
Year: 2007 
Availability: Water Air Soil Pollution: Focus 7 371- 377 
Author 1/Producer: J. Slootweg 
Other Authors/Producers: J.-P. Hettelingh, M. Posch, G. Schütze, T. Spranger, W. de Vries, G. J. Reinds, M. van ’t Zelfde, S. Dutchak and I. Ilyin 
Author / Producer Type: University research group / research institute 
ISSN: 1567-7230 
Article Weblink (=direct link): http://www.springerlink.com/content/514hk555wn281826/?p=d9fb ...  
EUGRIS Keyword(s): Diffuse pollution-->Processes
Soil-->Soil quality
Water resources and their management -->Stresses, quality and ecological status
 
Short description: The critical load is a measure of how much metal input from anthropogenic sources a system can tolerate. It is the threshold below which significant harmful effects on human health and on the environment do not occur, according to present knowledge. Based on this methodology, a team of international researchers calculated the critical loads of cadmium, lead, and mercury in 18 countries of the LRTAP Convention, 14 of them being located in the EU. Some of the indicators used to assess the critical loads include: concentration of heavy metals in ground water, content of heavy metals in grass and animal products (e.g. cows), and concentration of mercury in fish. The authors then estimated the actual levels of atmospheric metal deposition using a long-range atmospheric dispersion model also developed under the LRTAP Convention. These deposition levels were then compared to critical loads, to identify areas where ecosystems were at risk (i.e. where the critical load is exceeded). Results show that: *Cadmium was not a widespread risk in 2000 and caused exceedances only in one country (Germany) due to agricultural inputs (e.g. fertilisers). *The risk to human health posed by lead deposition decreased from 1990 on but was still widespread in 2000: in EU-25, 71.8% of the ecosystem area (e.g. area of land and water investigated) was subject to excess lead deposition in 1990. This was reduced to 8.1% in 2000. *The risk from mercury remained high in 2000: in EU 25, 77.4% of the ecosystem area in 1990 was at risk of ecosystem effects (terrestrial and aquatic) and 51.2% in 2000. 
Link to Project(s): ESPREME Estimation of willingness-to-pay to reduce the risks of exposure to heavy metals and cost-benefit analysis for reducing heavy metals occurrence in Europe
 
Submitted By: Professor Paul Bardos WhoDoesWhat?      Last update: 07/12/2007

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