International conference"Integrative approaches towards sustainability" (Baltic Sea Region taking the lead) |
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Sponsored by EC DG Research |
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Abstracts:
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Silvia Bargigli
University of Siena,
Department of Chemistry
Italy
Resource
use by production processes and national economies have been very often
investigated under the point of view of their upstream cost (financial,
energetic, labor, and land investments). Instead, the direct and indirect
effects of resource use on local and global environment are still poorly
integrated with process and economic accounting, although a significant
literature already exists about large-scale effects such as global warming and
acidification and local-scale, eco-toxicological effects of airborne and
waterborne dispersal of chemicals and particulate. Integration of NFA (Material
Flow Accounting) and LCA (Life-Cycle Assessment) techniques with a detailed
classification of emissions as well as of their environmental fate and
potential harm to humans and ecosystems is urgently needed and would help
choices for environmentally friendly production processes and economic
development.
An aluminum foil production process from bauxite ore in the ground
is carefully analysed in this case study, via a multi-method and multi-criteria
approach. Outputs are classified according to the usual MFA method, and
abiotic, biotic, water-use and air-use intensities are calculated. Emissions
are also are classified into environmental impact categories with
special attention to the localization of the associated impacts, in order to
highlight those impacts that occur in sites far from the final process site.
As a consequence of both upstream and downstream analyses, the
effects of aluminum production are quantified and assigned to the following
impact categories: (a) material and energy resource depletion, (b) global
warming potential; (c) acid rain potential; (d) tropospheric ozone and
photosmog formation potential; (e) eco-toxicity; (f) decrease of biodiversity;
(g) land use and ecological footprint. Other impact categories (such as
eutrophication) were found not significantly involved in this study.
Results show that localization of emissions is a crucial point in
the environmental impact evaluation of aluminum production. This calls for a
careful consideration of the uneven distribution of the economic benefits and
the environmental load on the international market, where the environmental
burden associated to primary resources is very often not accounted for.
Alexandre Borde
Institut
français de l’environnement
61, boulevard
Alexandre Martin, 45058 Orléans cedex, France
Email:
alexandre.borde@ifen.fr, aborde@infonie.fr
The
elaboration of a set of sustainable development indicators (SDI) is a long and
complex task. As part of the European efforts, it took several years to build a
system of SDI in France, from the development of a consistent framework, before
deciding of an extensive list of indicators, to the selection of about 40
indicators according to regional or policy priorities (making the French
experience redeemable to other regions like the Baltic Sea Region).
First,
it is important to adopt a methodology allowing to organize the choice of
indicators in a transparent manner and to involve the various stakeholders
(through a two years period of consultation with NGOs experts, university
researchers as well as decision makers from national and subnational
authorities.). In order to do so, the issues of sustainable development have
been “disaggregated” in homogenous and manageable modules. These modules
are then articulated within an integrative framework, following the Brundtland
report definition of sustainable development. At the end, the three dimensions (the
environmental, social and economic dimensions) and the various (and sometimes
opposite) visions of sustainable development (Dobson, 1996) are taken into
account in a way that avoids putting them side-by-side.
The
leading concepts characterizing sustainability in this integrative framework
can be summarized as follows:
·
Balanced economic growth which creates more
jobs, greater productivity and fewer externalities (modules 1 and 2);
·
Greater attention to maintaining and restoring
critical natural capital, including human and institutional capital (modules 3
and 4);
·
Strong links between the local and the global
levels (modules 5 and 6);
·
Meeting the needs of the present generations by
reducing inequalities (objective conception) and dissatisfaction (subjective
conception) (modules 7 and 8);
·
Taking into account future generations by
applying the precautionary principle for managing resources and by adapting to
unforeseeable circumstances (reducing dependency in the case of risks) (modules
9 and 10).
Ruta Bubniene
Vilnius University,
Kaunas Faculty of humanities,
Department of
Management, Economy and Business Administration,Muitines 8, Kaunas, LT 3000
e-mail: Ruta@aapc.lt
The
paper presents the review and analysis of the recent actions at national and
local level towards sustainable development. The focus is put on the
highlighting the application of sustainable development indicators while
developing Local Agenda 21 action plans.
The
implementation of the EU Environmental Acquis is a challenge not only for the
national institutions, but for all environmental stakeholders as well. While
following the headlines of the EU Sixth Environmental Action Program it is of
crucial importance to follow the principles of sustainable development and
monitor the approaches of the Cardiff process of integration of the environment
in the other policy areas.
More
than 25 % of Lithuanian local authorities have participated in the Local Agenda
21 activities. The experience and lessons from the Baltic Region has been
widely applied to facilitate the progress of LA 21. There were some trials to
include sustainable development indicators in the strategic plans of the
cities.
The
World Summit on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg in 2002 was a strong
incentive for the development of the Lithuanian National Sustainable
Development Strategy. Thus, it is believed that the gap between local and
national level will be diminished and the partnership could be built. The
milestones for the promotion of the sustainable development concept are not
only the capacity building and awareness rising but the co-operation,
partnership and apropos decision making as well.
Thus,
the paper will mainstream the obstacles and perspectives of the sustainable
development at local level and present the scheme of indicators applied at
Vilnius municipality.
Michele Galatola,
Eliana Russo, Nicola Brunetti, Stefano Canese
ENEA – Italian National Agency for New
Technologies, Energy and the Environment
In
this paper we report the preliminary results of a study we are carrying out in
a “tourist farm” located in the Basilicata Region. This is not a typical case
study, as in this kind of enterprise we can find a deep integration of
different aspects connected to the several activities run daily within the
farm. There are six main production areas: (i) growing of cereals and other
crops, (ii) farming, (iii) production and preserving of meat, (iv) operation of
dairies and cheese making, (v)
restaurant and (vi) provision of short-stay accommodation.
This
complex net of activities and potential impacts makes really tricky and
scientifically interesting the implementation of an integrated management
system (Quality-Environment-Safety) that could then be registered according to
the European EMAS scheme (Environmental MAnagement and Audit Scheme). In some
aspects this “tourist farm” represents a simple industrial district with the
same problems and opportunities for closing some material and energy cycles.
The
methodology used and the identification of the significant environmental
aspects is discussed, together with the working approaches experimented in this
project. As far as we know in Europe there is no experience of such integration
for those “tourist farm” within the framework of the EMAS scheme.
The
outputs of our project will be used in order to plan and implement the
Environmental Management Program of the farm, and to define reasonable
objectives and targets.
The
implementation of an EMS and the LCA is helping the management to have a
clearer and more systemic view of all the relations existing between their own
activities and between the farm and the “rest of the world”.
Ladislav Hanus
Mendel University of
Agriculture and Forestry Brno, Department of Landscape Ecology
Zemedelska 1, 613 00
BRNO, Czech Republic
e-mail: hanus@mendelu.cz
Sustainability
analysis deals with system viability and probability of its survival. The goal
of this work was to find sustainable trends, indicators and evaluation method. Sustainable trend means reduction
material and energy consumption in ecological dimension. Employment represents
agriculture support for regional community and indicates sustainability in
social dimension. Profit represents sustainable trend in economical dimension.
According to these trends were selected aggregate indicator for each
dimension: i) material and energy costs, ii) personal costs, iii) profit. The
indicators are at an
appropriate level of aggregation, simple in order to make them useful for
policy-decisions. Indicator values are in units EUR per hectare per year.
The research evaluated 40 chosen farm
systems and used data from Profit / Loss Accounts. The
first step was determination of indicator intervals that were considered as
intervals of sustainability. The second step was creation of a pyramidal model
of agriculture system where dimensions were marked according to their
dependency in system: ecological 3, economical 2, social 1. The third step was
evaluation of all systems and sequencing of their sustainabilities.
Sustainabilities of chosen systems ranged in interval from 27% to 63%. The
highest sustainability (63%) was found in system with material and energy costs
of 171 EUR/ha, profit 3 EUR/ha and personal costs 135 EUR/ha. The lowest
sustainability (27%) embodied farm with material and energy costs of 806
EUR/ha, profit 29 EUR/ha and personal costs 242 EUR/ha. Advantage of proposed
sustainability evaluation method is the simplicity of agriculture system model,
however, it provides only general results.
Mark Hammer
Sustainable Europe Research Institute (SERI)
Schwarzspanierstraße 4/8, A-1090 Vienna (Austria)
mark.hammer@seri.at
Within
the field of industrial ecology material flow accounting has been developed as
a tool for the derivation of indicators for ecological sustainability. The
paper will present results of a material flow analysis (MFA) of the Hungarian
Economy for the years 1993-1997. Material flow based indicators like Domestic
Material Consumption (DMC) and Total Material Consumption (TMC) are used as
environmental sustainability indicators. The analysis of the structure of the
material flows shows the share of domestic and foreign components and the
shares of several material categories. The time series demonstrates that only a
relative decoupling of material flows and economic activity has taken place
during the last years. Although a decrease of the material flows per unit of
GDP during the last years of the analysed period could be observed, both material
flows in absolute values and material flows per capita have increased. Material
intensity of the Hungarian economy in terms of material requirement or
consumption per unit of economic output is higher – and vice versa material
efficiency is lower – compared to western industrialised countries. In contrast
material inputs per capita are lower than in most western countries. The thesis
closes with a methodological discussion and policy and research implications.
Julija Jeganova,
EuroFaculty
Eco-Management and Audit Scheme is
Regulation (EC) No 761/2001 of The European Parliament and of the Council of 19
March 2001 allowing voluntary participation by organization in a Community
eco-management and audit scheme (EMAS). The scheme has been open for
participation by organizations since April 1995 and its goal is to promote
continuous environmental improvements within organization.
The
objectives of EMAS are: the establishment and implementation of environmental
management systems by organization, the systematic, objective evaluation, the
provision of information and an open dialogue with the public, the active
involvement of employees.
Today,
EMAS is a useful tool for combination of business and environmental interests.
EMAS has an economic background. It is a management system which implies that
decision-making process and allocation of resources is a management
responsibility. EMAS is strongly connected with the economic meaning of
auditing. Auditing may be defined as a systematic process of evaluating results
without prejudice regarding financial statement and accounting systems about
economic actions and events in order to establish the standards and report the
results to interested users.
History:
EMAS Regulation 1836/93 was first introduced in July 1993 as an environmental
policy tool with the goal of sustainable development. From April 1996 EMAS was
open for voluntary participation by industrial organizations. In 1996 EN ISO
14001 (the International environmental management system standard) was
recognized as a step toward achieving EMAS.
In October 1998 EMAS was proposed for revision. And revised EMAS
Regulation was adopted by the Council of the European Union and the European
Parliament in February 2001.
Participation:
EMAS Regulation applies to all 15 EU Member States and the 3 European Economic
Area Member States i.e. Norway, Iceland and Liechtenstein, but candidate
countries are also implementing the scheme in preparation for their accession
to the EU.
In my research paper I
interpreted EC Regulation on EMAS and analyzed the advantages and disadvantages
for Latvia in participating in EMAS. This research paper is a part of an
educational book “European Environmental Law” in Latvian which will be
published this year. The objective of my paper was also to explain EMAS for Latvian students. The main misunderstanding is
with environmental auditors who are used in different context that it is
described in the Regulation. The whole system and connection to environment are
also misused in a different way. Being an economist by background and
environment by specialization, it is rather interesting for me to research the
theory of eco-management and check it in practice.
Anu Kõnnusaar
Estonian Fund for
Nature
Pk 245, Tartu 50002
E-mail: anu@elfond.ee
Estonian
Fund for Nature (ELF) started to measure its environmental impact in 1999.
Since then the environmental report is a part of the annual report, but also
the employees everyday work. From 2001, ecological footprint (EF) method is
used for measuring the organisation’s impact on environment.
The
measuring process is getting more accurate and intregeted into the
organisations management. ELF have balanced the overuse of resources, but
haven’t succesfully deminished the use of resources. Therefore three objectives
are set up:
·
To measure every project environmental impact
separately
·
To work out environmental indexes for new
projects, where the expected environmental impact should be evaluated and added
to the budget of the project proposal
·
To identify and analyse those components that
are not taken into account by using EF methodology and calculate the share of
those components of the total budget.
EF
methodology is used for calculation of environmental impact of ELF in total and
separately for each project. For working out special environmental indexes for
ELF projects, special methodology has been worked out. Components that can not
be measured by EF methodology, will be written out, analysed and summarized
(their cost and share from the total budget).
Results
of EF measured for 2002 are expected in Feburary 2003. Based on experiences, 14
different components, divided into 6 categories (transport of people and goods,
electricity, heating, water and waste), will be measured. Targets for 2002 will
be analysed and new targets for 2003 will be set up.
This
continous case-study is necessary for ELF to balance the overuse of natural
resources, to minimize the use of natural resources and to encourage employees
to participate actively in the organisation’s environmental management. But it
could also be a practical guideline for any other organisation who is willing
to measure its environmental impact.
Andrej Moskvin
Vilnius Gediminas
Technical University, Environmental Protection Department
Now in Lithuania the scientific
environmental project “Transport: Technologies, Economy, Environment, Health”
is carried out. Project aims: systemic analysis of environmental pollution by
chemical and physical elements, contaminants diffusion modeling, transport
sector environmental influence evaluation, solutions how to minimize transport
environmental impact.
These researches are made: the present
situation review (in the Lithuania and in the world), evaluation of transport
sectors which are most harmful for environment, Lithuanian hot points and
regions selection, research methods choosing and research schedule preparing,
natural researchers in the hot points and regions, obtained natural researches
results analysis.
All Lithuanian territory was
divided in characteristic regions. It was taken samples of the air main
contaminants in these regions also samples was taken in the largest Lithuanian
cities (Vilnius, Kaunas, Klaipėda), near the most intensive traffic highways
and highways nodes. It was taken air quality samples near the railways, railway
stations and nodes. All obtained results are described.
In refer to maiden researches
atmospheric pollution situation was described.
Stanisław
Czachorowski, Lech Pietrzak
University of Warmia
and Mazury, Department of Ecology and Environmental Protection
ul. Żołnierska 14;
10-561 Olsztyn; POLAND
e-mails:
lpietrzak@wp.pl, stanislaw.czachorowski@uwm.edu.pl
Aquatic insects are important elements in water and terrestrial
ecosystems. They are of great economic importance, e.g. the hematophagic
insects. The urbanization process drastically changes the natural ecosystems.
Water insects in cities depend on the modifications of the natural water
reservoirs and the quality of anthropogenic ones. The development of the city
area decides on preserving or destruction of the natural fauna. Therefore, a
sustainable development is a chance for the coexistence of the people and the
insects.
We would like to establish if natural fauna of water insects is
preserved in a city. We have investigated caddis larvae (Insecta: Trichoptera)
in the water reservoirs of the two urban areas: Olsztyn and Złocieniec. We have
collected materials from 1983 to 2001. The naturality indexes (Wn) for
investigated water bodies have been calculated.
We have found 89 species of Trichoptera (including rare and
endangered). Fauna of the most water bodies has high value of Wn, which were
higher or comparable to the indexes calculated for the natural areas.
The Results show, that vulnerable species and natural fauna of the
water insects can be preserved within the urban areas. Natural fauna and rare
species have been found in recultivated lakes in Olsztyn. Similar results have been found for large
rivers, which can be settled by fauna from the upper section of the river. Some
rare species have occurred in the anthropogenic small ponds within the center
of the city. We have found more species in the cities than in natural areas. A
city may be a temperature- and light-trap for flying insects.
The investigations are continued. We are looking for cooperation
and comparative investigations.
M. Raugei
Department of
Chemistry
University of Siena,
Italy
The
subject of the poster is an integrated assessment of the environmental
performance of mc-Si, CdTe and CIS photovoltaic modules, using local- and
global-scale evaluation approaches: Material Flow Accounting, Energy Analysis,
Exergy Analysis and Emergy Synthesis. Results from the individual approaches
are compared and integrated, in order to provide the policy maker with a set of
reliable indications. Three case studies are presented, relevant data
highlighted and the importance of the integrated approach is stressed. Special
focus is given to the environmental impact associated to the sites where the
individual sub-processes take place.
Endla Reintam1,
Jaan Kuht2
Estonian Agricultural
University,
1Institute
of Soil Science and Agrochemistry
2Institute
of Field Crop Husbandry
Viljandi Road, Eerika,
51014 Tartu, Estonia
E-mail: endla@eau.ee;
jkuht@eau.ee
Soil compaction affects all soil
properties and functions and trough that plants root system, plant productivity
and nutrient cycling.
Data were collected from
Estonian Agricultural University research field (58º23´N, 26º44´E)
with different levels of soil compaction (4 levels) on sandy loam soil in 1997,
2001 and 2002. Investigated phytocoenosis was spring barley (Hordeum vulgare
L.) field.
Because of the compaction, soil
bulk density increased from 1.4 to 1.9 g cm-3, total porosity
decreased more than 70% compared with non-compacted area. In rainy year the
aeration porosity of soil may be less than 3,1%, even zero. Penetration
resistance of soil increased 60% in plough layer and 64% in subsoil. Increased
resistant for a plants roots and anaerobic conditions increased nutrient losses
from soil, especially nitrogen, but also potassium and phosphorus. The nutrient
uptake by plants (barley and weeds) was almost the same with given fertilizers
by normal soil bulk density. But in dense soil the uptake was reduced up to 70%
and free elements started to pollute the nature. Soil compaction decreased
competiveness of barley and increased share of weeds from 20% up to 53%. Most
of weed species has a higher nutrients assimilation possibility as barley and
they accumulated more nutrients in shoots and roots. More than half from
accumulated nutrients on dense soil (1.9 g cm-3) was in weeds. From
weeds the most rich in nutrients was the corn spurry. With soil compaction
increased share of dense soil tolerant weed species in phytocoenosis, as great
plantain (Plantago major L.) and corn mayweed (Matricaria inodora
L.).
Edgars Smalins1, Kristine Zommere2,
Steen Solvang Jensen3
Latvian Hydrometeorological Agency, Maskavas
165, Riga, LV-1019, Latvia
e-mail: edgars.smalins@meteo.lv
Latvian Environmental Agency, Straumes 25,
Jurmala, LV-2025, Latvia
National Environmental Research Institute,
Frederiksborgvej 399, P.O. Box 358, DK-4000 Roskile, Denmark
To
authors’ knowledge, for the first time in Latvia, air emissions from road
transport have been estimated at local level. Estimated emission data has been
used in AQ (Air Quality) modeling; indicative comparison of modeled and
measured AQ data has been performed which provides for an indicative test of
the quality of the applied input data.
Traffic
data has been obtained for about 100 main traffic links in Riga. Emission
factors calculated by COPERT (Computer Programme to estimate Emissions from
Road Traffic) have been applied to obtain vehicle emissions. An estimate of
the emission from the rest of the road network has been carried out using a
bottom up approach. A digital road network with three road classes was used
(about 6000 traffic links). It is assumed that all class one roads are covered
by the main roads. Class two roads have been assigned traffic levels of 1000
and class three roads of 300 cars per day. Emission factors from the COPERT
have been applied. ArcView GIS was used to summaries the emission in each grid
cell of 1000 m * 1000 m grid.
With
method applied it has been estimated that for the year 2000 in Riga NOx
emission from the industry and traffic is at the same level: 1435 and 1683 tons
respectively. CO emissions from traffic is about 75% of total CO emission and a
similar distribution is expected for benzene although very limited data was
available on benzene from stationary sources: 4056 tons of CO from industry and
10947 tons from traffic and 365 tons of benzene from traffic. SO2
emission is entirely dominated by the industry since traffic only contributes
less than 2%: 1166 tons from industry and 18 tons from traffic.
M. Burinskiene,
R. Uspalyte
Vilnius Gediminas
technical University
11 Sauletekio, Vilnius
Rasa.uspalyte@ap.vtu.lt,
marbur@ap.vtu.lt
Description
of urban development could be explained as common endeavors of society to
coordinate economical growth and social progress, to save nonrenewable
resources, and to use it without threats to ecological balance. This process
consists of four main elements: wholesome environment, lively economics, social
welfare and active community of the city. In the last decade cities of Baltic
countries undergone many changes from planned economy to market condition. This
process created problems: destroyed old fashion technical, social, health care
and other infrastructure, debased quality of housing, reduced level of public
transport service quality, created large amount of unfinished buildings and
territories. On another hand, for the livability of the cities it is necessary
to attract investments, create new working places, renovate urban environment.
There are many systems of sustainable development indicators in the world, but
in this article firstly are presented example of statistical evaluation of
factors, which have influenced urban development, their mutual correlation and
secondly- determinate groups of Lithuanian towns with the same changes towards
sustainability in transition period. The characteristics of cities were used
for cluster analysis. The data shows situation in twelve Lithuanian cities
depending on many aspects: demographical situation, social structure, health
care, education and transportation systems, environment pollution, housing,
income, technical infrastructure, tourism, investment, criminal situation and
etc. These figures cover period from 1996 to 2002. The main goal of our
investigation is to find out common features in the development of Lithuanian
cities and to create range system for the evaluation of city’s future
development potential. The results of evaluation could be used for target
investment program financing.
Kristine Abolina,
Faculty of Geography
and Earth Sciences, University of Latvia;
Andis Zilans,
EU 6th Framework
Programme National Contact Point, Latvia
Sustainable
development as a relatively new concept has become one of the development goals
of the European Union as well as Latvia.
Subsidiarity is a fundamental dimension of sustainability. Consequently,
it is important that questions dealing with sustainability and governance on
the neighbourhood level in Riga be better understood. In this study the views
of the residents of the suburban neighbourhood of Mezaparks were compared with
the goals of the municipal administration, and an analysis was undertaken of
the different actions proposed to further sustainable development in
Mezaparks.
The
differing view of development in Mezaparks, as seen by residents and
administration, indicates a need for the municipality to heed more closely the
opinions of local residents. Some development issues could be more effectively
addressed at the local neighbourhood level instead of being implemented by the
municipal administration. Presently, it is unlikely that the actions
recommended by neighbourhood residents will be implemented by the municipal
administration . This highlights the importance of on-going active
participation of non-governmental organisations, the business sector and
residents in issues related to development planning and implementation.
Particular attention needs to be directed to facilitating full observance of
existing normative acts to ensure uncompromised execution of municipal
functions and implementation of approved municipal Development Plans.
Development of a set of neighbourhood sustainability indicators by the
residents of Mezaparks places them a step ahead of the municipal administration
in identifying and addressing the challenges to urban sustainability.
Ieva Bērziņa, Elīna
Volksone
University of Latvia,
Faculty of Law, 19 Raina Blvd., Riga LV-1586, Latvia,
e-mail:
ievab@navigator.lv, elina_volksone@hotmail.com
20th century represents
an essential turn in the development of mankind – human rights and environment
have been recognised as the basic values. Environmental issues affect any
individual: impose not only human health but also economy. The right to live in
friendly environment has been recognised the basic right of an individual in
Latvia. According to the Article 115 of the Satversme (Constitution) state
protects those rights by providing information on the state of the environment
and taking care of the conservation and improvement. The Parliament has adopted
variety of laws regulating environmental issues. It has also ratified (2002)
Aarhus Convention on Access to Information, Public Participation in
Decision-making and Access to Justice in Environmental Matters.
It is essential to
meet the pre-requisites of environmental protection in building enormously
expanding now. Construction on coastal zone is regulated by the Building Law
(1995) and General Building Rules (1997), but the Law on Protected Belts (1997)
designates the limitations.
Local self-government
has to adopt regulations on territorial planning stating the territories where
new construction is not allowed. The aim of such regulation is to secure that
coastal zone is not damaged by constructing new houses – restaurants, hotels
and other buildings beneficial for the owners. Lack of environmental awareness
in Latvia results in illegalities still going on. The low interest in
environmental problems, nescience of legislation and economical problems lead
to the imperfect realization of environmental protection policy. Liability for
implementation of policy lies on officials sometimes not competent or not
willing to involve society in decision-making process.
The aim of this report is to draw attention to
the questions that are not enough austere regulated and allow owners to
accomplish actions harmful for environment, especially illegal building on
coastal zone.
Ilze Irbe, Ingeborga Andersone,
Zaiga Chakste
Latvian State Institute of Wood Chemistry, 27 Dzerbenes St.,
LV 1006 Riga, Latvia
Historic
cultural heritage embraces historic cultural landscape and individual
territories, groups of buildings, works of art, furnishings and articles with
historic, scientific, artistic or other cultural value. In Latvia, there are
8325 protected heritage sites. The inclusion of the historic center of Riga in
the UNESCO world cultural heritage list in 1997 testifies the significance of
Latvian heritage. Protection of cultural heritage for future generations is a
guarantee for sustainability of Latvian historic cultural environment.
Sustainable maintenance of this environment corresponds with the national and
international interests.
Nowadays,
the owner of a cultural monument in Latvia can be the state, self-government
and a physical or juridical person, which are responsible for the monument’s
maintenance, repair and restoration. As a result, the restoration of old
buildings becomes very common but is often carried out inadequately. At the
same time, many buildings are abandoned, while others are bad maintained. The
above factors promote spreading of biodeteriorating organisms (fungi and
insects) in constructions. Biodeterioration of wooden materials causes
considerable decrease in wood mechanical properties to the limits dangerous for
safety.
Our
inspections of cultural monuments i.e. churches, estates and dwelling houses in
Riga and different districts of Latvia, as well as the buildings in Open-Air Museum
for wood biological damages have shown that the main biodeteriorating organisms
are wood-rotting fungi Serpula lacrymans,
Coniophora puteana, Antrodia spp., and wood-boring insects Anobium spp. and Hylotrupes bajulus.
Protection of cultural
monuments is an urgent problem in Latvia that claims more attention. More
information for society on the dangerousness of biodeterioration, and adequate
control measures will play an important role towards the sustainability of our
cultural heritage.
Katri Kerem, Katrin
Kull
Tallinn Technical
University, Faculty of Economics and Business Administration
katri@staff.ttu.ee
The
idea of environmental concern surrounding consumption is quite a new one in
Estonia. However recently the public opinion has shifted towards environmental
consciousness and thus it is time for the first preliminary researches into
those areas. First consumers are realizing that their behaviour has also a
direct ecological impact.
The
idea of green marketing has two main facets - in the one end there are
producers and marketers who must be willing to take environmental impact into
consideration and in the other end there are consumers who may or may not be
willing to pay attention to the environmental impact of the consumption. Both
parties must be at least somewhat interested in the environmental side of their
actions in order to reach some sort of paradigm shift.
The
aim of the current study is to explore the importance of greener products for
the consumers. The main issues under exploration are the importance of
environmental aspects in everyday consumption, willingness to pay more for the
greener products and criteria for product choice. Hopefully this survey will give
insight into areas that need deeper exploration in the nearest future.
The
empirical data for the survey will be collected via a consumer survey
instrument designed specifically for this research project.
P. Baltrenas, E. Kliaugiene
The main objectives of this program are investigations of the environmental impact of pollution caused by the transport sector in Lithuania; evaluation of environmental impact of transport sector on soil; simulation of pollutant dispersion by computer programs, preparation of suggestions and recommendations for the reduction of impact on environment. The object of this research program is the environmental impact of the Transport system (motor and railway transport sectors) on soil. The motor and railway transport sectors are the main sources of pollutants in Lithuania. Therefore these two sectors are under the more detailed research than the other two – air and water transport sectors. The main goals of this program are the environmental impact of motor and railway transport sectors on soil (topsoil). The most important thing in this program is to set the sample net and to choose the right method of collecting the soil samples. The whole territory of Lithuania was divided into the areas where the environmental impact of motor and railway transport sectors on soil is the most intensive. Some other areas were selected where the pollution impact is the lowest, for the purposes to compare polluted and not polluted areas. For evaluation of pollution caused by the motor and railway transport, the soil samples were collected across the road or railway, and each profile of samples contained about 12-14 samples depending on the relief. One sample was composed of five sub-samples collected according to the “envelope” principle. After transportation of the topsoil samples to the laboratory the following analytical method was used AAS-ES. Heavy metals (Zn, Co, Cr, Ni, Cu, Pb, Mn) were analyzed for the purposes to evaluate the composition of contaminants in the topsoil. Following conclusions could be made after the interpretation of the results. Substances emitted are exposed to various aerodynamic and gravitation forces resulting in their separation and, depending on their physical and chemical properties, they settle selectively on the soil surface at different distances from the road surface. The main amount of heavy metals is settling on the soil surface in the narrow limited zone of the highway itself, its slopes and ditches. On the railways, the heavy metals are settling in the narrow zone next to the tracks depending on relief conditions.
Agrita Ozola,
University of Latvia
Cultural
heritage is rapidly becoming a key factor for economic growth and development
of local communities. Buildings, locations and sites, artworks and artefacts of
national level is thought to be a key component of identities of people.
UNESCO
World heritage Convention concerning the Protection of the world's Cultural and
natural Heritage (1972) is contributing to the protection of the culturral and
natural diversity and to the international standarts for heritage conservation.
New chalenges have emerged with the adoption of the UNESCO Universal
Declaration on Cultural Divercity (31st session of the General Conference
2001).
The
new norms in the cultural field respects no only tangible heritage, including
underwater heritage, but also intangible heritage. The concept of intangible
heritage encompasses complex and diverse forms of living heritage and is
intended to pay more attention on the safeguarding and evolutin of Traditional
culture and Follore.
One
of the key aspects is the integration of new heritage concept and conservation
strategies into regional and urban planing as well as sustainable development
strategies.
The
revitalisation of intangible cultural heritage in all its dimensions: languages,
oral traditions, values, beliefs, local traditional skills, know-how for the
creation of material culture is another factor to enhance the development of
the teritory.
The
recognition of local traditional skills and knowledges as well as nonmonumental
cultural sites, places with both cultural and natural values and places with
spiritual and other associative value for local people is also stategic
planning.
Sergei
Stafeev
Centre
of Community Networking and Information Policy Studies (CCNS),
St.
Petersburg, Russia
This presentation is written in the context of lessons
learned in the last three years in the field of community networking in Russia.
The author has worked using a community development methodology to support the
use of ICT’s (Information and Communication Technologies) in the Northwest of
Russia. This model has built on the "Community-based approaches"
applied to the development of telecommunications. Versions of the model have
been actively pursued for ten years in the USA, UK and Canada. The underpinning
definitions and conceptual framework of these ideas and models are used widely
in the rest of the world, and in recent years are beginning to be applied in
Russia. Leading researchers and practitioners in Russia anticipate that the
application of these models to the use of telecommunications for community
benefit will lead to positive outcomes rather than exacerbate the poor social
and economic situations that exist in many areas of Russia. The crucial question is: ‘How successful are
these applications from the western world to date and will they allow Russian
communities to move forward in their understanding of effective strategies to
introduce new technologies (e.g. the Internet) into the everyday life of
Russian citizens?’
During the last 4 years the Autor who was working in
several international R&D projects in the field of civil society structures
development at the local level in Russia (and also observing the work of
similar projects in other Russian regions) saw some cases of very effective
using of the ICT tools as social tools for formation of various local (geo)communities,
establishing new social links and developing the social partnership.
The
paper will overview these experience.
Jaroslaw Szewczyk
Bialystok Polytechnic,
Faculty of Architecture
ul.Krakowska 9, 15-875
Bialystok, POLAND
cad.cam@interia.pl
This
paper presents results of investigation into spatial consequences of a depopulation
of rural areas in northeastern Poland. The research was conducted by Jaroslaw
Szewczyk at Studio of Rural Architecture (the Department of Urban Planning,
Faculty of Architecture, Bialystok Polytechnic) in 2000 – 2003, supported by a
Rector’s grant of Bialystok Polytechnic # W/WA/4/00, funded by the Polish
Research Council. The investigation included a comparison of population of 1500
villages separately in 1970, 1978, 1988 and 2002, in order to get
geographically dispersed dynamics of depopulation processes in Podlaskie province in Poland. As a result three maps of
settlement processes during the periods 1970-88, 1978-88 and 1988-2002 were
generated. Areas with strong migrations were described, showing depopulation
dynamics in 1970-2002. This analyses
were preceded by less detailed investigations by A.Stasiak,
R.Horodeński, W.Mirowski, J.Szewczyk and other researchers, who had focused on
wider area, but had compared population of communes rather than of villages.
Depopulation processes in Podlaskie province in Poland are summarised, with
emphasis on how they affect spatial development of rural areas. There are
following conclusions:
Growing depopulation
started to affect space, economy and landscape in sixties, and since seventies
until now it has been influencing disruptively on the spatial development
processes, especially in peripheral regions.
Global-scale
depopulation of rural areas still disintegrates spatial development, acting
against sustainability.
The
paper aims to inspire discussion about a wider problem of depopulation in the
Baltic Rim. The needs for further
large-scale, integrative investigation into the consequences of depopulation
processes, are reasoned.
Jaroslaw Szewczyk
Bialystok University
of Technology, Faculty of Architecture
ul.Krakowska 9, 15-875
Bialystok, POLAND
cad.cam@interia.pl
This
presentation is to inspire discussion about computed management of cultural
heritage, in order to long-term safeguarding of cultural identity of rural
European architecture and for preventing cultural genome for sustainable
local architecture.
This
issue covers creation of database of architectural heritage, defined by
XML syntax, developed in order to describe Polish traditional rural
architecture for scientific investigations of architectural, rural and spatial
planning fields, with emphasis on architectural heritage management. The
primaeval objective of this undertaking was to store digitally the existing
rich architectural data, such as over 600 kg (!) of the paper documents
collected during the Student Summer Workshops of Bialystok University of
Technology, Faculty of Architecture, since 1986. Recently we have put this idea
into new fields, focusing on challenge of creating and maintaining a digital
database of cultural heritage.
The
main aspects of the problem are recognised:
1. Conceptual
Background - Cultural Genome
The idea of regional
cultural genome, which led as a foundation of the project, is presented.
2. Organisational
Aspect - Coordination of Efforts
The coordination of
European, regional, national or local activities with emphasis on building
digital heritage databases is needed. The results can be open scientific
databases for integrative research, training and protection of cultural
heritage.
3. Technological
Aspects
Architectural
databases for scientific investigations include a great amount of heterogeneous
information, represented by various data structures. This implies problems with
defining "open” (not fixed) structures of heterogeneous data, flexible
enough to be restructured easily.
Concerning these
aspects, relevant analyses are summarised.
Georg Tamm
Tallinn Pedagogical
University
Some
environmental movements use narratives of traditional rural lifestyle combined
with modern technologies in their sustainability visions of local strategies of
sustainability. Politicians and social scientists often neglect such scenarios
as too rapid and destructive change for economy and society.
I
interviewed 20 rural enterpreneurs and officials of local government from
peripheral regions, where economic situation would be unstable and favour
short-term management strategies. Target group was choosen mostly to be
dependent on natural resources extraction (forestry, fishery, agriculture) and
therefore potentially most pessimistic against ideas of sustainable management.
People were asked to interpret sustainable development in their field, their
personal attitude to such idea, and estimation to presented radical “green”
sustainability vision for Estonia.
Respondents
revealed unexpected support to sustainability idea despite of presented
environmental norms and restrictions for their short-term profits. In
interviews two conflicting fields were mostly used to describe sustainable
development: 1) current liberal market is perceived to rise antagonism between
sustainability in monetary terms as opposed to sustainability of natural (and
social) resources - though enterpreneurs itself perceive threat to environment
they feel forced for unsustainable management; 2) rural life is often used as
example of “true sustainable development” - urbanism and industrialism are
perceived as main problems for sustainability on the national level, though
current sustainability of rural life is related to lack of resources and “real
sustainability” is perceived as expensive technological project.
I
propose hypothesis that in Estonian case public perceptions of localised
sustainability ideas reveal political cleavage not so much between economic
development vs. sustainability as traditionally expected, but also between
different (rural and urban?) lifestyles?
Edgars Andersons,
University of Latvia
Prevention
and protection of the sea environment from harmful pollution is the main task to
ensure sustainable development of the Baltic Sea and Riga Gulf. Only
appropriate information and effective actions of continuous monitoring can
assure real understanding and adequate measures could be taken.
Remote
sensing of oil pollution in the Baltic Sea and Gulf of Riga, including
observation of oil slicks from accidents or illegal discharges in the sea is
the primary task of an efficient monitoring system. The traffic of dangerous
goods in the Baltic Sea is another acute problem.
There
is a necessity for prediction and forecast of the movement of oil slicks for
the purposes of emergency response. Integration of satellite observations with
the existing chemical pollution monitoring system in the Baltic Sea area seems
to be reasonable, at least.
Dealing
with dangerous goods, such as different sorts of oils is widely developed in
the three Latvian ports. Oil terminals are situated in Liepāja, Ventspils and
Riga. Intensity of the flow of dangerous goods is rather high and poses
potential possibility of pollution as a consequence of accidents or illegal
discharges in the sea. To decrease pollution risk it is necessary to realize
permanent remote sensing of the Baltic Sea and the Gulf of Riga.
Permanent
monitoring of the traffic flow of dangerous goods in Baltic Sea could be
realized by satellite observation as the first phase and a more precise
detection by aircraft in the second phase. Since almost all ships carrying
dangerous goods, such as tankers, bulk carriers, and RO-RO ships are being
constructed as large-size vessels, so identification should raise no
difficulties.
For
prediction and forecasting of the movement of oil slicks for efficient and
permanent emergency response, constant and real information source is also
necessary – satellite observation would minimize the damages to environment as
well as recovering costs.
It
is very important to verify satellite observations with the existing system of
chemical pollution monitoring of the Baltic area to eliminate mistakes of
interpreting the information and to distinguish between pollution and natural
phenomena.
Kerstin Doescher
University of
Lüneburg, Germany
In
the framework of the seminar “Sustainable development in Europe” the focus of
this abstract is on the development of a policy for a more sustainable
agriculture and the emphasis of the relevance of agriculture in terms of a
sustainable development.
Agriculture,
properly meaning assurance of food supply, is an issue concerning all human beings
as everybody is essentially dependent on food to meet basic needs. The growing
human population on a global level stresses the importance of a long-term
availability of agricultural production.
Concerning
the three spheres of sustainability, all of them are related to agriculture,
i.e. jobs in terms of economy, i.e. land use in ecological area and i.e. health
in the social dimension.
A
lot of problems resulting from agricultural practices and policies are
contra-productive to all dimensions of sustainability.
The
awareness of cultural identities is a condition for sustainable land use and
long-term food supply. Of extreme importance is this in the transformation
process from centrally planned to market economy in Central and Eastern
European countries where agriculture has a much higher significance (in
comparison to Western Europe), i.e. in terms of employment.
By
interpreting the EU´s policy the importance of agriculture has been understood,
at least for the economical sphere. More than half of the EU budget is spent on
agricultural policy annually.
The big challenge
would be to integrate the applicant countries in the Union by realizing a
sustainable agriculture.
Berit Hayn
University of Lüneburg,
Faculty of Environmental Sciences, Germany
At
the University of Lüneburg, Germany, I am working on the topic “Renewable
Energy in Europe” according to “The Role of Sustainable Development in Europe:
Issues and Options”, motivated by the importance of sustainability and the
enlargement process for Europe. The importance of renewable energy is based on
their need for the economic system and activity and also the climatic change.
According
to the current situation in the European Union – the enlargement process –, the
existing policies in the field of energy are discussed in their possibility to
reach the aims under the approach of sustainable development. Regarding to the
advancement for renewable energies the policy paper deals with the discussion
and reflection of the different EU programs, especially “The Strategy of the
European Union for Sustainable Development” and “Intelligent Energy for
Europe”. The EU programs ALTENER and SAVE are described as an initial stage for
“Intelligent Energy for Europe”. The program “Intelligent Energy for Europe” is
inspected under the given aims in the “Green Book” and “White Book” and also in
achieving sustainable development.
Furthermore,
the now existing energy law – the European Legislation – is discussed on the
base of being able to reach the declared aims and also in contributing to the
programs. Under this aspect the transformation into national law will be
reflected.
The
final aim of the policy paper is to give policy recommendations relating to the
existing policies and the legislation in the EU. Contributing to sustainability
and the enlargement process it should give ideas for concrete measures to
approach sustainable development in Europe to modify unsuccessful policies.
Jörg Hoffmann
University of
Lüneburg, Faculty of Environmental Sciences, Germany
e-mail:
hoffmann-joerg@web.de
The
European Union is currently developing a new approach to policy making, in order
to assure that the aims set in different spheres of Community activities follow
a more coherent overall guideline. The priority areas, as identified by the
European Council in Gothenburg (2001), shall be acknowledged by all future
policy setting.
To make the European Union more
sustainable, the amendment of the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) is of
paramount importance. The greater part of current EU legislation deals with
organising rural development and sets standards for products and markets related
to agricultural production. In 2002, nearly 50 % of the total EU budget was
spent on Agriculture and the development of rural landscapes. Agriculture not
only provides crops for EU’s population, it also offers jobs and creates social
nets, which strongly did and still do influence the identity of numerous rural
areas in Europe.
The
presentation held in the framework of the conference will highlight problematic
relations between current CAP and other policy fields, mentioning unwelcomed
outcomes of CAP due to existing financial incentives. In a second part, the
current outcomes of CAP, with special regards to their impact on the new
memberstates, will be contrasted with proposals from the Commission and
important environmetal non-governmental stakeholders, in order to develop an
idea of how a more sustainable CAP might look like.
Katrin Kull
Tallinn Technical
University, Faculty of Economics and Business Administration
katrin@dreamers.ee
The
world has become more environmentally conscious. Numerous researches have been
made to highlight different angles of the subject. In different countries and
in different areas there is a different opinion about environmentalism, too.
One
aspect of the environmental economics is greener marketing. On the one side of
the issue there are the marketers, who must consider the balance of costs and
revenues while adopting the greener strategies. On the other side stands the
consumer, whose decisions to buy or not to buy affect the marketers.
The
objective of the current study is to measure the importance of the “greener”
products for the consumers in Estonia. The study is a preliminary research for
a wider study that will discuss the effectiveness of the “greener” scheme as a
marketing strategy and its acceptance by the consumers. The current research
will describe the existing situation in Estonia in the field of marketing the
“green” products, and with the help of the research, further objectives could
be set in order to gain deeper insight into the issue of greener marketing in
Estonia.
According
to the previous researches, made in other countries, it can be assumed that the
“green” product could be thought to be of better quality, and that the consumers
would be willing to pay more for it. But is it so for Estonian consumers as
well? How many of them will actually consider that it is important? The current
research will try to answer it.
Beatriz Vidal Legaz
University of
Lüneburg, Faculty of Environmental Sciences, Germany (host university)
University Miguel
Hernández de Elche, Spain
NUCLEAR POWER IN theEUROPEAN
UNION
Energy
produced by nuclear power plants makes up for35% of EU’s total electricity production.
We give an overview of the current state of nuclear power in a choice of EU
memberstates, and also in some of the applicant countries.
The
state of nuclear energy production in terms of safety and efficiency is in many
states not satisfying, thus it is worth to have a closer look on relevant
statistics. The organizations and agencies that take control and advise in
terms of nuclear safety (IAEA, WENRA, WPAQ, Euratom…) and the domains of each
one will be presented in short.
In
a second step, the presentation will take an interest in the most important
nuclear power related problems facing the European Union: security and
economics of this issue. Principally, the potential hazard from the fission
process, the unsolved problem of nuclear waste transport, treatment and
storage; the high cost of dismantling of old fission reactors; uranium as an
unrenewable fuel; economic viability of the probable new generation of power
stations in a global energy market.
After
analysing the current nuclear problems, future perspectives will be discussed:
the decision of some European countries of phasing out nuclear energy and the
need of achieving real nuclear safety in the applicant countries. Next to that,
EU’s porposal to rely on this electricity source, to meet the commitments of
the Protocol of Kyoto, will also be presented.
European
related policies, principally the strategy of the Directorate General of Energy
and Transport and the Green Paper
about nuclear power into the energy and sustainable development policy will
form an additional point of the presentation. At last, we explain the found
gaps in european policy about nuclear energy and the necessary enlargement of
its little domains in the context of a new Europe. The mechanisms to take
control on nuclear sector must be saveand global enough to turn sustainable
development into a reality.
Isabel Maria
Cañamás i Llopis
University Miguel
Hernández (Spain)
Lueneburg University
(Host University)
Abstract
for the International
Conference on “Integrative Approaches Towards Sustainability” (Baltic Sea
Region Taking the Lead),
to be hold on 26-29th March
2003, in Riga-Jūrmala (Latvia)
In
order to define an own Strategy for the European Union on the matter of
Sustainable Development (trying to approach the current one and to point the
deficiencies); our international group of students at the University of
Lueneburg (Germany) have checked the different positions between the Commission
and important NGOs about the way the Enlargement Process will influence
Europe’s way to Sustainability
The
European Union is going to face one of its most important challenges with the
new Enlargement Process. A new market is going to be created, and this would
allow millions of people to get better conditions as consumers.
One
of the most important economical markets in the European Union is the Energy
Market, and its relevance for Europe’s way to Sustainable Development is
crucial, because of the influence Energy constitutes in other markets.
For
the last years, a new kind of policy-making has arisen in order to protect the
environment and to create a global view of the human activities on it; after
having participated in the Earth Summit in Rio (1992) and in Johannesburg
(2002), the European Union created a new strategy for Sustainable Development
in order to attend the global purposes.
Relating
to the energy matter, one of the main points for the European Union is to get
an internal liberalised market, able to both supply the demand and guarantee a
competitive service, in order not to be dependent on external critic political
situations. The Green Paper brings an
important study on the matter, and other Strategies like the White Paper, contribute to create the
exiting linkages between energy and another fields like transport. The
relevance of this global strategy deals with the fact of assembling each one of
the Sectorial Strategies in a common strategy for the Sustainable Development,
based on the role of energy efficiency and low consumption.
About
Conventional Energy Sources, Kyoto constitutes the main priority, and the
increasing use of natural gas in front of oil and white coal to get lower
contamination ratios are two of the most desirable options.
All
this policy and decision-making influences on the regional Planning, and this
is the most important handicap the Candidate Countries may face in order to
join the European Union, but in the same way, it constitutes an opportunity for
them in order to get better infrastructures and to generate new paths to
Sustainable Development.
Aida Macerinskiene
Vilnius Gediminas
technical University
11 Sauletekio, Vilnius
aida.macerinskiene@ap.vtu.lt
Lithuania
is one of the countries that is undistinguished by exclusive natural resources
(as Italy and Australia). Current Lithuanian industrial depression increases
unemployment (in some regions it is up to 20 percent). The governmental budget
deficit grows. The development of tourism, as economical branch, would create
conditions to replenish country budget, create new working places that is very
significant for countryside. Tourism is an activity that do not object to
sustainable development principals, encourage to recognize and conserve
Lithuanian natural and cultural heritage, secure permanent Lithuanian Republic
economical welfare growth, positively influence social, natural and ecological
conditions.
One
of the most important tourism development conditions are subjects of
accommodation system. There are hotels, motels, tourism bases, guesthouses,
camping, rest houses and rural tourism houses. Tourism accommodation buildings
places selection, the most suitable type identification, building and
renovation affect tourism market and are one of the most important market
formulating elements. Technical construction rules outline the requirements set
for such type of buildings, the amount and quality of services, the necessary
infrastructure.
Research
target is tourist’s accommodations buildings analysis and development from planning
perspective. During research social, economical. Infrastructure, nature and
cultural elements affecting tourist’s accommodation building system development
are analyzed. According to geographical information systems, digital tourism
services and resources database that are used determining tourism development
in suitable territory is created.
Benediktas Jankauskas,
Genovaite Jankauskiene and Jurgita Stankute
Kaltinenai Research
Station of the Lithuanian Institute of Agriculture (KRS of LIA), Varniu 17
LT-5926 Kaltinenai, Silale District, Lithuania
E-mail:
kaltbs@kaltbs.lzi.lt
The
research data, presented in this paper, were obtained on the undulating
landscape of the Zemaiciai upland (Western Lithuania), where loamy sand and
clay loam Albeluvisols prevail. The thickness of the lost soil layer differed
due to common effects of water, wind and tillage erosion and varied from 0.12
to 1.07 m according to the slope gradient and degree of soil erosion. The
degree of soil erosion on investigated hilly-rolling areas was determined by
comparison of the thickness of lost soil layer, slope gradient and different
thickness of present genetic soil horizons. Among 155 investigated soil
profiles or borecoles even 116 eroded plots were established (74.8%). Very
severely and severely eroded soils were on 49 plots (31.6%), 29 plots (18.7%)
were moderately eroded, 18 plots (11.6%) were slightly eroded and 20 plots
(12.9%) contained eroded-deposit soil.
The
fertility of soil measured by productivity of spring barley on slopes of 2-50,
5-100 and 10-140 decreased by 21.7-22.1%, 38.9-39.7% and
62.4%, respectively. The soil was eroded slightly, moderately and severely on
the mentioned slopes. According to 18 years of field experiments, the different
annual losses of soil due to water erosion on slopes of 2-50, 5-100
and 10-140 were as follows: 4.9-13.5 t ha-1 under winter
ryes, 13.9-42.5 t ha-1 under spring barley, and 37.3-136.8 t ha-1
under potatoes. The perennial grasses for long-term use stopped soil erosion
completely. The losses of soil were 6.4-20.5 t ha-1 under the field
crop rotation, and they decreased by 74.8-79.5% under erosion-preventive
grass-grain crop rotations or by 22.5-24.1 % under grain-grass crop rotation in
comparison with the field crop rotation. The losses of N, P and K nutrients
were in close correlation with soil losses.
The
erosion-preventive crop rotations are only part of antierosion ago-phytocenoses
useably on the arable undulating terrain. We find however, that grassing on
slopes of 100 and over are especially important. Grass stands of
high fertility for early, medium and late haymaking or grassing were
recommended and erosion-preventive tillage with antierosion liming-fertilising
must be practised on slopes of 2-100.
D. Butkus, Edita
Baltrėnaitė
Vilnius Gediminas
Technical University
Large
amounts of various contaminants are transported via natural processes from the
technogenic pollution sources. Heavy metals (HM) are very hazardous and with
long-lasting impact to the forest ecosystems. HM enter forest ecosystems in wet
and dry form from local and further sources of atmosphere contamination,
carried from seas with biogens and sea salts or washed out from soil materials,
which are brought by wind or water. HM may enter tree from soil, with nutrients
and water soaked by the roots.
HM
concentrations determined in tree rings could give information about forest
ecosystem contamination with HM, soil contamination with HM in the past. This
helps to analyze the main ways HM enter a tree and migration characteristics.
The
tree samples were prepared according to methodology requirements: the tree
cylinders were chopped, burned until ashes remain. Then the concentrations of
HM in the aches' extracts were measured using atomic absorption spectrometer.
The
results showed that HM concentrations in the tree rings change along the years.
It was determined that concentrations of Cu in birch bark are 7 times as much
as in pine bark. The amount of Ni and Pb was found to be 1,8 times greater in
birch bark than in pine bark. The
concentrations of Pb are larger (2,5 times) in upper soil layers (0-5 cm) than
in the depth of 10-20cm. In the pine tree trunk the concentration of heavy
metals is growing from the root up to the top.
O. Bikovens1,2,
J. Gravitis2, K. Iiyama1
1 - The Asian
Environmental Sciences Center, the University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan
2 - Latvian State
Institute of Wood Chemistry, Riga, Latvia
Plant materials provide
the primary resources of organic matter in soil. Biomodification of
lignocelluloses under composting environment is relatively shorter period
process than the transformation to humic matter in soil. It was clearly showed
that not only polysaccharides, but also lignin macromolecules were modified
certainly during short time composting. Björkman lignins were isolated from
extract-free grass composts. It was shown by chemical and instrumental analyses
that Björkman lignin had only small oxidative changes. However, water and alkaline extractable fractions of composted
grasses gave products containing methoxyl groups, which are the same
with alkaline permanganate oxidation, nitrobenzene oxidation and ozonation of
lignin, suggesting water and alkaline extractable
fractions of compost are composed of significantly modified lignins.
Lignins in water and alkaline extractable fractions
of compost were characterized with highly condensed structure and low
aryl glycerol-b-aryl ether linkage.
These results suggest
that some portions of lignin macromolecules were biologically modified
significantly by introduction of hydrophilic groups such as carboxyl groups to
be dissolved in water or alkaline medium. Such biologically modified soluble
lignin would play the same role as soil humic matters and take part to chelating of metal ions.
Jānis Blahins,
University of Latvia, Riga
e-mail: janis.blahins@vvi.gov.lv
Sustainable life as a global system comprises a large number of
self-regulating constituents, cross-bound with a lot of partially inaccessible positive and negative feedbacks most of which are
characterized by considerable delay or relaxation times measured by centuries.
All that makes the diagraming and
modelling of sustainability nearly hopeless, since we have to deal with
endless numbers of "black boxes"
systemic response times of which are
decades long. The natural self-regulating systems with a
delayed response are prone to becoming “wild”, oscillating or, at least, exhibiting enormous over-regulative
waves, so the only possibility to
calm down the wildness is making the system insensitive, robust. To avoid the
"shock therapies" in mega-systems, such as the social and economic
organisations and environment, parameters characteristic for sustainability
ought to be defined and optimized. The ultimate task of science is to find some
way to predict the behaviour of a complex system to keep stability of it on the
one hand and make it sensitive enough to the "will of small people"
and the "mind of smooth earthworms " – on the other hand.
Laila Dubova*,
Dzidra Zarina
* Latvia University of
Agriculture, Department of Plant Biology and Protection,
Strazdu str. 1,
Jelgava, Latvia, LV – 3004, e- mail : lailad@cs.llu.lv
University of Latvia,
Institute of Microbiology and Biotechnology,
Kronvalda boulv.4,
Riga, Latvia, LV-1586,
e- mail: dz@lanet.lv
Standardised
Toxkit microbiotests were used in this work for toxocity assessment in
agricultural soil and for monitoring of toxicity during composting process. For
microbiotesting analyses we have used micro algae (Selenastrum capricornutum), protozoa (Tetrahymena thermophila), crustaceans (Daphnia magna, Thamnocephalus
platyurus and heterocypris
incongruens) and rotifers (Brachionus
calyciflorus).
Until
now, bioassays are still rarely used for environmental toxicity screening and
monitoring. However, microbioassays are useful tools for ecotoxicological
assessment of contaminated soils and water (Persoone and De Pauw 1991). In
contrast to chemical analysis, which mainly focuses on the quantitative and
qualitative determination of defined contaminants in environmental samples,
biological test systems can detect the combined effects of different
pollutants, the mobility and the bioavailability of contaminants (Persoone and
De Pauw, 1991; Bierkens et. al.1998).
The
results point to a different sensitivity of the microbioindicators to the soil
and compost water extract. The most sensitive bioindicators were Tetrahymena thermophila and direct contact - heterocypris incongruens.
Selected test batteries are indispensable not only for agricultural soil
pollution assessment, but also for monitoring compost toxicity changes during
composting, because, the biotests battery represented differences in
sensitivity of test organisms from various trophic levels. For soil fertility
not only the presence of main microorganisms, but also of microalgae, protozoa
and invertebrate are important.
Kristina
Greičiūtė, Saulius Vasarevičius
Vilnius Gediminas
Technical University, Environment Protection Department
Soil
is important component of biosphere. One of the main functions in soil is
carried out by Soil Organic Matter (SOM). Physical, chemical and biological
features of soil depends on the SOM, and causes the ability of plant growing.
Each of given features can be different according to the conditions like
climate, land using, etc.
Structure
and features of soil can be caused by different factors, natural and not. The
main natural factors, influencing the quantity of SOM in soils, are climate
conditions (temperature, rain, etc.), aeration, pH level, microorganisms
population. The quantity of SOM can decrease because of the agricultural, also
military activities. Intensive land using for crops, or military activities
(bombing in particular) causes decrease of SOM in soils. Entire areas are
disturbed when proceeding bombing trainings, and it leads even to the fertile
lands turning into desert.
A
lot of lands with destroyed plant cover are in the Lithuanian firing grounds. A
wide scale of activities are taking place in these lands, and bombing trainings
too. Ussualy bombing trainings takes place in the same areas, so called
tactical fields. Because of regular
disturbation, the plant cover in such fields is poor, sometimes is missing,
waste grounds are predominating. As it was mentioned before, the plenty of
plants is caused by the SOM, so it is important to find out how quantity of SOM
depends on explosions materials, what is the main tendencies and dependencies.
After it will be possible to realise the negative factors of military
activities for soil features, and SOM in particular.
Ilze Januska,
Valdis Klasens
Latvia University of
Agriculture, Department of Plantbiology and Plantpatology
Nodule
bacteria of inoculate occupancy in the roots of garden beans (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) and peas (Pisum sativum L.) is determined in pot
(Hortic Anthrosol, loamy sand, Terric Anthrosol, sandy loam, compost) and in
field trials (Hortic Anthrosol, loamy sand). Rhizobium phaseoli Dengeard. and Rhizobium leguminosarum Frank. streptomycinresistent forms were
used. Nodules were analysed in the stage of budding – flowering of the
host-plants.
Nodule
bacteria of inoculate occupied themselves in the roots of garden beans rather
well, 17-80 per cent, but in the roots of peas under the same conditions only
0-15 per cent. It testifies, that freely living Rhizobium phaseoli, met in the soils of Latvia are not suitable for
effective atmosphere nitrogen fixation in the nodules of garden bean roots and
the rhizobia of inoculate can compete and form comparatively many nodules.
Occupancy
in the roots of garden beans is also dependent on the qualities of sorts.
Occupancy of the rhizobia of inoculate in the roots of the host-plant in pot trials
is considerably better than in field trials.
Audronė Žaliauskienė, PhD. Ilona Jegorova, Per-Anders
Bergqvist
River
water has the possibility to change pollutant concentration very rapidly
depending on occasional releases and rain events. It is thus important to
assess the time weighted average concentration of potentially toxic compounds
in order to describe the exposure to organisms living in the watercourse. During
this study we examined two Lithuanian rivers and two Swedish streams consisting
mainly of storm water. Nemunas river in Lithuania were sampled with
semipermeable membrane devices (SPMD) during 24 days in October 2000 thus
allowing the calculation of time weighted average (TWA) values of dissolved
concentrations of most of the analysed compounds. On the other hand, the
Lithuanian river Neris was sampled with SPMD during 4 month in autumn 2000 and
then only approximately half of the studied compounds could be used for TWA
calculation. The other reached steady state concentration during the sampling
period. The Swedish streams were sampled above and below industrial activities
as well as large parking lots.
Assoc. prof, Dr. Viktoras Račys, phD. Daina
Kliaugaitė, Assoc. prof, Dr. Per-Anders Bergqvist
Kaunas University of Technology, Department for
Environmental Engineering
Radvilėnų pl 19Kaunas,
LT-3028
daiklia@stud.ktu.lt
Storm water is produced in all
corners of the world and is usually released to lakes and rivers without any
cleaning. Leakage of gasoline and other petroleum-derived hydrocarbons is quite
common in urban area runoff. Pollutants often exceed the solubility
concentration in water as can be seen on the surface. The handling of this
water in conventional wastewater treatment plants is not desirable because of
expensive treatment and high content of oil, metals and other toxic products.
Agricultural and forestry
products and wastes have gained increased interest as new sorbents for sorption
of oil in water. One such is bark chips from coniferous trees. In this study
the capacity of natural bark and commercial bark products for reducing the
aromatic hydrocarbons content are measured.
After trapping the oil, which is
done in laboratory scale columns, a simplified analytical method for analyzing
the efficiency was developed. The aim of this study was to examine adsorption
properties of slash pine bark.
Aarne Luud and Margus
Pensa
Institute of Ecology,
Department of Northeast Estonia, Pargi 15, 41537 Jõhvi, Estonia.
e-mail: aarne@ut.ee
In
Estonia, the reforestation of lands damaged by oil shale mining has been
considered as the most sustainable way to restore land productivity. However,
distinct reforestation alternatives give different results depending on surface
planing, planting material, etc. In this paper we compare three alternative
ways of reforesting oil shale quarries: (1) natural succession; (2) planting
seedlings of Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.); and (3) planting
seedlings of black alder (Alnus glutinosa (L.)). For evaluating of these
alternatives we applied the emergy conception developed by Howard T. Odum. This
allowed us to estimate, on a comparable basis, the environmental work and
economical inputs required for developing (1) total aboveground plant biomass
and (2) stocks of commercial wood in 30 years-old forest stands.
The cost of total biomass,
expressed by economical equivalent of emergy, emdollars (em$), was highest for
Scots pine stands: it required 1.3 em$ per year to produce 1 t biomass in 1 ha.
The biomass cost was 0.8 em$ yr-1 in black alder stands and 0.6 em$
yr-1 in natural stands. The economical load on environment was
nearly similar for black alder and Scots pine stands, the share of economical
inputs in total costs was 75 and 69%, respectively. For naturally recovered
stands, the same value was 0.07%. The costs of producing commercial wood were
highest in Scots pine stands (1.8 em$ yr-1) followed by black alder
(1.2 em$ yr-1) and natural stands (1.0 em$ yr-1). All
alternatives generated net public benefit, emdollar yield ratios ranged from
1.2 to 1.5. Highest public benefit per dollar cost came from naturally recovered
stands (1584 em$ $-1).
The most sustainable way of
reforesting oil shale quarries is the using of unassisted natural succession.
It gives greater net benefits then other two evaluated alternatives and causes
the slightest economical load on environment.
Agnese Meijere,
Daniels Turlajs
Riga Technical
University
Nitrogen
is involved in the combustion as a compound of combustion air and also as a
part of fuel composition. The amount of nitrogen in the air is much more
compared to the amount of nitrogen bound in the fuel. The latter, however, is
significantly more reactive. Due to that the nitrogen content in the fuel forms
the basis of the nitrogen oxide emission formation during the combustion
process and should be considered more carefully.
The
formation of two types of nitrogen oxide emissions – nitric oxide (NO) and
nitrous oxide (N2O) - is observed under the combustion parameters in
the circulating fluidised bed boiler. The formation of nitrous oxide is
promoted by the comparatively low temperature in CFBC, i.e. below 900 0C.
However, it should be mentioned that the correlation on combustion parameters
is often contradictory for both types of nitrogen oxide emissions.
The
work has been carried out to find the correlation between the process
parameters and nitrogen oxide emissions. The intention of the investigation is
to describe the formation of nitrous oxide and nitric oxide by the mathematical
expressions by means of fuel properties, temperature and excess air level.
The
fuel used in fluidised bed combustion varies a lot from the different types of
coal until biomass. Besides the varying fuel properties of different fuels
under the same combustion parameters, there is a strong correlation between
process parameters and gaseous emissions. Moreover, the process should be
adjusted to the specific features of various fuels. The investigation so far
includes different types of coal and wood fuels.
Dainis Ozols,
North Vidzeme
Biosphere reserve;
ozolsdainis@hotmail.com
North
Latvia and South Estonia lies on the belt of prevailing processes of glacial
erosion during the Pleistocene glaciations (Straume, 82).
The
territory is a bit unique within the whole world due to best-preserved traces
of erosion activity of Pleistocene glaciers.
Large-scale negative forms
of the relief testify of erosion processes. Such forms are depressions of Gulf
of Riga, lake Burtnieku, lake Vurtsjarv and lake Peipsi as well as wide range
of medial scale forms within the depressions and on ice divides between the
depressions.
Glaciers
were spreading as surging ice tongues. That means ice movement on thin pillow
of sheetflow. Subglacial waters were under very high hydrostatic pressure
(10-100 atm). Thanks to the glacier movement regimes of water flows were highly
variable with great resulting erosional influence.
Landforms
of glacial erosion determine the mode of landscape within the territory. In
total landscape has mosaic type pattern with orientation of elementary
landscapes and linear units of the landscape along the glacier movement.
Study
of Pleistocene deposits and landforms helps to understand the nature and
regularities of distribution of landscape and biotopes.
Janis Pukite
University of Latvia
Along
with the fast development of satellite technologies and their use in science
and economic different sectors, the possibilities of the use of space-borne
instruments in research and monitoring of chemical composition of atmosphere
are increasing. Data acquired from satellites cannot replace the data from
ground stations but, integrated with each other, they make complementary parts
of information improving concepts of the atmosphere and the processes affecting
it.
Measurements
of boundary layer air pollution in Latvia are made since the end of the sixties
by SHMA (State Hydrometeorological Agency). There are in Latvia and in Baltic
region monitoring stations of air pollution providing measurements within the
framework of the WMO Climate Monitoring and Diagnostics Laboratory and the NOAA
network. These series of measurements of trace gases in the boundary layer of
troposphere can be used to compare with satellite data.
To
extend resources for interpretation and to compare the ground and space-borne
data, it is planned to develop a DOAS (Differential Optical Absorption
Spectroscopy) station in Riga. The measurements of the station will contribute
to validation of the space-borne data and acquiring the measurements of total
columns of the trace gases. The station will be practically the only one in the
Baltic States and a notable supplement for world’s network of DOAS stations for
satellite.
The
ground-based stations are important because of the point character of
measurements. In opposite, the satellite instruments measure data average over
some area. For instance, the largest nominal resolution of SCIAMACHY (an
instrument on the ESA satellite ENVISAT) is 30*60 km. But the space-borne
measurements can cover areas where the ground-based measurements are not
available.
Therefore,
the satellites cannot monitor pollution extremes but comparison of the two
kinds of data sets may improve the quality of information about concentrations
of trace gases in the atmosphere. Most of all this relates to the boundary
layer of troposphere, significantly affected by economical activity, where
major part of ground-based measurements (in Latvia all of them) are made.
Therefore, the sources of pollution have the point characteristic or very local
emission.
The
economical activity (industry, transport) in Latvia is relatively higher in
Riga. Therefore, it is interesting to compare the data of the air quality in
Riga with the side of background level in the country, measured by space-borne
and ground instruments.
E. Petraitis
Vilnius Gediminas
Technical University, Environmental Engineering Faculty
Environmental
Protection Department
Saulėtekio al. 11, 2
211, LT-2040 Vilnius, Lithuania,
E-mail:
egipet@ap.vtu.lt
The
novelty and importance of the work lies in the investigation of orimulsion as a
new research object. Orimulsion is currently incinerated only for experiments.
A special block for experiments with orimulsion is now under construction. That
is why determination of the main orimulsion characteristics is needed. The aim
of the investigation is to find out dispersion and electrical characteristics
as the main characteristics of the new fuel ashes. As a rule, the efficiency of
electrostatic filters depends on many characteristics of a treated air stream,
but dispersion and electrical characteristics are the main ones which are
mostly affected by environmental conditions, and changes of humidity and
temperature.
Orimulsion
ashes contain mostly small particles: 66.8% of them are smaller than 0.6mm and only 15%
are larger than 2.5 mm
(such a fraction forms when orimulsion is incinerated in a special
boiler-house). Experiments with ashes caught by an electrostatic filter show
that orimulsion ashes contain 80% of particles smaller than 1.0mm. This lets
draw a conclusion that orimulsion ashes are small dispersed, and it is
necessary to use more efficient air - cleaning plants, for example,
electrostatic filters. Other kind of cleaning plants could be lack of
efficiency to remove such small particles from the air. The experimental data
also prove that change of an electric charge depends directly on meteorological
air conditions. Charge change is directly proportional to temperature changes.
An especially distinct difference can be seen with humidity changes.
Maris Puke and Janis
Ryzhikovs
Latvian State
Institute of Wood Chemistry
27 Dzerbenes Str., LV
1006, Riga, Latvia
Woodworking industry residues
often do not find proper utilisation and are heaping up or used as a fuel at
best. One of the feasibilities of the appropriate use of this out-of-demand but
yet valuable raw material is to produce furfural, acetic acid and activated
carbon by implementing an energetically self-sufficient unified hydrolytic and
thermal process of hardwood processing. Furfural and acetic acid are obtained
by catalytic prehydrolysis of hardwood residues and 50% of the left-over
lignocellulose is used as a fuel in a boiler house and the rest as a raw
material for carbon production. Since such a unified processing scheme is
almost unexplored, our intention was to study the main parameters of the
process.
Birch
wood veneer shorts were chosen as a starting raw material. It contained 72.2%
polysaccharides, including 29.9% of easy-hydrolysable polysaccharides; the
potential fufural yield was 15.3% on the o.d. wood basis. Since the
lignocellulose would be used for production of activated carbon, its yield and
properties were also of interest. Therefore, the impact of the catalyst
(concentrated sulphuric acid) was studied to elucidate the optimum conditions
to ensure a high yield of furfural and lignocellulose with appropriate
properties. Changing the amount of the catalyst, the furfural and
lignocellulose yields varied from 6.3 to 8.9% and from 65.9 to 59.3% on the
o.d. wood basis, respectively.
The
left-over lignocellulose possessing good self-binding properties was studied as
a potential raw material for production of a high-density sorbent in the granular
or palletised form characteristic of a sufficient crushing strength for
industrial use. The experimental specimens were shaped in the form of panels in
a hot press at 150-170oC, carbonised at temperatures up to 600 oC
(charcoal yield up to 50% on the o.d. lignocellulose basis) and activated by
superheated steam at 850 to 950 oC. The apparent density of the
carbonised panels was 0.950 – 0.980 g/cm3. All activated carbon
specimens were microporous ones, since 69.5 to 86.8% of the total pore is made
up by micropores.
Thus,
the activated carbon prepared by short-term activation has properties of
high-density microporous sorbents appropriate for purifying the gaseous medium.
The novel technology of processing fine-grained hardwood residues is
pro-environmental and energetically self-sufficient.
Ulla Vainio1,
Natalia Maximova2, Janne Laine2, Per Stenius2,
Janis Gravitis3, and Ritva Serimaa1
1Division
of X-ray Physics, Department of Physical Sciences, P.O. Box 64, FIN-00014
University of Helsinki, e-mail: ulla.vainio@helsinki.fi
2Laboratory of Forest Products Chemistry,
Department of Forest Products Technology, Helsinki University of Technology,
P.O. Box 6300, FIN-02015 HUT
3Latvian
State Institute of Wood Chemistry, 27 Dzerbenes Str., Riga LV1006 Latvia
Kraft pulping is one of the major pulping
processes and tens of millions of tons of kraft lignin is produced every year
from the spent pulping liquor. For the efficient use of this by-product the
understanding of the morphology of lignin is necessary. Furthermore, the
control of the redeposition of lignin onto cellulose fibres during all stages
of pulping process has become an important issue for the overall pulping
process efficiency and the papermaking quality of the fibres, in particular,
with the introduction of the displacement batch cooking and the water circle
closure.
In this study the morphology of kraft
lignin in aqueous solutions and in the solid state were determined. The lignin
solutions were prepared by dissolving dry pure kraft lignin in 0.1 M NaOH.
Ionic strength and pH were adjusted to levels of 0.1 M NaCl and 7
correspondingly, by adding NaCl and HCl. The shape of the kraft lignin
particles in the solution was determined to be more prolate than oblate in
contradiction to previous studies with pulsed field gradient NMR. The study of
dry lignin aggregates reinforces the studies according to which fractionated
kraft lignin in aqueous solution tends to aggregate as a fractal network up to
1 – 2 mm scale.
Cationic starches (CS) are widely used in
papermaking to improve the dry strength, retention and dewatering. To gain a
more fundamental understanding of lignin/CS complexes’ adsorption onto
cellulose fibres, we studied the morphology of lignin/CS complexes in solution
and isolated as fugates.
P. Baltrėnas, V.
Vaišis
Vilnius Gedeminas
Technical University, Environmental Protection Department,
Saulėtekio al. 11,
2040 Vilnius, Lithuania
e-mail:
vaisisv@takas.lt, aak@ap.vtu.lt.
The
main pollutants contaminating soil are organic compounds (oil and its products,
fats etc.), metals, household waste. Comparing to oil and its products,
household waste and fats are contaminating soil not so heavily. Additionally,
these pollutants are released mostly from domestic sewage, which are usually
purified.
Human
industrial activities is more and more intensive, and actuality of pollution
issues is increasing. Solving of these issues is closely related to economy,
because in view of growing production more and more funds is required for
solving ecological problems in order to avoid damages to and maintain balance
existing in the nature.
In
these latter years here in Lithuania, as in other countries, one of substances
heavily polluting Earth’s depths is oil and its products. Most of contaminated
territories are located in sanitary areas of watering places, where subsurface
pollution necessarily diminishes water resources and reduces their quality.
Soil is contaminated
with oil when various oil products (mazut, mineral oils and greases, kerosine)
get into it. This happens in cases of various accidents, incidents, railway
tanks rolling off the ways, defects in containers with oil products. Oil
products spilled in cases of accidents make the heaviest damage to the
environment.
Having
made assessment of damage extent, riskiness and measures for and costs of
decontamination, it is possible to state that soil pollution with oil products
is live ecological problem.
Rational
dislocation of sources of raw materials and energy in relation to the
technological equipment under operation and rational use of materials and
energy diminish total factual environment pollution. Necessity of such actions
is forcing to look for new materials among natural resources, required for
technologies of environment pollution prevention, enabling at that same time to
investigate physical-chemical properties of these materials.
Surface
peculiarities of biosorbents determine their hydrophobic properties. This
enable to use them when collecting oil and its products from both soil and
water surfaces.
Growing
requirements to environment risk prevention are forcing to have and use
sorbents. There shall be their supplies in potential places of pollution with
oil products. In order to evaluate sufficiency of their amount, detailed
investigation of oil-product sorption is required. Additionally, sorbents shall
meet environmental requirements: easily collected, residual sorbents have no
harmful impact to nature, biodegradable, with prospective disposal
possibilities.
Experimental
investigation of four sorbents Qualisorb gold 628, Sphag sorb, USVR-VIP,
Belneftesorb-extra was carried out. Qualisorb gold 628 is produced from natural
mineral diatomite and crystal quartz. This sorbent is intended for oil-product
sorption from soil surface; it may be used also by interspersing it into soil.
Sphag sorb is produced from peat-moss (sphagnum). This is ecoproduct intended
to absorb large amounts of different chemical substances from water and soil
surfaces. Its residues in the nature are biodegradable. USVR-VIP is a sorbent
of activated carbon. This material is very fine and is intended to sorb
substances from both water and soil surfaces. Belneftesorb-extra is a sorbent
produced from peat. Because of its hydrophobic properties, it is well-suited to
collect pollutants from water surface. Since it is absolutely natural product,
it may be used for pollutant collection from soil surface.
P.
Baltrėnas, Rasa Vaiškūnaitė
Vilnius Gedeminas Technical University, Environmental
Engineering Faculty, Department of Environment Protection
Saulėtekio al. 11, LT-2040 Vilnius, Lithuania
E-mail: rasava@takas.lt rasava@hotmail.com
In
last years, the most frequently considered environmental issue among all others
in both developed and developing industrial countries is air pollution in
residential and working environment, and its reduction. Therefore, when
removing volatile compounds of organic nature from air, it is very important to
choose and apply at the given industrial object the proper, efficient,
affordable air-purification method. These requirements are met by
unsophisticated, commonly used technologies of biological air purification,
where microorganisms use organic substances as carbon and energy sources, by
oxidising harmful substances to harmless ones.
With
this aim in mind was developed the experimental
biofilter with activated charge of pine bark at the Department of Environment
Protection of the Vilnius Gediminas Technical University. biologically
activa-ted pine bark has good sorbic properties. Cell walls in bark and their
cavities make porosity of 75% in the biomedium. In time of air purification the
biomedium being a porous material arrests pollutants passing the filter, and
they are later decomposed by cultiving associations of natural microorganisms
living in the bark.
Work
objective is to carry out a quantitative analysis of the associations of
microorganisms naturally living in the biological medium (before and after the
air cleaning) and, when changing the equipment operation mode (flow of polluted
air injected, charge height etc.) to measure the efficiency of the biological
filter and to evaluate the sorption and the decomposition of organic compounds
in the activated charge of pine bark), injecting single selected compounds
(butylacetate, butanol, xylene) of organic nature in different concentrations
(up to 100 mg/m³) and their mixtures at
different time.
It
was determined in time of investigations, that among natural microorganisms
found in the biofilter charge, the bacteria, not micromicetes. Taking total
amount of natural microorganisms, it was determined, the longer microorganisms
are in contact with organic pollutants, the more intensively they are growing
and more efficiently oxidising organic pollutants.
Filter
efficiency, when purifying air from volatile organic compounds, depends in
great extent on nature and concentrations of pollutants injected. Experimental investigation of filter efficiency has shown
that, among substances investigated, natural microorganisms more easily
decompose compounds, which are more easily dissolved in water: butanol and
butyl acetate. And biological decomposition of xylene, a hydrocarbon of
benzene family, in the same time period is substantially slower For example,
when initial concentrations of butyl acetate and butanol are below
30 mg/m³ and that of xylene is below 19 mg/m³, pollutants are removed with
efficiency of 80-98%, when concentrations are increased (from 30 to 97 mg/m³),
efficiency of purification drops down from 70 to 52.8%. The sorption and the decomposition of organic compounds in the activated pine bark charge also depends on nature
and concentrations of pollutants injected. Quality of biological air purification
improves (e.g. for butyl acetate from 77 to 92%), when reducing flow (from 2.0
down to 0.8 m/s) and volume (from 144.69 down to 57.6 m³/h) of air being
processed, increasing charge height (from 0.15 to 0.75 m), charge amount
(from 0.036 to 0.18 m3) and number of layers (from 1 to 5)
correspondingly.
The
investigation results could be useful in applying biofilters as an inexpensive
and efficient means of air treatment in food, chemical, motor transport and
agricultural industries.
Volperts, A.,
Dizhbite, T., Telysheva, G.
27 Dzerbenes st.,
Riga, LV-1006, Latvia,
e-mail: ligno@edi.lv
Two
applications of binary systems, consisting of lignosulphonates or modified
lignosluphonates and polymeric paper
additives are offered for paper and board production. We offer to use the
above-mentioned system as an agent for for the strength demanding specialty
papers, such as corrugated mediums, since they are usually made from the
brittle secondary fibers. The application of lignosulphonate-starch system
showed increased surface and corrugation groove strength on the background of
considerably increased pick-up. The use of lignosulphonate - starch mixtures
offers improvements in the production efficiency, since paper production can be
increased on the expense of drying time decrease. Thus, not only quality, but
also economy can be positively affected.
The
usage of binary additives consisting of silicon-modified lignosulphonate and
polyacrylamide for paper production provides the increase of the flocculating
action of polyacrylamide due to advanced adsorption of the lignin component on
the fiber. The benefits of silicon-modified lignosulphonate – polyacrylamide
addition are: decrease of polyacrylamide consumption and increase of paper
mechanical properties on the background increased retention of fines and
filler. The latter improves significantly sustainability of papermaking
technologies.
The
miscibility of lignosulphonate and silicon-modified lignosulphonate with starch
and polyacrylamide was investigated and experimental results were compared with
values calculated according to the Fox equation and with the data obtained by
ESR, X-ray, IR spectroscopy. Mixtures lignosulphonate - starch showed complete
miscibility in good accordance with theoretical data in the whole concentration
range investigated. Mixtures lignosulphonate - polyacrylamide revealed partial
miscibility whereas silicon-modified lignosulphonate - polyacrylamide exhibited
a complete miscibility.
Robert Ziolkowski
Technical University
of Bialystok
Poland
Used
car tires and scrap rubber waste materials have become a very serious
ecological and economical problem in Poland since the European Union had issued
a directive against collecting that type of materials. This directive is to be
in force from July of 2003 in regard to used car tires and from July of 2006 it
is going to concern the scrap rubber materials as well. The directive will
concern both the European Union’s countries and countries which are willing to
join the EU – including Poland. There is a need to create conditions for
putting in working order about 150000-180000 tones of used car tires that are
produced each year. Definitely, one of the solutions of developing of scrap
rubber of used car tires is their application as a bitumen modifier.
Asphalt
blended together with the scrap rubber at elevated temperature creates new
asphalt-rubber binder which viscoelastic properties depend on amount of
additive of scrap rubber.
The
paper presents the research results of the rubber-asphalt viscoelastic
properties. The influence of amount of the scrap rubber addition on the
rubber-asphalt viscoelastic properties was established by conducting laboratory
tests on bitumen with 10%, 15% and 20% of scrap rubber addition.
Based
on research results of softening point TR&B, penetration, force ductility
test and dynamic viscosity, the improvement of modified bitumens’ technical
characteristics in range of estimated parameters was proved.