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Baltic Sea - Good Agricultural Practicein the new EU Member countries and theNorth-Western Region of the Russian Federation


Protecting the Baltic Sea from environmental impact remains important even 30 years after foundation of the Helsinki Commission (HELCOM). Every year some one billion kilograms of nitrogen and roughly 40 million kilograms of phosphorous are still being discharged into the Baltic Sea, of which more than half stems from agriculture. The high phosphate and nitrogen inputs largely owe to the intensive animal husbandry concentrated around the sea in littoral states. The consequences are algae growth, oxygen shortage, and high concentrations of hydrogen sulfide that jeopardize the biological diversity of the marine environment.

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Series
Texte | 53/2004
Number of pages
116
Year of publication
April 2004
Author(s)
Umweltbundesamt (Hrsg.)
Language
English
Publisher
Umweltbundesamt
File size
2836 KB
Price
0,00 €
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nicht lieferbar
Article:

Tags:
 Baltic Sea  Russian Federation  marine ecosystem  environmental impact  agriculutral  marine conservation area  strategy for sustainable development  plant nutrition

The UBA’s motto, For our environment (“Für Mensch und Umwelt”), sums up our mission pretty well, we feel. In this video we give an insight into our work.

The UBA

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Source URL (modified on 04.04.2023):https://www.umweltbundesamt.de/en/publikationen/baltic-sea-good-agricultural-practicein-new-eu