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Homes and sewage
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Human homes, and particularly those in urban areas, produce a broad range of materials that impact on the marine environment, including sewage, solid waste, toxic pollutants and greenhouse gases.
 
Pollution from domestic sewage is one of the most serious forms of ocean contamination. It affects every region of the world. In Chile for example, it is estimated 82 percent of all domestic sewage finishes up in the sea, transported there by 27 river basins. In the Mediterranean over 50% of wastewater, or over 3.2 billion cubic metres per year, are discharged untreated. Untreated sewage contains very high levels of nutrients which can lead to eutrophication. It is also responsible for introducing suspended solids, biological contaminants, and chemical waste, including persistent pollutants and toxins. In its raw form sewage can also contain significant amounts of solid waste and litter.
 
The complex nature of sewage requires a range of treatments to neutralise all of the damaging compounds. Preliminary treatment such as filtration removes some of the solid waste, primary treatment can remove some of the suspended sediments. Secondary treatment, typically involves bacterial introduction to remove the soluble components, while tertiary treatment attempts to disinfect the remaining liquids. Significant levels of nutrients may remain, even in well treated sewage. Pathogenic micro- organisms are only thoroughly scoured in tertiary treatments and many persistant toxins may remain even in such highly treated sewage. In some cases disinfection methods, such as chlorination, can further add to pollution. Domestic homes are major source of solid waste, including plastics, which escape into the oceans. A number of countries deliberately dump their solid waste at sea, and others incinerate their waste at sea, but with considerable losses of solid waste during this process. Homes are also major energy consumers, fuelling the greenhouse effect with CO2 emissions, particularly associated with temperature regulation through heating or air conditioning.
 
 
 
 
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TitleMESH Project  ( PROJECT )
Project SummaryMESH is an international marine habitat mapping programme that started in spring 2004 and will last until January 2008. A consortium of 12 partners across the UK, Ireland, the Netherlands, Belgium and France gained financial support from the EU INTERREG IIIB fund for this international programme. The MESH partnership covers all five countries in the Interreg (IIIb) north-west Europe area, drawing together scientific and technical habitat mapping skills, expertise in data collation and its management, and proven practical experience in the use of seabed habitat maps for environmental management within national regulatory frameworks. MESH aims to produce seabed habitat maps for north-west Europe (see MESH study area) and develop international standards and protocols for seabed mapping studies. The end products are a meta database of mapping studies, a web-delivered geographic information system (GIS) showing the habitat maps, guidance for marine habitat mapping including protocols and standards, a report describing case histories of habitat mapping, a stakeholder database and an international conference with published proceedings.
Project OutputsProject website including interactive mapping website - MESH webGIS Online Metadata Catalogue of seabed mapping studies System of Confidence Assessment for habitat maps Guide to Marine Habitat Mapping (online & DVD) Review of Standards and Protocols Cruise reports Modelled outputs Case studies Stakeholder network
Keywords MESH; SEABED HABITAT MAP
Geography Keywords UK; FRANCE; BELGIUM; NETHERLANDS; IRELAND
Start DateApril 2004
End DateMarch 2008
Total Project Cost $ 11,000,000
Lead/Managing OrganizationJNCC
Contact
Natalie Coltman
Contact PositionMESH Mapping Scientist
Address
City Road
Peterborough   
UK   PE1 1JY
Contact Email
Contact Phone44 (0)1733 866914
Project Web Address (URL)http://www.searchmesh.net
Related to TopicsMarine environment (15096)
  
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