Language:  GlossaryImagesHelp
 
Home: USES: Disposal of Waste from Land: Municipal Wastewater (Sewage): Approaches and Policy Steps
Advanced Search | an expanded view of Topics and Knowledge in the Atlas
 Login for Members

 Username
 
 Password
 

Forgotten your Password?

Not a Member? Join Now

 
Navigate the Atlas:
 1 SUB-TOPICS:
 Topic Overview
 Editors
 KO Overview
 Owner
 
Approaches and Policy Steps
Text-only     Printer-friendly version             
Cross-sectoral problems, cross-sectoral solutions
 
Most marine environmental problems from land-based activities are cross-sectoral in origin. So are their solutions. For example, the problems of eutrophication, sedimentation of near-shore ecosystems and destruction of habitats will require the same kinds of control measures to deal with them.
 
Measures to reduce sedimentation will obviously have an impact on nutrient inputs that cause eutrophication. Stopping the physical alteration of habitats will al;so keep soils stable and reduce nutrient flow. Reducing agricultural use of fertilizer will stop some nitrogen emissions as will catalytic converters for cars or scrubbers for industry.
 
But will these measures be enough to stop nitrogen flows to the sea? The UN's marine scientists doubt it. They suspect that only radical changes in transport patterns and energy use will cut back the flows significantly. For the moment these remain a serious concern.   See More...
 
 
 
 
All  (1) Documents   (1)
  
TitleImproving waste management and port waste reception in the Caribbean  ( DOCUMENT )
Author(s) / Editor(s) OECS
Keywords WASTE MANAGEMENT; SOLID WASTE; SHIP WASTE
Geography Keywords CARIBBEAN
Content Language(s)English
File Locationdocuments/15741.Imp_wast ... 0-17.html
Type of Document Paper: Working paper
Document StatusFinished
Related to TopicsApproaches and Policy Steps (2592)
  
979 Topics - 5229 Related Knowledge - 11257 Members - 47 Editors
freeMem:125,286,408 totMem:477,233,152 reqNum:1118130 openSessions:0 generationTime:2013/05/24 23:11:13