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A step closer to a cleaner Danube

 

 

JDS - Joint Danube Survey - is the most comprehensive survey carried out so far to determine water quality and
ecological status of the Danube River

 

 

 

Credit: ICPDR/I. Liska
The survey attracted a lot of
public attention on its 2,581-km journey

Over 140 different chemical determinands and biological parameters have been analysed and more than 40.000 laboratory results generated in the ICPDR survey that - for the first time - produced comparable data on biological parameters and chemical pollutants, aquatic flora and fauna and bacteriological indicators about the entire course of the river.

 

Towards a homogenous data set

 

The International Commission for the Protection of the Danube River (ICPDR) initiated JDS to improve the validity and comparability of water quality data received from its regular monitoring programme (Trans-National
Monitoring Network, TNMN). „The major goal of the survey was to produce a homogenous data set of selected determinands for the whole Danube River and to identify and confirm specific pollution sources“, explains ICPDR Project Manager Igor Liska.
On August 14th, 2001, a team of ten scientists from Germany, Austria, Slovakia, Hungary, Yugoslavia, Bulgaria and Romania boarded the German "Argus” and the Hungarian "Széchényi” ships in Regensburg and started their 2581-km, six-weeks' journey towards the Black Sea.
During its journey down the Danube, the survey attracted a lot of public attention. It was followed by journal-ists and TV crews in all countries and usually made it into the headlines of major national newspapers, radio and TV news.
JDS was funded by Germany and Austria (Euro 560.000). Each participating country provided in-kind contribution by establishing a national team of experts who worked alongside international JDS experts on their national stretch of the Danube and in the National Reference Laboratories.

 

Credit: ICPDR/M. Fabianova
Regular media briefings raised
public awareness about pollution
reduction policies and activities in the
Danube River Basin.

Main results and findings

 

JDS has produced a reliable and consolidated picture of the water quality of the Danube and its major tributaries in terms of chemical, biological and microbiological parameters. Issues of particular concern involve the stretches with identified hot spots of pollutants listed in the EU Water Framework Directive as priority substances, nutrient concentrations along the entire course of the Danube and its middle part in particular, and overall pollution by bacteria and heavy metals.
„The results of JDS represent a major contribution towards the implementation of the EU Water Framework Directive in the Danube River Basin“, says Peter Literathy, member of the project team. „The Directive envisages the development of an integrated and coordinated river basin management plan for the entire river basin and the achievement of a good status of surface water and groundwater by 2015“, says Literathy. As a first step towards this objective, it requires a comprehensive characterization of the river basin to be established by 2004 together with an assessment of the significant impacts. The data and information yielded by JDS meet these requirements of the Directive and will form an important basis for this work.

 

 

Briefings boost public awareness

 

The Survey provided an excellent framework for harmonising the sampling, sample preparation and analytical methods used in different Danube countries. The jointly collected samples analysed on board and in the national laboratories provided a unique opportunity for scientists to compare their results and improve the quality of their analytical work and the monitoring results. Last but not least, the close contact that JDS researchers established with country representatives during the Survey, the media, local experts and the public, created an ideal forum for raising public awareness about pollution reduction policies and activities in the Danube River Basin.