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Survey of Environmental Monitoring Programmes in the CBSS

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Survey of Environmental Monitoring Programmes in the CBSS Anne Liv Rudjord Topcal Day on Monitoring of Radioactivity in the Environment Oslo 12-13. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Survey of Environmental Monitoring Programmes in the CBSS


1
Survey of Environmental Monitoring Programmes
in the CBSS
  • Anne Liv Rudjord

Topcal Day on Monitoring of Radioactivity in the
Environment Oslo 12-13. April 2011
2
Introduction
  • A proposal in EGNRS to consider whether the CBSS
    should harmonise their programmes and share
    results essentially creating one regional
    monitoring programme
  • Identified tasks
  • 1 Overview of ongoing monitoring programmes
  • 2 Analysis of information on monitoring
    programmes
  • 3 Streamlining towards a regional monitoring
    programme
  • 4 Sharing information
  • 5 Assessments
  • EGNRS decided to move forward on task 1 and 2,
    and initiated a survey on monitoring programmes
    in the CBSS member and observer states.

3
Introduction
  • The benefits of data compatibility and sharing
    over the whole region would include
  • a more cost-effective environmental monitoring
    programme by avoiding redundancies and filling
    gaps
  • a better and broader basis for detecting and
    responding in abnormal situations
  • a better and broader basis for more complete
    information to the public
  • a better basis for maintaining compatible
    measurement capabilities for emergency response
  • a better and broader basis for predicting
    movement of radioactive materials in the
    environment

4
Introduction
  • Priorities
  • aiming for overview rather than detail
  • looking for gaps and overlaps
  • monitoring around nuclear installations not
    included

5
Outline
  1. Introduction
  2. Overview of multilateral actors and agreements
  3. Survey
  4. Variability among national monitoring programmes
  5. Evaluation
  6. Conclusions


6
Relevant multilateral actors and agreements
  • Euratom
  • (EURDEP and recom. 2000/473)
  • HELCOM
  • OSPAR
  • The Arctic Council (AMAP)
  • IAEA

7
Survey collecting information
8
Survey
  • We have gathered information from 12 countries
  • Questionnaires (7) Finland, Germany, Lithuania,
    Latvia, Norway, Poland, Romania
  • Collected from documents (5) Denmark, Estonia,
    Iceland, Netherlands, Sweden
  • Results are summarized in a large xcel table
  • All countries asked to verify the information

9
Survey objectives of monitoring programmes
  • The stated objectives for performing
    environmental monitoring often differ from
    country to country
  • Estimating doses to the public
  • Documenting levels and trends
  • Providing background information for research
  • providing information to the public
  • Controlling/reducing exposure to the public
  • Facilitating data exchange with neighbouring
    countries
  • Controlling discharges from facilities
  • Complying with legislation and agreements
  • Providing a warning in case of a radiological
    emergency
  • Maintaining competence for emergency situations

10
Survey- sampling media
  • 17 categories of sampling media
  • External gamma dose/dose rate (12)
  • Airborne particulates (12)
  • Deposition (9)
  • Soil (5)
  • Surface freshwater (11)
  • Freshwater biota (3)
  • Freshwater sediments (4)
  • Sea water (11)

11
Survey sampling media
  • cont.
  • Marine biota (9)
  • Marine sediments (9)
  • Drinking water, ground water (10)
  • Milk (11)
  • Mixed diet (8)
  • Other individual food products (10)
  • Sewage (2)
  • Indicator biota (4)
  • Whole body measurements (3) -

12
Survey - Variability among national environmental
radiation monitoring programmes
  • The degree of variability differs greatly among
    the different sampling media.
  • Some observations
  • data from external gamma and aerosols is already
    shared and therefore reasonably harmonised.
  • Monitoring included in international co-operation
    also tends to be fairly harmonised
  • HELCOM/OSPAR marine environment
  • EU recommendations drinking water, milk, and
    mixed diet
  • Other monitoring of food and terrestrial biota
    vary widely

13
Survey variability
  • Chapter 3
  • describes variability for each sampling media
  • Example table 3.9 gt
  • Key summary on variability marine biota
    monitoring

Countries that monitor marine biota 9 members (Denmark, Finland, Germany, Iceland, Lithuania, Norway, Poland, Sweden)
Countries that measure
gamma spectrum/cesium-137 9 members (Denmark, Finland, Germany, Iceland, Lithuania, Norway, Poland, Sweden)
strontium-90 2 members (Germany, Lithuania)
technetium-99 2 members (Denmark, Norway)
polonium-210 2 members (Denmark, Norway)
alpha spectrum 1 member (Germany)
plutonium-239240 1 member (Norway)
radium-226 1 member (Poland)
Type of biota sampled Fish only (Poland, Sweden), seaweed only (Lithuania), fish seaweed (Estonia, Iceland), or fish seaweed benthic animals (Denmark, Finland, Germany, Norway).
Number of sites For fish Ranges from 2 (Estonia) to 20-40 (Norway). For seaweed Ranges from 1 (Lithuania) to 13 (Norway) For benthic animals Ranges from 1 (Denmark) to 20-40 (Norway)
Sampling frequency Once per year for most countries (twice per year in Germany, 4 times per year for seaweed in Iceland and Denmark)
14
Survey radiation measurements and analysis
  • Practically all sampling media are analysed by
    gamma spectrometry by all countries.
  • The most important exception is the external
    gamma monitoring
  • Sr-90 analyses are performed by several countries
    in several sampling media, especially drinking
    water, foodstuffs and milk.
  • gross alpha, gross beta, tritium a few/some
    countries in some media
  • other radionuclides one or a few in some
    sampling media

15
Priorities among the sampling media
  • Evaluation Criteria
  • Relevance for doses to the public
  • Relevance for emergency preparedness
  • Usefulness for other countries
  • Need for further harmonisation for data to be
    comparable
  • Whether harmonisation of methods would require
    big changes

To be discussed and further developed !
16
Evaluation- gaps and overlaps
Example Gaps in deposition monitoring in the CBSS
17
The draft report- conclusions
  • Main survey observations
  • CBSS members tend to monitor radioactivity in
    many of the same media
  • Nearly all sampling media analysed by gamma
    spectrometry, but otherwise measurement methods
    vary widely
  • Current monitoring in the CBSS is partly
    harmonised through international programmes, but
    none of these cover the whole environment or the
    whole region, and there are still
    incompatibilities among these sampling media as
    well.
  • Preliminary evaluations suggest that some
    sampling media (for instance deposition and milk)
    would be relatively easy to harmonise.

18
The draft report - recommendations
  • to be developed!
  • Will be based on discussions and conclusions of
    the Topical Day.
  • The final report will be submitted from EGNRS to
    the CBSS CSO meeting in June
  • Opinions and contributions welcome!
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