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Cover image for Air, water and soil quality modelling for risk and impact assessment
Title:
Air, water and soil quality modelling for risk and impact assessment
Series:
NATO security through science series.

NATO security through science series.
Publication Information:
Dordrecht, The Netherlands : Springer, 2007
ISBN:
9781402058752
General Note:
Available online version
Electronic Access:
Fulltext

Available:*

Library
Item Barcode
Call Number
Material Type
Item Category 1
Status
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30000010149513 QH541.15.M64 N37 2005 Open Access Book Proceedings, Conference, Workshop etc.
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Summary

Summary

Environmental pollution by harmful anthropogenic substances and uncontrolled use of natural reserves have become a global problem and require substantial efforts for developing and applying efficient measures of control, mitigation and abatement. For achieving this goal predictions of possibly resulting risks and impacts are urgently needed for future environmental planning. The majority of environmental quality models is focusing on selected isolated parts of the geo-system though impacts on one compartment usually also affect one or more other parts. There is a strong need to advance to an integral treatment of air, soil and water pollution by combining different models for different media. Furthermore it is imperative to develop and apply modern methods of control theory to environmental risk assessment in order to support mitigation and abatement measures in an optimal way. The aim of the NATO Advanced Research Workshop on "Air, Water and Soil Quality Modelling for Risk and Impact Assessment" was to further joint environmental compartment modelling and applications of control theory to environmental management. The articles of the proceedings provide an overview of ongoing research in this field regarding assessment of environmental risks and impacts. Besides selected issues of practical application they address questions of forward and inverse modelling, integrated treatment of environmental changes and economic impacts as well as aspects of future development of numerical environmental modelling.


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