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Project Aims to Reduce Water Risk in Europe
An EU project costing an estimated €2.5M
will aim to provide vital timely information for the management
of pollution incidents in coastal areas and large rivers. Ian Thompson
from project partner YSI Hydrodata (UK) says “The project
will develop novel water quality monitoring techniques and exploit
recent developments in communications technology to produce a network
of monitoring stations that will integrate with satellite based
remote sensing equipment to provide a real-time monitoring network
for diffuse and point source pollution. As a result it will be possible,
for example, to monitor chemical leaks and spills and predict the
growth of algal blooms.”
The EU Water Framework Directive has stimulated a demand for greater
monitoring data. It is now necessary to take measurements at more
points, more often. However, water sampling and subsequent laboratory
analysis is time consuming and costly. Furthermore, sampling frequency
has to be high in order to ensure that all water quality events
are detected. This has created a need for continuous monitoring
systems that are able to provide real-time data.
WARMER (WAter Risk Management in EuRope) is a research project funded
by the EC 6th Framework Programme, under the IST-Environmental Risk
Management program aiming to fulfil the growing demands for real-time
monitoring data.
The water quality monitoring system being developed within WARMER
will be buoy mounted and include modular automated in-situ probes
capable of making a variety of measurements including temperature,
conductivity, ammonium, nitrate, phosphate, pH, redox, calcium,
chloride, dissolved oxygen, lead, cadmium, copper, turbidity, colour,
mercury, iron, chromium, phenols, chlorophyll/phyto pigments in
addition to water direction and flow.
Several of these parameters are measured by existing technologies
within the YSI multiparameter sondes; however, a range of subsidiary
development projects will seek to develop technologies for the remainder.
These will include:
1. Potentiometric sensors, mounted in one or more multiparameter
flow-cells measuring mainly inorganic ions and heavy metals; in
the case of heavy metals, a specific preliminary digestion phase
will be included (for dissolved and total metals).
2. Stripping voltammetry, working with screen printed electrodes
for heavy metals with possible integration of biosensors working
with the same detection system; phenol measurements will be tested
using a specific selective sensor.
3. Colorimetric / fluorimetric techniques, running standard analytical
methods
Each monitoring station will be battery powered with data storage
capability and will be mounted on commercially available coastal
buoys. Water monitoring data will be collected by a local remote
programmable data-logger and a GPS device will spatially identify
any collected data with time. Data will be stored and then transmitted
using GPRS or other suitable telemetry technology to a sophisticated
Web server system which will provide data visualisation in alphanumeric/graphic
format and manage the data validation process and remote configuration
upgrades.
Data collected by the buoys will be used to calibrate remote sensing
data, automatically collected from satellites and processed using
the DISMAR Web based system. Spatial and short-medium term water
pollution forecasts will be produced to inform decisions on accidental
spills in natural water resources.
Looking forward Thompson comments “This is a very exciting
project which combines the skills and expertise of nine organisations
from all over Europe including manufacturers, research institutions
and universities. At YSI Hydrodata, we are market leaders in instrumentation
to monitor the aquatic environment, this includes sensor technologies
and integrated monitoring systems so the benefit of our long history
in the subject will be to ensure that the insitu monitoring equipment
which is created by ‘WARMER’ will be robust, reliable
and capable of producing good quality data.
The WARMER project will be of interest to many
of our customers because they are often those with responsibility
for the protection of aquatic resources.”
The WARMER project will last until the end of August 2009 and it
is anticipated that further announcements will be made as the project
progresses and new technologies emerge.
The 9 WARMER participants are as follows:
*Institute of Electron Technology, (Poland)
* Nansen Environmental and Remote Sensing Center, (Norway)
* Politechnika Warszawska, (Warsaw University of Technology), (Poland)
* Research Institute of Chemistry of St. Petersburg University,
(Russia)
* Systems Technology Advance Srl, SYSTEA (Italy)
* The University Court of the University of Aberdeen, (UK)
* Universitaet fuer Bodenkultur Wien, (Austria)
* Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona,(Spain)
*** YSI Hydrodata, (UK)
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