Title of article :
Regional air pollution caused by a simultaneous destruction of major industrial sources in a war zone. The case of April Serbia in 1999
Author/Authors :
Zorka B. Vukmirovi ، نويسنده , , Miroslava Unka evi ، نويسنده , , Lazar Lazi ، نويسنده , , Ivana To i ، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2001
Pages :
10
From page :
2773
To page :
2782
Abstract :
During NATOʹs 78-day Kosovo war, 24 March–10 June 1999, almost daily attacks on major industrial sources have caused numerous industrial accidents in Serbia. These accidents resulted in releases of many hazardous chemical substances including the persistent organic pollutants (POPs). Detection of some important POPs in fine aerosol form took place at Xanthi in Greece and reported to the scientific world. The paper focuses on two pollution episodes: (a) 6–8 April; and (b) 18–20 April. Using the Eta model trajectory analysis, the regional pollutant transport from industrial sites in Northern Serbia (Novi Sad) and in the Belgrade vicinity (Pan evo), respectively, almost simultaneously bombed at midnight between 17 and 18 April, corroborated measurements at Xanthi. At the same time the pollutant puff was picked up at about 3000 m and transported to Bulgaria, Romania, Ukraine, Moldavia and the Black Sea. The low-level trajectories from Pan evo below 1000 m show pollutant transport towards Belgrade area in the first 12 h. The POP washout in central and southern Serbia in the second episode was deemed to have constituted the principal removal mechanism. Maximum POP wet deposition was found in central Serbia and along the 850 hPa trajectory towards south-eastern Serbia and the Bulgarian border.
Keywords :
Pollutant transport modelling , POP deposition , Accidental gas release , War-impact assessment , particulate matter
Journal title :
Atmospheric Environment
Serial Year :
2001
Journal title :
Atmospheric Environment
Record number :
756481
Link To Document :
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