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Displaying 11 - 16 of 16 results found
  • News & Media

    Practical Tools and Policy Recommendations to Improve the Safety of Tailings Management Facilities in the Danube River Basin

    Improving the safety of Tailings Management Facilities (TMFs) throughout the Danube River Basin is a key issue for the ICPDR, and we've now published a paper of policy recommendations.

  • Publications

    Recommendation paper: Improving the Safety of TMFs in the DRB (259.34 KB)

    A recommendation paper by the ICPDR addressing the issue of improving TMF safety throughout the Danube River Basin.
  • Publications

    Leaflet: Safety of Tailings Management Facilities In The Danube River Basin (8.63 MB)

    A leaflet on the ICPDR's study of TMF safety in the Danube River Basin
  • News & Media

    Improving the Safety of Tailings Management Facilities in the Danube River Basin

    Since March 2019, the ICPDR, in cooperation with the Babes-Bolyai University and the non-governmental organisation, “Sustainable Development Platform”, has been implementing a new project: “Capacity development to improve safety conditions of tailings management facilities in the Danube River Basin – Phase I: North-Eastern Danube countries”.

  • Content pages

    Accident Prevention

    Accidental pollution in the Danube River Basin can cause widespread damage to the environment, and endanger the health of local people and the state of local economies downstream. This was exemplified by the effects of the Baia Mare cyanide spill in Romania in 2000 or by the Hungarian redsludge accident at Ajka in 2010. The ICPDR is working to prevent accidental pollution and to improve response capability by compiling an inventory of all relevant "Accident Risk Spots".

  • Content pages

    Hazardous Substances

    Hazardous substances can remain in the environment for a very long time, and harm ecosystems and human health. Although monitoring indicates that the loads of some substances have been reduced in recent years, many problems still persist. The increasing number of these man-made substances present in the environment is a matter of concern, and calls for the application of the precautionary principle.