Wakil INC1 menerima snek ikan

Paras Raksa dalam Manusia dan Ikan di Seluruh Dunia Biasa Melebihi Paras Nasihat Kesihatan

Gorham, Maine — A new scientific report, Global Mercury Hotspots, finds that humans and marine ecosystems around the world are contaminated with mercury and that mercury levels in humans and fish regularly exceed health advisory guidelines. The report, a collaboration between IPEN,  a global network of public interest organizations, and the scientific research team of Biodiversity Research Institute (BRI), highlights the urgent need for an overall reduction in mercury emissions.

The report,“brings together new data on mercury concentrations in fish and human hair samples and identifies, for the first time, a set of global biological hot spots where elevated levels of mercury are sufficient to pose serious threats to both ecosystems and human health,” said David C. Evers, Ph.D., BRI’s executive director and chief scientist.

Government delegates will convene next week in Geneva in their final negotiating session to establish an international mercury treaty – the first global treaty on the environment in more than a decade by the United Nations Environment Programme.

Rangkaian Penyingkiran Pencemar Antarabangsa
Garis Besar Privasi

Laman web ini menggunakan kuki supaya kami dapat memberikan anda pengalaman pengguna yang terbaik. Maklumat kuki disimpan dalam pelayar anda dan melaksanakan fungsi seperti mengenali anda apabila anda kembali ke laman web kami dan membantu pasukan kami memahami bahagian laman web yang anda dapati paling menarik dan berguna.