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UNU International Symposium
Impacts of POPs from Urban Areas
Beijing, China; 24-25 May 2004
On 24-25 May 2004, the United Nations University (UNU) will hold an
international symposium in Beijing on Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs): Impacts of
POPs from Urban Areas. This symposium is jointly organized by the UNU and the China-Japan
Friendship Center for Environmental Protection, Beijing. The symposium is the fifth in a
series under a UNU programme focusing on Environmental Pollution and Governance in the
East Asian "Coastal Hydrosphere" - the region's freshwater and seawater coastal
environments and the natural living resources contained in them. Speakers from the region
and invited experts from other parts of the world will discuss the role of various
land-based emission sources in POPs pollution in the coastal areas, particularly
highlighting the effects of pollution from urban areas.
UNU initiated its regional pollution monitoring programme on chemicals in the environment
in 1996. Since 1998, this programme has focused on POPs in the coastal waters of East
Asia. Nine countries have been involved in this monitoring programme: China, Indonesia,
Japan, Korea, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam. UNU has
undertaken capacity building in this monitoring programme by providing analytical
equipment to each country and hands-on training to young laboratory personnel as well as
annual funding for implementation of the monitoring. As part of these activities, annual
symposia and workshops are held by UNU. The Symposia are held in a different participating
country every year, with a thematic focus selected to correspond to their local interest
(e.g., 2001 Symposium on Endocrine Disruptors, held in Kuala Lumpur, 2002 Symposium on
industrial pollutants held in Seoul, and 2003 Symposium on agrochemical pollutants, held
in Hanoi).
For the forthcoming symposium, the focus will be on POPs from urban areas. Numerous urban
activities generate pollutants, quite a few of them are POPs. Of particular relevance are
groups of chemicals such as PCB's. Also of interest, although they are not recognized
under the Stockholm Convention as POPs, are the group of chemicals known as PAH's, and a
number of phenols. Within the existing research on POPs, relatively little consideration
has been devoted to systematically investigating the POPs pollution originating from urban
areas. This topic may be particularly relevant to POPs research in China, where many
burgeoning urban centers are undergoing unprecedented development. The Symposium may
present a timely opportunity for consideration of this issue.
In addition to Chinese leaders in POPs research, experts from other parts of the world
will also present their most recent research on the subject. Researchers from China,
Japan, the Republic of Korea, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Viet Nam
will present the status of coastal pollution in their respective countries - a monitoring
effort that is part of the UNU Coastal Hydrosphere project. This monitoring project has
been undertaken with support from the Shimadzu Corporation of Kyoto, Japan.
The Symposium will be conducted in English and is open to the public. Admission is
free, although advance registration is required (please contact the address below). Media
representatives are cordially invited to attend.
Contact address:
Dr. Huang Yeru
Associate Professor
China-Japan Friendship Center for Environmental Protection
No. 1 Yuhui Nanlu, Chaoyang District,
Beijing 100029, P. R. China
Phone:+86-10-64947722, +84637722 ext. 2213.
Fax: 010-84634275 or 84636344.
E-mail: yrhuang@163bj.com