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Ecosystem specific accumulation of organohalogenated compounds: A comparison between adjacent freshwater and terrestrial avian predators

Bustnes, Jan Ove; Bårdsen, Bård-Jørgen; Herzke, Dorte; Bangjord, Georg; Bourgeon, Sophie; Fritsch, Clémentine; Eulaers, Igor

Insight into processes determining the exposure of organohalogenated contaminants (OHCs) in wildlife might be gained from comparing predators in different ecosystems. This study compared two avian predator species with similar food chain lengths: the goldeneye duck (Bucephala clangula) and the tawny owl (Strix aluco) breeding in adjacent freshwater- and terrestrial ecosystems in central Norway. We measured lipophilic organochlorines (OCs) and protein-bound perfluorinated substances (PFASs) in eggs of the two species over 21 years (1999–2019). Across years, the proportional distribution of OCs (∼90% of the ΣOHC load) relative to PFASs (∼10%) was similar in the two species. Moreover, ΣOC concentrations were similar between the species, but PFAS compounds were 2–12 times higher in the goldeneyes than in tawny owls. OC-pesticides dominated in tawny owls (∼60% of ΣOC), whereas persistent polychlorinated biphenyl (PCBs) congeners were the main OC components in goldeneyes (∼70% of ΣOC). The lipid-normalized concentrations of most OC-pesticides and the less persistent PCB101 declined significantly in both species. Hexachlorobenzene (HCB), p,p’-dichlorodiphenyldichloroethylene (p,p’-DDE), and more persistent PCBs decreased in tawny owls, while they tended to increase in goldeneyes. The increase in HCB was particulary robust. Among the PFASs, contrasted temporal trends were found across the species for four out of 11 compounds: PFOS declined while most perfluorocarboxylic acids (PFCAs) increased in tawny owls. In contrast, most PFASs were stable in goldeneyes. Moreover, there was no annual covariance between the OHC exposure in the two species: i.e., high concentrations in one species in a given year did not translate into high concentrations in the other. Hence, the two avian predators in adjacent ecosystems seem to be subject to different processes determining the OHC exposure, probably related to variation in diet and climate, long-range transport of different contaminants, and emissions of pollution locally.

Elsevier

2022

Economic Feasibility of Power/Heat Cogeneration by Biogas–Solid Oxide Fuel Cell (SOFC) Integrated Systems

Athanasiou, Costas; Drosakis, Christos; Booto, Gaylord Kabongo; Elmasides, Costas

Based upon the thermodynamic simulation of a biogas-SOFC integrated process and the costing of its elements, the present work examines the economic feasibility of biogas-SOFCs for combined heat and power (CHP) generation, by the comparison of their economic performance against the conventional biogas-CHP with internal combustion engines (ICEs), under the same assumptions. As well as the issues of process scale and an SOFC’s cost, examined in the literature, the study brings up the determinative effects of: (i) the employed SOFC size, with respect to its operational point, as well as (ii) the feasibility criterion, on the feasibility assessment. Two plant capacities were examined (250 m3·h−1 and 750 m3·h−1 biogas production), and their feasibilities were assessed by the Internal Rate of Return (IRR), the Net Present Value (NPV) and the Pay Back Time (PBT) criteria. For SOFC costs at 1100 and 2000 EUR·kWel−1, foreseen in 2035 and 2030, respectively, SOFCs were found to increase investment (by 2.5–4.5 times, depending upon a plant’s capacity and the SOFC’s size) and power generation (by 13–57%, depending upon the SOFC’s size), the latter increasing revenues. SOFC-CHP exhibits considerably lower IRRs (5.3–13.4% for the small and 16.8–25.3% for the larger plant), compared to ICE-CHP (34.4%). Nonetheless, according to NPV that does not evaluate profitability as a return on investment, small scale biogas-SOFCs (NPVmax: EUR 3.07 M) can compete with biogas-ICE (NPV: EUR 3.42 M), for SOFCs sized to operate at 70% of the maximum power density (MPD) and with a SOFC cost of 1100 EUR·kWel−1, whereas for larger plants, SOFC-CHP can lead to considerably higher NPVs (EUR 12.5–21.0 M) compared to biogas-ICE (EUR 9.3 M). Nonetheless, PBTs are higher for SOFC-CHP (7.7–11.1 yr and 4.2–5.7 yr for the small and the large plant, respectively, compared to 2.3 yr and 3.1 yr for biogas-ICE) because the criterion suppresses the effect of SOFC-CHP-increased revenues to a time period shorter than the plant’s lifetime. Finally, the economics of SOFC-CHP are optimized for SOFCs sized to operate at 70–82.5% of their MPD, depending upon the SOFC cost and the feasibility criterion. Overall, the choice of the feasibility criterion and the size of the employed SOFC can drastically affect the economic evaluation of SOFC-CHP, whereas the feasibility criterion also determines the economically optimum size of the employed SOFC.

MDPI

2022

Economic benefits from mercury emission reductions in Europe.

Sundseth, K.; Pacyna, J.M.; Pacyna, E.G.; Travnikov, O.

2011

Economic benefits from decreased mercury emissions: Projections for 2020.

Sundseth, K.; Pacyna, J.M.; Pacyna, E.G.; Munthe, J.; Belhaj, M.; Aström, S.

2010

Economic assessment of exposure protocols for PAHs and PCBs. NILU OR, 80/2010

Liu, H.-Y.; Bartonova, A.; Loh, M.; Palkovicova, L.; Stram, R.

2010

Economic assessment of exposure protocols for PAHs and PCBs. NILU PP

Liu, H.Y.; Bartonova, A.; Loh, M.; Palkovicová, L.; Sram, R.

2009

ECOMAP - Exploitation of ongoing and future Copernicus Missions for Atmospheric Applications

Fjæraa, Ann Mari; Stebel, Kerstin; Schneider, Philipp; Sollum, Espen; Ytre-Eide, Martin Album

2024

Ecological unequal exchange: quantifying emissions of toxic chemicals embodied in the global trade of chemicals, products, and waste

Tong, Kate; Li, Li; Breivik, Knut; Wania, Frank

Ecologically unequal exchange arises if more developed economies ('core') shift the environmental burden of their consumption and capital accumulation to less developed economies ('periphery'/'semi-core'). Here we demonstrate that human populations in core regions can benefit from the use of products containing toxic chemicals while transferring to the periphery the risk of human and ecological exposure to emissions associated with manufacturing and waste disposal. We use a global scale substance flow analysis approach to quantify the emissions of polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs), a group of flame retardants added to consumer products, that are embodied in the trade of chemicals, products and wastes between seven world regions over the 2000–2020 time period. We find that core regions have off-loaded PBDE emissions, mostly associated with the disposal of electrical and electronic waste (e-waste), to semi-core and peripheral regions in mainland China and the Global South. In core regions this results in small emissions that mostly occur during the product use phase, whereas in peripheral regions emissions are much higher and dominated by end of life disposal. The transfer of toxic chemical emissions between core and periphery can be quantified and should be accounted for when appraising the costs and benefits of global trade relationships.

2022

Ecological and spatial factors drive intra- and interspecific variation in exposure of subarctic predatory bird nestlings to persistent organic pollutants.

Eulaers, I.; Jaspers, V.L.B.; Bustnes, J.O.; Covacic, A.; Johnsen, T.V.; Halley, D.J.; Moum, T.; Ims, R.A.; Hanssen, S.A.; Erikstad, K.E.; Herzke, D.; Sonne, C.; Ballesteros, M.; Pinxten, R.; Eens, M.

2013

EBAS Data Licence

Tørseth, Kjetil; Fiebig, Markus; Myhre, Cathrine Lund

2021

EBAS as InGOS Halocarbon Data Centre.

Fjæraa, A.M.; Myhre, C.L.; Tørseth, K.

2015

Eastward-propagating planetary waves prior to the January 2009 sudden stratospheric warming

Rhodes, Christian Todd; Limpasuvan, Varavut; Orsolini, Yvan J.

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

2021

Eastward Propagating Planetary Waves Observed Using the SuperDARN Meteor Radar Network

Espy, Patrick Joseph; Mirzaamin, Tina; Orsolini, Yvan Joseph Georges Emile G.; Rhodes, Christian Todd

2023

East Asian SO2 pollution plume over Europe - Part 2: Evolution and potential impact.

Fiedler, V.; Arnold, F.; Schlager, H.; Dörnbrack, A.; Pirjola, L.; Stohl, A.

2009

Earth observation.

Lahoz, W.

2015

Early-life effects of PFOS and its fluorinated alternative in the domestic chicken

Briels, Nathalie; Ciesielski, Tomasz Maciej; Herzke, Dorte; Jaspers, Veerle

2018

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