The World Wide Fund for Nature has issued a health warning about eating fish caught in the Baltic Sea
Published:
26 January 2005 y., Wednesday
The World Wide Fund for Nature has issued a health warning about eating fish caught in the Baltic Sea.
The organisation says the concentrations of toxic chemicals from industrial waste are sometimes so high that they exceed European limits. The levels of some chemicals are between two and five times higher in the Baltic than in the North Sea and the Arctic Ocean.
As long ago as 1995, the Swedish authorities issued a warning to women of childbearing age to limit consumption of herring and salmon from the Baltic due to the risk of birth defects.
Šaltinis:
rnw.nl
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
On the 23–24th of this March, the capital of the United States of America (USA) Washington will host SelectUSA Investment Summit 2015, an event for investors organized for the second time.
more »
On 4 November, Mogilev hosted the 10th Belarusian-Lithuanian Economic Forum. The Forum, which already became a tradition, was organized with the support of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Belarus, the Mogilev Oblast Executive Committee, and the Confederation of Lithuanian Industrialists.
more »
Google's engineers want to help you brush up on your geography knowledge.
more »
The young company has struck a deal with Motorola to create a tattoo which can unlock your Moto X smartphone.
more »
On July 3, neighbouring Belarus will celebrate Independence Day.
more »
A Canadian man who forgot his passport has said that he managed to cross the border into the US using a copy of the document he had scanned on to his iPad.
more »
Laser-guided travel pods that work without drivers or timetables have started ferrying passengers around London's Heathrow airport. The system is expected to carry half a million passengers a year, saving 50,000 shuttle bus trips.
more »
A Russian firm has set a target of five years to open a hotel in space for tourists looking for something other than a conventional holiday.
more »
Inflatable aircraft have been around since the Montgolfier brothers developed the first untethered hot-air balloon in 1782, but 200 years later, they are making a high-tech resurgence for both civilian and military use. US aerospace company Lockheed Martin's version is called the P-791 airship, which it hopes is about to take off
more »
Robotic seals helps elderly tsunami victims in Japan recover from mental and emotional scars.
more »