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  • News & Media 11 September 2008

    JDS2 Final Results available (130.92 KB)

  • News & Media

    JDS2 Final Results available

    Vienna, 11 September 2008 – The Danube and its tributaries are becoming cleaner, the ICPDR announced today, presenting the scientific results of the Joint Danube Survey 2 (JDS2) - possibly the world’s biggest river research expedition ever.

  • Publications

    TNMN Yearbook 2003 - long version (6.21 MB)

  • Publications

    TNMN Yearbook 2005 - Annex Data (1015.53 KB)

  • Publications

    TNMN Yearbook 2005 - long version (3.18 MB)

  • Publications

    TNMN Yearbook 2005 (2.2 MB)

  • Content pages

    Invasive Alien Species

    The Danube River is seeing an influx of new non-native species, stemming from the increasing interconnections with various European and global water bodies via canals and other waterways designed to facilitate navigation. It is currently believed that alien species are very likely to become even more significant in the future, as the importance of the Danube as an international waterway increases.

  • Content pages

    Water Quality

    Water quality in the Danube has improved over the years, but there is still much work to be done to meet the region’s goals for water status. To improve the water quality, an ambitious programme of measures for the whole Danube River Basin District has been agreed under the EU WFD. To assess trends in water quality, the ICPDR oversees the TransNational Monitoring Network (TNMN). The network carefully monitors physical, chemical and biological conditions in the Danube and its tributaries, and provides in TNMN Yearbooks an annual overview of pollution levels as well as long term trends for water quality in the basin.