Search Results
-
2021 Report on the MONERIS model application (4.73 MB)
-
Receiving Sea: Black Sea
The Danube River flows into the Black Sea at the Danube Delta, making the Black Sea the receiving sea for the Danube's water. A receiving sea refers to the body of water into which a river or other watercourse empties its flow. In this context, the Black Sea serves as the final destination for the waters of the Danube River.
-
New Study Shows Restored Floodplains Can Remove Significant Amounts of Nitrate Pollution in the Danube River Basin
A recent large-scale modelling study has shown that restoring floodplains and reconnecting cut-off water bodies with the Danube River, and its tributaries could play a significant role in improving water quality and removing nitrate pollution in the Danube River Basin.
-
DRBMP Update 2021 - Map 26: Chemical Status of Groundwater Bodies of Basin-wide Importance (3.37 MB)
-
DRBMP Update 2021 - Map 25: Quantitative Status of Groundwater Bodies of Basin-wide Importance (3.38 MB)
-
DRBMP Update 2021 - Map 4: Transboundary Groundwater Bodies (3.96 MB)
-
(Press Release) World Water Day 2022: Celebrating the groundwater of our shared basin
VIENNA, 22 March – World Water Day 2022 is focusing on groundwater and making the invisible visible.
-
Groundwater Guidance (2.84 MB)
-
Sold out film premiere of the “2467 km - A Journey to the Black Sea” attracts almost 400 guests in Munich
On Thursday, 8 February 2018 in Munich (Germany), The Pure Water for Generations-film project of Pascal Rösler, a SUP-Paddler ICPDR friend and water advocate, was met with a resounding positive response from the audience at the premiere. Among the attendees were, Ulrike Scharf, Minister of the Environment and ICPDR Executive Secretary Ivan Zavadksy.
-
The frail angels of the Black Sea
In the framework of the joint EU and UNDP project -“Improving Environmental Monitoring in the Black Sea – Phase II” (EMBLAS) new opportunities for public monitoring of the Black Sea coastal status using so called “ecological sentinels” are developed.