Nutrient export from Finnish rivers into the Baltic Sea has not decreased despite water protection measures

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Abstract

To tackle the symptoms of eutrophication in the open Baltic Sea and Finnish coastal waters, Finland has agreed to reduce both total nitrogen (TN) and total phosphorus (TP) inputs. Due to large investments in treatment of municipal and industrial wastewaters, TP loads started to decrease already in the mid-1970s and the respective TN loads in the mid-1990s. During the last two decades, much effort has been spent in decreasing the load originating from diffuse sources. Trend analyses in 1995–2016 showed that, despite various mitigation measures, riverine nutrient export has not substantially decreased, and especially the export from rivers draining agricultural lands remains high. In some areas TN concentrations and export were increasing and we found evidence that it was linked to ditching of peatlands. Several factors connected to climate/weather (e.g. temperature and precipitation) have counteracted the mitigation measures, and therefore Finland will not achieve the nutrient reduction targets by 2021.

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Räike, A., Taskinen, A., & Knuuttila, S. (2020). Nutrient export from Finnish rivers into the Baltic Sea has not decreased despite water protection measures. Ambio, 49(2), 460–474. https://doi.org/10.1007/s13280-019-01217-7

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