Outcome of HELCOM HOLAS II Workshop on integrated hazardous substances assessment (HOLAS II HZ WS )

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Baltic Marine Environment Protection Commission Project for the development of the second holistic assessment of the Baltic Sea HOLAS II Workshop on integrated hazardous substances assessment Helsinki, Finland, 21 March 2018 Document title Outcome of the HOLAS II Workshop on integrated hazardous substances assessment, HOLAS II HZ WS 1-2018. Date of finalization 23.3.2018 Outcome of HELCOM HOLAS II Workshop on integrated hazardous substances assessment (HOLAS II HZ WS 1-2018) Introduction The HELCOM HOLAS II project (Project for the development of the second holistic assessment of the Baltic Sea) runs from December 2014 to June 2018. In June 2017 the project provided the first version of the State of the Baltic Sea report which is publically available online through a dedicated HELCOM web-site. The report presents the HELCOM second holistic assessment of environmental status of the Baltic Sea and addresses the status of pressures, their impacts on ecosystem components, their spatial distribution, and economic and social analyses of selected human activities. In the first version of the State of the Baltic Sea report the integrated assessments of status were based on data from the period 2011-2015. The updated and final version of the report also includes data from 2016, thus extending the assessment to cover a six year period. For this purpose the HELCOM core indicator evaluations and integrated assessments have been updated. The integrated assessment on hazardous substances is based on the CHASE tool as developed by previous HELCOM projects. The HOLAS II Workshop on integrated hazardous substances assessment validated the results of the updated assessment and reviewed the associated supplementary report. Workshop The workshop was held on 21 March 2018 at the premises of the HELCOM Secretariat, Helsinki, Finland. The agenda of the Meeting is contained in Annex 1. The Meeting was attended by representatives of Denmark, Finland, Germany, Lithuania, Poland and Sweden according to the list of Workshop Participants which is included as Annex 2. The Workshop was chaired by Mr. Jaakko Mannio, SYKE, Finland. Ulla Li Zweifel, Project Manager, and Owen Rowe, Project coordinator, HELCOM Secretariat, acted as secretaries to the workshop. Page 1 of 6

Introduction 1. The Chair clarified the framework for the workshop: - Indicator evaluations have been updated to include data for the period 2011-2016, and data and evaluations have been approved through national checking. Based on the indicator updates the supplementary report on integrated hazardous substances assessment has been revised and provides the main background document to the meeting (document 2-1). - The aim of the workshop is to validate that results are correct and to propose amendments and improvements to the supplementary report as seen necessary. - The participants agreed to the agenda and time-table for the workshop. Discussion on results of the updated integrated assessment of hazardous substances 2. The Project coordinator presented the updated results of the indicators and the integrated assessment of hazardous substances (Presentation 1). 3. The following changes in approaches compared to the first version of the State of the Baltic Sea report were highlighted: - all data for any substance is brought together into the aggregated indicator evaluation while in the first version only 'full' data (data series with 3 or more years of data) were utilised in the aggregated evaluation. - the updated integrated assessment is based on the indicator evaluations (while in the first version full and initial data entered the integrated assessment as two separate data streams) and assessment is carried out directly at HELCOM assessment units scale 3. - a new secondary threshold value for PBDEs (in sediment) has been implemented (as approved at HELCOM 39-2018). 4. The workshop considered how to present the maps that will be associated with key messages for the indicator evaluations. It was agreed to present an indicator summary map for each indicator i.e. the status based on the application of the one-out-all-out approach between the sediment, biota and seawater matrix. In addition, associated smaller maps will present results based on the primary and potential secondary threshold values separately. In the indicator reports and supplementary report such maps will be presented for all indicators. 5. The workshop furthermore proposed to explore options to limit the possibility to separate the smaller maps from the larger map (i.e. to avoid that users can select to extract specific results). 6. For the State of the Baltic Sea summary report, it was recognized that the relatively space consuming presentation of maps will not allow all indicator results to be visually presented in this form. The workshop therefore recommended to limit the map-based presentation of indicator results in the summary report to mercury, cadmium, PFOS, radioactive substances and PBDE. Results from the other substances will be reflected in the text of the summary report, whereas all indicators will be represented in the supplementary report. 7. The workshop noted and welcomed that a figure will be produced to show how the 12 substances are linked to the seven indicators. 8. The project coordinator presented different options to evaluate the confidence in the integrated assessment (document 2-3). The proposal to adjust the confidence evaluation is due to the changes in the indicator evaluation methodology and the nature of the data entering the integrated assessment. In the first version full data was assigned high confidence and initial data assigned low confidence which is no longer valid since combined full and initial data is used in the updated indicator evaluations within each assessment unit (see Document 2.3). 9. The workshop recommended the use of Option 3 i.e. to apply the rules for setting the confidence in the assessment for each of the 57 scale 3 assessment units. Page 2 of 6

10. The workshop discussed other issues related to the confidence setting and proposed that since the time-line made it difficult to implement these changes in the current report that these should be discussed and developed in the future within the EN-HZ group. The issues included a review of the threshold confidence rules (i.e. to consider if thresholds undergoing review, or BAC threshold values could warrant different confidence scores) and if improvements could be made to apply penalty scores for heavy metals (HM) and organic substances (Org) so that it is based on the substance and not the HM or Org category (matrix). Furthermore, extending this to specific compounds seen to drive the assessment, such as mercury and PBDE, was also discussed. Discussion on and proposed amendments to the supplementary report on integrated assessment of hazardous substances 11. The workshop discussed and provided the following initial comments on the supplementary report: - Update Table 1 so that the legend properly reflects the use of primary and secondary thresholds for the respective substance. - Figure 3; state clearly in the figure text that the figure is developed using contaminant ratio (CR) values based on the mean concentrations for the assessment period. - Table 7. Clarify that the column with unit relates to the substance input data and not the CR values (CR values, which have no units). - Table 9. Clarify the 12 substances that are included in the integrated assessment. Delete row with Great Belt. 12. The workshop recommended to use the DOME-type maps (station and trends displayed) to display trends in the substances in the summary and supplementary report while graphs showing trends over time for specific sites could still be included in the indicator report. 13. The workshop updated indicator summaries within the supplementary report for HBCDD, PBDEs, PCBs, PAHs, PFOS, mercury, cadmium, and radioactive substances and agreed to update the remaining substances through correspondence. The proposed amendments will be included in the updated supplementary report to be submitted to HOLAS II 9-2018 and form the basis of the substances to be highlighted in the summary report. 14. The workshop drafted the content for Chapter 6 (with the current title Impact and recovery ) as contained in Annex 3. The text is being further developed by a drafting group within the workshop participants and will be included in the next version of the supplementary report. 15. The workshop recommended that EN-HZ should consider future work to analyse hazardous substances in sediment cores at representative sites since this approach will allow an alternative way of detecting improvements over time and highlight decreased inputs. 16. The workshop recommended that EN-HZ should re-visit the methodology used for handling initial data as part of future discussions to ensure that the methodology remains suitable. Outcome of the workshop The Outcome of the workshop and the amended supplementary report will be updated according to the discussions at the workshop and submitted to HOLAS II 9-2018 for consideration. The outcome of the workshop was agreed by correspondence. Page 3 of 6

Annex 1 Workshop Agenda Provisional Agenda and time-table Time Activity 9:00 Words of welcome Introduction to the work of the day and key questions for the workshop - Plenary discussion on the updated integrated assessment results 10:30-11.00 Coffee break 11.00-12.00 - Continued discussion on the updated integrated assessment results 12:00-13.00 Lunch break 13:00-15:30 - Work to propose amendments or improvements to the supplementary report 15:30-16:00 Coffee break 16:00-17:00 - Summary of discussion and recommendations from the workshop to the HOLAS II project Note: the outcome of the workshop will be agreed by correspondence within two days after closure. Page 4 of 6

Annex 2 Participant list Representing Name Organization Email address Chair Jaakko Mannio Finnish Environment Institute jaakko.mannio@ymparisto.fi Contracting Parties Denmark Ane-Marie L. Raun Ministry for Environment and Food anlra@mst.dk Denmark Martin Larsen AU Bioscience mml@dmu.dk Finland Emmi Vähä Finnish Environment Institute emmi.vaha@ymparisto.fi Germany Berit Brockmeyer BSH berit.brockmeyer@bsh.de Lithuania Galina Garnaga-Budrė Environmental Protection Agency galina.garnaga@aaa.am.lt Poland Tamara Zalewska Institute of Meteorology and Water Management- tamara.zalewska@imgw.pl National Research Institute, Maritime Branch Sweden Elisabeth Nyberg Swedish Museum of Natural History elisabeth.nyberg@nrm.se HELCOM Secretariat Owen Rowe HELCOM Secretariat owen.rowe@helcom.fi Lena Bergström (on-line) HELCOM Secretariat lena.bergström@helcom.fi Ulla Li Zweifel HELCOM Secretariat ullali.zweifel@helcom.fi Jannica Haldin HELCOM Secretariat jannica.haldin@helcom.fi Page 5 of 6

Annex 3. Draft content for the chapter 6 on impact and recovery (tentatively to change title) Chapter 6 Implications - This second holistic assessment gives much better spatial coverage of data and with harmonized threshold values between countries an improved confidence/reliability on the assessment compared to HELCOM HOLAS I - Time for recovery for persistent and ubiquitous substances is longer than a single assessment period - Indicators are only representative for a minor part of hazardous substances (12 out of several hundreds contaminants of emerging concern) o Some major contaminant groups are not looked at, e.g. currently used pesticides and their metabolites o New contaminants of emerging concern which are not yet monitored - Effective regulations/prohibited use often show effects on trends (downward) thus showing that political decisions lead to an improved environmental status such as Pb - Substances no longer of concern since inputs and concentrations reduce HCH, DDT, HCB - Bans have had an effect on e.g. the white-tailed eagle recovery - Downward trends might be strong at the beginning of the regulation, but it often takes years to reach threshold values as the decrease is levelling off by time due to more diffuse sources. - Sediment functions as contaminant storage but resuspension events release these substances again to the marine environment Future perspectives: - Detection of combined/mixed effects of several substances by monitoring biological effects - Sediment cores for long time trends for both phased-out and recently regulated substances (back recording) and for less frequently monitored areas - Development of indicators which are representative for e.g. pesticides and pharmaceuticals (regionally coordinated) - Streamlining of indicators with MSFD requirements and OSPAR - Recommendation to look at hazardous substances which are not regulated for the moment contaminants of emerging concerns and their substitutes - Implement screening monitoring programs to tackle these tasks - Additionally focusing on offshore sources (e.g. wind farms, shipping, oil and gas) - Development of time integrated water sampling (e.g. passive sampling) Page 6 of 6