PARC Projects

Address chemical pollution in the natural environment
Developing a system to monitor chemicals in the environment
Environment
Health effects
Human health
Monitoring methods
Risk assessment
Time span
-
Potential impacts
  • Developing lists of substances for specific monitoring actions in response to regulatory needs, such as prioritising chemicals that are widely present across multiple environmental compartments.
  • Integrating scientifically established prioritsation schemes to ensure an efficient and relevant approach for future monitoring projects across different geographical scales. The final prioritisation framework will cover multiple compartments and address both human and environmental health.
  • Defining a cross-regulation and cross-compartment prioritisation mechanism, supported by multiple lines of evidence, to select chemicals, matrices, and effects for monitoring. This mechanism will also serve as an early warning system.
Partners involved
AU (DK)
INERIS (FR)
ANSES (FR)
ARSO (SI)
BPI (GR)
UKCEH (GB)
CNRS (FR)
CSTB (FR)
EAWAG (CH)
CSIC (ES)
INRAE (FR)
ISS (IT)
ISSeP (BE)
IVL (SE)
JSI (SI)
LNS (LU)
MU (CZ)
NILU (NO)
NKUA (GR)
ONIRIS (FR)
OVAM (BE)
SLU (SE)
SYKE (FI)
UBA (DE)
UFZ (DE)
ULFFA (SI)
VUA (NL)
Contacts
Katrin Vorkamp (AU)
kvo [at] envs.au.dk
Valeria Dulio (INERIS)
valeria.dulio [at] ineris.fr
Overview

Monitoring chemicals in the environment is crucial to understanding their impact on human health and ecosystems. It helps identify where these substances come from, how widely they are spread, and whether stricter controls – such as limiting or banning their use – are needed. Monitoring also provides essential data to evaluate the effectiveness of measures taken to reduce pollution, aligning with the European Union’s Zero Pollution ambition. However, monitoring is a complex, time-consuming, and costly process, requiring careful planning to focus on the most pressing issues while ensuring no harmful substances are overlooked.

This project aims to address these challenges by developing a flexible system to prioritise which chemicals need closer monitoring. It focuses on chemicals that are poorly monitored or entirely overlooked, including unintentional mixtures and new substances of emerging concern.

By creating a transparent, and reproducible framework, this project will help identify priority chemicals, environmental areas which are known as matrices, and specific health or ecological effects for targeted monitoring. Matrices are parts of the environment, like water, soil, or air, where pollutants can accumulate.

This framework will ensure that monitoring efforts are efficient, effective, and aligned with regulatory needs. It will also be adaptable to emerging risks and changing environmental challenges, helping to safeguard human and environmental health while supporting the EU’s goal of reducing pollution.

Filter by
Address chemical pollution in the natural environment
Provide protection against most harmful chemicals
Shift away from animal testing
Biodiversity protection
Streamlining data processing methods for suspect and non-target screening
Environment
Health effects
Human health
Monitoring methods
Risk assessment
NGRA
Mixtures
Human biomonitoring
Workers
Streamlining data processing methods for suspect and non-target screening
Streamlining data processing methods for suspect and non-target screening

Developing a system to monitor chemicals in the environment

Time span
-
Potential impacts
  • Developing lists of substances for specific monitoring actions in response to regulatory needs, such as prioritising chemicals that are widely present across multiple environmental compartments.
  • Integrating scientifically established prioritsation schemes to ensure an efficient and relevant approach for future monitoring projects across different geographical scales. The final prioritisation framework will cover multiple compartments and address both human and environmental health.
  • Defining a cross-regulation and cross-compartment prioritisation mechanism, supported by multiple lines of evidence, to select chemicals, matrices, and effects for monitoring. This mechanism will also serve as an early warning system.
AU (DK)
INERIS (FR)
ANSES (FR)
ARSO (SI)
BPI (GR)
UKCEH (GB)
CNRS (FR)
CSTB (FR)
EAWAG (CH)
CSIC (ES)
INRAE (FR)
ISS (IT)
ISSeP (BE)
IVL (SE)
JSI (SI)
LNS (LU)
MU (CZ)
NILU (NO)
NKUA (GR)
ONIRIS (FR)
OVAM (BE)
SLU (SE)
SYKE (FI)
UBA (DE)
UFZ (DE)
ULFFA (SI)
VUA (NL)
Overview

Monitoring chemicals in the environment is crucial to understanding their impact on human health and ecosystems. It helps identify where these substances come from, how widely they are spread, and whether stricter controls – such as limiting or banning their use – are needed. Monitoring also provides essential data to evaluate the effectiveness of measures taken to reduce pollution, aligning with the European Union’s Zero Pollution ambition. However, monitoring is a complex, time-consuming, and costly process, requiring careful planning to focus on the most pressing issues while ensuring no harmful substances are overlooked.

This project aims to address these challenges by developing a flexible system to prioritise which chemicals need closer monitoring. It focuses on chemicals that are poorly monitored or entirely overlooked, including unintentional mixtures and new substances of emerging concern.

By creating a transparent, and reproducible framework, this project will help identify priority chemicals, environmental areas which are known as matrices, and specific health or ecological effects for targeted monitoring. Matrices are parts of the environment, like water, soil, or air, where pollutants can accumulate.

This framework will ensure that monitoring efforts are efficient, effective, and aligned with regulatory needs. It will also be adaptable to emerging risks and changing environmental challenges, helping to safeguard human and environmental health while supporting the EU’s goal of reducing pollution.

Contacts
Katrin Vorkamp (AU)
kvo [at] envs.au.dk
Valeria Dulio (INERIS)
valeria.dulio [at] ineris.fr
Topics
Address chemical pollution in the natural environment
Keywords
Environment
Health effects
Human health
Monitoring methods
Risk assessment