Nearly 50 participants gathered in Gdynia when the EnviSuM project invited to a workshop to discuss Impacts from SECA in Baltic Sea ports.
The discussion was lead to the subject of present and future air emissions from ships.
Below you can find presentations from the workshop.
Current situation at the ports of Gdynia and Gdaosk – Status and development
by Port of Gdynia and Port of GdaoskModel calculations of the effects of present and future emissions of air pollutants from shipping in the Baltic Sea and the North Sea
by Jan Eiof Jonson and Michael Gauss, the Norwegian Meteorological InstituteAIS based ships' emission calculation, STEAM model
by Jukka-Pekka Jalkanen and Lasse Johansson, the Finnish Meteorological InstituteEmission of ship's calling Gdynia and Gdansk
by Prof. Tadeusz Borkowski, the Maritime University of SzczecinTri-City air quality assessment driven by SECA regulation, results of 2014 and 2016 local model calculation
by Malgorzata Paciorek, Ekometria, GdanskRegional air monitoring system; operation verification and air quality criteria evaluation
by ARMAAG and Jari Walden, Finnish Meteorological InstituteRegional air monitoring system; operation verification and air quality criteria evaluation
by Michalina Bielawska, Agency of Regional Monitoring of the Gdansk AgglomerationRemote ship’s emission measurement, results of Tri-city measurement campaign
by Prof. Johan Mellqvist, Chalmers UniversityPresentation of the EnviSuM project and the effects of SECA on innovation
by Dr Johanna Yliskylä-Peuralahti, University of TurkuEconomic impact of SECA regulation on clean shipping in the BSR by Eunice Omolola Olaniyi, University of Tallinn
Transshipments in Tri-City ports after SECA introduction
by Dr Bogusz Wiśnicki, Maritime University of SzczecinImpact of air quality on the health of port city residents, based on modeling in high spatial resolution
by Dr Katarzyna Maciejwska, Warsaw University of TechnologyPopulation-weighted exposure to PM from Baltic shipping, and potential health effects
by Dr Peter Molnár and prof. Lars Barregård, University of Gothenburg