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Air Quality Guidelines for Europe

World Health Organization, "Air Quality Guidelines for Europe." Copenhagen, 1987. [Pg.381]

Air Quality Guidelines for Europe. World Health Organization, European Series No. 23. [Pg.183]

WHO. 1987. Hydrogen sulfide. In Air quality guidelines for Europe. Copenhagen, Denmark World Health Organization Regional Publications, European series no. 23. [Pg.204]

FIGURE 3.S WHO air quality guidelines for Europe and WHO guidelines for drinking-water quality. [Pg.68]

WHO. 2000. Criteria for carcinogenic endpoint. In Air Quality Guidelines for Europe. Second Edition. WHO Regional PuhUcations, European Series, No. 91, 20-29 Copenhagen WHO Regional Office for Europe. http /www.euro.who.int/document/e71922.pdf... [Pg.314]

Recognizing the need of humans for clean air, the WHO Regional Office for Europe in 1987 published the first edition of the Air Quality Guidelines for Europe containing health risk assessments of 28 chemical air contaminants (WHO 1987). In 1993, air pollutants of special environmental and health significance to countries of the European Region were identified by a... [Pg.356]

The second edition of the Air Quality Guidelines for Europe (WHO 2000) comprises four introductory chapters plus sections on health risk evaluation and guidelines of the various pollutants. [Pg.357]

World Health Organization (WHO), Polynuclear Aromatic Hydrocarbons (PAH), in Air Quality Guidelines for Europe, WHO Regional Publications, European Series No. 23, World Health Organization, Regional Office for Europe, Copenhagen, pp. 105-117, 1987. [Pg.546]

Recommended air quality guideline for Europe (annual average)... [Pg.431]

WHO has also provided general guidelines for air quality (WHO 1999, last updated 2001). Since the problems are often different in developed and developing countries, WHO will soon offer special Air Quality Guidelines for Europe. [Pg.424]

The World Health Organization has issued Air Quality Guidelines for Europe at 50 tgm (annual average), 125 pgm (24-h average) and 500 pgm (10-min) (WHO 1996), as well as general standards for annual average sulfur dioxide concentrations of 80 tgm in an industrial area and 60 pgm in a residential area (Guttikunda et al. 2003). [Pg.1313]

WHO (World Health Organization (1996) Update and Revision of the Air Quality Guidelines for Europe. Vol. 6. Classical. Final consultation. Bilthoven, The Netherlands 28 -31 October 1996. [Pg.1320]

WHO/World Health Organization-Regional Office for Europe (1987) Air quality guidelines for europe. [Pg.304]

WHO-Europe (1997) Update and revision of the WHO air quality guidelines for Europe. ICP EHH 018 VD96.2/11. WHO-Europe, Copenhagen WHO-Europe (2005) Air quality guidlines— global update 2005. World Health Organisation-... [Pg.551]

Humans need water, food, and a continuous supply of air. Recognizing the human need for clean air, the WHO s Regional Office for Europe published some air quality guidelines for Europe in 1987. These guidelines contain health risk assessment for many chemicals considered to be air contaminants [6]. [Pg.81]

According to the Regional Air Quality Guidelines for Europe (published by the WHO in 2000), the concentration of chromium (VI) in air associated with an excess lifetime risk of 1 10,000 was 2.5 ng/m at that time [23]. Also a provisional guideline value for total chromium in drinking water was listed as 0.05 mg/L in a 2011 WHO publication [24]. [Pg.85]


See other pages where Air Quality Guidelines for Europe is mentioned: [Pg.68]    [Pg.492]    [Pg.1508]    [Pg.107]    [Pg.133]    [Pg.338]    [Pg.87]    [Pg.88]    [Pg.18]    [Pg.745]    [Pg.888]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.888 ]




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Air Quality Guidelines

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For Europe

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