Global mercury assessment

In Chemicals & pollution action

The Global Mercury Assessment 2018 and the Technical Background Report are now available. The Governing Council acknowledged the Global Mercury Assessment 2013 at their meeting in 2013, and UNEP was requested to provide a further update of the report within six years (Decision 27/12). The main focus is on updated global emissions and releases inventories (for the target year of 2015), especially for sectors of relevance for the Minamata Convention. The assessment has been expanded with respect to quantification of releases and discharges of mercury to the aquatic environment, and includes an overview and assessment of mercury levels in humans and biota. 

 

The map above shows results from the Global Mercury Assessment 2018 for total mercury emissions by country and sector. Click on a country to see the sector breakdown of mercury emissions. You can also view the map here.

UNEP produced its first Global Mercury Assessment in 2002 following the request of the Governing Council (decision 21/5) and based on governments concern of mercury as a global pollutant.

In 2007, the Governing Council requested UNEP to develop a new report (decision 24/3) focused on atmospheric emissions. The information was presented as a summary report for policy makers entitled The Global Atmospheric Mercury Assessment: Sources, Emissions and Transport released in December 2008, and an accompanying Technical Background Report to the Global Atmospheric Mercury Assessment, a fully referenced scientific report. The technical background report, which formed the basis for statements made in the summary report and was prepared in cooperation with the Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Programme (AMAP) Secretariat, included an updated inventory of anthropogenic emissions of mercury to the atmosphere. The inventory was based on national emissions data for the year 2005 submitted by governments, as well as estimates prepared for countries that did not provide data. The report also drew on the work of the UNEP Global Mercury Partnership, in particular the Mercury Air Transport and Fate Research partnership area.

In 2009, the Governing Council requested UNEP to update the 2008 report (Decision 25/5). The Global Mercury Assessment 2013: Sources, Emissions, Releases and Environmental Transport and its accompanying and updated Technical Background Report were the response to that request.

The inventory was based on national emissions data for the year 2010. In addition to atmospheric emissions, the report also provides for the first time the recent and available information on releases to the aquatic environment and aquatic pathways and transport.

An update of the modelling of the intercontinental transport and source attribution of mercury deposition was done in 2015  Global Mercury Modelling: Updates of Modelling Results in the Global Mercury Assessment 2013.

Please see also this data visualization on Global Mercury Emissions by Country and Sector

In Chemicals & pollution action