Abstract

Oil shale mining and processing in northeast Estonia have brought about several ecological problems. The mined oil shale is used as fuel in power stations and in processing plants producing crude oil and about 40 manufactured articles. Pollutants emitted from oil shale processing and chemical plants include SO2, CO, NO x , oil shale fly ash, and organic compounds in which aromatic and aliphatic hydrocarbons, phenols, formaldehyde, etc., are represented. Pollution has caused changes in the condition of the forest ecosystem and the chemical character of soil and ground water. The condition of coniferous forest sites was investigated in 1995–1998. Because of the high concentration of alkaline fly ash in the air, the pH of rain water is somewhat elevated (pH = 7.0–7.1) and exceeds the level regarded as normal for rain water. The analysis of the soil samples showed that the concentrations of Ca, Mg and K, which dominate in the solid fraction of the pollutant mixture, are high, being respectively 18, 14, and 4 times as high as the control. The increases in the concentrations of K, Mg, Cu, Pb, and Ni in stemwood reflect increases in the regional oil shale fly ash deposition. Conifers influenced by high levels of air pollution emitted from the oil shale industry are characterized by retarded growth of needles and shoots and radial growth as a result of disturbances in their mineral nutrition and imbalance in their mineral composition.

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