Mustafa Abdulwahed Aref from  Department of Soil Sciences and Water Resources successfully defended his MSc. work with the title ” The Role of the South Baghdad Gas Power Plant No. 2 in the Contamination of Soil, Plants, and Water with Certain Heavy Metals at the University of Baghdad Site”
The study aimed to investigate the impact of gases, smoke, and volatile emissions from the nearby South Baghdad Gas Power Plant No. 2 on the contamination of soil, plants, and water at sites within and outside the University of Baghdad with certain heavy metals.
The researcher recommended using gas and particle collection devices to treat emissions from the plant’s chimneys to control pollution at its source and ensure safe levels before release into the environment. He also emphasized the need for a comprehensive national plan to monitor heavy metal concentrations in soil and plants around power generation stations, especially the South Baghdad Gas Power Plant No. 2.

You May Also Like

A Training Course on the Basics of Writing Social Research Using Computer Programs

A Workshop Discussed by the College of Agricultural Engineering Sciences

A Seminar Discussed by the College of Agricultural Engineering Sciences

A Scientific Workshop on Sustainable Agriculture Organized by the College of Agricultural Engineering Sciences

A Workshop on Hatred and Extremism: Its Causes and Impact Organized by the College of Agricultural Engineering Sciences

College of Agricultural Engineering Sciences / Non-Curricular Activity

Visiting the Internal Sections of the Female Students’ Housing in Al Jadriyah Complex

The College of Agricultural Engineering Sciences Hosts a Workshop for the National Council for Accreditation of Agriculture Colleges Programs in Iraq

A Seminar discussed by the College of Agricultural Engineering Sciences

A Seminar discussed by the College of Agricultural Engineering Sciences

A Seminar discussed by the College of Agricultural Engineering Sciences

A Seminar discussed by the College of Agricultural Engineering Sciences

Comments are disabled.