supporting parties and the opposition are trying to get the minister of the environment Lea Wermelin to skvatte in the case of shit and pee in the Danish seas, lakes and rivers.

Wednesday opening the Liberal party’s Kim Valentin further møgsluserne, after TV2 Lorry has revealed that from 2014-2018 has been derived over 35 billion litres of waste water solely in the Sound.

It surprises me, actually, that we have a minister who says that she is green and then just let an area as the stand.

– I thought that it was a ’no brainer’, and that she would pull the handbrake, but it did not happen, and that I am surprised, says Kim Valentin, who later in the day udfritter minister in the Danish Parliament, to Ekstra Bladet.

He states that the Lea Wermelin must tighten the rules for the discharge of waste water in Denmark.

the Left-the claim comes in the slipstream of a broad political majority consisting of V, S, DF, EL, and SF on Monday, got the drain for a stinking criticism of Lea Wermelin, as they believe hangs in the miljøbremsen.

According to DR has the minister not yet formed an overview of exactly how much wastewater will be discharged in the Danish seas, lakes and rivers.

In a consultation last year she called otherwise, the need for an overview for an important cause.

– We have seen a minister for the environment, who obviously did not care much for that – for to say it straight out – shit and piss completely untreated runs out in the water, said René Christensen, who is miljøordfører for the Danish people’s Party, to DR.

The bakteriebefængte affair is on the new country on the minister’s table, even though it flared up as a municipal matter.

In may, it emerged that the Municipality had given permission to a discharge 290 million gallons of sewage out of the Sound.

According to the Althing, who has spoken with the environmental protection Agency, was the many millions of litres is just a drop in the ocean.

Agriculture accounts for up to 70 percent of nitrogen oxide emissions, while wastewater accounts for about 30 percent of the discharge of phosphorus.

See also: Minister is called in consultation over spildevandssag

There was, nevertheless, a deafening outcry among politicians, miljøbeskyttere and experts on both sides of the strait, and the minister was called in consultation.

Lea Wermelin stated that she marveled at, that the city of Copenhagen had given the green light to the malodorous discharge.

One would otherwise think, that she had had ample opportunity to take hold of his colleagues in the Copenhagen Municipality in good time.

Lea Wermelins own agency, the environmental protection Agency, was informed that the city of Copenhagen have given the permission to the emissions already 13. may – more than ten days before discharge should take place.

Policy – 25. may. 2020 – pm. 21:01 Shit in the Sound: Taken with pants down

HOFOR and the lord mayor of Copenhagen, Frank Jensen, has now called off the discharge, but the case will never end.

The People Martin Lidegaard suggests together with Niels Paarup-Petersen from the centre party in Sweden’s Parliament in the day to do the Sound to a marine national park in order to stop the discharge of sewage into the waters.

Minister: I have delivered

the Extra Leaf is working on a comment from the minister.

recently said she stated in a written comment that she already has delivered results in the area:

‘It is important for our environment, that we will have lowered the number of overflow and strengthened the work with climate adaptation. Therefore, we have since the consultation last year got better data with the PULSE database, which went live in February’.

‘We have changed the spildevandsbekendtgørelsen, so the municipalities is even stronger obligation to report data than in the past. And the government has, together with a wide circle of political parties signed a political agreement on the new and simpler rules for vandselskabernes adaptation to climate change, to pave the way for cheaper and more effective adaptation of the sewers’.

‘in Addition to the work of the forthcoming river basin management plans in full swing, and I am glad that the rapporteurs share the ambitions of more adaptation and better protection of our water environment’, she wrote.