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Summary

I chose this work to highlight the importance of the European Union's environmental
policy.
The paper contains three chapters, the first containing general data on water in nature.
First, water exists in nature under all three states of aggregation: liquid, gaseous (water
vapor) and solid (ice and snow). This causes the water to have more interpenetration valences
with the other envelopes. Perhaps only the creatures (Biosphere), due to the wide possibilities of
adaptation and organization of forms and dimensions, have such broad valences of apprehension
with the other elements of the Earth, but it does not go beyond the possibilities of the water. For
example, in very cold (polar) regions, water occupies huge ice caps, while organisms are almost
lacking.
At present, the theory of Hot Earth, accounted for in parallel with the other planets, is
accredited. It starts from a heterogeneous cosmic cloud (cosmic gas and dust), which initially
suffers a strong concentration, with the rise of temperatures and pressures becoming a star. The
transformation of hydrogen into helium, which is done with great energy release, ensures the
temperature of that star, which in time has become a kind of protoss. The huge energies and the
continued agitation of the particles formed around the protoss a kind of cosmic plasma ring with
ever stronger centrifugal tendencies. About approx. 6 billion years ago, this disk kept
gravitationally by protoss, but farther from it, it began to cool down. The heavily fused elements
have turned into cosmic dust that began local concentrations and separations within the immense
ring and gained individual rotating movements and thus, 5.5 billion years old, protoplanets
appeared.
The second chapter refers to the general properties of water.
Pure water is a liquid with a density of 1 gr / cm3, colorless, odorless and insipid. Water
is a hydrogen oxide and is in nature under all three states of aggregation: liquid, solid and
gaseous.
Liquid water is the most widespread, occupying about 2/3 of the Earth's surface, in the
form of seas, oceans, lakes, rivers, rivers, precipitation water. Liquid water also occurs in the
superficial layers of the bark, in the permeable deposits or in the cracks of the rocks.
Solid water is found in continental, marine or mountain glaciers, in persistent snow, or
during seasonal boreal or australian winters, ice crystals in the atmosphere, hailstones, haze, etc.
Steam water is the result of evaporative and sweating processes and occurs especially in
the atmosphere, but also in the gaps in the rocks, especially at deep depths where the
temperatures are elevated due to the geothermal gradient (towards the interior of the Earth the
temperature increases with 1 ° C every 33 m).
Generally, in the natural state, water is not pure due to its property of dissolving soluble
substances. Even in the atmosphere, in precipitation, there are certain chemical concentrations,
often high enough to generate acid rain. Water quality is constantly monitored by specialized
units of the Ministry of Environment and Water Management or of the Ministry of Health
through analyzes carried out in specialized laboratories. The number of analyzes and chemical
elements determined is determined on a case-by-case basis (for drinking water, industrial water,
water as raw material, irrigation, recreation, etc.). Natural waters are uniquely characterized by
the organoleptic, physical, chemical, radioactive, biological and bacteriological properties. Their
limits of use are set out in STAS 4706/88. Pollutants introduced into natural and artificial water
are numerous, producing a significant impact on surface and underground waters. Environmental
damage to pollutants can be grouped into two broad categories: damage to public health and
damage to industrial uses, fishing, navigation, etc.).
In Chapter Three, I chose to present all aspects of the European Union's environmental
policy, including the impact of all regulations on Romania. Contemporary economic and social
development takes place in close connection with the phenomenon of globalization of the world
economy, which makes many of the processes of contemporary economic life mutually
influenced. More than ever, the ecological interferences of global interdependencies affect all the
world's states. The global and cross-border nature of environmental issues also affects European
countries in general, the European Union in particular. During the research, we found out how
the principle of sustainability in international environmental law evolved, as it first appeared in
the form of the concept of sustainable development, then to specialize in various branches of
interest, and in terms of the international water to transform into sustainable use or use. The
general conclusion that emerges from this analysis is that the transboundary impact can only be
effectively avoided if there is a corroboration of all the stated principles.
It is enough to get rid of a single cause of pollution, so that its effects may be impossible
to stop. Although international river instruments seem to be increasingly concerned about the
perceptions of sustainability, we still note a reluctance of riparian states - as well as a global
trend - towards the introduction of rules on liability for environmental damage . Although the
problem of accountability of states is present in most international instruments, these rules do not
provide for a practical purpose. In other words, responsibility, as currently envisaged, does not
imply the practical form of a legal instrument designed to establish the regime for the
applicability of legal liability.
Given that the principle of sustainable development was adopted, it was necessary to
establish a new correlation between industry and the environment as a first component, because
industrial activities are considered to be a major cause of ecological degradation. That is why
there is a need to reconcile the objectives of economic growth with those of environmental
protection. As part of this competition between industry development and environmental
protection, the European Commission believes that the introduction of clean, industrial processes
is required at the same time as identifying and remedying what has deteriorated. The introduction
of new eco-technologies for the production and production of products, the spread of clean and
recycling technologies is a necessity of present and future.

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