Sea pollution can be defined as the direct or indirect release of substances or energy into the sea environment that harms the sea ecosystem, adversely affects human health, hinders activities at sea, including fishing, and impacts the quality of sea use.

The increase in sea pollution from urban, industrial, and agricultural waste is of great importance for the sustainability of natural resources and the future of humanity. The sources of sea pollution generally include direct discharge of waste, surface runoff due to rain, and pollutants released from the atmosphere.

One of the uses of the seas is as a receiving environment for wastewater discharges. Therefore, in order to control pollution, deep sampling is carried out, and analyses of Deep Sea Discharge monitoring (SKKY Table 4) are conducted.

To protect human health and the environment, we provide services for determining the quality of waters used for swimming and recreation (within the scope of the Bathing Water Quality Regulation) and for preventing contamination by all types of pollutants, especially microbiological ones, through sampling, measurement/analysis, and reporting.