Meeting of MindsDanube Basin water ministers met in Vienna for the first high-level meeting in the history of the Danube River Protection Convention. |
|
Front row: Ibro Cengić, Bosnia & Herzogovina;
Ivana Dulić-Marković, Serbia & Montenegro;
Liliana Bara, Romania; Catherine Day, ICPDR President 2004; Helmut Kukacka,
Austria; Henriette Berg, Germany |
“Bosnia
and Herzegovina in the Danube River Protection Convention means that at long
last the Danube family of nations is together with an uninterrupted line of
cooperation from the Black Forest to the Black Sea.”
Ibro Cengic, Bosnia and Herzegovina.
“Actions of government alone will not bring improved water quality to
the Danube – every one of us can do something to protect the ecosystem that
supports us.”
Catherine Day, ICPDR President 2004
Ten years is a
relatively small milestone to the Danube River Basin. To the people who live in
the basin, however, much has changed in the last ten years. Since the Danube
River Protection was signed in Sofia in 1994, the European Union has expanded,
several countries in the Danube Basin have been reorganised politically, and
the Danube is in better shape ecologically. All Danube countries have reduced
pollution, and have learned to take better care of the precious Danube
wetlands.
For the first time in the history of the Danube River Protection Convention,
Ministers responsible for water resource management in the Danube River Basin
gathered in Vienna on December 13 for the ICPDR Ministerial Meeting. Ministers
and representatives from all Danube Basin countries were in attendance, as well
as NGOs and observers to the convention. The meeting marked the ten-year
anniversary of the sign-ing of the Danube River Protection Convention, and
provided an opportunity to look back at the last ten years in Danube history
and to celebrate the successes achieved and identify the strategies and actions
necessary to undertake for the next ten years.
Ten years of
success.
The meeting opened with a short film on the Danube River Basin and the work the
ICPDR has done to protect this delicate region. In a short time, the ICPDR has matured
into an effective forum for coordination and cooperation and has helped the
countries of the Danube basin work towards sustainable water resources
management.
This message was reinforced by Catherine Day’s opening remarks about the
achievements of the ICPDR in the ten years since the Danube River Protection
Convention’s signing. She highlighted several outstanding achievements of the
last ten years, including the TransNational Monitoring Network, the Accident
Emergency Warning System and the Five-Year Joint Action Plan necessary. She
also singled out the first international Danube Day, celebrated June 29 across
the entire basin: “It is important that we get people — not just politicians
and officials — to play their part in protecting the Danube.”
Making history.
The Ministerial Meeting provided many opportunities for decision-makers to
continue to move forward in their objectives. Meeting participants celebrated
the announcement of Bosnia and Herzegovina’s ratification of the Danube River
Protection Convention, witnessed the signing the Danube Declaration and the
Tisza River Basin Agreement, and discussed the Roof Report 2004 and Flood
Action Programme. The Ministerial Meeting also served as the scene for the
crowning of the ‘International Danube Art Master’, part of 13-country school
competition carried out as part of the first international Danube Day
celebrated June 29 throughout the Basin.
A complete
Danube family.
The delegation from Bosnia and Herzegovina announced at the beginning of the
meeting that their country had recently adopted the ratification instrument to
join the Danube River Protection Convention, the last of the 13 signatory
members to ratify the convention.
Catherine Day, ICDPR President 2004, said she was pleased that the “circle is
complete and all the Dan-ube Basin countries are together”. One of her original
goals when her presidency started was to continue a dialogue with the Balkan
countries, a target she achieved with her trip in June to Bosnia and
Herzegovina and Serbia and Montenegro. Day congratulated her colleagues from
Bosnia and Herzegovina for getting through the very ambitious ratification
process and said that she was glad to be able to celebrate the ratification
together.
All ministers echoed Day’s celebratory sentiment on the ratification of Bosnia
and Herzegovina. “I am so glad we could formally recognise the ratification
today,” said Ibro Cengic on behalf of Dragan Doko, Minister of Foreign Trade
and Economic Relation. “Bosnia and Herzegovina in the Danube River Protection
Convention means that at long last the Danube family of nations is together
with an uninterrupted line of cooperation from the Black Forest to the Black
Sea.”
|
ICPDR President 2004 Catherine Day receives an NGO Declaration promoting ecologically sustainable navigation on the Danube, outside the meeting venue. |
A declaration
from the heart.
A substantial amount of time at the meeting was set aside to evaluate and
redirect the future efforts of the ICPDR. The ministers and representatives of
all Danube countries endorsed a Danube Declaration that expressed their
commitment to reinforce transboundary cooperation on sustainable water resource
management within the Danube region further.The declaration, called ‘The Danube
Basin – Rivers in the Heart of Europe’, stressed the commitment of all
countries to cooperate in identifying and implementing solutions for integrated
and sustainable water resource management in the Danube River Basin.
The declaration affirmed the commitment to promoting the sustainable and
balanced use of water resources in the Danube Basin. The declaration also
recognises the work of partners in helping ICPDR achieve its goals, including
donors and financial institutions, the UNDP/GEF Danube Regional Project, the
Commission for the Protection of the Black Sea Against Pollution, the
Danube—Black Sea Taskforce, and the official observers of the ICPDR.
Setting targets
for the river.
The declaration acknowledged achievements from the last ten years, but also
addressed continuing concerns for the region and set goals and objectives for
the next ten years. Recognising the shared responsibility necessary for the
future, the declaration commits to meeting key objectives of the Danube River
Protection Convention through implementing the EU Water Framework Directive,
developing an internationally coordinated river basin management plan for the
Danube basin by 2009, and taking coordinated steps to reduce risks from floods.
State Secretary Helmut Kukacka of the Austrian Ministry of Transport and
Technology commended the “outstanding spirit of cooperation”, and called the
declaration “remarkable, not only for the plans and objectives it set forth,
but also for how little time it has taken to develop”.
Catherine Day agreed with Kukacka, and stressed that it was “vital to agree on
the Danube Declaration today in order to set out a vision and a concept for the
International Commission for the Protection of the Danube River to tackle the
challenges ahead”.
|
Catherine Day, ICPDR President 2004, called the meeting timely, not just for marking the ten-year anniversary of the Danube River Protection Convention, but also for the enlargement of the European Union, which moved the Danube region closer to the heart of Europe. |
Sub-basin
cooperation.
An important issue of discussions at the meeting was the successful cooperation
of the ICPDR with the sub-basin initiatives in the Sava and Tisza River Basins.
The Tisza River Basin Agreement specifies ad-ditional commitments to coordinate
water quality and flood risk management in the Tisza River Basin, the Danube’s
largest tributary. The agreement was signed by Hungary, Romania, Serbia and
Montenegro, Slovakia and Ukraine.
Ivana Dulić-Marković, from Serbia and Montenegro, praised the
agreement, saying “This agreement marks a significant accomplishment for all of
us in the Tisza Basin, and the entire basin will benefit as this brings us one
step closer to implementing the EU Water Framework Directive.”
Tools for the
future.
At the end of 2004, the Danube Basin countries completed the first important
milestone in fulfilling the requirements of the EU Water Framework Directive,
the Roof Report 2004. The completion of the Danube Basin Analysis, or Roof
Report 2004, fulfils one of the requirements of the EU Water Framework
Directive. The report describes the main environmental problems in the Danube
River Basin and, based on this report, a cost-effective programme of measures
will be developed in order to ensure that the objectives of the EU Water
Framework Directive will be met. This programme of measures will be included in
the Dan-ube River Basin Management Plan to be completed in 2009.
The Action Programme for Sustainable Flood Protection in the Danube River Basin
was also adopted at the meeting. The programme aims at achieving a long-term
and sustainable approach for managing conservation and the improvement of
water-related ecosystems.
Challenges
ahead.
ICPDR President Catherine Day noted that the work of the ICPDR is far from
complete. She identified several urgent problems still facing the Danube,
including pollution loads, the risk of accidents and floods, and the continuing
degradation of water systems.
“Taking into account the important and relevant tasks of the ICPDR, the further
consolidation of this institution is necessary in order to allow an adequate
co-ordination of the tasks which have to be solved,” said Liliana Bara, State
Secretary of Romania. “We express our availability for total cooperation and
also our hope that, through our common efforts, we will be able to benefit from
clean and healthy environment, both for us and the future generations.”
An optimistic
future.
Day summed up the spirit of the meeting by remarking that the work of the ICPDR
was not completed. Moreover, she added, “the actions of government alone will
not bring improved water quality and environmental conditions to the
Danube…every one of us can do something to protect the ecosystem that supports
us. Industry, farmers, municipalities, people of all ages, young and old,
should join in and act in ways that preserve and restore, where necessary, our
Danube River ecosystem.”