2
September 2004![]()
Headline
story. Dominican Republic's protected areas law raises
concerns. The Secretary General of the Ramsar Convention reiterated
last week his concern about the new law on Protected Areas which was approved
by the Parliament of the Dominican Republic but which is now undergoing litigation
as to its unconstitutionality. On the occasion of the nomination of H.E.
Dr. Leonel Fernández as the new President of the Dominican
Republic, the Secretary General of the Convention on Wetlands, Dr
Peter Bridgewater, reminded the Government of its international obligations
regarding protected areas.
[02/09/04]
¿Qué futuro para los humedales de la República Dominicana? El Secretario General de la Convención de Ramsar reiteró la semana pasada su preocupación acerca de la nueva ley sobre áreas protegidas aprobada por el Parlamento de la República Dominicana pero actualmente demandada por inconstitucionalidad. En ocasión de la toma de posesión de S.E. Dr. Leonel Fernández como nuevo Presidente de la República Dominicana, el Secretario General, Dr. Peter Bridgewater, recordó al Gobierno sus obligaciones internacionales en materia de áreas protegidas. Más aqui.
Announcement.
High Andean Wetland Symposium set for Salta, Argentina, 14
to 18 February 2005. The High
Andean Flamingos Conservation Group has been working for the past eight
years for the conservation of the three flamingo species inhabiting the Andes.
The conservation of high Andean wetlands requires transboundary cooperation
and common training, research and monitoring programmes. The High Andean Wetland
Symposium will provide an exchange opportunity for scientists and wetland managers,
as well as for writing the final draft of the High Andean Wetland Strategy,
which
was discussed in March this year in Ecuador, following Ramsar's Resolution VIII.39
on High Andean Wetlands. The Symposium is sponsored by the Danone-Evian Foundation
through funds administered by the Ramsar Convention. More
details are available here. [01/09/04]
Simposio de Humedales Altoandinos - Primera circular: Salta, Argentina 14 al 18 de febrero de 2005. El Grupo Conservación de Flamencos Altoandinos trabaja desde hace ocho años en la conservación de los flamencos altoandinos y sus ambientes con un enfoque regional. Dado qua la conservación de los humedales altoandinos requiere de cooperación transfronteriza y programas comunes de capacitación, investigación y monitoreo, el simposio propiciará el encuentro de científicos y administradores de humedales, y servirá para redactar el borrador final de la Estrategia de Humedales Altoandinos, cuyas discusiones iniciales tuvieron lugar en Quito, Ecuador, en marzo de 2004, en cumplimiento de la Resolución VIII.39 de Ramsar. El simposio está patrocinado por la Fundación Evian Danone a través de fondos administrados por la Convención de Ramsar. Más información aquí.
Ramsar
staff news. New Assistant Advisor chosen for
Asia region. The Secretariat is pleased to announce that a new Intern/Assistant
Advisor for Asia has been selected from a very strong field of candidates,
to begin in late November and to replace Ms Liazzat Rabbiosi who will by then
have been helping with Asian issues for the past 18 months. Ms Shahzia
Mohsin Khan from Bangladesh is
currently working with the IUCN Bangladesh office, where she has responsibility
for project development for wetlands, implementing a trade and environment project
on sustainable shrimp industry, and coordinating IUCN membership and commissions
in Bangladesh. She has also worked on local community management issues in the
Tanguar Haor Ramsar site, and on indicators and early warning systems for the
Sunderbans wetlands. Shahzia has a degree in environmental sciences from the
North South University, Dhaka, and is presently completing a Master's degree
on rural development and development economics. It is hoped that she will be
able to join the Secretariat soon after participating in the IUCN World Conservation
Congress in Bangkok, 17-25 November 2004. [31/08/04]
Ramsar
staff news. Annette Keller retires after years
of service to IUCN and Ramsar. Annette Keller, presently the Convention's
Human Resources Officer, joined IUCN in 1983 and participated in the logistics
side of the early Ramsar COPs in 1984 and 1987, in the days when IUCN provided
the secretariat duties for the Convention. Following the creation of the permanent
Ramsar secretariat, Annette joined the Bureau, as it was then called, and served
for many years as Small Grants Fund officer and Administration Coordinator,
amongst other roles. For her logistical help, in any number of languages, to
generations of Standing Committee, STRP, and COP participants over many years,
she is doubtless one of the best known and most appreciated of all Ramsar staff
members, and the first who's made it to retirement. Annette is extraordinarily
active in cultural and charitable affairs and a great traveler, and one feels
that her retirement from the burdens of the secretariat will be welcome to her
and put to very good use. With, of course, nostalgic reflections about Ramsar
from time to time. Here are
some photos of Annette's retirement party and her congratulatory letter from
the Chair of the Ramsar Standing Committee. [30/08/04] Photos
of Annette Keller's last Ramsar staff meeting. [01/09/04]
Who's
where?
Peter
Bridgewater, the Secretary General, is visiting UNEP in Nairobi,
Kenya, for a first meeting on international assessment of the impacts
of agriculture and an Environmental Management Group meeting. He will then go
on to Kampala, Uganda, 2-3 September 2004,
to evaluate the progress there in preparing for COP9. [30/08/04]
|
Highlights from World Wetlands Day. Protected Areas, Wildlife and Coastal Zone Management Service of DENR, Zamboanga City, Philippines |
Yesterday's News!
![]()
First
of the Ramsar COP9 regional meetings announced. The preparations
for the Ramsar Convention's triennial Conferences of the Parties (COPs) are
complemented by regional meetings in which the Contracting Parties and environmental
organizations can work together to develop common responses to issues scheduled
for discussion at the COP. The substantial results of the eleven regional and
subregional meetings held before Ramsar COP8 (Spain, 2002) can be seen here.
In advance of Ramsar COP9 (Uganda, 2005), one regional meeting is presently
planned for each of the regions of Africa, Asia, the Americas, and Europe, and
there are hopes that one can be arranged for the Oceania region as well. The
3rd Panamerican regional Ramsar meeting is
now being organized for 7-12 November 2004
and will be hosted by Mexico in Merida in the Yucatan, with financial assistance
from the governments of Canada, Mexico, and the United States. This will be
a focused working meeting for national Ramsar delegates and observers and Ramsar
partner organizations, not necessarily very interesting to the general public,
but further details, the
agenda, and the registration forms in English and Spanish can be found here.
[26/08/04]
Lithuania
signs up for AEWA. Lithuania has recently submitted its instruments
of accession to the African-Eurasian Migratory Waterbird Agreement and will
become the Agreement's 48th Contracting Party as of 1 November 2004. Here's
a succinct report on Lithuania's considerable waterbird virtues contributed
by UNEP-AEWA's new Technical Officer in the AEWA secretariat of the Convention
on Migratory Species, Sergey Dereliev,
former Ramsar intern and Assistant Advisor for Europe. [26/08/04]
Nominations
sought. Luc Hoffmann Medal for Wetland Science
and Conservation. On the occasion of its 50th anniversary, Wetlands
International announces a new award - the Luc Hoffmann
Medal for Wetland Science and Conservation. The award will be presented
every triennium in honour of Luc Hoffmann, one of the founders of Wetlands International
and a continuing source of inspiration and support to those who share his passion
for wetlands.
It
has been established to highlight Luc's belief that effective nature conservation
activities need to rely on good science, as well as in recognition of his own
outstanding achievements in this field. The award will be conferred to an individual
who has demonstrated excellence in one or more of three categories: scientific
research; communication, education and/or public awareness; and wetland management.
Max Finlayson's call for nominations
can be found here. [25/08/04]
News from the Secretariat. Ramsar welcomes a new staff member. The Secretariat is delighted to announce that Ms Catherine Loetscher is joining the team in the full-time position of Administrative Assistant. Catherine's native language is French but she has excellent knowledge of English, Spanish, and German as well and has considerable administrative work experience both in the French- and German-speaking parts of Switzerland and in Spain. She will be joining the "executive support team" and has already attended her first Ramsar staff meeting with no ill effects. We welcome Catherine to the Ramsar community. [25/08/04]
Ramsar
Oceania officer appointed in Samoa. In order better to promote the
Ramsar Convention and the conservation of wetlands and water resources in the
Oceania region, a new subregional outposted office of the Convention has been
created in Samoa and a new subregional adviser was designated last week. With
strong experience in environmental issues in the region, Mr.
Seiuli Vainuupo Jungblut will work under the supervision of the South
Pacific Regional Environment Programme (SPREP) to provide the Small
Islands States and Territories of the Oceania region with support for wetlands
and water conservation and management. In particular, he will help the countries
join and implement the Ramsar Convention. This new outposted
office of the Ramsar Convention has been possible thanks to the support of the
Australian Government, the US Government, SPREP, and WWF International.
Here is the Ramsar and SPREP press release
with further details, in HTML and PDF.
[24/08/04]
Ramsar,
governments, and international organizations critical of Ukrainian canal.
Several international organizations and countries, including the Ramsar
Convention on Wetlands, UNESCO, the Government of Romania, Germany's Chancellor
Gerhard Shröder, and the Government of the United States of America, have
expressed their deepest concern regarding Ukraines repeated deafness to
the recommendations of the international community. The countrys project
to build a navigable waterway through the Bystroye arm of the Danube delta has
raised significant international opposition, as the project is affecting an
important natural area listed as a Ramsar Wetland of International Importance
and the core zone of a UNESCO-MAB Biosphere Reserve, as well as a national protected
area in Ukraine. Here you will
find the text of the Ramsar press release protesting the further work on this
canal and offering technical assistance in finding a solution to the problem.
[24/08/04]
Stockholm,
world water capital. The 14th World Water
Week, 16-20 August, finished recently in Stockholm, Sweden. During
one week of debates and discussions, delegates analysed the main issues related
to water and its management. One of the topics was particularly relevant to
the Ramsar Convention: the development of a global convention on the human rights
to water. The Secretary General of the Convention, Peter
Bridgewater, was present in the discussion to explain the prominent
role Ramsar has to play in this project. In his statement, Bridgewater stressed
the "necessity to take into account and maybe use and increase the existing
international agreements instead of investing too much effort in the difficult
endeavour of creating a new convention on water". Bridgewater reminded
the participants of the existence of the Ramsar Convention and the central role
it can play on the water issue.
Spyros Kouvelis, coordinator of the MedWet Initiative under the Ramsar Convention, also participated in the Water Week sessions, bringing the Mediterranean experience to the discussions on the issue of "comprehensive assessment: identifying opportunities in the water-food-environment nexus". Another key session was a briefing discussion on the upcoming CSD13 (UN Commission on Sustainable Development, 13th meeting), to be held in New York in April 2005, in the presence of H.E. John Ashe, chairman of the CSD Bureau. The Secretary General pointed out that the Convention was available to implement immediately aspects of the decisions foreseen from CSD - a comment underlined by the panel on integrated water resources management. -- Sebastià Semene Guitart, Ramsar Secretariat. [23/08/04]
Now
available. Third
ECRR International Conference on River Restoration. From
17 to 21 May 2004 there took place in Zagreb, Croatia's capital, the 3rd international
conference of the European Centre for River Restoration
(ECRR), organised jointly with Croatian
Waters (Hrvatske Vode), the national water management authority.Nearly
40 conference papers were focused upon river restoration as part of integrated
water management, on technical solutions to reconcile user conflicts in the
river basin, on public awareness and support to river restoration, and on restoration
projects in countries in economic transition. The Proceedings, including those
conference papers, are now available in hardcover and in PDF format -- more
details here. [23/08/04]
Progress
on the Western Hemisphere Migratory Species Initiative. The first
meeting of the Interim Steering Committee of the Western Hemisphere Migratory
Species Initiative took place in Sarapiquí,
Costa Rica, 10-13 August 2004, and Ramsar's
Margarita Astrálaga reports that representatives of Colombia,
Costa Rica, Santa Lucia, Uruguay, and the United States, as well as the Ramsar
and CMS Secretariats, WWF, BirdLife International, American Bird Conservancy
and the Western Hemisphere
Shorebird
Reserve Network were all on board {photo left}. A draft strategy document was
hammered out painstakingly and will be distributed for comment throughout the
region in the coming months, and the participants were able to groundtruth the
strategy themselves in big rafts on the Sarapiqui river. Margarita's brief report
on the objectives and the outcomes of the meeting includes a summary of her
other discussions with government and NGO colleagues on the implementation of
the Convention in Costa Rica and provides a useful update. Here
is her illustrated report. [20/08/04]
Niger
names three important Ramsar sites in the Niger basin. The government
of Niger, which has been taking vigorous steps in recent years, with the energetic
assistance
of WWF International's Living Waters Programme, to designate for the Ramsar
List a number of extremely valuable wetland areas along the Niger River and
in the Lake Chad Basin,
has recently listed three new sites, totaling over three quarters of a million
hectares along the Niger and two of its former tributary valleys from the north.
Ramsar's Abou Bamba, Senior Advisor for Africa, was able to present Niger's
president,
Mamadou Tandja, with "site diplomas"
for the three new sites at President Jacques Chirac's meeting in Paris on 26-27
April 2004, "Partenariat international pour le Bassin du Niger: vision
partagée, de la stratégie vers un plan d'action", and now
that the site datasheets have been thoroughly gone over by the Africa team in
the Secretariat, the new RSs can be added to the List of Wetlands of International
Importance. The three sites are Dallol Bosso (376,162 hectares), Dallol Maouri
(318,966 ha), and Zone humide du moyen Niger II (65,850 ha) in the Niger floodplain.
[17/08/04]![]()
Paraguay
designates another Ramsar Site in the Chaco. Following
Laguna Chaco Lodge, listed in october 2003, Laguna Teniente Rojas Silva in Boquerón
department joins the Ramsar List as of 14 July 2004 as the 6th Ramsar Site in
the country. Fundación DeSdelChaco
was instrumental in supporting the designation and preparing the Ramsar Information
Sheet. As described by Ramsar's Iván Dario Valencia, based upon the Ramsar
Information Sheet, the Laguna Teniente Rojas Silva
(8,470 hectares, 22º38S 059º03W) is part of the watershed
of the Riacho Yakaré Sur in the Paraguayan Chaco and alternates between
freshwater and brackish conditions. Here
is his brief report in English and Spanish. [16/08/04] ![]()
Paraguay designa un nuevo sitio Ramsar en el Chaco. Tras la inclusion de la Laguna Chaco Lodge en la Lista de Humedales de Importancia Internacional en octubre de 2003, la Laguna Teniente Rojas Silva se convierte en el sexto sitio Ramsar de Paraguay. La Fundación DeSdelChaco apoyó la designación y elaboró la Ficha Informativa Ramsar. Más.
Progress on the MA's Ramsar Synthesis Report. Deputy Secretary General Nick Davidson is in Kuching (Sarawak), Malaysia for the meeting of the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment's Ramsar Synthesis Report Team (16-18 August). The Team, co-lead by Max Finlayson (STRP Chair) and Rebecca D'Cruz (former Ramsar Bureau Regional Coordinator for Asia) will be preparing the first full draft of this important MA product for the Ramsar Convention. The Synthesis Report will summarise and highlight key findings of the full MA chapters on the Conditions and Trends of Wetlands, future scenarios, and response options, in a succinct and accessible form for use by Ramsar Contracting Parties and all others concerned with the conservation and wise use of wetlands. The contents of the Synthesis report is being guided by the set of key questions setting out Ramsar's information needs from the MA, which were prepared by the Scientific and Technical Review Panel in the early days of the MA process. Later this year, the draft report will be circulated for review to all Ramsar Administrative Authorities and the STRP, before the report is finalised and published in 2005. [16/08/04]
INTECOL7
calls for wise use of wetlands. The 900 participants in the 7th INTECOL
International Wetlands Conference, 25-30 July 2004, in Utrecht, The Netherlands,
summarized their conclusions and recommendations in the so-called "Utrecht
Declaration on Wetlands", in which, amongst other things, they
called upon the Contracting Parties to the Ramsar Convention to act upon "their
obligation to identify all sites within their territories that can be classified
as wetlands of international importance and ensure the conservation and wise
use of these sites". The text of the Utrecht Declaration, borrowed from
http://www.bio.uu.nl/intecol/declaration/,
has been reproduced
right here. [13/08/04]
Parliamentarian
Hiroyuki Tani presses for Ramsar values in Japan. The
Honorable Hiroyuki Tani, a member of the Japanese Diet (Parliament), who paid
a visit to the Ramsar Secretariat in December 2003, has recently met with Ms.
Yuriko Koike, Minister of the Environment in Japan, on the 3rd of August 2004
in order to discuss Ramsar issues in Japan. Specifically he urged the designation
and sustainable management of more Wetlands of International Importance before
COP9 and encouraged the government to facilitate the participation of NGOs and
local communities in the Ramsar Site designation process. Here
is a very brief illustrated report of that meeting. [13/08/04]
Wetlands
Centre Australia plans national forum. The
Wetlands Centre Australia is launching The Wetland
Innovation Series through a National Forum. Entitled Innovations,
Obligations and Incentives, the Forum will be held on Tuesday 21st
September 2004 at The Wetlands Centre, 10 minutes from Newcastle in the lower
Hunter Valley. The Forum will focus on: Interpretation and update on all significant
legislation and reforms affecting development adjacent to wetlands in NSW, and
Providing central access to cutting-edge approaches for managing activities
in wetland catchments, including planning and policy-making; urban design; assessment
and prioritisation; incentives and tools. The Wetland Innovation Series is designed
to challenge current thinking and practice. It will provide direct access to
up-to-date knowledge, tools and technology, and key players and specialists
in the field of wetland management from across Australia. Here
is the announcement, sent to us by Kylie Yeend,
Project Officer, Hunter Ramsar Communication Strategy, with a link
to a PDF brochure which includes application forms. [13/08/04]
From
the Ramsar Forum. The National Flood Insurance Program,
USA. "Can anyone recommend a good reference describing the National
Flood Insurance Program in the USA. I am particularly interested in what happens
when properties suffer repeated loses, whether the Program facilitates owners
moving out of the risk zone and what happes to the property afterwards. I have
had a quick look at www.fema.gov/nfip/ but couldn't find a good general text
that addressed this issue. Many thanks. Duncan" Dr Duncan Huggett,
Habitats Policy Advisor, The Environment Agency (duncan.huggett@environment-agency.co.uk).
[13/08/04]
Ramsar
welcomes the Marshall Islands as its 140th Party. The Secretariat
is extremely pleased to welcome another new Party from the Oceania region, the
Republic of the Marshall Islands - the procedure
for accession has been completed on 13 July 2004 and the treaty, as amended
by the Paris Protocol
of
1982, will therefore come into force for the Marshall Islands on 13 November
2004. The new Party's first Ramsar site, Jaluit Atoll
Conservation Area (69,000 hectares, 06°00'N 169°34'E) is
a large coral atoll comprising 91 islets with a land area of 700 ha enclosing
a large lagoon and including diverse and relatively pristine marine and terrestrial
habitats, such as reefs, sandflats, seagrass beds, mangroves, and sand cays.
There is a considerable range of relatively healthy marine species populations
of reef fish and invertebrates, and though terrestrial species are more limited
there are turtle nesting beaches and seabird roosting islands in relatively
stable condition. A human population of fewer than 2000 people practices a subsistence
lifestyle. Traditional land ownership and resource management have been effective,
but as resource uses fall increasingly under local government councils, there
has been a decline in sustainable management awareness and practices. Potential
threats include over-harvesting, especially of marine species for off-island
markets, and the prospect of rising sea levels associated with global warming.
A management plan is in effect, and the new site designation data, prepared
by John Bungitak of the EPA, has benefited by the work of the South Pacific
Regional Environment Programme (SPREP) and of Bill Phillips of Mainstream Consulting
with funding provided by WWF. [12/08/04]
Now
available. STRP midterm 2004 photos.
From 20-24 July 2004, members and observers of the Convention's Scientific
and Technical Review Panel (STRP), joined by invited technical experts
including authors of chapters of the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment, the CBD
Secretariat and the Chair of the Standing Committee, met in a series of intensive
and very successful workshops in Wageningen, the Netherlands. The workshops
were hosted by Wetlands International as part of their provision of the STRP
Support Service. The final results of their labors
are not to be viewed by the general public until Ramsar COP9 in November 2005,
but a brief report of the meetings
can be seen here, and here
are the photos. [11/08/04]
Asian
Wetland Symposium 2005: Innovative Approaches to Sustainable Livelihood, February
2005, India.
"We are pleased to inform you that The Asian Wetland
Symposium 2005: Innovative Approaches to Sustainable Livelihood will
be held on 6-9 February 2005 in Bhubaneswar and Chilika Lake, India, jointly
organized by Ramsar Center Japan, Chilika Development Authority, the Department
of Forest and Environment, the Government of Orissa and the Ministry of Forest
and Environment, India. The Symposium will be the third opportunity of the regional
wetland symposium which aims to synergize cooperation among all stakeholders
to achieve the wise use of wetlands in Asia and the Pacific. The organizers
call on every academician, wetland manager, government official, university
student, NGO,
community
leader, media person and nature lover who is concerned with the conservation
of wetlands to come and join the forum. Further information and on-line registration
are now available from the Web site http://www.aws2005.com. [link
later removed] We
are looking forward to your positive participation." - Reiko
Nakamura, (reiko.nakamura@nifty.com), Secretary-General, Ramsar Center
Japan. [10/08/04]
WWD
materials to be available on CD-ROM as well. Every year since 1997,
the Ramsar Secretariat has produced a number of materials to help people liven
up their World Wetlands Day celebrations, and these have been distributed free
of charge. This year, the design of a colorful WWD poster and three new stickers
is proceeding on schedule, and the results should be ready by mid-October. As
in the past few years, we would like to encourage everyone to consider personalizing
and/or translating these materials in national or local languages so that they
have more direct relevance to local audiences, and especially to consider printing
them in his or her own country if large numbers are required. Thus, the print
versions of the poster and stickers for 2005 will also be made available in
a choice of two electronic formats: CD-ROM 1 (Quark): QuarkXpress Passport 4.11
and CD-ROM 2 (Photoshop): Adobe Photoshop 6.0.
[09/08/04]
Announcement.
IWRM course set for October. This
year's 5-day Integrated Water Resources Management
course, sponsored by the World Bank Institute and the Swiss Development
Corporation, will be held 11 to 15 October 2004 in Divonne, France (near Geneva),
co-hosted by UNITAR and the WMO with contributions from FAO and IUCN. The convener,
Dr Keith Kennedy, Executive Director of IWRM.org (www.iwrm.org), says
that the course "provides policy-makers, water managers, operators, stakeholder
representatives including water-user associations and NGOs, the opportunity
to directly address challenges of sustainable development (SD) targeted at aspects
of improved comprehensive and effective water resources management. It focuses
on strengthening their ability to impact and implement means of reaching SD
particularly related to water sector reform in their country/region. . . . The
course looks carefully at key policy, institutions, legal and regulatory considerations
and economic principles as well as critical interaction of social, ecosystem
and hydrologic dimensions in fair and reasonable practices in water management."
The brochure is available here in PDF format [since removed], and more
information can also be got from the IWRM.org
and WBI
Web sites. [10/08/04]
Novedades
del Centro Regional Ramsar para la Capacitación e Investigación
sobre Humedales en el Hemisferio Occidental.
En
cumplimiento del Convenio entre el Gobierno de la República de Panamá
y la Secretaría de la Convención, así como de la Resolución
VII.26 de la COP7, el 5 de enero del 2004 inició operaciones el Centro
Regional Ramsar, luego de un proceso de varios meses para la selección
de la Directora Ejecutiva y la asignación de la partida presupuestaria
aportada por Panamá, como capital semilla para su operación inicial.
Durante los primeros seis meses de gestión, ha enfocado sus esfuerzos
en el desarrollo de una estructura legal y operativa que incluye su reconocimiento
mediante una ley (Ley No.33/2004), el establecimiento de los sistemas administrativos
y financieros, el plan estratégico y de trabajo, la línea base
para la evaluación de su desarrollo institucional y el diseño
de diversos proyectos. Por otra parte, se está realizando un diagnóstico
regional dirigido a identificar las necesidades de fortalecimiento de los puntos
focales de la Convención así como de otros actores relevantes
en la región para los ecosistemas de humedales, con base en el cual se
diseñarán los diversos programas de capacitación que el
Centro ofrecerá, considerando que como parte de sus objetivos se encuentra
apoyar el cumplimiento del Plan Estratégico de la Convención Ramsar
y las prioridades de los países miembros.
Adicionalmente, se están concretando alianzas estratégicas en diversos sectores tanto a nivel de organizaciones no gubernamentales nacionales e internacionales, como de organismos internacionales. Un ejemplo de ello ha sido su participación como miembro fundador del Centro Internacional para el Desarrollo Sostenible (CIDES). Igualmente, está organizando su primer taller regional sobre manejo de humedales, a realizarse en noviembre del presente año. Con esta base de trabajo durante sus primeros meses de existencia, el Centro Regional Ramsar, está delineando sus áreas de acción que continuará desarrollando durante el próximo año en cuatro pilares estratégicos: capacitación, investigación, política y operatividad. [09/08/04]
Mekong
wetland biodiversity programme launched. A new US$ 30 million programme
to promote conservation and sustainable use of the biodiversity of wetlands
in the lower Mekong Basin was launched in Vientiane, Lao PDR. Representatives
from the governments of Cambodia, Lao PDR, Thailand and Vietnam attended a ceremony
held in Vientiane on 19 July 2004 to launch the scheme. The Mekong
River Basin Wetland Biodiversity Conservation and Sustainable Use Programme
(MWBP), led by UNDP Lao PDR, is a joint initiative between UNDP,
IUCN - the World Conservation Union, and the Mekong River Commission (MRC).
Working in partnership with the governments of Cambodia, Lao PDR, Thailand and
Vietnam as well as civil society organizations, NGOs and rural people, the programme
is the first of its kind to undertake a combination of assessments, dialogues
and pilot interventions addressing a range of ecological, economic and social
challenges to the region. Further
details can be seen in this timely press release sent to us by Dr.
Charlotte MacAlister, MWBP Program Manager, Environment Division ~ Mekong River
Commission Secretariat. [06/08/04]
Ramsar
to assist in legal debates on alien species. In a few months' time,
Ramsar's Secretary General, Dr Peter Bridgewater,
will be helping to evaluate the finalists in a worldwide environmental legal
competition sponsored by the Stetson University college of law in Florida, USA.
The Ninth Annual
International Environmental Moot Court Competition, 28-30 October, will
focus on the hypothetical problem of the legal and
policy issues associated with an alien invasive species and its impact on a
wetland of international importance. Law students from around the
world compete regionally to earn a spot in the competition, and this year teams
from eight countries including Australia, Canada, India, and South Korea will
be participating. View here a press release
reprinted from the Stetson University Web site. [06/08/04]
MedWet
prepares for the 6th MedWet Committee meeting. MedWet/Com will be
holding its 6th meeting in Algeria in mid-December 2004, and MedWet Policy Adviser
Nejib Benessaiah visited the venue 16-19
July to view the preparations. In collaboration with Mr Ammar
Boumezbeur, the Ramsar focal point in the government, and Ms Nassima
Aghanim, former Ramsar staff member and now Executive Secretary of
MedWet's North African Wetlands Network Focal Unit, Nejib got to take a good
look round the facilities and provide this encouraging photographic report.
And here it is. [08/06/04]
Lesotho
becomes the Convention's 139th Party. The Ramsar Secretariat is delighted
to report that UNESCO, the Convention depositary, has notified us that on 1
July 2004 Lesotho deposited its instrument of accession to the Convention on
Wetlands, as amended by the Paris Protocol (1982) and Regina Amendments (1987),
and the Convention will therefore enter into force for Lesotho on 1 November
2004. The new Party's obligatory first Wetland of International Importance is
"Lets'eng-la-Letsie", a human-made
lake and associated marshes covering 434 hectares along the Mohlakeng River,
a far-upstream tributary of the Orange River which descends through South Africa
and Namibia to the Atlantic Ocean. The area is a "biodiversity hotspot"
in the Drakensberg Mountains area. A more substantial description of the
fascinating new Ramsar Site, with some stunning photographs, will follow after
the site data has been studied by the Africa team in the Secretariat, but in
the meantime we welcome Lesotho to the Ramsar family as our 139th Contracting
Party. IUCN's Southern Africa regional office has been extremely helpful
in moving the accession process forward. [05/08/04] ![]()
Wetland
Professionals Platform launched at 7th INTECOL Wetlands Conference. At
the closing session of the 7th INTECOL Conference in Utrecht, The Netherlands,
on 30 July 2004, Dr. Gordana Beltram, the Chair
of the Standing Committee of
the Ramsar Convention, officially launched the "Wetland
Professionals Platform". The platform, a joint initiative between
the RIZA institute, Lelystad, and UNESCO-IHE (Institute for Water Education),
Delft in the Netherlands, will provide space for wetland professionals worldwide
to interact, exchange information, announce events and training opportunities,
and much more.
[05/08/04]
Lake
Chad Basin Commission and the CHADWET Initiative. The 51st Session
of the Lake Chad Basin Commission was held 21 to 22 June 2004, amongst other
business, the Commissioners expressed satisfaction with the take-off of the
Lake Chad Basin Initiative and decided that the five pilot projects undertaken
within the framework of the LCBC/GEF project (all coinciding with existing or
planned Ramsar sites in the Lake Chad Basin) be considered as concrete contribution
to the CHADWET Initiative launched in June 2003 at Izmir (Turkey). Here is a
by Anada Tiéga, formerly of the Ramsar Secretariat and now the GEF project
manager. [05/08/04] ![]()
News
from Ramsar's STRP Working Groups. From Tuesday to Saturday last
week (20-24 July 2004), members and observers of the Convention's Scientific
and Technical Review Panel
(STRP), joined by invited technical
experts including authors of chapters of the Millennium
Ecosystem Assessment, the CBD Secretariat
and the Chair of the Standing Committee,
met in a series of intensive and very successful workshops in Wageningen,
the Netherlands. The workshops were hosted by Wetlands
International as part of their provision of the STRP Support Service.
The workshops reviewed progress against the large number of tasks in the Panel's
2003-2005 Work Plan, and made significant progress in refining and further developing
technical review papers and a suite of guidelines and advice for Contracting
Parties, for consideration by COP9 in 2005.
[30/07/04]
Announcement.
European Ramsar Meeting:
change of date! The
5th European Regional Meeting on the implementation
and effectiveness of the Ramsar Convention will be held in the Armenian capital
Yerevan in
early December, at the invitation of Armenia's Environment Minister Mr Ayvazyan,
sent to more than 200 Ramsar focal points throughout Europe's 44 Contracting
Parties. Up to the initial deadline for registration
(15 July), 53 delegates have done so. However, we know that many more European
delegates have the intention to participate. In order to assure the best possible
organization of the meeting, we ask you to register now, by sending the attached
registration form to the Ramsar Secretariat at: europe@ramsar.org.
Registered participants will receive more details of the meeting over the coming
weeks.
Please note that the meeting will start and end one day earlier than originally announced: starting Saturday 4 December 2004, closing on Wednesday 8 December. This is for purely practical reasons: though there are daily flights from Moscow to Yerevan, from Vienna, London, Paris, Prague, Athens and other European cities flights only operate on specific days of the week, many of them arriving in Yerevan on 3 December and departing on the 9th. [28/07/04]
Announcement.
Ramsar
seeks Convention Development Officer. This
new post, available from 1 October 2004 until 31 December 2005, is designed
to help with the preparation and carrying out of COP9, especially dealing with
the national reports and their analysis, and ensuring that all the technical
issues are well prepared and managed. The deadline for applications is 20 August
2004.
[link
later removed][22/07/04
More to follow.
Watch this space. Feedback and suggestions are welcome
to: the Ramsar Convention Secretariat, Rue Mauverney 28, CH-1196 Gland,
Switzerland (tel +41 22 999 0170, fax +41 22 999 0169, e-mail
).
Updated regularly by Dwight Peck, Ramsar Secretariat.
Back
Issues of the Bulletin Board. Early in every month, the current edition
of the Bulletin Board is copied to the Ramsar
Archives page, and you can dig through the back issues there --
their contents are still indexed on the Global
Index page in perpetuity.
visitors to this site since...... Wait . . . . . . Take a number and a plastic
chair -- we'll call you when there's room at the head of the queue.